Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 5
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 5

Publication:
Courier-Posti
Location:
Camden, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

COURIER-POST, Camden, N.J. Wednesday, March 3. 1976 5 killed, burned in N. C. forest Mation in IMef ties in the surrounding counties to check school absentee records as a possible lead on the boys' identities.

Tyrrell County. located south of Albemarle Sound, is a sparsely populated area of farms and pine forests about 50 miles west of Nags Head. t. Patrick's Day ft Specials BEAUTIFUL SHAMROCKjjga ARRANGEMENT Cash Carry LARGER VERSIONS Delivered Anywhere -mMm" "Sfct? IcJrfif 1 pimgim Iff CASH CARRY SPECIALS GREEN CARNATIONS 50 SHAMROCK PLANT With Novelty ggC- Associated Press Tt J. SANDRA GOOD is led in chains to the Federal Building in Sacramento, where she is on trial for conspiring to mail threatening letters to a long list of people and groups, including business and government officials.

She claims they have been polluting the environment. DAFFODILS $100ABunch Pick up this delightful miniature Leprechaun Cash Carry $98 ALL MAJOR credit cards ACCEPTED' V- vis St. Patricks Day Floral arrangement with Special Novelty S4C cOP Pension fund ruling CHICAGO (AP)-In a case that could have widespread implications for private retirement plans, a U.S. District Court judge has ruled that a Teamsters Union pension fund is subject to the antifraud provisions of the Federal Securities Act. The decision could increase the government's powers to monitor possible pension fund abuses by those entrusted with handling the money.

Cop kills minister SPRING VALLEY. N.Y. AP) A police officer was under suspension after he shot and killed a minister while both were investigating a burglary alarm in adarkened church. No charges have been filed pending an investigation in the death of Rev. J.

Elmer Hausmann, pastor of the Reformed Church of Spring Valley, struck in the chest by a single bullet. 5 rich men missing NEW YORK (AP)-The management of a midtown skyscraper fears that five international businessmen who made steep downpayments on luxury apartments in the building may be dead. Officials of Olympic Towers said some of the missing men may have been killed in the Guatemalan earthquake or in the Lebanese civil war. Several were known to be traveling in South America at the time of the quake and others live in the Middle East. Lead pollutes air NEW YORK (AP)-A U.S.

District Court judge has ordered the federal Enviornmental Protection Agency to add airborne lead to its official list of air pollutants by theend of the month. The decision could lead to the collecting of data on lead, and the eventual limiting of its presence in the air. Most airborne lead is a product of auto engine exhaust. Harnessing sunlight SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--A new source of photochemical energy, a bacterial process that could one day harness sunlight to desalinate sea water, was announced Tuesday by researchers. The new-found process involves a purple pigment contained in cell membrane of bacteria found in sea water.

Surd ight cause the pigment to energize and transfer electrical particles, protons, across the membrane, the researchers said. 7 and has a very low price! Bailey begins attack on 4illegaP evidence 1 1 -v" COLUMBIA, N.C. (AP) At least four of the five persons whose bodies were unearthed in this rural, peninsula county had been bludgeoned to death before they were set afire, a state medical official said todav. However, other details of the incident remained locked in the pine forests where the bodies of two women and three boys were found in a shallow pit. Ronald Brickhouse.

Tyrrell County forestry agent, discovered the smoldering bodies Tuesday while investigating a brush fire which authorities said apparently spread from the burning bodies. Dr. Page Hudson, state medical examiner, said the bodies were those of a woman in her 60s. one in her 20s and three boys aged 6 to 15 years. He said identification "may take a few hours or a few days." The bodies were sent to Hudson's office in Chapel Hill for examination.

"The assailant or assailants apparently tried to obscure the matter by burning the bodies," Hudson said. "This resulted in only superficial burns which will not handicap our investigation." Tyrrell County Sheriff Royce Rhodes said he did not think the victims were from his county, which has some 4.000 residents. "I believe I'd have recognized them if they were from around here," he said. Rhodes said the boys were clad in pajamas, the younger woman in dungarees and a dungaree jacket and the elder woman in an overcoat with a fur collar. The bodies were crammed in a shallow pit about six feet long, three feet wide and two feet deep, officers said.

Brickhouse said he drove to the site after a woman working at a fire tower about two miles away reported smoke in the area. While walking from the fire, he noticed a mound of freshly dug dirt. There he saw two of the bodies half-buried. "I didn't really notice that good," he said. "I didn't recognize them.

I hustled out of there." The property is owned by a paper company, officials said. Rhodes said he had asked authori- Driier convicted A 38-year-old Margate man, who was shot and blinded by an off-duty Atlantic County sheriff's officer during a traffic incident May 2, was convicted Tuesday of drunken driving. The motorist, William Gordon, allegedly became abusive when he was stopped for driving erratically and speeding. He was shot by one of two officers who halted his car. ve Sport Shirts Dress Shirts Leisure Suits Vested Suits Leather Suede Jackets TOU We' ORDER BY PHONE PAT BY MAIl CALL BY PHONE WE SEND FLOWERS WORLDWIDE 1 NADDCNFIELD 151 E.

Hwy. 429-5800 SHOP AT HOME ECHELON MALL Voomees Township 429-5800 CAMDEN 116 North Broadway 966-SS00 GLOUCESTER 108 South Broadway 845-2426 oot the bring Kings he SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Patricia Hearst's defense attorneys have launched a vigorous assault against some of the most stinging evidence against her, seeking to have it stricken as the product of an illegal search. U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Carter scheduled an evidentiary hearing outside the presence of the jury today at the request of defense counsel F. Lee Bailey.

The judge predicted the hearing would take at least several hours, interrupting the prosecution's rebuttal testimony and virtually erasing any chance of sending the bank tdH -Ties robbery case to the jury by the end of the week. Bailey wants Carter to throw out the controversial "Tania Interview" as well as other documents the government contends prove Miss Hearst willingly embraced the revolutionary goalj of the Symbionese Liberation Army. The 29-page "Tania" manuscript so called for the revolutionary name Miss Hearst said the SLA gave her contains some of the defendant's handwriting and outlines her rejection of her family and her conversion to the terrorist doctrines of the SLA. Portions of the document were read to the jury during the trial. Bailey objected Tuesday when U.S.

Atty. James L. Browning Jr. attempted to read an agreement between the opposing counsels of a list of documents and notebooks found in the San Francisco apartment of SLA members William and Emily Harris, arrested within hours of Miss Hearst last Sept. 18.

"It has come to my attention that the search which we thought was made legally at the time of arrest has now been ruled illegal by a judge on the state bench," Bailey said. Some of the material, which could link Miss Hearst to planned bank robberies during her 19 months in the underground, prompted her to invoke the 5th Amendment 42 times last month. Bailey told Carter that a Superior Court judge in Los Angeles had declared the search of the Harrises' hideout illegal and asked Carter to do the same. Carter said he was aware of Judge Mark Brandler's ruling. Brandler said the FBI had the apartment under surveillance for more than 30 hours and had ample time to get a search warrant but failed to do so.

He refused to accept as evidence in the Harris assault case in Los Angeles any material found in their apartment. Browning objected to the hearing, saying the defense should have filed the motion to suppress the evidence long ago. Bailey angrily informed the prosecutor that he had been unaware that the legality of the search was in dispute. "I was unaware of the 30 hours of surveillance which moved Judge Brandler to suppress the evidence in the Harris case," said Bailey. "If we had known the facts, we certainly would have filed the motion sooner." Court was recessed 20 minutes early Tuesday to prepare for the hearing.

Railey out to fill a speaking engagement, but his associate, Al Johnson, said, "If the search and seizure were illegal, the evidence derived in that search would be stricken from the record of this case." LEGAL NOTICE Tftke Notl. that on March 8. 1976 at 9: 30 a.m. local time, at the office of Farr. Relfeteck Wolf, a Professional Corporation, 10 Wiite Horse Pike.

HadrJon Heights. New Jersey. Number 01 IK DP 1 0086, which has been Said article may be inspected at Florida Motor Court, Rio Grande. New Jersey. tS76) HERITAGE BANK, A.

CHERRY KILL Springdale Shp. Ctr. 429-5800 WOODBURY 45 Delaware St. 845-2426 NATIONAL FK. 1108 Hessian Ave.

845-0849 -Shoes body. clothes. Slacks -Sweaters If'" Mm. 3y aT YsPort ats Outerwear lPajamas Underwear- tFT" it: i-X Robes i hi, i 'j Free Life-Time Alterations lihi Cflf I WOMEN'S MEN'S CHILDREN'S $100 2Pr- 2Pr- A $1A00 $Q00 Formerly to 1.M 1 Hundreds to Choose From! Men's genuine leather 6" work boot. This store only: Mt.

Ephraim, 710 N. Black Horse Pike Open Every Night Sat. to 9:30 THE MALL AT ECHELON SOMERDALE ROAD, VOORHEES TOWNSHIP (Near Lit Bros.) Take Notice. rhatonMarch9. 1976 at9: 30a local time, at the office of Farr, ReiHteck Wolf, a Professional Corporation, 10 Mftnte Horse Pike.

Haddon Heights, New Jersey. shall sell at public sale one 1974 Ford LTD. 4 Serial Number 4F66S1 77507. which has been repossessed. Said article may be inspected at Rice Holman, 7400 Maole Avenue.

Pennsauken. New Jersey. 6.4 HERITAGE BANK. A.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Courier-Post
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Courier-Post Archive

Pages Available:
1,868,373
Years Available:
1876-2024