The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 233, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 9, 1973 Page: 6 of 6
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Page 6 THE CUERO RECORD Tam.. Ori. 9, |973JiMU».»iiiJHiuuiu»atiin»»mn»»»immj.iimi»»unnmi»nnut.aiiuui>i.unMinH»«m»|m»«»»»»^»»i|»iiii.
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SPOU H.H I ON THF, WOK I II
Israel Military Machine
Continues To Roll In Sinai
By United Pres* International
Israel's military machine
battled to ‘ break and destroy”
the remains of Egyptian and
Syrian armored might in the
Sinai Desert and the Golan
Heights today, taking the
fighting into Arab territory on
the fourth day of the war.
Military spokesmen in Tel
Aviv said Israeli tanks and
warplanes pushed a decimated
Egyptian armored force up
against the eastern bank of the
Sues Canal and cleared the
Golan Heights of all but “a few
pockets of insignificant, isola-
ted” Syrian units.
Arab communiques, in sharp
contrast, said Egyptian and
Syrian troops were still advance
ing in the Golan Heights and
the Sinai and had dealt a
crushing blow to Israel’s air
force and tank troops.
, Egypt said its troops were
pouring across the 102-mlle-long
canal and "we have forces on
all Sinai and in the depths of
Sinai.” Syria said its tank-led
forces were still deep in the
Israeli-occupied Golan and had
dealt a devastating blow to the
Israeli air force.
Oh tha Diplomatic Front
On the diplomatic front,
American Ambassador to the
United Nations John Scali
proposed a Middle East cease-
fire with both sides returning to
lines held before Saturday’s
start of the war. He said
Monday the U.S. plan would
open the way to solving “the
tense and cancerous situation
confronting us.”
In Cairo, however, the semi-
official newspaper A1 Ahram
said today the American
suggestion was “totally un-
worthy of consideration” and
“can only be interpreted as an
attempt to back Israel.”
The Israeli military com-'
mand Monday night reported
destroying hundreds of Arab
tanks and more than 100
warplanes on the northern and
southern fronts so far in the
fighting—the fourth Arab-Isra-
eli war in 25 years.
It said Israeli warplanes
carried the battle across the
Suez Canal in “massive” raids
against an antiaircraft missile
complex, military outposts and
an oil depot around Port Said.
Cairo claimed that civilians
targets also were bit by the
Israeli raids
Units Push Into Syria
The Israeli army radio said
Monday night Israeli armored
units have pushed across the
Golan Heights into Syrian
territory in pursuit of fleeing
Arab tanks, “but not sig-
nificantly” —apparently mean-
ing they did not penetrate deep
into Syrian territory.
However, as dawn broke on
the fourth day of the war
Egyptian and Syrian com-
muniques reported destroying a
total of 162 Israeli aircraft,
more than 150 tanks, 25
military outposts and six
gunboats with "heavy losses of
life.” The Arabs claimed taking
125 prisoners.
While the fighting raged in
the Middle East, there were
these diplomatic developments:
—In Washington, U.S. Secre-
tary of State Henry Kissinger
in a speech Monday night
reminded the Soviet Union, the
Arabs’ superpower ally, that
“detente cannot survive irre-
sponsibility.”
Breahnev Accuses Israel
—In Moscow, Soviet Commu-
nist party chief Leonid Brezh-
nev said Monday night in
Moscow Israel was the “ag-
gressor,” but he avoided using
the strong language and threats
of intervention Moscow em-
ployed during the 1967 war.
—The White House said
Monday President Nixon per-
sonally contacted Brezhnev
over the weekend to discuss the
Middle East situation. There
was no report on the outcome.
Gen. David Elazar, Israel’s
chief of staff, told a news
conference in Tel Aviv Monday
night, “We managed to push
almost all of the Syrian forces
to the cease-fire line and some
of the Egyptian forces, al-
though there still are some
Egyptian forces on this side of
the Suez Canal.”
“We are now in the middle of
the battle,” he said. “We
continue our counterattack, we
shall continue it tomorrow and
we shall break and destroy
completely all the attacking
forces.”
Justice Department To
Answer Questions Today
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
BALTIMORE, MD. (UPI) —
The Justice Department says it
is willing to answer questions
> under oath from Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew’s lawyers about
news leaks. But it supports
several reporters who say they
are not willing to do the same.
Lawyers for the department
and the reporters filed separate
responses Monday to Agnew’s
subpoenas attempting to force
them to make sworn deposi-
tions about what the vice
president contends is a “mali-
cious campaign” of news leaks
against him.
Meanwhile, the special feder-
al grand jury here begins its
third week of receiving evi-
dence about the allegations that
Agnew received kickbacks from
contractors and a rchitects
while he was Baltimore county
executive and Maryland gover-
nor.
The reporters asked U.S.
District Court in Baltimore to
delay from Thursday until Oct.
18 the date on which they must
appear with their stories and
notes. It a delay is obtained,
they are expected to move by
Monday to quash the subpo-
enas, probably on ground of
alleged violation of the 1st
Amendment.
The Justice Department
handed a 17-page memoran-
dum, signed by Solicitor Gener-
al Robert H. Bork, to U.S.
District Court Judge Walter E.
Hoffman in the Washington
area Monday. Hoffman, of
Norfolk, Va., was assigned to
the case when all nine federal
fudges from Maryland disquali-
fied themselves.
The department said all 134
employes who might have
knowledge of the investigation
had signed affidavits denying
they were the source of any
information that appeared in
the news media But it said it
has willing to permit senior
^Kclals to give dopoeKiona
enter oath| A.
“The only plausible explana-
tion of the news leaks that have
plagued this investigation, as
well as many other matters of
similar news worthiness in
modern times, is that they have
come from a wide variety of
sources,” the department said.
As to the reporters, the
department said, "We have
supported the right of the
courts to the testimony of
newsmen when its relevance
and importance were plain. We
have never supported incur-
sions into this sensitive area for
the mere purpose of conducting
fishing expeditions, and it is
plain that that is all that is
involved here. ”
The department said that to
show “good faith” it was also
taking these steps:
—It will agree to a protective
order, applying to all parties, to
prohibit disclosure of the
evidence.
—It has filed with the court a
report by Acting Assistant
Attorney General Glen E.
Pommerening on his investiga-
tion of news leaks.
’ —It will offer a sealed
summary of evidence obtained
thus far on the subject to
Hoffman for his private inspec-
tion.
Destruction of Tanks Cited
He said the Israeli forces
destroyed “hundreds, many'
hundreds, of Syrian tanks on
the Golan heights and many
hundreds of tanks in Sinai.”
“The troops are moving from
our territories against the other
side,” he said when asked if
Israel planned to march oo
Damascus. “We shall see in the
next days the directions and the
results.”
Elazar said he’d only predict
“one thing—we will continue to
attack and we will continue to
hit them and we will break
their bones.”
Israeli troops rumbling in
tanks toward the Golan
Heights, however, were more
concrete in predicting an attack
against the Syrian capital.
“Come back tomorrow,” one
tank sergeant told newsmen.
“We’U take you to Damascus
with us.”
On the Southern Front
On the southern front, Egypt
said Monday night Israeli
warplanes bombed civilian as
well as military targets in the
raids against Port Said, a
petroleum port on the northern
end of the Suez Canal.
Egyptian communiques said
“a number of civilians were
killed” in the attack. “This is
the first time a city in Egypt
has been hit, and the enemy
will bear the consequences of
this operation, ’ ’ Cairo said.
Egypt said its troops raided
an oil drilling complex in the
Israeli-occupied Sinai and set
fire to installations “to stop the
enemy from using the Sinai
oil.”
A Cairo communique said
Egyptian forces captured most
of Qantara along the eastern
bank of the canal in hand-to-
hand fighting and seized 30
Israeli prisoners.
Pockets Still Remain
Ma). Gen. Ezzedine Mukhtar,
the Egyptian military spokes-
man, said Monday night “four
or five” pockets of Israeli
resistance still remained in the
city. He said Egypt’s Sinai
administrative command would
be transferred to Qantara.
Egyptian authorities went on
television Monday night to
interview two men claimed to
be Israeli prisoners.
One, identified as Dr. Van
Daniel, 27, an army physician,
said he and some of his
comrades abandoned an Israeli
outpost in the Sinai after they
ran out of food and water “in
order to be seized by the
Egyptians.”
The other, identified as Lt.
Erli Gor, 22, a pilot shot down
during a reconnaisance flight
over the canal, said he didn’t
think the Israelis still had air
superiority over the Arabs.
Gunboats Attack Minesweeper
In other southern fighting, an
Israeli communique said Mon-
day night naval gunboats
attacked an Egyptian mines-
weeper in the Gulf of Suez
south of the canal and the Arab
vessel “went up in flames.”
On the northern front, Israeli
military sources said warplanes
and ground troops destroyed
half of an estimated 800 Syrian
tanks that pushed into the
Golan Heights Saturday at the
start of the fighting.
“The Syrians are openly in
retreat and our forces are
racing after them and destroy-
ing them,” an Israeli military
correspondent reported from
the front.
Syrian military sources in
Damascus, however, said Mon-
day night the Israelis were
“telling lies” and Arab troops
still controlled a big chunk of
central Golan, a rough, hilltop
area used to shell Israeli
settlements before the 1967 six-
day war.
WHEEL CHAIRS • WALKERS
COMMODES FOR THE ELDERLY
CONVALESCENT A HANDICAPP-
ED._
Medicare Information
Medicare will cover the rental of
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seek as. . . .
tor further information regaraii%
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REUSS’ PHARMACY
Record
CEE
In Brief
Teen-ager Sought In
Multiple Ranch Killings
(MIDEAST) Undated — The
Israeli military machine battles
to “break and destroy” last
remaining Egyptian and Syrian
pockets of resistance ip Sinai
and Golan Heights. The bulk of
the fighting appeared to be' in
Arab territory on fourth day of
fourth Middle East war U N
Security Council meets to hear
American plea' for end to
hostilities and return to the
cease-fire lines prior to Satur-
day.
(NIXON) Washington —Presi-
dent Nixon steps up his
diplomatic initiatives, hoping to
form a broad, collective front
including the Soviet Union and
China to restore pea6e to the
Middle East, according, to his
aides.
(AGNEW) Baltimore, Md.—
The Justice Department says it
is willing to allow its officials to
be questioned under oath by
Vice President Agnew’s law-
yers about alleged news leaks.
Reporters under subpoena by
the Vice President are not
willing.
(FOUR) Helmville, Mont —
Officers set up highway check-
points in rugged Continental
Divide in their search for
heavily armed teen-ager sus-
pected of killing four persons at
a dude ranch.
(VIET) Saigon—U.S. con-
tracting company appeals to
international truce team to
probe apparent kidnaping of
American security adviser and
two Vietnamese who worked for
firm.
(OIL) Vienna-Oil talks be-
tween six Persian Gulf states
demanding two-thirds increase
in prices and major Western
petroleum countries go into
second day with no end to
discussions in sight.
(WATERGATE) Washington
—Michael McMinoway, other-
wise known as “Sedan Chair
II,” has told Senate investiga-
tors be infiltrated the 1972
presidential campaigns of three
Democratic senators for pur-
poses of spying and political
sabotage. He testifies in public
session at 10 a m. EDT today.
(EDICON) Mexico City-
Herbert G. Klein, former White
House communications direc-
tor, says Watergate violated
American tradition and law but
that over-obsession with the
scandal “can be a greater
danger to the nation than the
evils we seek to eradicate.”
HELMVILLE, Mont (UPI) -
Law enforcement officers set
highway checkpoints along the
rugged Continental Divide
today in their search for a
heavily armed teen-ager sus-
pected of killing four persons at
a dude ranch
Sheriff’s deputies said Roger
Caryl, 17, who liked to be called
“Tex McCord” after a fabled
19th-century bandit, was carry-
ing several weapons including a
7mm rifle which “could blow a
man’s head off at 500 yards.”
Montana Highway Patrolmen,
deputies and Fish and Game
Department wardens were sta-
tioned every two miles along a
north-south road between U.S.
12 and Montana 200 in the
manhunt.
Sheriff David Collings said
Caryl is suspected of killing the
four persons Sunday, possibly
Investment Chatter
NEW YORK (UPI) - “While
portents of a more hospitable
money market environment
triggered the turnaround in
stocks, the advance is likely to
be protracted as valuations of
depressed stocks move toward
more nearly normal levels,”
says Standard A Poor’s Corp.
The recent rally may be only
the early stages of an extended
bull market, the firm continues.
It advises investors to accumu-
late more holdings.
“One of the last bugaboos
which impeded'the initiation of
a sustainable bull market trend
has been the trend of short-
term interest rates,” according
to Harris, Upham A Co.
Although it still is to early to
tell whether the Federal Re-
serve Board has eased off in its
monetary restraint, “the up-
ward momentum in rates
appears to be spending itself,”
the firm says. And the recent
sharp drop in 90-day Treasury
bills suggests a major stock
market low should be at hand,
it adds.
Cyclical stocks have made a
strong showing in the rally that
sprang up several weeks ago,
Alexander Hamilton Institute,
Inc. says. “Health fundamen-
tals'augur well for additional
gains in cyclical issues,” the
firm says, but glamor stocks
continue to be ignored. In light
of the current vigor of the
market with its heavy volume
and favorable breadth figures,
the firm counsels investors to
acquire quality cyclical stocks
before they become overpriced.
because be was ordered to bury
a dog he had shot to death The
youth was employed at the
dude ranch where the killings
took place.
Collings said Caryl first shot
Samuel Akins. 42, and his son,
Steven. 18, with whom he
shared a cabin at the Whitetail
Ranch. Then, according to the
officer, he killed the manager,
John Miller, 23. and the cook.
Ruby Judd, 62.
Witnesses who scattered
when the violence erupted told
investigators that Caryl told his
victims: “I have a few hellos
for you” and “Here's a hello
for you,” then blasted them
with a shotgun.
Deputies said Caryl spent the
night after the shooting in an
unoccupied ranchhouse near
this small southwest Montana
community. They said he
severed telephone lines there.
- Planes and tracking dogs
were pressed into service in the
search
Caryl, an Eagle Scout, came
to Montana in August after
leaving his home in Decatur,
111.
His father, James, 49, a
mechanic at a farm implement
manufacturing firm, told re-
porters at Decatur: “If they
have to shoot him, they’ll just
have to. I hope they get him
before he hurts anyone else.
“Everytime the phone rings
we hope that we’ll get word
that they’ve caught him.”
Our home is a sanctuary of privacy. The outside world of
unseemly warmth and distracting noise can never disturb
the serenity of our beautiful home, nor the comfort and
privacy so important during bereavement.
FREUND FUNERAL HOME
t»-2MS
MEDICARE A MEDICAID
SALES A RENTALS
KLECKA DRUG CO. ef Csers, Inc.
Downtown Cons niiniiT
CENTER PHARMACY
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Berner, Homer K. The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 233, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 9, 1973, newspaper, October 9, 1973; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1099024/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.