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Show 4A Commissioner Delays Rotation Plan; The Sail Lake Tribune, Fridav, November 14, 1986 Cancer Kills A Pioneer Of A-Bo- mb - SOUTH BEND, lnd. (UPI) nard Waldman, a physicist Police officers agreed work slowdown after Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward said he would delay a plan to rotate officers every five years The rotation plan, which had been scheduled to begin Monday, will be delayed while officials meet with Patrolmen's Benevolent Association head Phil Caruso to address his concerns, Ward said at a news conference. The slowdown began after Ward announced r of the force would that NEW YORK (APj Thursday to end a Ber- who worked on the Manhattan Project and observed the explosion of the first atomic bomb in warfare from an airplane over Hiroshima, has died of cancer. Waldman died Wednesday in a hospital in Sanford, N.C., the University of Notre Dame said Thursday. He was 73. Waldman was a: the Roman Catholic university in South Bend, lnd., for 41 years, 12 years as dean of the College of Science. In March 1943, he took a leave of absence from the university to join a team of scientists working on the Manhattan Project, which produced the atomic bomb. His tasks at the laboratory in Los Alamos, N.M., included work on instrumentation used to measure the force of the explosion. He was one of four civilians who, on Aug. 6, 1945, watched from a military plane as the bomb devastated Hiroshima. His death came just two days after Leona Marshall Libby, the only female member of the Manhattan project, died at Santa Monica, Calif., at age 67. Waldman was born in New York on Oct. 12, 1913. He received his bachelor's and doctoral degrees in physics from New York University. In 1938, he joined the Notre Dame faculty as a research associate and was promoted to assistant professor in 1941. Two months after the Hiroshima bombing, he returned to Notre Dame- - AIDS Warning one-fift- charges. The slowdown saw a reduction in the number arrests made and summonses issued by police officers, but Mayor Edward I. Koch said he did not believe the public was in any danger. of Ward said he was not giving up the idea of rotating officers. He also said the police union mea agreed to rotation as an FBI Picks Up Newborn; 2 Held for Kidnapping - A baby beBALTIMORE (AP) lieved to be the newborn taken from his mother in Sellersville, Pa., last week was found alive and well Thursday, and a man and a woman were arrested on kidnapping charges, the FBI said. Charged with kidnapping were Ramona Joan Thompson and George Stanley Soustek, said Andy Manning, a spokesman for the FBI in Baltimore. FBI agents arrested the two with the baby in a parking lot near a suburban Baltimore shopping mall. The woman was in a car with the baby. infant was believed The week-olto be Phillip Worthington, born Nov. 6 in Sellersville, Manning said. "We have not positively identified that child. We are printing the babys feet and making all efforts to positively identify him, Manning said. that the FBI hoped for a positive identification. The baby was examined by a doctor and "given a clean bill of health, Agents were analyzing his footprints Thursday evening. He said the Worthingtons were being notified and multiple sclerosis and Worthington said the trauma of the abduction made her condition worse. d The FBI had received a tip about the babys whereabouts Wednesday. The Worthington baby was taken from Grand View Hospital in Sellersville on Friday, a day after Barbara Worthington gave birth to the child. Mrs. Worthington, 26, suffers from a. 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A manager of the store cosponsoring the turkey said the event had been planned for weeks, and there was no reason to postpone it. The Los Angeles police department began a similar program three years ago. It has been so successful that one officer is asduty to spot good signed drivers and issue them turkey tickets. ffri ' f i T JUST Of San Diego , It's Turkey Time SAN DIEGO (LTI) - Police o dl J UGH QnDaDDcE a. 9HOME1FURNISHINGSI - WB0NAN2A he said. Jim Dearborn, an FBI agent in Baltimore, said no ransom had been involved in the abduction. Thompson, 44, Ellicott City, and Soustek, 42, Baltimore, were expected to appear later Thursday before a federal magistrate at the U.S. District courthouse in downtown Baltimore. a department spokesSgt Peter Sweenev, had man said Thursday 'that no suspensions the slowdown. with connection been issued in Thomas Before the slowdown ended, director of the Citizens Crime Commistraffic sion said there are so many unpunished the city and other "quality of life violations in would be on a normal day that any increase sure as long as it is sensitive to the needs of officers Officers opposed to Ward's plan had argued that the department already has significant safeguards against corruption and that a transfer will not deter a crooked cop On Wednesday, Ward threatened to suspend officers who participated in the slowdown and ordered supervisors to accompany officers on patrol. The slowdown was growing, he said, and "is beginning to get dangerous be transferred every year to try to prevent the spread of corruption His action followed the indictment last week of 13 oolice officers from Brooklyn's 77th Precinct on theft and drug Rally Alive and Well Issued on Swing Clubs ATLANTA (UPI) Federal 1 ;alth officials warned members of ,ome 100 swing clubs across the c untry Thursday that sexual promiscu ty exposes them to an increased ; sk of contracting AIDS. The warning followed a report that two sexually active women in two swing clubs in the Minneapolis-St- . Paul area tested positive for antibodies to the AIDS virus, After detection of the AIDS antibodies in the two women, both of the swing clubs disbanded, said a report published by the national Cer ters for Disease Control. The CDC said the swing c ubs are "social-sexua- l clubs whos stated purpose was to provide the.r members (primarily couples) with opportunities for social and sexual contacts. It quoted the North American Swing Club Association of Buena Park, Calif., as saying there are more than 100 such clubs in the United States. The (AIDS) infection is a sexually transmitted disease and all persons who engage in behaviors that increase their risk of infection should, including members of these clubs, be aware that the risk of having HTLV infection is increased by having multiple partners and having sex with persons at increased risk of getting AIDS," said Dr. Alan Lifson, a medical epidemiologist with the CDCs AIDS program. AIDS destroys the immune system. Since the first cases were detected in this country more than five years ago, the disease has spread to 27,519 people and killed 15,445 There is no effective treatment for AIDS and no cure. 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