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Zanesville Times Recorder

   The Times Recorder (Newspaper) - June 12, 1974, Zanesville, Ohio                        County Plans Purchase Of Bridge Lifting System By ROBERT WOLF TR Staff Reporter County commissioners have decided to purchase a hydraulic lifting system for the Sixth Street it was learned According to Dee president of the com- expect to officially ask a local firm in the near future to prepare designs for such a system which could lift the bridge sufficiently high so as to provide the required 26 feet Shook said that the com- missioners have already been informed the system will cost the with the county likely paying the full In order to protect the system of electric motors which would operate the hydraulic Shook indicated the com- missioners were considering constructing a building in which the equipment would be stored and in which a person would be housed who could operate the system is really just what we After once it is installed we will be able to open and close the bridge within minutes and won't have to wait for a crane to get there and do the rob after several Shook Over 'a week ago a 30-ton crane was used to lift the bridge about five feet following some minor repairs the County Engineer Loren Camp said he was confident the crane could lift the bridge about eight At normal water levels the bridge does not allow boats higher than seven feet to pass through when the draw span is The county does not currently own a crane which is large to lift the bridge Shook said it would cost in the area of to for us to purchase a suitable crane and then there are all the problems which are created including the necessity of blocking traffic every time we wish to open the Shook added state has held us up trom doing anything to the bridge for a long time but now we are determined to get the job done Shook was not optimistic as far as prospects were concerned for lifting the are many more problems as far as our being able to make the A hydraulic system may be impossible because of the difficulty in being able to lift the bridge straight up and Other methods have been but at this point we could not in good any of these Shook reported cost of the system for the Sixth Street Bridge is within the means of this suggestions for the generally are much more expensive Shook added Camp previously told The Times Recorder he was to approve long term solution for either bridge until the arious suggestions are acted upon the necessary state agencies and the Coast Guard However Shook said he is that at least the Coast Guard would be satisfied uith what we plan to do After mey have said that just want the bridges raised and don't really care how it is done The TR reported last Friday that Clyde Bryant of Riverside Airport road was planning to file suit m federal court at Columbus charging Camp with violation of and noncompliance with federal laws Under federal the River is now considered a navigable body of water That means that the river must be able to ac commodate boats which are 20 feet high Today's Chuckle A baby-sitter is not experienced until she knows which kids to sit with and which kids to sit The Times Recorder 110th 161 22 Pages Your Newspaper Ohio June 12, 1974 Today's Weather Partly cloudy with highs near and lows near 50. Fair Thursday with highs in the 70s on Page 15 Cents Judge Delays Trial WASHINGTON ing President Nixon's refusal to surrender subpoenaed a federal judge Tuesday delayed John D. conspiracy trial indefinitely while the court tries to force Nixon to U S District Judge Gerhard A Gesell said he would issues orders on Wednesday enforce subpoenas for White House documents to defend himself in the Ellsberg breakin case He presumably could order Nixon to show cause why the subpoenaed materials should not be produced for the court's examination or why he should not be held in contempt last resort considered unlikely at this time Gesell said the trial of three remaining would begin as scheduled but he had no given Nixon's con- to a lawful trial other than to postpone case until the matter is Ehrlichman is accused of conspiracy and perjury in connection with the Sept. 3, 1971, raid on the office of Daniel psychiatrist's office after berg leaked the Pentagon Papers to the The only defendants ing are G. Gordon Bernard L. Barker and Eugenic R. Martinez have already been convicted the Watergate Charges have been dropped against two others initially incited Felipe De Diego and Charles W. formerly Nixon's special pleaded gulty last week to a related Cat Greets Governor A cat greets Gov. John Gilligan moments before his first stop Tuesday during a con- visit to Gilligan presented two Service to Mankind awards at Children's Home to Dr. Ann Brown of 270 Kopchak road and Mrs. Helen Kirk of North Dr. Brown was honored her services to area children and Mrs. Kirk for 2G years service on County Children's Services Pictured to are children of Dr. Betsy and Hoger superintendent of the children's and Mrs. Gilligan attended a campaign strategy luncheon at the home of Mrs. Rose Tanoury on Wheeling The meeting became controversial it was revealed many of county's leading Democrats were not informed such a meeting would be held or that the governor would by Don Measure Virtually Uncut Senate Passes Defense WASHINGTON After seven days of debate and votes on 36 proposed the Senate Tuesday passed a billion defense arms having shaved it by only of 1 per cent. The solitary deletion of funds was simply a bookkeeping correction proposed by man John C. Stennis of the Senate Armed Services Com- who had discovered that million ui parts for the Trident submarine had already been approved in another The weapons was passed on an 84-6 vote with all the nay votes from James Dick William Harold Mike and Claiborne The administration had re- quested The House cut that by but the Senate Armed Services Com- reduced it by yet another That ference will have to be resolved in a conference between members of the House and Senate armed services com- Every attempt to trim weapons or expenses went down to But opponents of Vietnam military aid came losing by only one vote Tuesday when Sen. Edward M. proposed cutting such aid from million to The one vote Kennedy could normally have counted on for victory belonged to Sen. Harold a longtime dove who argued the Armed Services Committee on which he sits had already cut the administration's request by million and that was enough Other proposed cuts that went down to defeat included amendments aimed at the Bl a new class of cruise missile more curate warheads and two separate proposals to slash the number 01 troops Stennis and his committee suffered a few setbacks on the floor but they were generally on peripheral issues that have generated public attention but which don't go to the heart of defense for for- bade the services to use dogs to test although other federal agencies will still be allowed to use the The Senate also cut the number of servants that als are forbade the Air Force to test fire Minuteman missiles over the and ordered the Navy to stop using the Puerto Rican island of Culebra as a bombing range after 1975. World's Scientists Begin Weather Study News Digest Oil Warning Given HOUSTON Federal Energy Office chief John Tuesday said consumers will bear the burden of increased costs if Congressional efforts to eliminate the oil depletion allowance Pollution Delay Sought COLUMBUS Ira director of the Ohio Environmental Protection said Tuesday he would ask Gov. John J. Gilligan to request a one-year extension of the July 1, 1975 federal clean air deadline for four coke ovens operated by Armco Steel Corp. at Typhoon Threatens Island HONG KONG Typhoon Dinah aimed its 60-mile-an-hour winds at the southern Chinese island of Hainan Tuesday as it churned across the South China Sea from the where it left a trail of death and destruction in a 24-hour Tornado Victim Dies Okla. An elderly man injured by a tornado that wrecked a nursing home died increasing to 16 the number of persons killed during weekend weather the Red Cross Illness Delays Departure MOSCOW Jewish ballet dancer Valery S. Panov fell ill further delaying his departure from the Soviet Union his ballerina wife a friend in Leningrad said GENEVA Men and machines took up their posts around a third of the globe Tuesday for a million expedition that marks the largest international scientific effort in history and is aimed at providing better weather fore- casts U.S. and Soviet scientists led the 72-nation, 100-day project involving men and 40 ships and more than a dozen aircraft and space Starting Jie international team will collect information about the or of tropical ocean water that largely determines the world's The to be tabulated during the next three is expected to help provide two to three-week weather forecasts far more accurate than anything known with a consequent saving of untold billions of dollars every year around the The global heat engine's components are the tropical ocean The sun's heat is stored in the upper layers of the transferred to the atmosphere by shifted higher in cloud form by air currents and dispersed around the The project is being called which is an acronym of an GATE stands for GARP Atmospheric Research Atlantic Tropical There will be 40 ships in- the largest tional fleet ever assembled for scientific 13 research aircraft and United States and Soviet GATE extends from the eastern Indian across tropical Africa and the Atlantic over tropical South and Central America and into the easternmost Pacific On Wiretap Role Cited Kissinger Threatens To Quit In Dispute Austria Choked with Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger said Tuesday he will resign unless and m- about his role in White House wiretapping are stopped and his honor upheld by a special Senate review But as statements of thy and support poured out from President Nixon and shocked U.S a member of the House Judiciary Committee in Washington said the impeachment panel has that despite his helped initiate a national security wiretap drive in 1969 Also in soon after Kissinger's charged news conference in the Senate Foreign Lawmaker Claims Proof WASHINGTON A member of the House Judiciary Committee said Tuesday the panel had received that Secretary of State Henry A. despite his helped initiate a wiretap program in 1969. It was that allegation which caused Kissinger to threaten to resign at a news conference in Tuesday unless senators reviewed his role in the Rep. Joshua said the evidence received by the House impeachment inquiry went beyond mere allegations about Kissinger's was positive he told a group of reporters However Rep Don said it was to say that the evidence proved Kissinger or the 17 wiretaps of newsmen and government did not order the Edwards was done by M who then was Kissinger's deputy in the National Security Council Kissinger supplied the names of the NSC employes whose phones subsequently were Edwards The orders to wiretap were not signed by he Kissinger's threat to resign surprised The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted unanimously to accept his written request to reopen its investigation of his role in the wiretaps Kissinger had denied the allegations as recently as last Democrats and Republicans alike urged Kissinger not to resign Vice President Gerald R Ford said such a move would be Even Eilberg urged Kissinger to stay Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said a Kissinger resignation would be a and predicted the Senate Foreign Relations Committee review once again lish the complete integrity of Secretary Relations committee voted unanimously to accept his suggestion and reopen its in- of his role in the wiretapping But one powerful lawmaker after another of Mansfield of Humphrey of Minnesota and more in Humphrey's to with cool and stay in office Kissinger said the he was fighting had come from the House impeachment inquiry and a member of that Rep Joshua told newsmen was positive before the committee on Kissinger's direct role in the wiretapping or his Col. initiated wiretaps on employes of the National Security Co. White House employes and on With Nixon's inger denied White House officials stunned as they listened to his voice cracking with emotion and lash out at impugning of my in a hastily summoned news conference at an 18th The secretary denied once again he had initiated or recommended the wiretapping of newsmen and White House aides in a 1971 national security condemned recent re- ports to that effect as a sonal and then drove home his anger in one blunt it is not cleared he will Pressures Mar Trip Austria Pressures from the Watergate scandal marred the start of President Nixon's goodwill trip to the Middle East Tuesday when Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger threatened to resign unless his name is cleared Before the Kissinger sion over persistent stones concerning his role in ordering wiretaps placed on the tele- phones of 17 newsmen and White House aides in 1970, Nixon rested m an 18th Century met with the Austrian and looked forward to a triumphant welcome in Cairo Wednesday morning Egyptian President Anwar an admirer of both Nixon and has planned a big welcome complete with at least cheering Egyptians in a show of appreciation for the U.S. peace efforts in the Middle East undertakes a full gation to clear his Later in the committee agreed to review Kissinger's When Nixon left Washington role in the White House aides announced to the press that they would entertain no re- quests for reaction to gate developments while they were away from That resolution dissolved in the wake of two controversies during what was to have been a quiet day of recovery from the so-called of fast travel through a number of different time angered by con- queries as to his role in the wiretap called a news conference to announce that he would resign unless the Senate Foreign Relations Com- Nixon immediately leaped to Kissinger's side to declare that Secretary's honor needs no and shortly thereafter Kissinger left burg by automobile for a 10- mile drive across the border to the German village of Bad to meet with the new West German Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Press Secretary Ron Ziegler meanwhile denounced criticism by Sen. Henry who said in Washington that the President should stay at home rather than travel abroad during the im- investigation New Building Planned To Relocate Corporation plans to move its Zanesville district operations from 1434 Virginia street to a new square foot building to be erected soon west of Richards road near the Coca Cola according to an announcement by Matthew general manager of Zanesville and Gene L executive director of the Zanesville Industrial The new facilities will provide double the floor space of present location where the firm has operated the past five Plans are being finalized for construction to begin within a month with occupancy set for early fall Piatek said that the new 100 foot by 100 foot building will serve as a sales warehouse and equipment servicing facility to meet customer needs for the rapidly growing food service Piatek said the Corporation philosophy is that a quality food service program keeps customers happy and the new facilities will allow better service to present customers and increase ability to add new Construction details will be announced within two will be situated on three acres of ground fronting on Richards road with access from both Richards road and Kemper the new county access road installed for the Mid Atlantic Canners Association plant now being constructed and the announced plant for National Can Cor- The property was part of the Downing Company development of 45 Piatek said that zip's work in attracting the Mid Atlantic Canners Association and National Can Corporation plants to the Richards road property and the current installation of gas and access road facilities made the location highly desirable for MacDonald pointed out that the former Mosaic Tile space served as a location for to expand in 1970 and to develop sufficient business to justify building a new 5000 square foot space to be vacated by will be available for another tenant and ZIP and the Zanesville Area Chamber of Commerce will be attempting to get the area utilized soon in conjunction with the Mosaic property Zanesville Industrial Butch Cassidy Death Disputed By Sister Utah Butch Cassidy's sister says the leader of the Wild Bunch was a boy who got off on the wrong she can never forgive him for the way he treated his parents Mrs. Lula Parker 90, also said her brother wasn't killed with the Sundance Kid in South claim ed by William C. vice president of the Pinkerton Detective The two sooke at the opening U. S. Patch Up Row Germany The European Com- mon Market and the United States agreed Tuesday that they have patched up last winter's row and developed a more flexible and pragmatic think the American dialogue is making good Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said during a joint news conference with German Foreign Minister The two men met for two hours the Bavarian Alpine health resort of Bad after v Genscher presided over a two-day session of the Common Market foreign ters in Bonn on political Before leaving er told reporters he and his European colleagues had agreed seek flexible and pragmatic relations with Wa- He reported the same to who commented afterwards that he has ob- served change in the spirit and of European consultation with the United Stales since the controversy last winter over handling of the Middle East the major problem is not Kissinger went Genscher and the other eight Europeans ministers meeting in Bonn approved plans for opening a dialogue with 20 Arab states on technical and cultural cooperation cooperation the Europeans hope will assure them a supply of vital Arab Genscher said Kissinger's mission to the Middle East had improved the climate for the have no reservations about economic and technical cooperation between Europe and the Kissinger have expressed some reservations about 20 Arab foreign ministers meeting with nine European foreign ters without a very clear agenda A foreign ministers meeting is the tual aim of the dialogue now to be but is unlikely to take place before sometime next Genscher said earlier in Bonn of a new Outlaw and Lawman library at Utah State sity was a good boy who got off on the wrong said Mrs. of Utah only thing I hold against him is that he hurt my parents so He broke my mother's I'll tell you Mrs. Betenson added wasn't killed in South America He came back to this country and lived a good many years Linn said the Pinkerton file on Robert Leroy alias Butch ends with the statement of many eye witnesses who saw the Linn said Parker and Harry also known as the Sundance were shot by the Bolivian Army in 1911. have talked to a lot of people who claim Butch re- turned to the United but I have never been able to pin down any solid Linn said But 80-year-old who claims he rode with the Wild Bunch at age of 14, said he saw Cassidy at the San Francisco World's Fair in 1915 Democrats Rap Nixon Economics WASHINGTON The Congressional Democratic Tuesday renewed its attack on President Nixon's economic policies and a former White House economist urged a new form of wage and price Speaker Carl Albert criticized the administration's of doing nothing at all while the economy sinks slowly into deep and said House Democratic leaders will consult with economists in coming weeks on how to combat inflation and boost employment The first of those Walter chairman of the Economic Advisory Council under the Kennedy and Johnson told House leaders Tuesday that wage-price controls must be renewed while taxes on low income groups must be cut and tax of the wealthy The House Ways and Means Committee meanwhile con- drafting a tax reform and plans were made for a possible Senate vote Monday on another revenue reform sure Jackson also said that inger had brought stability to the Middle East and the President is screwing it Ziegler said Jackson sented a minority view of the President's and that many senators Before the Nixon met for nearly two hours with Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky about East-West tions generally and about the Middle East and the Soviet Union Kreisky visited both earlier this The President's party was scheduled for an departure for Cairo He planned a private meeting with Sadat at Qubba palace in Cairo Wednesday Sadat Eye Summit By United Press International Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi will visit Moscow soon to arrange a meeting between President Anwar Sadat and the Soviet a Cairo government spokesman said The announcement was made on the eve of President arrival for a three-day It followed speculation that one of the Soviet possibly Communist party Secretary General Leonid I. might visit Cairo to the Nixon In preparations for Nixon's visit this weekend overshadowed the ment process on the Syrian No official gram has been announced but the newspaper Haaretz said Nixon would visit the sites holy to the three major religions in These are the Church of the Holy the Dome of the and the Wailing sites held holy by Moslems and The process of military disengagement on the Golan Heights was reported ing Israeli troops blew up mines on their side of the cease-fire line and Syrian forces were observed doing the same on their the Israeli national radio These steps were in tion for Friday's scheduled handover of the southernmost quadrant of Israel's forward bulge in occupied since the October Egyptian Information ter Kamal Abul Magd told newsmen in Cairo Fahmi an- his Moscow travel plans at a cabinet meeting presided over by First Deputy Premier Abdel Aziz Index Crossword Classified Deaths Editorials Financial Dixon Ohio Report Snorts Pages Television Women's Pagou 9 ft 4 71 9 3 4-4 2 10-11 B B A A B B A B B A  

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