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Could It Work Today? In 1895 some students at Bowdoin College appeared for class in sloppy clothing that offended their professor. He excused them. An indignation meeting followed, and one , student was named to meet with president William DeWitt Hyde and state the grievance. With cordial dignity, _ President Hyde received the student and said, \We seem at a stalemate. The faculty vnanimously supports Professor Manning, and the students appear unanimously otherwise. I think we should appoint a committee of three alumni to review the matter and advise us. Why don't the students choose one, | will name one, and those two can select a third-and we'll agree to abide by their findings. Is this agreeable?\ The student returned soon to say it was agreeable, and that ~ the alumnus to represent them would be a graduate of the previous year, a liberal- minded sort certain to side with the students. '\' said President Hyde, \Now for my member, | am going to name your father.\ --CHRISTIAN SCIENCE w- MONITOR Report Says City Air Is Clearing Up WASHINGTON (UPI) - The air in most cities is cleaner to- day than it was a year ago, but the same cannot be said for water, Russell E. Train said Sunday. Train, chairman of the presi- dent's Council on Environmen- tal Quality, made the assertion on a radio-television broadcast taped for use Sunday on some New York stations. The pro- gram was a discussion between Train and Rep. Barber B. Con- able Jr., R-N.Y. Train said his agency will publish a report in July with some good news about the struggle against air pollution. \But if I can give you a quick preview in one aspect,\ . he said, \the data we are now gathering indicates the air in our cities, most of our cities, in terms of most of the common pollutants, is definitely better than it was the year before.\ But. Train said, \the water situation is more mixed.\ The best that can be said is that \we are holding our own\ on water pollution control, Train said. § iRa Bomb Goes Off; By COLIN BAKER BELFAST (UPI-Dozens of persons were injured today in two separate incidents when bombs exploded in parked cars. A British army spokesman said the first blast, which injured nearly 50 persons, was the work of the Irish Republican Army (IRA). An army spokesman said a 150-pound bomb blast in an industrial area of North Belfast sent at least 49 people to the hospital suffering from cuts, bruises and shock. Witnesses at the scene said many were seriously hurt. The bomb exploded in the car at the Jennymount Industrial Estate parking lot. The spokes- man accused the IRA of misleading security officials on the location and timing of the bomb in a telephoned warning. He said the caller warned the bomb would go off in 30 minutes but the blast came 10 minutes after thei call as the area swarmed with fleeing people and troops atrying‘ to evacuate them. : \This seems a deliberate IRA attempt to cause the maximum casualties in a Protestant area,\ the army spokesman said. The residential zone around the industrial complex is mostly Protestant. _ The second blast came in a parkedcar in Maghera, County Londonderry, 40 miles west of Belfast. The explosion slightly injured two civilians and a British soldier. It wrecked the front of the local branch of the Ulster Bank and damaged 15 shops, the army said. A spokesman said troops recognized the car as one used in the hold-up of a nearby village post office earlier, became suspicious and cleared the area before the bomb went off. The new outbreak of provin- cial violence came a day after army troops moved in on foot and in armored cars to smash Dog Sniffs Out Drugs; 2 Arrested BUFFALO, N.Y: (UPID-Two persons were arrested and 45 pounds of marijuana seized at the Buffalo International Air- port Sunday after Erie County authorities received a tip from Tucson, Ariz., police that the il- legal \pot\\ was being shipped here. A German shepherd named \Duke\ sniffed out the mari- juana in two lockers while the - two suspects waited for their luggage at the airline terminal. When the two Niagara Falls _ residents, Thomas Mang and Ariene Bale, both 21; claimed the lockers they were arrested, sheriff's deputies said. They were charged with felony pos- - session of a dangerous drug Mang lives at 2911. Ferry St.; Miss Bale at 33 Nineteenth St. Deaths COTRISS, MRS. MARY E. Injured barricades of burning cars, trucks and buses Protestants erected in five Belfast areas. The Protestants set up new barriers after the onslaught but removed them after an uneasy truce was negotiated. An army spokesman said it was the most serious confronta- tion with Northern Ireland's Protestant majority in three years. The mobs behind the barricades hurled stones, bot- tles, sticks and taunts against the troops, who were accused of *'shooting indiscriminately\ during the charge. $350 in Fines; He Takes Jail ALBION -A 23-year-old Kendall man, John A. Walls, of Carr Road, will be spending the next 100 days in the Orleans County Jail in lieu of $350 in fines t levied Sunday morning in Albion Village Court after he pleaded guilty to four traffic violations. Charged with driving while intoxicated, operating an unregistered motor vehicle, - operating without insurance and while his driving license was revoked. Walls received the sentence from Justice Harmon Ries after the defendant was picked up earlier that morning. Friday night, a mistrial was declared in the trial of Milton E. Garrand, of Rochester charged with driving v.Aaile intoxicated. Following the mistrial, brought about when the court ran out of prospective jurors, Garrand was allowed to plead guilty to a 'reduced charge of driving while impaired. He was fined $100 and his driving license was suspended for 60 days by the village justice. Connecticut Assembly Ponders Abortion Bill HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) - The Connecticut General Assem- bly today takes up a measure which would permit abortions only to save a woman's life. The bill, backed by Gov. Thom- as J. Meskill. is similar to a. 112-year-old statute declared un- constitutional by a federal court. The Public Health and Safety Committee sent .the measure to the Assembly floor on a 16 8 vote Friday. - Several legislative leaders said the bill faces amendments. The provisions of the proposed bill are very similar to the 1860 statute, ruled unconstitutional in a 2-1 decision by a federal court panel April 18. a Representatives of women who joined in \Women vs. Con- necticut,\ the suit that forced the federal court decision, con- demned any statute similar to the old law. . Any measure containing the same provisions, which they - contend abrogated \freedom of choice,\ would face a court test, ties Union also opposes the bill. Serving The Lake Plainszi MEDINA, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972 _ nd A Beautiful Sunday How To Spe i a ¥ AL Country- Orlea ns, ol, Abe _ - - ~ t - THAT HISTORIC WATERWAY- While bright sun sent temperatures up to the mid-80s Sunday and people streamed to golf courses, parks, to favorite fishing spots...and many nature spots, there were those who picked the water route. A graceful sloop was snapped passing under the State St. bridge--followed by an outboard and the per- fect way to acquire a sun tan. perfect can a Sunday be?\ - (J-R Photos) In all, everybody just said: \How Senate Race Fifth Candidate The number of Republican candidates for the nomination to succeed Senator Earl W. Brydges in the State Senate has increased to five with the an- nouncement by Richard M. Barn and Shed Lost In Fires Nelson, a resident of North Tonawanda, but operator of the \Brown Jug\ in Niagara Falls, that he had filed qualifying petitions with the Secretary of State. 3 The 28-year-old conservative Republican is a graduate of Lewiston Porter High School holds a B.S. degree in Business Administration from the State University at Buffalo. He is married to the former Nancy Harrington of North Tonawanda, a schoolteacher at Starpoint Central High School. He is a member of the Lewiston First ALBION - A 75x100 foot barn Presbyterian Church and the on Route 104 in the Town Of Niagara Falls Country Club. . Gaines containing two autom0- This makes four candidates biles, farm equipment and tools from Niagara County Treasurer was destroyed Saturday night by Lioyd H. Paterson and County fire, according to the Orleans Legislators Wilfred G. Miles and County Sheriff's Department. 'Cause of the blaze is still under County Chairman Curtis Lyman . H. William Fedder. Republican investigation. The barn was own- of Albion is the lone Orleans ed by Jesse Downey one-and-a-half story The fire, requiring the services of the Albion and Carlton Fire ents, started in the west Departm side of the barn, Sheriff's depw ! ties said. The Sheriff's Department also reported that fire destroyed. son and Sheriff's deputies be and was a candidate. structure' _ With the primary election ° three weeks' away Tuesday, June 13, the campaign throughout the senatorial district is moving into an accelerated pace and is expected to be a «fite completed a rare academic \hat trick\ Sunday at Boston University. Jaffee, 25, who has been ac- cepted as an intern at the BU University Hospital, picked up his bachelor of arts, doctor of philosophy and medical degrees all at one time. lively one from now until | Waal an primary day. 18x9 foot shed on the Hindsburg ‘ and Holley Roads in the Town of Murray at 4 a.m. today. 'The shed belonged to Jake Patter- Academic Hat Trick\ - ha: woke a te mas Is Rare drea . sell “£13;le Albany, N. Y., GISTER Niagara, Genesee rrives Summit Talks Expected - To Be 'Most Intensive' By STEWART HENSLEY UPI Diplomatic Reporter MOSCOW (UPI) -President Nixon arrived in Moscow today for the start of intensive week- long summit talks with Soviet leaders on arms control, space, trade and possibly Vietnam and the Middle East. American and Soviet flags flapped under gray sky and Moscow's warmest day of the year -81 degrees -as Nixon descended from his presidential jet, The Spirit of ©76, at Moscow's Vnukovo II airport. 'He was greeted by band music and military honor guards that marked the first visit in peacetime by an American chief executive to Russia. ' Headung the welcoming party of 300 were Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, Premier Alexei: N. Kosygin, and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. The Communist Party sekreta- ry general Leonid I. Brezhnev was not at planeside. This was described simply as a matter of protocol. ° The President and his party rode by limousine through 17 miles of bunting-decorated streets to the Kremlin fortress in the heart of Moscow. Nixon said before leaving Salsburg, Austria, where he made a 36-hour rest stop in a fairyland castle atmosphere, that he expected the summit talks to be \the most intensive ... I have ever participated in on substantive matters.\ | But there were indications the talks might not produce the immediate accord on arms control that had been expected. The Nixon arrival was seen live on both American and Soviet television. The American television networks picked up the Russian TV pictures and interposed their own commen- taries. | - . Tass, the official Soviet news agency, also gave unusually fast treatment to the arrival. Tass commented, \It is diffi- cult to overestimate the signifi- cance of this visit. Moscow television devoted 25 minutes to the live arrival ceremonies. f There were a few smiles but no traditional bearhugs of greeting for Nixon from Krem- lin leaders. Kosygin, hardly a smiler at the best of times, offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs. Nixon took into both arms a bouquet of red flowers. , Diplomats noted the absence at the airport of Brezhnev, the leader judged more equal than his equals on the Soviet Union's 15-man ruling Politburo. He had generally been expected to be present. About 200 Russian workers, bused to the airport, dutifully waved U.S. flags but did not shout or smile. The Nixons were to be guests at a dinner in the Grand Kremlin palace in the evening. The first talks bezween Nixon \224 Gene .from the airport to and Brezhnev were planned at 4° a.m. EDT Tuesday. Mrs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule called for a visit to a secondary school, a ride on the Moscow subway and a tea. Nixon came to Moscow 84 days after he ended the first trip to China by a U.S. President and 14 days following his order to blockade by mines North Vietnam's harbors. Despite the American-Soviet discord over Vietnam and the Middle East, the successors of Ivan the Terrible, Péter the Great, V. I. Lenin and Josef Stalin took pains to put a happy face on Moscow. Red: and red-white-and-blue bunting decorated the route the Kremlin. Women in Babushka scarves had scrubbed off the traffic signs, and residents of apartment houses along the limousine route - had , been ordered not to hang their wash from balconies. The President's sleek jet, which he named The Spirit of '76 in anticipation of America's 200th birthday in 1976, set down at 8:55 am. EDT. A light shower fell a few minutes before the President's arrival. But the - weather cleared. The official welcoming party, headed by Premier Alexei M. Kosygin and Pres- ident Nikolai Podnorgy, walk- edsout to . the big plane bareheaded and coatless to greet the visitor. - First to greet Nixon at the foot of the steps from the Spirit of '76 was Podnorgy, with Kosygin standing alongside. Vodnorgy and Kosygin then shook hands with Mrs. Nixon, who was handed a bouquet of flowers. Following them off the plane were Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Henry A. Kissinger. , Possible Delay As Nixon relaxed in Sunday Salzburg's ancient Alpine splen- dor, his security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, warmed of a possible delay developing in the arms talks. His comments appeared to be an attempt to . make the public aware of the chance that the long-expected accord might not be signed and sealed during Nixon's coming week in the Soviet Union. The Strategic Arms Limita- tion Talks have been going on since November, 1969, in an effort to work out a ceiling on Soviet and American offensive and defensive missile stores. Sources at the current session of the talks in Helsinki reported Sunday that negotiators were having difficulty working out details and said some loose ends involving offensive wea- pons still had not been wrapped up. . The talks were to continue today. > Kissinger told a news briefing he was reasonably confident an agreement would be worked. fli‘ifléaffi er Sunny and warm through Tuesday. Ma clear and cooler tonight, low 40 to 45. Wi light north to northeast. PRICE 10 C out; but he said one major issue involving offensive wea- pons had not been completed and there was no certainty un agreement would be| nailed down during Nixon's stay. - Kissinger also said the U. S. bombing of North Vietnam and - the blockade of that ports would continue Nixon is holding, the sessions. He added that the President was aware lof peti- tions from millions of i would try to bring the matter up during his discussions with photographs Sunday w teen-age girl in a group outside the 18th Century 1 Palace where he f night. Later in the day joined Austrian Chancellor' Bruno Kreisky for lunch at the 2,400- foot level on Gaisberg Mountain above the city. f But the visit was not! without its violence. Antiwar demon- strators shouting \Nixon-mur- derer'' stormed the airport before the presidential party arrived Saturday and police charged with night sticks swinging to clear the (runway. - Sunday's only violence oc- curred around the press head- quarters where réporters watched as one youhg man pulled down an Ameri¢an flag. Shot With Revolver | ALBION - A 39-year-old Me- dina woman was shot in the lower right leg early, Sunday morning in the parking area out- side the Brick Wall tavern at Childs on Ridge Rd. |, Troopers said Lucy Poole, of 129 Starr St., Medina, was the victim and was taken t<%> Medina Memorial Hospital for |removal of the .22 caliber bullet. It was reportedly inflicted by! Samuel Tyson of Newport Plazé, Albion around 4 a.m. with a small re- volver. ~ He has been charged {with un- lawful possession of the gun and reckless endangermenti Admits Theft In Hartland LOCKPORT - Karl F. Boyer Jr., 22, of 3271 Hosmer Rd., , Gasport, pleaded guilty Friday to attempted third degree bur- glary and petit larceny. County: Judge Charles J. Hannigan set June 13 for sentencing. Boyer had been indicted for third degree burglary and petit larceny in a Nov. 19, 1971 entry at the Snell, Service| Station, Ridge Rd., Hartland. Eight tires, 20 boxes of shotgun shells and two fire extinguishers were BEEHIVErEIti was a fine week end and as a result the attendance at the 1972 Scout, O-Rama at Kenan Center, Lockport, was around 5 ,000. Booths ranging all the way from rope making, sea scouting, nature craft, ecology, camp activites, electronics, gun cy l e a safety, and dozens of other subjects lined the big arena. Over 20 booths were spon- -_ sored bx 'Orleans County and Middleport units. ~- (J-R Photo) ' .