Tony Knight -Li. ood evening A Memler of the Gannett Group Pensacola, Florida, Friday Afternoon, September 10, 1971 82nd Year No. 178 Two Sections 22 Pages 15 Cents Ex-Kon Official Arrested in Pontiac mm SEMINOLE POW-WOW: Dr. J. Stanley Marshall and his pretty wife, Shirley, will help the Florida State University Alumni Club kickoff the '71 football season at a pre-game party at Downtown Ramada Fnn tonight Real estator Ronald Swaine, president of the club, expects several hundred FSU supporters to welcome the Marshalls Saturday afternoon Seminole Booster buses will head for Mobile and the FSU-University of Southern Mississippi game Among the Pensacolians aboard will be the Ted Scarritts, the Tom Scarritts, Jim Aikens, Don Rushings, Ralph Atwells, Terry Busbees, Ed Franks, the Ronnie Blues, the Walter Conrads, the John Careys, the Tommy Tuckers, the Ernie Ma-gahas, Al Millers, Dr.
Gene Bowman, Bill Gah-lenbeek, J. T. Carey, Tommy Ratchford After the game the goup will come back to the Downtown Ramada for a "victory party" Others aboard the bus include Mark Jones, Bert Bevis, the Gerald McArthurs, Richard Broughton, William S. Rowley, Walt Coggins, the John Halls, City Councilman John Frankel and his wife, Dr. Phil Levine, Dr.
and Mrs. Bill Parda, Bill Juarez, the Dick Clarks, the Gordon Jerniagans, Margaret Villar, Dick Gamble, Jim Jackson, Theresa Nickerson, Pat Donnelly, Richard Worsnop, Vern Muss, Jim and Sarah Zinn, Randy and Barbara Mager. 0 le i net Caution urn USM BOOSTERS: Woodham High football assistant coach Jame Currie, president of the USM Alumni Club, will head the cheering section for the Southerners The Pensacolians will have a pre-game party with the Mobile Alumni Club Saturday at the Town House on Mobiles famous Government Street. sftltesfv COMMAND: Lt. Cmdr.
Ronald Weldon Martin, son of the Fred Martins of Gulf Breeze, has been transfered to Barbados, West Indies where he will command the American naval forces on the island for two years The officer, and his wife, Jordon, and their two sons, have been living on Patuxent River, Md. here he was an instructor. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vocal and occasionally violent opposition to court-ordered integration-by-busing plans has continued in some Northern and Southern cities although fewer parents kept their children out of school in many districts. In Pontiac, where tensions have run high since 10 school buses were bombed Aug. 30 FBI agents arrested a former Ku Klux Klan official and five others Thursday and charged them with conspiracy in that incident.
Police arrested 13 others in demonstrations and rock-throwing incidents, bringing to 38 the number arrested in antibusing protests since Pontiac schools opened Tuesday. Police Chief William Hanger said he thought the conspiracy charges would calm the com-m i Nevertheless, the NAACP said it would petition the U.S. District Court in Detroit today to assign federal marshals to insure order. Officials said schools in Pontiac had reported the same 28 per cent absenteeism rate as Wednesday. In Savannah, where a parent boycott has kept thousands of children home since schools opened under busing orders a week ago, attendance rose Thursday by 215 over the PEOPLE: Royal Package Stores owner Bob Miller got a "good guy" tribute from Multiple Sclerosis Society for his donation he turned over cocktail hour proceeds for a day to the West Florida chapter Kiwanian Charles May is moving to Tampa Pensacola High graduate Charles Haveard Jr.
has gone to Eatern Washington State College where he plans to major in law John Braun is WCOA's new music director He came here from Louisville, Ky. Turn to GOOD EVENING Page 2A JUST FLAKED OUT Walking around in the hot sun with a fur coat on is tough enough even without having to provide entertainment for specta tors, so Stanley Park's twosome just flake out and yearn for chilly weather in Vancouver, B. C. The two polar bears have a nice cool pool to swim around in and exercise, but most of the Summer days are spent in serene somnolence. (Pensacola News-AP Wirepholo) Chiles Waits TornadQQS Hit rLsacolaoNewg Instant Editorial Gumey Terms Fern Drenches Galveston Area Inside The News The U.S.
Dollar remains stable on Foreign Markets. Page 4A Amusements 3B Editorials 4A Billy Graham 9A Horoscope fiA Bridge 5A Living 8A Classified 4-12B Sports 1-4B Comics 6A Television 7A Crossword 6A To Your Health SA Deaths 10A Weather 2A I '1 Talk mueswne See where the U.S. Senate is planning to spend $6 billion in the "poverty fight" the next two years? If they keep spending at that rate there will be plenty of poverty to go around all right. previous day total. Still, about 500 angry parents hanged and burned in effigy the Chatham County School Board chairman.
Julian C. Halligan, at an ihiising rally. Other parents blocked a suburban elementary school entrance until police ordered them to move. Mayor John P. Rousakis told a delegation of the protesting parents who sought him at City Hall that he too opposed longdistance busing but that they must pursue legislative methods to stop it.
Boston school officials said far fewer parents were refusing to comply with the busing and transfer program aimed at achieving racially-balanced school enrollment. About 200 parents had at- Turn to BUS-Page 7A 6 Explosions FREEPORT, Tex. (AP) -Hurricane Fern hit the shore over mostly open country today but drenched Galveston and surrounding areas with heavy rains and spawned two tornadoes and lightning which set six house ablaze. Two Army trucks were sent about 3 a.m. CDT today to help evacuate the remaining residents from the 300 homes in Matagorda where the beach road was under water.
"We tried to get them to leave Thursday but some of them wouldn't leave until the water started rising, and then they called for help," said Deputy Sheriff Walter Kilgore of Matagorda. Thousands of persons had the Galveston area Thursday as the storm churned offshore, The storm appeared to be weakening over land as winds gusting up to 60 miles an hour were reported near Freeport, Allen Jacoby, assistant chief meteorologist at the National Turn to FERN Page 7 A Snipers Active Against Tommies More about the President and his speech on Page 2A. By LEE HICKLING Gannett Newi Service WASHINGTON Sen. Edward J. Gumey, said President Nixon's economic speech to a joint meeting of Congress Thursday was a "milestone," but Sen.
Lawton Chiles, said he's waiting to see what happens next before he endorses the President's program for economic stability. "I enjoyed the President's presentation and can generally support his proposals," Chiles said. "But he did not tell us how he plans to implement his uroposals, and I will be watching very closely what form his nlans take before I make a voting decision." Chiles, who introduced a wage-price control bill just before Congress recessed in August, said he is "happy to join the President in urging full cooperation with the national effort to curb inflation." Gumey called the Nixon talk "a s'gnificant milestone in the nation's political and economic history. "Now it is time for Congress to follow through." the Florida Republican said. "This program is one of the most bipartisan efforts we have seen in modern times.
It's a good prescription to cure the nation's economic ills. I believe those in Congress who have the nation's best interest at heart will act quickly to support the program." Rep. Lou Frey, said he especially agreed with the President that Congress must act quickly to pass the administration's tax proposals before the 90-day wage-price freeze ends. If it does not, he said, "the sacrifices of the American people will have been in vam." Frey said he was delighted that the President, in effect, "told the world the U.S. was no longer going to be a patsy." We have spent $200 billion on foreign aid and defense since the end of World War II, and it is time to cut back, he said.
The Winter Park Republican said he was "a little surprised" but pleased to hear that the freeze will end after 90 days. it BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) Snipers fired at British troops in Londonderry End saboteurs set off six bomb blasts in Belfast early today. Security forces were on full alert for a major offensive promised by militant "provisionals" of the Irish Republican Army in their efforts to overthrow British rule in Northern Ireland. The snipers sprayed 50 bul lets at an army post in London Turn to SNIPERS Page 7A n. i xi Jk if I I 1 BRITISH AMBASSADOR GEOFFREY JACKSON freed by Tupamaro guerrillas (Pensecol.
News-AP Wirephoto) I Held by Guerrillas 245 Days assador Released Amb rifish 1 "Allende said to me: 'For your ears alone, Jackson will shortly be "The reason why I kept this absolutely undisclosed was because I knew this would obviously affect Jackson's safety and because I respected the fact this was confidential information." The Tupamaro pamphlets signalling Jackson's release also hinted that the guerrillas would end their terrorist activities and instead work actively for a coalition of five leftist parties that is challenging the conservative government of President Jorge Pacheco Areco in general elections Nov. 28. But several hours after Jackson was released the government announced that for the first time in Uruguay's history the army would join police in the battle against the Tupamaros. This had been the sole responsi-' bility of the police before, although soldiers had been used to search for kidnap victims. The priest said he asked Jackson if the authorities should be notified and the diplomat replied: "No, I have to wait here until they come for me from the embassy." Police said embassy officials arrived 10 minutes later, after the British Embassy received an anonymous phone call giving the diplomat's whereabouts.
Jackson stayed in the church about 50 minutes, Father Jose Maria said, and during that, time he confessed, received Holy Communion and gave thanks for his release. Embassy sources said Jackson phoned the Foreign Office in London to report on the circumstances of his captivity, and also spoke to his wife, Evelyn, who returned to London from Montevideo two days after the ambassador was kidnaped. In Washington, Mrs. Hart said she had a private meeting with Allende in Columbia on Sept. 1.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) After eight months in captivity, British Ambassador Geoffrey Jackson was released Thursday night on 'the steps of a church by his guerrilla kidnapers. He went inside, received Communion and offered a prayer of thanks. He had been held in a dark, underground "people's jail" for 245 days, the longest confinement in the recent spate of political kidnapings. But doctors said the 56-year-old diplomat was in good health, and after a physical examination he went to the British Embassy to rest. The leftist Tupamaros guerrillas, who had seized Jackson on a Montevideo street Jan.
8, declared in pamphlets scattered at a leftist political rally Wednesday night that they had granted amnesty to the diplomat. There was no further need to hold the ambassador, the pamphlets said, because the Tupamaros had already won their "fight for political prisoners," a reference to the mass jailbreak Monday of 106 Tupamaros. In Washington, a Labor member of British Parliament, Hart, said she has been told by President Salvador Allende of Chile on Sept. 1 that Jackson would be released shortly. But there was no immediate indication that the Marxist president played a role in the diplomat's release.
A priest at the Church of St. Francis of Assisi, in the Montevideo suburb of Nuevo Paris, told authorities Jackson knocked on the door at 7:55 p.m. He was blindfolded, freshly shaven and wearing the "same light suit he had on when he was kidnaped," the Rev. Jose Maria said. "He looked very well.
If I had met him in the street, I wouldn't have recognized him. He was fine, spiritually perfect and normal." A CONCERT GOERS President Nixon leaves First Lady on each arm. They are his wife, Pat, the Concert Hall at the John F. Kennedy Center left, and Mamie Eisenhower. (Story on 10A) for the Performing Arts Thursday night with a tP.ns.coii n.w-ap wirsphot.).