Times Recorder, The (Newspaper) - November 7, 1976, Zanesville, Ohio Sunday Inside many years the nation's consumers have been turning nore and more to the use of credit to purchase everything rom toys to cars Some make it work for them while others regret it later Shopping for the best credit is a must oday and this week's Consumers Corner offers some handy i on selecting the right plan for Zanesville consumers ige Th Times Recorder Gaited American horses proud and aristocratic are not com- in and around Zanesville except on the farm of Harold and Betty Blake These high stepping beauties have added ribbon upon ribbon and trophy after trophy to the Blake home and Times Recorder staff writer John Ray tells how with special care and training it's done Page South American Military dictators have succeeded in ding leftist extremism to some degree but along the way Dasic human rights have been trampled underfoot Torture and death are the rule rather than the exception often for innocent people but the dictators consistently assert that the practice is necessary to ferret out the terrorists Page 60 Pages 6 Sections Zanesville Ohio 43701 Sunday November 30 Cents Where To Look Soc B Builders Page 6 B D Consumers Corner 10 A Crossword Puzzle 8 C Deaths Funerals 10 C Editorial A Entertainment C Financial Page 6 D For What It's Worth 2 C C 2 A A Sports B Women's Pages C Sunday Outside The official starting date hasn't arrived yet but that apparently makes little difference to Old Man Winter who plans to make his presence felt today It's expected to torn colder with the temperature edging into the low 40s and scattered snow flurries possible And it gets colder Sunday night so put an extra cover on the bed No three-year-old Heather Moore isn't playing hide-and-seek She's just trying to keep warm and can you blame her when the temperature is hovering at 22 degrees now that's cold Pretty Zanesville High School Devilette Kelly McCollister certainly didn't blame her and Weekend Roundup Elevator Blast Kills One Ohio TAP One man was killed and three injured in a grain elevator explosion which witnesses said could be heard six miles from the site The dead man was identified as Stanley Drumm 50 of Milford Center He was was sitting in his truck waiting to have his grain unloaded at the Ohio Grain Co when the blast occurred Friday night Authorities said he was killed by a door frame which was thrown 250 feet by the blast Alioto Isn't Giving Up SAN FRANCISCO AP A third mistrial has been declared in Joseph L million libel suit against Look magazine and the former San Francisco mayor says he'll ask for a fourth trial Lawyers Want Delay SALT LAKE CITY AP Lawyers say tney will file documents with the State Supreme Court on Monday to delay the Nov 15 execution of convicted killer Gary Mark Gilmore who says he wants to die before a firing squad Judge Considers New Site MADERA Calif AP The judge in the Chowchilla kidnaping case after ordering the trial moved from Madera he will select a new trial site from a list of counties provided by the court system Superior Court Judge Jack L Hammerberg said that he granted a defense motion for change of venue to avoid any possibility that the case might be prejudiced and overturned on appeal Flash Floods Bring Death TRAPANI Italy AP Flash floods touched off by torrential rains have killed at least eight persons police and city officials said The rain continued Saturday Another 10 persons are in this Western Sicilian seaside city which was left half under water after the Friday night floods Pakistan Issues Ultimatum I All-Out War Bingo Pay Raise Bills Await Solons Any Port In A Storm offered the protection of her cape and the two watched somewhat happily and a bit warmer the Zanesville Newark football game Friday night Times Recorder photographer Don Durant happened along just when Heather peeked out for a look at the action NAACP Elects Hooks As Wilkins Successor NEW YORK AP jamin L Hooks a member of the Federal Communications Commission was elected day to succeed Roy Wilkins as executive director of the tional Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People The unanimous vote by the NAACP national board marks an end to the long and times uncomfortable search find a successor to the old Wilkins who plans to retire next July 31 The NAACP has been a part of my life for as long as I can Hooks 51 said after learning of his election This is one of the most tant jobs in the country the very top in terms of the black community Hooks of Memphis Tenn said he had no great novel changes to propose for the civil rights I just want to see it bigger and he said The first black appointed to the FCC Hooks is an attorney and former Baptist minister who served congregations in Memphis and Detroit He said he will have to resign his FCC post to take up the NAACP job which is his as of Jan 1 1977 He planned to meet with NAACP officials in Washington to discuss the transition Wilkins had wielded power in the NAACP without challenge for decades He was a hero of the civil rights movement and his name was virtually with the organization But the NAACP had fallen on lean times in recent years and experienced financial There was increasing pressure to ease Wilkins out of the post and put someone younger in Finally at its annual convention last July the acted to take away his real but unofficial power and place it in the hands of the member board of directors He forced the issue himself by asking to be allowed to stay oh past his planned retirement next January until after annual The tors acceded to his wish but only after removing all his for internal op- Last February the board of directors had enlisted more than 200 prominent blacks to aid in a campaign to double the membership during this year The move was seen by some as a departure from the long-time policy of keeping planning in the national board More than 50 of the blacks enlisted in the drive and they were also asked to advise the organization on modernizing its fiscal administrative and lic relations systems The move seemed to sent the thinking of Young Turks faction on the national board led by its chairwoman Margaret Bush Wilson COLUMBUS Ohio AP Ohio's lame duck legislature meets Tuesday to act on a bingo and county officials pay raises left pending when lawmakers adjourned regular sessions Sept 18 Majority Democrats who will be veto proof against GOP Gov James A Rhodes in the next legislature will caucus Tuesday morning to elect leaders for the two-year session starting Jan 3 House Speaker Vernal G Riffe Jr New Boston and Senate Majority Leader Oliver Ocasek Akron are ex- Prisoner Exchange Approved WASHINGTON AP dreds of Americans who say they are trapped in rat-infested Mexican cells subjected to ture and forced to sign con- fessions may be returned to the United States to complete their sentences as a result of a new treaty And more than Mexi- cans in U.S federal prisons would have the option of trans- ferring to Mexican cells under a treaty an- by the State Americans who return from Mexican prisons may apply for parole and those who could prove they had been abused in Mexican prisons probably would have better chances of being freed by U.S authorities That is the view of U.S legal experts who worked out the tentative treaty with Mexico The treaty provides for a eral exchange of some 600 American and Mexican federal prisoners All will have the right to re- quest transfer to prisons in their home country But the two governments must approve each transfer and the treaty depends on ratification by the U.S and Mexican senates Some legal experts say some prisoners once returned to the United States may try to seek freedom by suing to revoke the treaty One U.S legal expert says they may argue that they cannot be kept in an American jail because they were not con- under U.S laws The treaty grew out of com- plaints by Americans and their relatives who said they were beaten in Mexican jails and that they were denied access to lawyers and U.S consular Most Americans in Mexi- can prisons are serving arising from drug of- fenses Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger took up the problem on a visit to Mexico City last June After a series of ings U.S and Mexican tors completed a general ment convicted in fornia and other states most of them on charges of illegal entry into the United States would be eligible for transfer to Mexican prisons if the states agree The few Americans in Mexican state prisons as opposed to federal prisons would be covered under a Mexican constitutional amendment Mexican President Luis proposed the ment to his con- along with separate reform legislation that would allow prisoners held on lated charges to become gible for parole a right taken away several years ago to be re-elected Both have held their leadership posts since January 1975 Scheduled the same day is a Senate Republican caucus for the election of a minority er in that chamber Sen Mi- chael J Maloney nati apparently will retain the post House Republican Leader Charles F Kurfess ing Green is favored to keep his job at a House GOP caucus also set for Tuesday The bingo got sidetracked in mid-September when it failed by seven votes to receive 66 needed in the House for an emergency clause giving it im- mediate effect It received a 13 tally However the vote came at ending a marathon session at which only 72 of 99 House members were present House Judiciary Chairman ry J Lehman Shaker Heights said he expects no problem picking up the tional votes on a motion he will make to have the earlier vote reconsidered The which further ments a constitutional ment that legalized bingo in Ohio for charitable purposes spells out regulations and con- designed to wipe out illicit gamblers running big stakes games under the guise of ty With the attorney general overseeing bingo operations the legislation expands an lier 1976 law to include veterans and senior citizens among groups which may be licensed to run bingo and similar types of games including zingo Actually what the House will be voting on is a conference committee's version of the measure which the Senate proved before the ers adjourned for their Also pending is the report of another ence committee on a giving officials in Ohio's 88 counties their first pay raise in eight years Some of the increases are as high as 30 per cent but are justified to make up for in- since the last raise say Rep Frederick H Deering Monroeville chief sponsor and conference committee chairman said the panel will meet Monday afternoon in ad- vance of Tuesday's floor sions to try to resolve ences over whether to include future annual increases pegged to cost of living hikes The House put the automatic gers in its version of the but the took them out The county officials won't be eligible for another pay boost for four years under a law ning increases during their terms Deering's needs an emergency clause to qualify sheriffs commissioners and others elected Nov 2 to terms commencing in January lar bills do not become effective until 90 days after signing by the governor Riffe said there is a that the House will try to override some recent vetoes by Rhodes but didn't single out any particular An aide mentioned some rejected sions in a recent welfare The speaker and other crats were incensed over the governor's veto of language new accountability procedures in the massive and embattled welfare department Rhodes indicated he felt the re- violated executive department prerogatives If all 59 Democrats are present Tuesday they still would need one Republican vote to muster the majority required to override This is a prospect not seen as likely among GOP lawmakers still stunned over last day's election results Democrats will have a edge in the new House and re- tain their present tage in the upper chamber Otherwise the Senate may act this week on the con- of Welfare Director Aggrey and Natural Resources Director Robert W Teater two Rhodes appointees who have had run ins with the Democratic majority over the past several months and whose jobs could be in jeopardy Democrats were expected to discuss the directors fate at their party caucus GM Next In Line For UA W Strike DETROIT AP The United Auto Workers will set a strike deadline at General tors Corp this week after reaching a last-minute agreement for hourly employes at Chrysler UAW and Chrysler tors met Saturday to discuss a separate pact covering laried workers The deadline for that contract has been ex- tended indefinitely The tentative agreement for the No 3 Auto Maker's U S and Canadian hourly employes was an- just before the deadline Friday The UAW struck the Ford Motor Co for nearly a month earlier this fall before reaching an settlement In negotiations with industry giant GM the union will be ing to win a similar pact for workers UAW dent Leonard Woodcock said of- would set the strike deadline early in the week The UAW negotiating com- scheduled a meeting of the union's Chrysler Council on Wednesday to discuss and vote on the tentative agreement If the pact is approved by the council it would then go to local units around the country for a vote Three plants reported wildcat walkouts Saturday over local issues but two returned to normal Company officials said only the Etobicoke Ont ing plant near Toronto re- mained closed with pickets keeping the 356 workers off the job Other brief wildcat strikes over local issues were also re- ported at the Trenton Mich engine plant and at the sburg Ohio stamping plant But both plants had returned to normal by midday Seven Detroit-area Chrysler plants were shut down Friday and workers sent home as thousands of UAW members jumped the gun by staging ly walkouts Nine persons were arrested during picketing day night outside a warehouse in Brownstown township near Detroit They were released pending hearings on demeanor charges UAW Vice President Douglas Fraser said Friday he was con- the Chrysler agreement would be approved by the rank and file The deadlines at local units with pacts have been extended in- definitely Officials said 26 of 69 Chrysler production facilities had settled locally by Mock POW Role Ends In Death LINDENHURST AP A college junior pledged to an military fraternity was stabbed to death with a bayonet police said during hazing in which he played the role of a prisoner of war under interrogation Suffolk County police said Thomas Fitzgerald 19 was stabbed in the chest by a ber of the fraternity the shing Rifles The member who was acting the part of a Soviet inquisitor was arrested on a murder charge The slaying took place late Friday on Indian Island off the south shore Long Island near here while 12 to 14 fraternity pledges were taking part in what police called a training and hazing program Fitzgerald the youngest of 10 children in his family had joined the ROTC unit at St John's University in Queens only last summer in the hope that he might get an Army scholarship for law school his sister said The ROTC unit at St John's serves schools in the area which do no have units of their own Charged with second degree murder in the death was James Savino 21 of Bayside Queens who was a cadet first lieutenant in the ROTC unit He is a senior at the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken According to his sister No- reen Reiser Fitzgerald was a junior at Queens College part of the City University of New York He worked at the school library to help pay for his cation He wanted to go to law school and my widowed mother did not have the money to send she said He joined the ROTC because he thought that under the Army program he could get some sort of ship He was very very smart A spokesman for St John's University had no immediate statement on the death but said he was trying to reach the nel in charge of the ROTC unit for comment He described the Pershing Rifles as a military professional fraternity AMSTERDAM The Netherlands AP President Zulfikar All Bhutto of Pakistan says his country will revoke its military alliance with the United States if Washington blocks the purchase by Pakistan of nuclear equipment from France a Dutch newspaper reported Saturday Licavoli Trial Postponed PHOENIX Ariz AP Special government Prosecutor Kevin the federal court trial of reputed Maiia figure Feter Licavoli Sr tentatively set for Monday has been postponed indefinitely Shelves Press Muzzle NAIROBI AP A commission Saturday voted overwhelmingly to shelve a declaration that the United States contended would muzzle press freedom in the world A key commission at the Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO conference voted with six abstentions of referring the proposal to a special negotiating committee a move expected to defuse the issue for two more years Only Solution DAR ES SALAAM Tanzania AP Five black African leaders meeting here Saturday ignored the Geneva talks on Rhodesia's political future and said the only way for blacks to gain power there is through armed struggle They charged that diplomatic moves for a peaceful transition to black majority rule in desia including the Geneva only offer time to consolidate the white racist re- gimes in Rhodesia and South Africa Zimbabwe Rhodesia will be liberated in the same way as Angola and Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere told reporters ring to warfare in those two countries after they gained in- dependence from Portugal The five nations have been supporting black nationalists who are fighting Rhodesia's white minority regime Sonar Pinpoints Fuzzy Monster ifm BOSTON AP Scientists report that a sonar search for he legendary Loch Ness ster has turned up a fuzzy out- ine of an object on the bottom of the deep Scottish lake which resembles a prehistoric saur But Martin Klein head sonar expert of this past summer's expedition to the loch sored by the New York Times and the Academy of Applied ence in Boston is cautious about his discovery Klein said in a telephone in- from Salem where his sonar manufacturing firm Klein Associated is located It certainly bears further investigation A picture of what might be a monster carcass of a wreck or something else in the electronics trade journal EDN published here Friday A carcass would establish Nessie's existence almost as well as a live specimen but no one has ever found one The picture is a nar trace of the bottom of Loch Ness One object is almost tain to be a barge sunk years ago Nearby is what EDN said Klein described as an unusual shape with a long and what could possibly be flippers about 30 feet long EDN said the object was at 330 feet too deep for a dive but in his telephone interview Klein said the magazine was mistaken and it was 150 feet Klein provided another ture of a scan of what the sonar crew dubbed The Average after the pre- historic animal that has been one candidate for the identity of the legendary monster It also was about 30 feet long In the draft of an article for Technology Review the alumni publication of Massachusetts Institute of Technology Klein wrote of that scan As is often the situation in our type of work we made one of the most intriguing finds just as we were about to wind up our survey The target has a shape with a long projection and does not look like any of the other targets which we picked up in the loch Of course it would be wild speculation to make any sumptions about this target without further investigation An underwater television or a small submersible would ably be needed for We named this target The Average to tease our paleontologist friends It will be interesting to find if the target is still there when we next go to look for it The expedition mounted a complex of cameras and other sonar equipment this summer in the loch in its most ambitious undertaking yet and probably the ambitious monster hunt ever launched It has not yet reported its findings A sonar team of the Loch Ness monster ex- has nicknamed the object shown in this sonar truce The Average after the prehistoric animal that has been one candidate for the identity of the elusive creature The object was detected toi feet of water off Fort Augustus and is about feet long