Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 64, Ed. 2 Thursday, May 4, 1972 Page: 4 of 12
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4. 1972 OKLAHOJ
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Now you can save fifteen cents on Jeno’s Tendercrust Pizza. Whether
it’s Sausage, Cheese, Pepperoni, or Hamburger, you’ll love it tender.
Tender coupon
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bly some small tax cuts.
Age Reduction OK'd
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Senate passed a bill
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Giraffe Debuts
TOKYO (AP) — Toshi-
ko, a spotless baby giraffe
believed to be one of three
In captivity, has made its
public debut at the Ueno
Zoo in Tokyo.
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CLEVELAND (AP) —
Suits totaling $12.1 million
were filed Wednesday
against the state of Ohio
and the
4
Of Surplus Money
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.
(AP) — Gov. Dale Bump-
ers said Wednesday his
plans for use of a state
revenue surplus include
expansion of facilities at
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Zinc Price Rises
VANCOUVER (AP)
Cbminco Ltd. says it will
increase the base selling
price of its zinc for export
to the United States by 1
cent a pound.
Interviewed recently in
their modest Paris apart-
ment, both Beate and
Serge Klarsfeld doubted
that the Gestapo chief
would be extradited.
“If there is a bad deci-
A South Vietnamese womaa rests beside Highway
1 as she flees southward from Quang Tri to Hue.
Quang Tri fell to the North Vietnamese earlier this
week, and now Hue, 47 miles south of the demilitarised
zone, is threatened. Refugees and military deserters
flowed southward from Hue today la one of Vietnam’s
biggest migrations. (AP Wirephoto)
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Confusion Aplenty
- WALLED LAKE, Mich.
(AP) — Double vision is
an occupational hazard for
teachers at Decker Ele-
mentary School where 10
sets of twins are enrolled.
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WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Senate Labor Commit-
tee Wednesday approved a
Beate Kunzel, daughter $2.95-billion child-develop-
of a Protestant working-
class family in Berlin, was
a five-year-old girl when
the Nazi Gestapo chief
sent the Jewish children to
Auschwitz.
Now a striking 33-year- cember containing such
child-care program.
But the Senate sponsors
made some concessions in
the new 1972 version in an
effort to meet Nixon's
objections.
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Indiana Tally
ing evidence that Barbie PleaSCS WallaCC
used fraudulent papers
to obtain Bolivian citizen-
ship. If his citizenship is
nullified and the Bolivian
strongman relents, Barbie
may eventually face a
war-crimes tribunal in
France, thanks to the re-
lentless prodding of a Ger-
man girl who dug up the
evidence.
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I Jdgy S CLOTHING DOWNTOWN & PENN SQUARE
The chief key to the
identification, Mrs. Klars-
feld says, came when the
International Red Cross in
Geneva, in a rarq breach
^PlZXcl
SAUSAGE
By Peter J. Bernstein
PARIS (NNS)-A diplo-
matic scandal is brewing
pver a beautiful girl, a
wanted Nazi who reported-
ly worked for the Ameri-
can Central Intelligence
Agency, and an unyielding
South American dictator.
. The Nazi, according to
Trench and German police
authorities, is a Gestapo
chief, Klaus Barbie, now
Mid to be living a rich life
in Bolivia under an as-
sumed name.
• His wartime record in
Prance, where he signed
an order transferring 41
Jewish children to the gas
chambers at Auschwitz, is
lurid enough to make
French President Georges
Pompidou demand his ex-
tradition in a formal com-
munication.
1 But Bolivian strongman
Fugos Banzer, who rode to
4»wer last year in a mili-
tary coup, has turned
•Pompidou down flat. He
claimed that Bolivia does
not have a normal extradi-
tion treaty with France and
prosecutes no crimes older
than 20 years.
Despite Banzers intransi-
gence, the Bolivian su-
preme court is weigh-
EXECUTIVE FORESIGHT!
ASTRA/73 VIRACLE SUIT
FROM HART SCHAFFNER & AAARX
The man who looks to the future shows his foresight in
the choice of an Astra/73 Virocle Suit because Hart
Schaffner & Marx projects present style trends and de-
signs this suit for seasons to come. Two button shaped
waist, scalloped pocket flaps, a center vent that rises to
a half belt at the back. A wrinkle resistant blend of Dac-
ron polyester and wool worsted keeps you cool and un-
crumpled through the warm summer days to come.
H ,
** <wn
Ki
ties Union, two in Cuyaho- or if the state refuses ex-
ga County Common pleas tradition, it will be neces-
Court and one in U.S. Dis- sary to kill him,’’ Mid
trict court here. Serbe.
Tn Kpnt Trouble livla twice in the hope of
in iveni i rounie presenting evldence t0 au-
t h o r i t i e i there and to
arouse public opinion. On
her second visit last
month, she was arrested
three times and held for
ment bill which would set expansion of facilities at and the Ohio National extensive questioning,
up the biggest federal day the University of Arkansas Guard in connection with
care program ever Medical Center and possi- the disturbance at Kent
pianned. bly some small tax cuts. State University May 4,
an antipoverty bill last De- Age Reduction OK d 1970- 0181 left four students
I a WASHINGTON (AP) - dead and nine injured.
[ The suits were filed by
Wednesday to reduce the the American Civil Liber- sion by the Bolivian courts
minimum age for mem-
bership in the Virgin Is-
lands legislature from 25
to 21 years.
/ ’I
Alabama Gov. George Wallace glances at a morn-
ing newspaper in Houston as he expresses pleasure in
his showing in the Indiana presidential primary. Be-
fore leaving for Tennessee, Wallace took a parting
shot at Sen. George McGovern’s Vietnam policy. (AP
Wirephoto) ___________________________
Panel Approves Governor Eyes Uses Suits Are Filed
Child Care Bill
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Diplomatic Scandal Brews in Paris I
of its normal secrecy over and signature under which French, who had given up
identification matters, Barbie-Altmann travelled on Barbie in 1950. Accord-
acceded to her request and to South America in 1951. ing to German records,
released the fingerprints, Mrs. Klarsfeld turned she said, French officials
identity card, photograph the information over to the had twice questioned Bar-
------bie in an American Intelli-
_____________ gence office near Augs-
berg after the the
American occupation au-
thorities refused to extra-
dite
According to the London
H Sunday Times, Barbie
worked regularly for
American as well as Bonn
Intelligence after the war.
It was while working for
the CIA, the paper said in
an article by Antony Terry
last month, that Barbie
was sentenced to death In
France.
The Gestapo chief is said
to have handed over to the
CIA for its secret files a
list of prominent French-
men who collaborated ex-
tensively with the Gestapo
during the occupation. The
French, the article said,
were not allowed by Amer-
ican authorities to question
Barbie in detail after the
war, and then only in the
presence of CIA agents.
The article added that it
may have been with CIA
help that he got his false
Red Cross passport In
1951.
Mrs. Klarsfeld is deter-
mined to keep the spotlight
on Barbie, no matter how
many obstacles bar her
way. She has gone to Bo-
old woman and married to
a French Jew, Serge
Klarsfeld, whose father ;
also died in Auschwitz, she ,
first drew international no- (
tice in 1968 when she
slapped the face of Kurt —
George Kiesinger, then
chancellor of West Germa-
ny, as a protest against his
having joined the Nazi
party in 1933.
She got a year in jail for
slapping Kiesinger, but
was released after four
months. Since then, she
and her husband have
been gathering data on the
hundreds of Nazi war
criminals who have gone
unpunished.
“All these criminals
were rehabilitated and oc-
cupy high posts, which is
like declaring their crimes
were nothing, and may be
done again,’' she says.
At the top of her list is
Barbie, known as the
Hangman of Lyons, who
was twice condemned to
death in absentia by
French courts for his war-
time activities.
Barbie had been Gestapo
chief in Lyons during the
German occupation and
was convicted of having
committed 4,342 murders,
of sending 7,591 people to
the gas chambers, and ar-
resting thousands of
French resistance fighters.
Among the many who died
in Barbie's hands was
Jean Moulin, the leading
martyr of the French re-
sistance, who was tortured
to death.
Both Mrs. Klarsfeld and
French and German au-
thorities maintain that
Barbie has been living un-
disturbed for the past 20
years under the name of
Klaus Altmann. They say
records show that he ob-
tained false travel docu-
ments in 1951 through an
international Red Cross or-
ganization in Rome and es-
caped to South America.
Unfortunately for him,
his claim that Klaus Alt-
mann was a minor Ger-
man SS officer during the
war, but never murdered
anyone, was made to look
ludicrous by the exhaus-
tive research done by
Beate Klarsfeld and her
aided by West
German prosecutors.
Apart from having ident-
ical fingerprints and look-
ing alike, authorities say,
parhie and his children
and wife all have the same
names and birth dates as
those of Klaus Altmann.
who acquired a Bolivian
rwsanort and Bolivian na-
tionallat 14 years ago. Bar-
ble’a marriage date also is
the same as AJtmann’s.
Tt
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 64, Ed. 2 Thursday, May 4, 1972, newspaper, May 4, 1972; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788166/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.