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---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
30,
25
] | McElyea Makes
Re-Election Bid
| H.C. McElyea Jr. is seeking
his second term on the Fort
Stockton City Council. In
making his statement. of
candidacy, McElyea
declared, ‘‘We have the finest
city in the State of Texas
today, and it has tremendous
outlook for the future. We will
need strong and businesslike
leadership to keep it this way.
“The next several years are
going to be very important to
the city, and I believe I can
help provide the kind of
leadership needed.”’
McElyea came to Fort
(See MCELYEA, page 10)
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] |
|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
24,
20
] | Dr. Pearce Asks
Second Term
| Dr. Paul L. Pearce, a Fort
Stockton dentist for the past
four and one-half years, has
announced his candidacy for
re-election to the City Council.
Dr. Pearce, 44, is a native of
Houston. He was graduated
from high school there in 1947,
and East Texas. State
University in 1952.
He served as a pilot in the
Korean War, and upon his
release from the service, Dr.
Pearce enrolled in the Baylor
University College of Den-
tistry.
He practiced dentistry in
(See PEARCE. page 10)
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14101
] |
|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
7,
0,
26,
16,
32
] | Ken Johnson ls New Jaycee President
| Ken Johnson was elected
1974-75 president of the Fort
Stockton Jaycees in a spirited
contest with Mart Adams at
Monday's” regular noon
meeting of the club
Following the an-
nouncement of the result. of
the close contest, Adams rose
and said he wanted to be the
first to congratulate the new
president
The atmosphere of good
feeling continued. as men who
lost by narrow Margins
congratulated their opponents
in the following election
outcomes:
Jim Ivy was elected first
vice-president. after his op-
ponent, Jack Power, withdrew
from the race
Jim Horton took a victory in
the second vice-president
contest with Bill Butz
Ysabel Duarte was elected
Jaycee secretary without
opposition
The red-hot race for
treasurer resulted in a runoff
between Bill Long and Dwain
Reeves, who were tied when
the ballots of the regular
election had been tallied. Jack
McNutt, the thrid candidate
missed the runoff by only one
vote. Long won the runoff
Three directors were
elected by just a few votes
over two other candidates.
New board members chosen
are Don Lincoln, Glen
(See JAYCEES, page 8)
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14102
] |
|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
9,
15,
8,
4
] | Mrs. Fulk Named First
Lady Of Fort Stockton
| Mrs. Frank F. Fulk, a
lifelong resident of Pecos
County ranches and Fort
Stockton, was named to the
honor of First Lady of Fort
Stockton at the meeting of the
Magno Usui Study Club
Tuesday afternoon
Magno Usui is the spon-
soring organization of the
annual recognition of an
outstanding woman as First
Lady, and makes its selection
by vote of the membership
following receipt of
nominations from other
organizations and individuals
of the community.
The meeting of the club at
which Mrs Fulk was
presented as the 1974 honoree,
was held in the home of Mrs.
Frank K. Baker, with the club
president, Mrs. James Elder
and Mrs. Baker serving as co-
hostesses
Magno Usui will hold a
special tea honoring Mrs. Fulk
on Tuesday, April 2, at the
(See FIRST LADY. page 8)
| [
[
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14103
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|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
21,
3
] | E. R. Hearn
Memorial Fund
Established
| A Memorial Fund, _ in
memory of the late EF. R.
Hearn, has been established
by the adult board of directors
of the Fort Stockton Teen
Center.
Memorials will be accepted
at the Teen Center or can be
mailed directly to Mrs.
Alpheus Harral, secretary of
the board of directors, at P. 0.
Drawer A, Fort Stockton,
Texas.
| [
[
5356.5073789062,
4588.9531796875,
6102.28803125,
5344.5736757813
],
[
5370.3251953125,
4147.9624023438,
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] | [
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14104
] |
|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
13,
19
] | Mrs. Smith Is
City Candidate
| Barbara Smith is a can-
didate for a place on the Fort
Stockton City Council, in the
election to be held here April
6.
Mrs. Smith is married to
Don Smith, a Firestone test
driver. The couple have two
children — Brian, a 15-year-
old freshman at Fort Stockton
High School; and Diana, a
third grader at Comanche
Elementary. The Smiths have
lived in Fort Stockton for six
years, and are members of the
First Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Smith was born in
Kilgore, Texas and moved to
West Texas in 1949. She at-
tended junior high and high
school in Midland before
moving to Seminole in 1955.
She was graduated from
Seminole High School in 1956.
During her high school years
Mrs. Smith was a member of
(See MRS. SMITH. page 10)
| [
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] | [
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14105
] |
|
246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/246729430-fort-stockton-pioneer-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
11,
2
] | WC Board Picks
Asst. Director,
Theme Of Show
| Gale Lain, a teacher of
seventh grade English at Fort
Stockton Junior High School.
has been selected as assistant
director of the 1974 Water
Carnival by the Water Car-
nival Association's board of
directors
The board in its meeting
Tuesday afternoon at the
Chamber of Commerce office,
also chose a theme for the
production, to be directed by
Mrs. Dean Duerksen
Theme of the production is
to be a stage and water ren-
dition of an Old = South
“‘showboat”’ variety show
The story line will deal with
a Mississippi river-style
paddlewheel steamboat,
which somehow gets confused
about its geography and gets
stranded on a sandbar in the
Pecos River.
| [
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14106
] |
|
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
37
] | White male German shepherd
dog, seven months old. Animal
Aid Society, south of Miami on
U.S. 66. Telephone 542-4936,
Labrador retriever-Austra-
lian wolfhound male dog, eight
months old. Charles Watkins,
408 North Main, Commerce.
Telephone 675-4669.
Four small breed puppies.
Ron Mead, 916 B northwest.
Telephone 542-2104.
| [
[
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6370.8850234375,
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] | [
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14107
] |
||
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
11,
23,
41
] | Pauls Valley and
Cushing Men Die
In Road Mishaps
| 2 ee eS eeeee ee
A Pauls Valley man and a
Cushing man died in separate
accidents on state roads
Wednesday.
The deaths raised Okla-
homa's 1974 traffic toll to 122,
compared with 119 al this time
last year.
John Roscoe Pratt, 58, of
Pauls Valley was fatally in-
jured in a two-«ar collision
Wednesday afternoon in Mid-
west City.
A car driven by Floyd Irvin
Jr., 21, of Cushing went out of
control on Oklahoma 51 about
four miles east of Stillwater
and crashed into a culvert, the
Highway Patrol said. He died
of head injuries. The patrol
said light sleet was beginning
to fall at the time of the crash,
but that it was not the cause of
the accident.
| Ry The Associated Press
| [
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] |
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
36,
31
] | From
the
Clutter
| Wise ol’ Phil Pastoret says:
The difference between a
champagne hangover and a
beer hangover is about seven
bucks a bottle.
With reports of high radium
levels in area waters, guess we
can use Geiger counters to
determine what makes folks
tick.
The first day of spring is not
the first spring day.
| [
[
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[
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|
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
10,
26
] | Trial in
Recess:
Juror III
| NEW YORK (AP) — Because
of the illness of a juror, the
criminal consipiracy trial of
former Atty. Gen. John N. Mit-
chell and ex-Commerce Secre-
tary Maurice H. Stans was re-
cessed today until Monday.
Federal Judge Lee P. Gag-
liardi announced that Violet
Humbert had been taken ill
early this morning and was
hospitalized. He said by agree-
ment of the prosecutor and de-
fense lawyers, the trial was re-
cessed until after the weekend.
If Mrs. Humbert is unable to
continue, there are six alter-
nate jurors available.
The nature of Mrs. Hum-
bert’s illness was not revealed.
The announcement came as
the government was prepared
to call John W. Dean III,
ousted White House counsel, as
its next witness.
Dean was reported to be in
the building, but he never ap-
peared in court.
Groundwork for Dean’s ap-
pearance was laid by former
Securities and Exchange Com-
mission chairman William J.
Casey’s testimony Wednesday
that Dean made at least four
telephone calls, evincing White
House interest in a securities
fraud case against financier
Robert L. Vesco.
Dean was ousted as President
Nixon’s counsel last April 30
after he admitted a part in the
cover-up of the Watergate
break-in.
Mitchell and Stans are ac-
cused of seeking to head off an
SEC complaint against Vesco,
in return for the latter’s secret
$200,000 cash contribution to
President Nixon’s 1972 re-lec-
tion campaign.
Government interrogation of
Casey focused almost entirely
on Mitchell, with scant mention
See TRIAL on page 3.
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20,
24
] | Kissinger Feels
Oil Embargo Is
Lifted for Good
| WASHINGTON (AP) — Sec-
retary of State Henry A. Kissin-
ger today said he does not ex-
pect the Arabs to’ reimpose
their oil embargo against the
United States and that he does
not hold the Soviet Union re-
sponsible for the outbreaks of
fighting between Israel and
Syria in the Golan Heights.
At a news conference in ad-
vance of a trip to Moscow, Kis-
singer said, ‘‘Both of us have
an obligation to contribute to
peace and both of us are ex-
changing ideas on this sub-
ject.”
Most of the Arab oil countries
announced last Monday in
Vienna that they would lift the
embargo against shipments
that they had imposed during
the Middle East War because
of U.S. support for Israel.
Kissinger said it was his un-
derstanding that the embargo
could be reimposed only by
unanimous vote and that he did
not consider such a reversal
likely. Arab oil ministers are
scheduled to meet in Cairo on
June 1 to review the situation.
Kissinger called the clashes
between Israel and Syria in the
Golan Heights an inevitable re-
sult of friction in the region.
He flatly dismissed any sug-
gestions that Moscow had pro-
voked Syria.
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15,
19,
29
] | Other Documents
Are Subpoenaed
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
special Watergate prosecutor's
office has subpoenaed addition-
al documents from the White
House, it was disclosed today.
A spokesman for special
prosecutor Leon Jaworski said
the subpoena directed to Presi-
dent Nixon was served on the
White House last Friday. Dead-
line for compliance is Monday.
The spokesman declined to
say what the subpoena de-
manded,
Earlier, James D. St. Clair,
President Nixon's chief Water-
gate lawyer, acknowledged in a
television interview that a sub-
poena had been received from
the special prosecutor.
St. Clair appeared on the
NBC “'Today"’ show.
Jaworski disclosed on Feb. 14
in a letter to Sen. James O.
Eastland, D-Miss., chairman of
the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee, that Nixon had refused
to give him material he consid-
ered vital to his investigation.
Jaworski told Eastland that
the material Nixon had refused
to supply included 27 tapes
sought for the investigation of
the Watergate cover-up as well
as evidence relating to investi-
gations of contributions from
the dairy industry and the ac-
tivities of the so-called White
House plumbers unit.
The President has contended
in several recent public appear-
ances that he has given Ja-
worski all the material he
needs to complete his investiga-
tion,
Nixon has said he has given
the special prosecutor 19 tapes
and some 700 documents.
The subpoena issued Friday
was the first one directed at
the President by the special
See DOCUMENTS on page 3.
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9560,
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9570,
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9105,
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9158,
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9166,
10703,
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10208,
12771,
13286,
10223,
11763,
13811,
10749
] |
|
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
14,
22,
16
] | Roosevelt Girl Is
City Spell Champ
| Kathy Hildebrand, a sixth
grader at Roosevelt, is Miami's
citywide grade school spelling
champion.
Kathy won the title Wed-
nesday afternoon in competition
against champions from five
other schools. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Norma
Hildebrand, 301 A southeast,
and a Roosevelt student of Mrs.
Dian Storie.
“Chestnut’’ and ‘‘dapper"’
were the magic words for the
diminutive Kathy.
When runnerup' Denise
Morgan, a Will Rogers seventh
grader, tripped on ‘‘chestnut’’,
Kathy spelled it correctly then
breezed past ‘‘dapper”’ for the
championship.
The spelidown was conducted
in the Will Rogers library. All
five elementary schools in the
system were represented by
champions as were the seventh
and eighth grades at Will
Rogers.
Other city finalists, in the
order in which they were
tripped up: Troy Botts,
Washington, on ‘‘attrition’’;
Tim Robinson, Rockdale,
‘“‘ambulance’’; Anita Linn,
Wilson, ‘‘artesian’’; Dianna
Long, Will Rogers eighth
grader, ‘‘auburn’', and
Raymond McKinney, Nichols,
second runnerup, “article.”
The Hildebrand girl will
represent Miami in statewide
competition May 4 in Tulsa. The
state Spelling Bee is sponsored
bv the Tulsa Tribune.
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|
310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
0,
2,
13,
9,
34
] | Princess, Chay but 4 Otters Sot
Man Charged in London Attack
| LONDON (AP) — Ian Ball, a
26-year-old unemployed Eng-
lishman, was brought into court
today and charged with at-
tempted murder during an at-
tempt to kidnap Princess Anne
from her car in the heart of
London Wednesday night.
Ball, lean-faced and bearded,
stood stiffly in the dock at the
Bow Street Magistrate's court,
handcuffed to two detectives.
He spoke only once during his
60-second appearance, saying in
a London accent: “I want to
apply for legal aid.”’
The court ordered him held
for another hearing on March
28 on the charge of attempting
to murder Princess Anne's per-
sonal bodyguard, Inspector
James Beaton.
Beaton was one of four per-
sons wounded as the would-be
kidnaper fired repeatedly at the
royal limousine. The. others
were Anne’s chauffeur and a
policeman and a passing jour-
nalist who tried to intervene.
Beaton and the policeman were
reported in serious condition.
The 23-year-old princess and
her husband of five months,
Capt. Mark Phillips, were not
hurt, But police experts said
the holes left by one of the bul-
lets fired into the car indicated
it passed between them, miss-
ing them by inches.
A police informant said it
was believed 11 shots were
fired by the assailant. Experts
were studying two revolvers
found at the scene. They said
five shots had been fired from
one and six from the other. Au-
thorities said earlier only six
shots were fired.
Police also found in the white
Ford that Ball rented for the
evening a typewritten ransom
demand addressed to Queen
Elizabeth II, Anne's mother,
along with three pairs of hand-
cuffs, a driver's license and en-
velopes addressed to two com-
panies.
Officials declined to disclose
any further details of the dis-
coveries, But the Daily Tele-
graph said the letter asked for
a $2.3-million ransom, and the
Daily Mail said it was full of
ravings about alleged in-
justices.
Police said Ball had no fixed
address. Following the attack,
there was speculation that it
was the work of Irish nation-
alists, but the police said they
believed the motive was not po-
litical.
The gunman was over-
powered by police from Buck-
ingham Palace, 150 yards away
from the royal limousine.
Witnesses said the gunman
ran into St. James Park, then
turned and leveled a pistol at
the police. One officer, Peter
Edwards, 21, brought him down
with a flying tackle, and the
other officers rushed in to help
Edwards.
The attack was the first
against any member of the
British royal family since 1936
when a man threw a loaded re-
volver in front of King Edward
VIII. The royal family occa-
sionally has received death
threats but is not normally sur-
rounded by heavy security ar-
rangements.
Police gave this account of
the attack on the princess:
The queen's only daughter
and the army officer she mar-
ried last November were re-
turning from a showing of a
documentary film about 8 p.m.
when a white Ford forced the
limousine to a stop on the Mall,
the ceremonial avenue leading
to the palace.
A man got out of the Ford
and began shooting, hitting
Alex Callender, the roya! chauf-
feur, and Inspector Beaton and
shattering the front and rear
windows of the limousine. Beat-
on tried to fire back, but his
gun jammed.
The man also shot Constable
Michael Hills, on foot patrol
nearby, and journalist Brian
McConnell when they tried to
intervene. Hills managed to get
off a warning on his walkie-
talkie before he collapsed.
Anne, her lady-in-waiting, Ro-
wena Brassey, and Capt. Phil-
lips, stayed in the back of the
limousine until more police ar-
rived to rescue them. One eye-
witness said the gunman shook
the door in a vain attempt to
get in.
The princess telephoned the
See LONDON on page 3.
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310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
33,
5,
8,
27,
38,
6
] | Official Reports No
Cause for Alarm in
Water Radium Find
| ge ee ee ee eee
Ottawa county Sanitarian
Rex Netherton said today that
the radiation levels in three
community water supplies and
one rural water district are
higher than the U.S. Health
Dept. standard, adding: ‘‘These
standards are set extremely low
on purpose, and the radiation
present in the drinking water
from these supplies does not
present any immediate health
hazard.”’
The water supplies named
today by Robert L. Craig,
director of the radiation
protection division of the state
Health Dept., as containing
radiation levels above the U.S.
standard are those at Afton,
Fairland, Oaks in Delaware
county, Ottawa county rural
water district No. 2 (Narcissa
area), and Welch rural district
No. 1.
The highest radiation level
has been found in the Afton
water supply. It contains 9.8
picocuries of radium per liter
(approximately one gallon),
while the U.S. Health Dept.
standard is 3.0 picocuries per
liter, Netherton said.
“The existence of this
radiation has been known for
about five years and an in-
tensive study of water supplies
in the area, including Grand
Lake, has been conducted in the
past six months and is con-
tinuing,’’ Netherton said.
He emphasized repeatedly,
however, that no apparent
health hazard has resulted from
the slightly higher radiation
level. “‘This radiation has been
present, as far as we can tell at
this time, for as long as these
water supplies have been in use,
and there have been no
noticeable or reported ill ef-
fects.”’
Water samples have been
taken on a monthly basis from
county waters since September
of last year in an intensified.
study of the radiation, and area
food samples have been sent off
for analysis in cooperation with
the Ottawa county OSU
Extension service office.
“The water supplies affected
are from wells drilled into the
Roubidoux sand strata about
1,200 feet below the surface,”
Netherton said. ‘Water sup-
plies taken from surface water
have not produced any
significant radiation test
results.”’
Also, the radiation seems to
be confined to the southwest
corner of Ottawa county, in part
of Craig county served by the
Welch rural district, and the
extreme southern area of
Delaware county in the Oaks
area.
‘‘Water from Grand Lake, the
Neosho and Spring rivers and
all surface water supplies in the
county have been tested, and we
find that the only water con-
taining the higher radiation is
that from deep wells drilled into
the Roubidoux strata in the
southwest part of our county,”
Netherton said.
“We can’t say the radiation
comes from that particular
level or sand strata, however,”
he added. ‘‘Most of these wells
are uncased or cased only to a
very shallow level and could
pick up seepage from any level
between the surface and the
Roubidoux sand.”
The source of the radiation
remains a mystery as the
county and state studies con-
tinue.
‘We've tested water supplies
throughout the county, but all
except these few are at or below
the U.S. Health Dept. stan-
dard,’ Netherton said. ‘The
radiation apparently comes
from some natural source, but
this will take considerably more
study before we can pinpoint
ag
He ruled out underground
See WATER on page 3.
| Rv GARY GARTON
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1,
18,
7
] | New Rise in Living Costs
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
pace of inflation quickened in
February with food and fuel
prices pushing the cost of living
up 1.3 per cent, the second big-
gest monthly jump since 195],
the government said today.
The Labor Department said
last month's rise sent consumer
prices 10 per cent higher than a
year ago and marked the first
time since 1948 that the United
States experienced double fig-
ure inflation.
It was the highest 12-month
increase in the cost of living
since consumer prices rose by
10.2 per cent in the 12 months
ending January 1948.
Nearly half the February in-
crease was attributed to higher
food prices with the price of
beef raising 7.5 per cent, the
sharpest jump since a 9.6 per
cent increase in June 1947.
Gasoline and other energy
items were responsible for
about a fifth of last month's in-
crease in prices.
The Consumer Price Index
climbed last month to 141.5 of
its 1967 average, meaning that
it cost consumers $141.50 to buy
the same amount of retail
goods and services that $100
bought in 1967.
While consumer prices con-
tinued their sharp rise, real
spendable earnings of workers
dropped another six-tenths of
one per cent in February and
were down 4.5 per cent from a
year ago. This was the largest
decline over a year since the
government began keeping that
Statistic in 1964.
The February price report
showed inflation holding a firm
grip across the economy. Food
prices rose 2.5 per cent; non-
food commodities, 1 per cent,
and services seven-tenths of 1
per cent.
The Nixon administration has
said it expects inflation to con-
tinue its sharp pace throughout
the first half of the year before
beginning to ease during the fi-
nal six months. Director John
T. Dunlop of the Cost of Living
Council said Wednesday that
February's surge in food prices
would be followed by more
See COSTS on page 3.
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310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/310279968-miami-news-record-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
17,
3
] | Hall Inquiry
Completion
Set in May
| OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—
The federal grand jury investi-
gation of Gov. David Hall was
recessed unti] May today after
testimony from steel contractor
Allen Coles.
The grand jury was not ex-
pected to issue any indictments
this month in connection with
the Hall probe, but it is ex-
pected to finish its investigation
in the matter at its May ses-
sion.
Coles testified for more than
an hour. He was the 14th wit-
ness called during the current
session. Coles was believed to
have been questioned about tes-
timony received earlier from
Jack Graves, the architect on
the state library building.
Graves’ testimony before the
grand jury was secret, but he
told a Senate committee last
month that he kicked back $15,-
000 of his $193,000 fee to Coles
to help defray Hall's campaign
deficit.
Coles, who also appeared be-
fore the Senate committee, con-
firmed receiving the $15,000,
but said Graves made it as a
voluntary politica! contribution.
The witnesses who testified
Wednesday included con-
tractors David Vaughn and Wil-
liam Tankersley and Tulsa at-
torneys Ollie Gresham, Ronald
C. Bennett and Wendell W.
Clark.
Gresham is Hall's close
friend and business associate.
Bennett and Clark are mem-
bers of Gresham's law firm.
The trio also testified during
the jury's January session.
See HATT on nage %
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105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
38,
36
] | Country
Tub Thumping
aan RY IOUN PIRT NH
| a ur party ln opain tooK two
flying side trips, both interest-
ing, but worlds apart, even
though one flight was 35 minut
#$ southwest of Malaga, and the
oftier a scant hour north of
‘* We landed at the Tanger air-
port about 8 a.m. local time,
aligh ting into a brisk and cool
‘wind. We had been forewarned
that it would be chilly, as a con
stant wind blows in off the At-
lantic during February. Our ad-
vice was correct. The sun shone
béightly, but the Moroccans all
wore long native coats with
"We saw no sign whatever of
any kind of heat in any build-
ing in North Africa. The cool
season is so short as to make
“the heating of buildings imprac
tical. They just bundle up and
forge ahead.
_ First we tourists were taken
by a “camel farm” where any-
one who so desired could
mount a one-hump camel stak-
ed out for just such tomfool-
ery. You guessed it-ye olde ed
was just such a fool. For 50
cents the native camel driver
allowed me to mount his
smelly, burping beast as it
knelt on all fours, The camel
. then reared up on his hind
__leqs, sending me precariously
- close to tipping off over the
beast’s head--then up came the
. front legs, where the process
was repeated, only backwards!
The rider, atop a square saddle-
box affair, is about ten feet
off the ground when finally
ready for the ride. Thank good-
ness there was a waiting line
and the trip was around the
halter stake-out just once.
Then on to a native cafe and
trinket shop that looked out
over the imaginary spot where
waters from the Atlantic meets
the Mediterranean Sea. The
specialty of the house was hot
:-.mint tea, which we tried, and
which was delicious. It was
served in a tall thick glass
‘. which was packed with fresh
_ mint leaves over which the hot,
sweet green tea is poured.
Most refreshing.
Then through a government
. reforesting project, and into
-. the city of Tanger itself. Heav-
ily inhabited for the past 3000
years, that area had been liter-
ally stripped of every living
tree a long, long time ago. The
_ State was using hundreds of
hand laborers to replant thous-
ands of acres to pines, for fu-
ture generations.
Incidently, all of the road
construction we saw in Mor-
occo was being done with picks
and shovels and sledges to
crush the larger rocks. No un-
- employment there!
; Then into the casbah. Every
coastal city in north Africa has
its own casbah, which is in
reality the old native quarter,
usually thousands of years old,
walled ten feet thick, and de-
signed for defense. All streets
are so narrow two camels or
donkeys can hardly pass. Our
bus stopped at the top of the
casbah as the streets were too
narrow for even a small foreign
car, let alone a huge tourist
bus,
The Tanger native quarter is
almost indescribable. We were
rushed through into the central
area where the old Sultan’s
palace had been restored and
opened to visitors. Then on
, through a five-mile maze of
narrow streets, beggars, barn-
yard animals, dirty, sweaty,
smelly natives pushing and
shoving, street peddlers by the
thousands shouting at you, bar
gaining, selling, crippled kids,
infested arms, runny faces, puf
fed eyes, snake charmers, op-
en air markets of every descrip.
tion, including bakeries, butch-
er shops, fruit stands, graneries
spice stores, ali kinds of shops
qwhere an infinite variety of nat
ive goods and merchandise was
sold and hawked and cried--
until finally the party burst
out on top of the Casbah once
. again, into sunlight and fresh
:. air, and a somewhat more reas-
‘ onable amount of humanity.
It was not unlike running *
through a burning forest and
across hot coals without gett-
*. ing burned. The guides kept
shouting to keep up, keep up--
"and up and down it was, over
- thousands of steps along cob-
bied streets, around single-file
. .corners--most of it too dark to
take pictures in, and too nar-
row to see more than a few
feet ahead.
Water is so scarce it is sold
‘by peddlers, a flat brass cup
full at a time, from goatskins
gtrapped to their backs. We
. ‘@idn’t try any, and plowed on
i to the Rif Hotel, a modern
structure seven blocks remove:
from the exit from the old
: galled town.
| [
[
86.2399957275,
688.3415429687,
613.3188574219,
6307.91578125
],
[
101.7691574097,
374.8979492188,
623.7319335938,
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]
] | [
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374.8979492188,
623.7319335938,
6307.91578125
] | 0 | 0_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,118 | 14,118 | [
14118
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8,
33
] | CARL BROWN
CUTS LAWN
| Another first of the season?
Not to be outdone by Frank
Stephens planting his potatoes
ten days ago, Carl Brown re-
ports he mowed his lawn Mar.
4. He says several passers-by
stared at him rather question-
ingly -- but he claims the grass
really did need cutting.
| [
[
647.5925195312,
4299.4665429688,
1143.3264257813,
4671.7019140625
],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 1 | 1_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,119 | 14,119 | [
14119
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
18,
17,
43
] | Trophy case
moves closer
to reality
| Since 1925, when the Ham-
burg High School was first put
into use at the present locat-
ion, a trophy case was discuss-
ed and discussed, each year,
from time to time -- but noth-
ing developed.
Now, in 1974, the trophy
case is again in the limelight
and is getting brighter each
day. As of this writing, there
has been $2,141.81 donated
to the trophy case fund and
the total cost is $3,000, so you
see we are very near our goal.
If you would like to help,
whether the amount is large or
small, would you please send
your contribution to Mrs.
Jerry Watton, 2106 Bluff,
Hamburg, lowa 51640.
Note: Many of our alumni
who have moved from Ham-
burg and who have had a big
hand in winning some of the
trophies perhaps would like to
give also.
| by Don Clavton
| [
[
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],
[
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[
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] | [
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] | 2 | 2_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,120 | 14,120 | [
14120
] |
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
16,
31
] | ADULT FARM CLASS
| The next Adult Farm class
will be Tuesday, Mar. 26 ar
the Vocational Agriculture
building at 8 p.m. according
to Larry Hansen, instructor,
The topic will be "Soybean
Exports”,
| [
[
1180.8748681641,
4295.7956445313,
1674.1025488281,
4608.0944921875
],
[
1184.5366210938,
4227.7592773438,
1639.7574462891,
4288.1303710938
]
] | [
1180.8748681641,
4227.7592773438,
1674.1025488281,
4608.0944921875
] | 3 | 3_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,121 | 14,121 | [
14121
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
14,
20
] | HOME GAS
GOING UP
45 CENT
| Users of natural gas in Ham-
burg will note an increase in
their bills after next month,
the city has been informed.
People’s Gas Co. has noti-
fied the city that effective
April 6 the retail price of
natural gas will be increased by
.45 of one cent per thousand
cu. ft. The new increased rate
will be noted on all bills sent
after April 23.
The gas company said this
is to catch up with three sepa-
rate gas price raises passed
along to them in recent
months by their supplier, Nat-
ural Gas Pipeline Co. Under
provisions of an Iowa Com-
merce Commission tariff filing,
the company can, without
hearing, pass along any increase
in gas costs directly to the
consumer.
No estimate of how much
this will increase the average
cost of gas to the home owner
was made.
| [
[
1172.1514794922,
3020.0344140625,
1688.5565283203,
4155.599375
],
[
1191.4729003906,
2718.0007324219,
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3007.669921875
]
] | [
1172.1514794922,
2718.0007324219,
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4155.599375
] | 4 | 4_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,122 | 14,122 | [
14122
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
0,
9,
26
] | Households ordered
to abate nuisances
| The city quit growling and
showed its teeth at a special
Council meeting Monday night,
approving ‘‘cease and desist’’
notices to four Hamburg resi-
dents.
The offenses cited in letters
to the four households includ-
ed, among other things: dan-
gerous sheds, junk, debris, bar-
rels, three junk cars at one
place, trailer loads of garbage,
six cars in various stages of dis-
repair at another, plus old tires
and junk.
Another householder was __
ordered to immediately get rid
of his horses, hogs, and rabbits,
kept in violation of city ordi-
nance.
All were given ten days to
abate the nuisances, or face
being brought to court, and the
subsequent publicity.
Councilmen say the number
of complaints concerning yards
full of a winter’s accumulation
of unsightly or illegal items is
growing, and that stronger
measures are in order unless
conditions at a number of
other, as yet un-cited locat-
ions, improves at once.
Violators usually face fines
of up to $100 a day for every
day such nuisances are contin-
ued, and will be brought be-
fore the new magistrate court
system, where fines have
not been Haht.
| [
[
633.3707177734,
718.3483178711,
1147.6652929688,
1514.8748876953
],
[
1169.77171875,
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1511.880625
],
[
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388.0748291016,
1652.1201171875,
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]
] | [
633.3707177734,
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1681.073984375,
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] | 5 | 5_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,123 | 14,123 | [
14123
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
21,
40
] | R. VOLLERTSEN
TO SPECIALIZE
| Randall Vovliertsen has
been accepted as a Fellow at
the hospital in Rochester and
will begin specializing in in-
ternal medicine there in July.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Vollertsen of Ham-
burg, he will graduate from
medical schoo! in lowa City
May 18.
| [
[
1707.9223535156,
1114.8037011719,
2178.9028417969,
1502.1386816406
],
[
1714.1619873047,
1000.6292724609,
2076.1748046875,
1097.0120849609
]
] | [
1707.9223535156,
1000.6292724609,
2178.9028417969,
1502.1386816406
] | 6 | 6_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,124 | 14,124 | [
14124
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
3,
23
] | Bob Lee bac!
to tourney
eighth time
| While the Wildcat basket-
ball team will not be in the
Iowa state boys tournament
at Des Moines this week, Ham-
burg will be represented none-
theless.
For the eighth straight year,
Robert Lee, Big Eight basket-
ball referee, will take part in
the state play-offs. Bob was
uncertain whether he would
journey to the games Thursday
or Friday, as his assignment
to either a Friday or Saturday
game had not been set. He
refereed a number of Big
Eight contests throughout the
Midwest this past season.
| [
[
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3051.4753320313,
2206.1137792969,
3768.3313085938
],
[
1702.9682617188,
2732.9106445312,
2180.5578613281,
3022.6574707031
]
] | [
1701.1288964844,
2732.9106445312,
2206.1137792969,
3768.3313085938
] | 7 | 7_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,125 | 14,125 | [
14125
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
11
] | lowa Ag Day
next Monday
| Taking part 1n a State and
nation-wide observation of
“Towa Agriculture Day”, a
number of interested area
businesses have saluted the
close contact between farmers
and those businesses who help
farmers, in an ad on page seven
of this issue.
The special day, next Mon-
day, Mar. 23, has been official-
ly endorsed by Gov. Ray to
focus attention on lowa agri-
culture and the farmers who
make this the food producing
capitol of the world.
| [
[
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],
[
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] | 8 | 8_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,126 | 14,126 | [
14126
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
12,
7,
13,
2
] | Hearing on raising
dike 2 ft. is Saturday
| Witn spring rapidly ap-
proaching, the Hamburg Levee
Board, after announcing plans
to improve the levee system
last week, has moved quickly
on to a public meeting.
It has announced a public
meeting on the subject will be
held at the high school multi-
purpose room this Saturday,
Mar, 23, at 10 a.m.
Purpose of the meeting is
to gather sentiment from those
persons protected by the levee
as to whether an additional
two feet should be built atop
the present dike as added
flood protection.
Army engineers feel that
changing conditions upstream
make an additional two feet
of height a feasable safety
measure, and have approved
construstion. They will pay
for the actual work, but levee
district property owners must
pay for borrow pit right-of-
way dirt. Cost is estimated at
about $34,000 and would be
spread out over a number of
years on the tax rolls.
While the average heicht
would be raised about two
feet, compaction in some spots
will require an additional six
inches or more of fill to restore
the dike to a uniform top level.
The current structure, start-
ed in 1947, has held back
Nishna flood waters on count-
less occasions since its com-
pletion, and has never been
topped. Even the worst flood
of them all, in 1952, did not
go over the top, but came
around its vulnerable (at that
time) upper end near Thurman.
Constriction of the river
above and below Hamburg
through construction of addit-
ional farm levees, however, .
have made the possibility of
future floods topping present
dike levels much greater, say
the engineers.
| [
[
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1969.8388574219,
1133.6496679688,
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],
[
1171.6434228516,
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2694.2641699219
],
[
1703.0854394531,
1944.7737939453,
2202.9187109375,
2677.8242285156
],
[
648.9235229492,
1540.4721679688,
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1916.71875
]
] | [
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14127
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
28,
42,
41
] | CECIL J. CRAIN
SERVICES MAR 8
| Cecnu Jonn Crain, died al
Grape Community Hospital
Mar. 6 at the age of 81.
A retired farmer, he had
spent most of his life in the
Hamburg area. He was with the
United States Calvary in W.W.I
and was a member of the Am-
erican Legion and of Jerusalem
Lodge 253 A.F. & A.M.
He is survived by his daugh-
ter, Mrs. Allen (Betty) Athen of
Hamburg; four grandchildren,
Craig Athen, Curt, Kerry and
Cathy Crain and two great-
grandchildren.
Funeral services were held
Friday, Mar. 8, at the Rash Fun
eral Home with Rev. Frank
Johnke officiating. Jerusalem
Lodge 253 AF & AM was in
charge of committal services.
Interment was in the Hamburg
Cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Scoles
and daughter of Winterset
spent the weekend in the Clyde
Scoles home. Mrs. Clyde
Scoles returned home Wednes~
day from Grape Community
Hospital after surgery.
| [
[
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3347.4191796875,
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],
[
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],
[
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14128
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
15,
22
] | Percival to
lose school
| To make a long story short,
the Sidney School Board last
week dropped the other shoe,
and voted to close the Percival
school at the end of the cur-
rent year.
All students would be trans-
ferred to the buildings in Sid-
ney.
The move came after a prev-
jous vote to close the school,
taken in the presence of a dele-
gation from the Percival area,
failed 3-2.
Voting to close the school
were Jerry Birkby, Tom John-
son, and Hugh Berry. Board
President Gertrude Ettleman
and Dan Golden voted against
the closing.
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Ladd
went to Rochester, Minn.
Monday where she was to
undergo a checkup following
surgery on her fingers.
| [
[
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5284.9118554688,
3292.0490820313,
6375.3215429687
],
[
2786.0009765625,
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] | [
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14129
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
6,
24
] | SIDNEY
TEACHER
BASE $7400
| Another meeting of the
Hamburg schoo! board to
study possible salary schedules
for local teachers next school
year will be held Thursday
night, and possibly again on
Friday night, says School Supt.
Ervin DeBoer.
DeBoer reported Tuesday
that the board hopes to come
up with an equitable salary
schedule that will hopefully
fit into what the legislature
will do on increased state aid
to schools. No contracts have
been offered, and no salary
offer made here, pending,
hopefully, action by the lowa
legislators.
At Sidney the board offer-
ed teachers a flat $500 a year
basic salary increase, which,
with various increments along
the line, would boost teacher
costs by about 11 percent.
Starting salary there for a be-
ginning teacher would be
$7400. A faculty committee
had recommended an $800 in-
crease,
In other action the Sidney
board voted to increase the
pay of Supt. Eugene Hess by
$2000, to $20,000 a year. The
salary of high school principal
Duane Ridnour was boosted
from $13,500 to $15,000.
| [
[
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[
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4992.24390625
] | 12 | 12_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,130 | 14,130 | [
14130
] |
|
105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
19,
35,
34
] | CECIL PRICE
SERVICES MARCH 18
| Funeral services were held
Monday at Johnson Funeral
Home for Cecil R. Price. He
died at Grape Community Hos-
pital March 15 at the age of
63. Interment was in Mt. Olive
Cemetery.
_ Survivors include six
daughters, Norma Cummings,
Lincoln, Nebr., Frances Morti-
more, Phoenix, Ariz., Darlene
Nesiba, Nebraska City, Carlene
Mueller, Lincoln, Dorothy
Austin, Richmond, Va., Judy
Barnett, Julian, Nebr.; six sons,
Raymond of Grand Island,
Nebr., Kenneth of Flagstaff,
Ariz., Marvin, Lincoln, Larry,
Shenandoah, James, Lincoln,
and Meivin, Phoenix, Ariz.;
thirty three grandchildren;
two sisters, Stella Howell of
Forest City, Mo. and Mollie
Wooten of Albany, Ore.; other
relatives and many friends.
Red Tillman fs a patient
in the Omaha Veterans Hos-
pital where he underwent
surgery last week, He fs in
room 8-E, Ward B.
| [
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[
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[
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] |
|
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5,
25,
10
] | Sewer bids down $75,000, an
acceptable’ $177,000 level
| AL 1OW DID OF 1/7 /,414 TOK
sanitary sewer work in south
and east Hamburg was submit-
ted to the Hamburg City Coun.
cil Monday night by the E. C,
Henningson Co. of Atlantic.
The Council gave every in-
dication that if the bid and
company checks out, it will ac-
cept the offer. This is the third
time specifications for the pro-
ject have been changed in an
effort to lower costs to a level
local sewer and water users
can afford.
There were four bids sub-
mitted, ranging from Henning-
son’s low up to $187,152 bid
by R. D. Blue Const. Co. of
Omaha, who was low bidder in
January.
More than $75,000 has been
shaved from the cost of the or-
iginal proposal, opened in De-
cember, when the low bid was
$243,000. The January letting
dropped bids to $215,943. By
way of comparison, Henning.
son's January bid was $224,-
215, more than $47,000 above
his current bid.
The principal change made
in specifications was moving
the sewers from alleys and plac
ing them on curbs, where un-
derground items such as tele..
phone cable and gas lines are
not present, and there are no
close building to undermine, as
along alley edges.
Asa “start-up” figure, how-
ever, to the bid must be added
a number of items to ve paid
the first year, which brings the
total project cost to about
$223,484. This includes about
$16,000 in engineering fees,
$4500 legal fees, $11,000 in-
terest, $9000 contingency
funds, and about $1200 adlnaine
istration costs.
FHA representative Darwin
Betts of Shenandoah was on
hand to give some rough calcu-
lations on user costs needed to
keep the city, and the sewer
system solvent, and while the
news was not good, Council-
men felt the cost per user is
now falling into a neighbor-
hood affordable to most peop-
le. FHA has guaranteed a
$195,000 loan to the city to
finance most of the work.
Betts said it would take
$13,500 a year to pay interest
and principal costs, plus anoth-
er $5000 a year for operation
and maintenance costs, and
$2200 a year added for requir-
ed reserves until the ten per
cent level is reached.
Betts said that simple arith-
metic at that point would bring
cost to the average user up to
about $8.75 per quarter for
the 595 anticipated customers.
The minimum now for sewer
use is $3.90 ver quarter. Betts
figures this would go up to
$6.50 or $7.00 for each three
months. That is about the cost
of a daily newspaper for use of
the city sewers.
Cost per quarter using the
December bid would have been
$13.50 per quarter average.
_There was discussion of plac
ing sewer use rates on a sliding
scale similar to the scale used
for water rates--the more you
use, the less it costs per unit--
but no action was taken.
At present the sewer use fee
is based on a flat 65 per cent
of the water bill.
Betts promised to rush
through final paper work with
the bonding attorneys and fis-
cal agents, and present the city
with “hard” figures on what
would be required for custom-
er charges before the loan can
be approved. They will be pre-
sented April 1.
One thing seems certain
from the six-month search for
extended sewer lines to most
sections of the city: The days
of cheap water, and cheaper
sewer, are about over for Ham-
burg. Those two services, long
underpriced when compared
with heat and light, will go up
in price.
Councilmen decided to ad-
journ the meeting until their
next regular meeting April 1,
and will accept or reject the
low bid at that time.
| [
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[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 14 | 14_105525864-hamburg-reporter-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 105,525,864 | front_page_20_99 | 14,132 | 14,132 | [
14132
] |
|
330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
16,
14
] | nual Fourth of July Jubilee ts
clouded, |
The Chamber of Commerce has
provided the chairman and done
the staff work for the first two
celebrations, which were highly
_successful conmunitywide efforts
held in Gilbert Park.
This year the Chamber appar-
ently is unable or unwilling to
assume the burden of coordinating
‘the Jubilee and has sought--un-
successfully to date--to interest
4 Mount Dora club in taking on
‘the task. The thought is that per-
haps..the chairmanship could be
rotated among a numberof local
organizations each year,
Anyone interested? .
The Mount Dora area has another
first-class restaurant withthe
openin;; of Sabatini's House of
Lasagna on US 441 just south of
the city. |
Its full menu of Italian food,
seafood and steaks is matched by
the restaurant's interior, which
pis tastefully decorated in Medi-
: panes accents highlighted by
chandeliers,
Go out and introduce yourself to
chef/owner Raul Sabatini and son
Gary who formerly operated a
restaurant in Buffalo, N.Y.
ee of xe
This week the TOPIC introduces
a new feature, a ‘poetry column
by Aaron H, Lauchner, a retired
school administrator, university
instructor, and professional
speaker,
An Illinois native, he began
ywriting poems ‘at age 10. For
many years he wrote a newspaper
column, "Teacher-Talk,” which
appeared in several Illinios week-
lies. Mr. Lauchner has made
some 8,000talks, including more
than 200 commence ment address-
es, in all parts ‘of the country,
Retiring fram active school ad-
ministration in 1960, he spent 10
years teaching in colleges and
universities, directing workshops,
and carrying oneducational eon-
_ sultant services, The Lauchners
(Continued on Page 4)
| By A.M.L.
| [
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14133
] |
|
330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
17,
15
] | Inside the
TOPIC
| Business Guide . secce My 13
Calengie ey iras s vsndead
Chuteh Page.......... 18
Classifieds 34 ...5.4423.
* From Topic Files... ..4.5
Legal Notices. ..10;16,20
ee ee ae
Obituaries........... 19
Schools ........+.-10,11
Speaking of Binds, 00.06 8
Sp seeaeaeeeee Ricki 14,15.
: ances 6-8
| [
[
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7198.4377265625,
1186.1115898437,
8392.6736015625
],
[
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1140.5739746094,
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]
] | [
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1186.1115898437,
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] | 1 | 1_330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 330,036,401 | front_page_20_99 | 14,134 | 14,134 | [
14134
] |
|
330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
3,
2
] | Summer recreation
program is assured
| Mount Dora City Council Pres-
ident Gordon Dake, acting in his
capacity as recreation comunittee
chairman, announced at the
Council meeting Tuesday night
that the city's summer recreation
program wili be "practically the
same Dogtra as we had last
year,"
Earlier it had seiial the pro-
gtam would be curtailed if county
‘funds were not made available,
‘The Lake County school board
has voted to make allotments
based on 50 percent of previous
funding. Because ofits wide based
recreation program last year,
Mount Dora stands to geta large
shate of this money,: Dake said,
_ Both city swimming pools will
‘be open and staffed by lifeguards;
the high school gym will be open;
arts and crafts will be taught, and .
there will be a full ath’etic al
gram including softball and
tennis,
Dake has interviewed candidates
for the position of summerrecre-
ation dire ctor but has not an-
nounced his choice,
In a recreation action taken at
its meeting this week, City Coun~
cil voted unanimously to accept
a $3,900 bid for resurfacing two
tennis courts near the high school;
$3, 700 had been ge aitaa for this
item,
This will give the city three
courts in "tiptopshape, " observed
Dake,
The Mount Dora Tennis Club
will fence the two courts, as it
did for the one located in Don-
nelly Park, :
It will not be possible to teasers
the ‘lighting at the high ‘school
| this year, Dake noted, but
‘this may ‘come next year, ,
| [
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[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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8577.315203125
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14135
] |
|
330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
0,
7
] | 2 charged
in traffic
accident
| Both drivérs have been charged
in atraffic accident that occurred
at 9:33 p.m. . Monday in the ‘in-
tersection of Donnelly St. and
Seventh Ave, , Mount Dora, .
Ricky Lee Smith, 16, of Rt, 1,
Mount Dora, driving a motor-
cycle north on Donnelly, was
charged with unlawful speed, He
struck the right rear fender of a
car operated by Richard H, Boese,
46, of 617 N. Clayton St,
Boese, driving south on Don=
nelly, was turning left into Sev-
enth Ave. and was charged with
failure to yield to oncoming traf-
fic,
: Smith, who was knocked to the
pavement, was taken by ambu-
lance to Waterman Memorial
Hospital, where he was treated
for abrasions and released,
| [
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[
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14136
] |
|
330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/330036401-mount-dora-topic-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
9,
5,
8,
13,
6
] | Gity gives final OK on library site
| By A. M, LIVERIGHT
Mount Dora City Council Tues-
day night accepted the recom-
mendationof its Planning and
Zoning Committee and voted
unanimously to approve definite -
ly a site at Donnelly St, and
Ninth ave. for a new public li-
brary and authorized the library
board to draw up plans for Coun-
cil’s approval,
Council members also approved
the use of library funds to mount
a fund-raising drive for the pro-
posed $150,000 building totaling
6,000 sq. ft,
A variance of six parking spaces
--24 instead of the 30 that nor-
mally would be required for a
building that size--was author-
ized,
Building plans still must be ap-
proved by City Council, since the
Mount Dora Public Library is en-
tirely under Council's control as
library board chairman David
Edgerton pointed out,
Council suggested the library
board try “diligently” to obtain
land adjacent to the site for ad-
ditional parking.
Mayor T, R, Champion com-
mented on the unusual situation,
in that normally the building of
a library is a municipal function
In the case of Mount Dora, per-
haps three~fourths of the funds
are being supplied privately, he
estimated,
By the same 6-1 vote as two
weeks earlier, Council passed the
second reading of an ordinance
to annex 60 acres west of Eudora
Road, as requested by Affiliated
Services Corp. of Winter Park,
Council president Gordon Dake
again cast the lone "no" vote,
citing concern for the burden on
the city’s sewer facilities,
Planning and Zoning chairman
G,R, M. (Bob) Pearson estimated
that 100 to 180 single-family
houses will be built on the tract.
Representatives of Affiliated Ser-
vices are to present a land-use
plan and other details at the Pear-
son committee ‘s regular biweekly
public meeting next Tuesday af-
ternoon in City Hall,
Mayor Champion raised the pos-
sibility of a veto on this annexa-
tion ordinance, "Unless I'mcon-
vinced that people of Mount Dora
would benefit, I'd have a tend-
ency to veto it," he said,
Champion stated that many
areas of the city still do not have
sewer service and now Council
would be giving it to a new area,
which he called unfair.
Council members pointed to ad-
vantages of annexation--more
revenue, control over outlying
areas--but the mayor appeared
to be unmoved,
The mayor has the power to
veto Council-passed ordinances,
_and a two-thirds vote--§ of 7
me mbers- is required to override,
Henry Platt approached Council
as a private citizen, to request
consideration of “bikeways” in
Mount Dora, He quoted a figure
of 80 million bicycles in the
United States now, and more bikes
than cars were sold last year, to
bolster his c ase for establishing
bike paths here,
Platt suggested creating a path
from downtownto Lakeshore Drive
and the shopping center skirting
Lake Dora,
Councilman Dake noted that
the land in question is owned
largely by the City, but there are
some privately-owned parcels,
The City in the past has had
trouble when it wanted to put in
a street there,
Dake promised to look into the
matter before the next Council
meeting and try to come up with
an answer to Platt’s question,
“Can this be. done?"
Richard Jackson raised from the
floor the issue of Mount Dora's
suit against Eustis over the latter’s
annexation south of Highway 441.
The Circuit Court on Mar. 7
granted the City of Eustis* motion
to dismiss the suit, stating that
the owners of the property inques-
, tion ere the CORON: mt the
: Mount Dora seal have aah oe
the. property owners. ‘in the suit,
which he o tame vad are carp
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|
32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
12,
21,
20,
10
] | Another gun store
permission sought
| A request by Eagle Uniforms, 13123
5. Western ave., for a license to sell
firearms was referred unanimously to
Blue Island's license committee at last
Monday’s city council meeting.
Vince Rufolo of Chicago Heights
asked the council when he could
reasonably expect an answer to his
request from the cornmittee, and was
assured one would be forthcoming at
the next council meeting.
Eagle Uniforms sells police and
security guards uniforms.
+++
ae amondmwont tno «em ardtinansan
regarding parking on the north side of
12rd st. and Vincennes on its east side
was approved unanimously by the
council, as was another ordinance
providing a weight limit of five tons on
Union, Walnut, Oak, and Prairie sts.,
among others.
+++
Blue Island has received federal
revenue-sharing funds of $12,674 for the
Emergency Operations Center to be put
in the new police station, Mayor
Richard Withers announced.
Mayor Withers said he expressed his
displeasure at a five-month delay in
completion of the Western ave. lighting
project to the city’s engineering firm,
R. W. Robinson company,
The Robinson company then wrote a
letter to Frank X. Cagney, of Contrac-
ting and Materials company in
. Wheeling, which Mayor Withers read
at Monday’s city council meeting. The
letter requested a sufficient work force
to complete the project.
+++
The city councilunanimously referred
to committee a request by the Depar-
tment of Transportation to tie their
secondary storm sewer into Blue
Island's combined sewer system until
their main system is finished.
The matter was referred specifically
to the Drainage and Sewerage com-
mittee and the Road and Bridge com-
mittee.
tat
The Drainage and Sewerage com-
mittee reported that property owners
along both sides of Western ave. at
138th st. would be assessed on a cash
contract basis for an extension sewer at
the rate of $28 per front foot.
It was unanimously decided by the
council that Romie J. Palmer, city
attorney, would contact the residents
affected by the resolution.
+++
A request by the Jewel.Food store at
2320 Burr Oak ave. for a liquor license
was referred unanimously by the
council to the License committee
Mayor Richard Withers said in his
report that he had sent possible liquor
license categories to the License
committee for consideration, since
Blue Island has only one type of liquor
license, which allows the opening of
package goods in the store which sold
them.
+++
A request by De Bruyn and Lockie of
Palos Heights to construct and operate
a communication tower within Blue
Island's city limits was unanimously
referred by the council to the city
attorney.
The tower would be necessary for the
company's nationwide microwave
transmission of data, the company said
ina letter to the council
bet
City clerk Edison P Heintz reported
total receipts by the city of Blue Island
for February of $124,226 07
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|
32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
9,
7
] | Two drivers injured
in head-on collision
| A Blue Island man is reported in fair
condition at St. Francis hospital after a
head-on collision at 122nd and Kedzie
Sunday might.
Paul RK Bauer Jr. 23, 2003 Broad-
way, Blue Island, has been charged
with driving in the wrong lane and
driving while intoxicated, as well as
illepal possession of a weapon, Cook
county sheriff's police said.
Bauer was reportedly driving south
on Kedzie ave when his car went into
the northbound lane, hitting the car of
Michael McGrath, 19, of Lansing, who
was traveling northbound.
McGrath is reported in good con-
dition at St. Francis hospital.
When sheriff's police were towing
Bauer’s car away, they said, they
discovered a .38-caliber revolver in an
open compartment in the car.
A court date has been set for Bauer
May 10 in Oak Lawn court. Bond on his
weapons possession charge will be set
when he is released from the hospital,
sheriff's police said.
| [
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14139
] |
|
32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
3,
15,
17,
22,
18
] | PTSA talent show tonight at Campus _
Se i ES) er eee. aaa” A eVvrwowe Fe WFOWM F€ 40
Palmer tops tally i in 8th district
| Incumbent Rep. Romie Palmer (8th
dist.) led the ticket by a total of 12,762
votes at press time. The Sun Standard
was advised that the latest figures
would not be available unti] late Wed-
nesday aiternoon,
Also unofficial, incomplete returns
by townnships but considered decisive,
Jane Barnes led with a total of 11,521
over Herbert Huskey with 10,770.
The 8th district state race was
apparently influenced by the tight
committeeman contest on the GOP
ballot. Rep. Herb Huskey had apparen-
tly gone down before **Barnes’ bullets.”"
Since she was alone in the state race,
Mrs. Barnes was free to seek ‘three for
me" bullet votes and. at press lime, it
uppeared she had gathered enough to
win even though more individuals voted
tor Huskey, since many of those gave
him only one and a half vates.
Oddly, the Worth township commit-
teeman candidate who campaigned
with Mrs Barnes, Lou Mirabelli, lost to
Ron Larson, wht was linked with
Huskey.
Democrats in the 8th District showed
returns, also incomplete but considered
decisive, of a total of 18,437 for Harry
Yourell; Robert Bily leading with 7,268
aver Daphne Spencer with a total of
6,519.
A comeback for Lynn Brenne who
served in the State House from 1970 to
1972, lost then when a recount showed
that the 9th had elected one Republican,
William Mahar, who led the primary
ballot vesterday, and two Democrats.
Leland Rayson and Richard Kelly.
Daniel Houlihan carried the 28th
District on the Democratic side in
Tuesday's election, with Emil Jones,
John Tully, and Arthur Davis following
behind in total votes.
This'places incumbents Houlihan and
Jones back on the ballot in November.
John Tully. not to be confused with
Tom Tully, now Democratic candidate
tor Cook county assessor in November,
is charging vote fraud in the 28th.
Houlihan carried the 28th District
with over twice the number of votes
Jones got, and Jones got twice Tuily’s
number. Davis was approximately
1,000 votes behind Tully.
The Republicans in the 28th District
didn’t have much to fight about, with
incumbent Robert Dunne and Ted
Meyer both going on the November
hallot, since there’s no one else trying
lo
In the third Congressional district,
{rom which one Representative will be
sent, incumbent Republican Robert
Hanrahan beat out Edward Sumanas
by a large number of votes. This pits
Hanrahan against Democrat Martin A.
Russo. who was unopposed on the
Democratic side, in November.
State central committeeman posts in
the third congressional district were
competed for in both parties Michael
FE. Fryzel, 28, of South Holland won on
the Republican side over William F.
Seannel of Calumet City and Carl L.
Klein of Oak Lawn.
Democrat Joseph P. Griffin of
Evergreen Park won the state central
committeeman post on the Democratic
side over William A. Pacini of Glen-
wood, who nevertheless did manage to
carry Calumet township.
In other local contests, Calumet
township supervisor Robert E. Schrei
was unopposed on the Democratic side
in his bid for Cook county board
commissioner from Calumet township.
Democrat Larry Petta was unopposed
for Calumet township committeeman.
There are no Republicans running for
similar offices.
The Regional Transit Authority,
which passed in its referendum in the
six-county area, was nevertheless
voted against in Calumet township in a
ratio of 25 against and 17 for it.
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14140
] |
|
32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/32217673-suburbanite-economist-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
1,
0,
2,
16
] | Uai-Sag land development
Park bd. enlists aid of
Congressman Hanrahan
| When Congressman Robert
Hanrahan came toctor of Blue Island
Parks and Recreation, he immediately
became aware of some of the problems
besetting the Park district.
Having recently acquired the
Metropolitan Sanitary District
Property along the Calumet Sag chan-
nel on lease, the board's problem is
now to develop this land.
Hanrahan asked, ‘Are you levying up
to your maximum, now?’”
“No,” Murphy answered and he
brought this conversation to the Park
Board cominissioners for discussion.
The percentage of the tax dollar for
the city of Blue Island is divided as
follows, it was noted: 70 per cent is
school tax and goes to District 130,
Community High School District 218,
and the Jr. College District 524.
The next section is 10 per cent which
goes to the city. The balance per cent is
divided up among the following: County
of Cook, South Cook County Mesquito
Abatement; the hospital; the
Metropolitan Sanitary district and 3 per
cent goes to the Park district, The
remaining is given to Calumet Town-
ship and the Forest Preserve.
“Hanrahan has already dedicated
himself to this problem,’’ stated Mur-
phy regarding the land development
along the canal.
The suggestion to tax up the
maximum was introduced. Roger
Decker, board member, stated,” We
can’t overtax the people.”
The need for recreation was stressed
and Murphy clarified his position by
stating, ‘I’m not proposing to raise
taxes."”
Then he suggested that the board
follow the next three steps to get more
funds to operate the park. (1) Clarify
the “error in the next tax ap
propriation, (2) Levy to the maximum
and 33) Get busy on legislation and
busy with becoming aware of the fact
that the wpark districts are being
weitten out of money by the Better
Communities Act that is to replace
HUD.
“We need to become more
sophisticated legislative-wise. We
should just get what's dutifully ours,”
Murphy stressed.
Decker said, “I just don’t know
where the money is going to come
from. You can’t take 15 cents and make
a dollar out of it.”
“} didn’t say that. You're twisting my
words,"’ Murphy interjected.
Vice president Leonard Bartle said,
“I spent $11 a year for the parks and
recreation, and I figure I'd spend more
for that.’’ Bartle went on to say, ‘‘These
parks and recreation mean much to
this town.”
“Maybe there are people who would
mind paying more,’’ Decker respon-
ded. He then cited things that need to be
repaired, in his opinion.
“Are we here for the people or to
build effigies? What are the
priorities?’’ Murphy asked.
When Commissioner Raymond Sch-
wartz was asked to comment about
what he observed after riding with
Murphy and Congressman Hanrahan
throughout other south suburban Park
districts, he said:
“I was proud of what we came back
to in Blue Island. Blue island has the
most beautiful parks in the 3d district.
John saved us lots of money when he
nad Dr. Rutledge of the University of
Ulinois bring students to the canai
property to gather data to make uf
plans for its development."’
“Isn't he (Rutledge) benefiting from
tms?”' asked Decker.
“Hanrahan is donating much of his
time for a tremendous advancement
for the Park district,’’ defended Mur-
phy
“We voted these people in. We all
have a job. They're supposed to do
this," answered Decker.
“The park began in 1930 as an
‘Ornamental Park’. We now have
things in it that eat up maintenance
hours,’’ Murphy said, ‘‘When
Rutledge’s students finish, we won't
have to hand trim any of that 60 acres.
It'll take less time to cut it than what
we have now.”
Commissioners Donald Mitchell and
Decker both indicated that it couldn’t
be done. And Murphy answered, “I
have a masters degree in Parks and
Recreation Maintenance Ad-
ministration. Maybe I wasted my time
zetting it.””
Confrontations continued on nearly
every item brought before the board. It
was noted that the Metropolitan
Sanitary district accepted allof the
changes the Park Board had previously
requested.
+44
Joseph Phelan, secretary and
treasurer of the board, submitted his
resignation at the end of the meeting.
He served for 18 months.
According to the letter he wrote to the
board, Phelan had other “professional
commitments”’ and could not continue
with the Park board after April 30, 1974.
He did comment, though, that the
programs of the Park ‘enhanced the
spirit and growth of the community.”
| [
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],
[
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],
[
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3187.2995683594,
3714.5161210937
],
[
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3202.4135742188,
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]
] | [
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2364.5541992188,
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14141
] |
|
15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
14,
15,
34
] | Electricity
Rates Show
Massive Jump
| MP FREE OOUCLALT ED PRESS
Some. Americans are paying
v2 to 50 per cent more per
month for electricity this year
than they did last, an Associ-
ated Press survey shows.
Consumers are beginning to
organize to. fight the rate hikes.
A spot check of monthly elec-
trie bills this year and. last
showed that miost increases
have been about $1 or $2, gen-
erally about 10 per cent, with
the highest reported boost com-
ing in Jacksonville, Fla., where
the ‘average tab went from
$17.90 last year to $27.70 this
year.
Utility companies say the in-
ereases are due primarily to
the rising cost of fuel. They
‘noted that imported crude oil
has jumped fourfold’ since Jan.
1, 1973. Most of these increases
are passed on to the consumer
automatically, with no review
by’ state or local authorities.
Areas like. the Northeast
swhich depend. heavily on im-
ported“oil have been the hard-
est hit. Ti the Northwest, where
water is-a- major source of elec-
tricity, the price hike has been
Jess. severe. Other operating
costs like labor.also are. gener-
ally higher in the East and tra-
ditionally have made electric
bills more costly.
The. AP check showed that
the price of a kilowatt hour of
electricity ranges from just
over’ a penny ‘in. Nevada and
Oregon to seven cents in New
York City.
Allelectric homeowners have
been especially hard hit. Such a
homeowner in New York’s Or-
ange County, for example, has
seen his monthly bill jump
from $101.67 in March 1973 to
$205.60 this year for 5,000 kilo-
watt hours of electricity. In
some cases, electric bills are
topping mortgage payments.
Most of the consumer outery
has come in the form of pro-
tests at publie hearings. A Pub-
lic Service Commission hearing
in ‘New York City was dis-
rupted by customers com-
plaining about Consolidated
Edison Co.’s request for a per-
manent rate hike of almost 23
per cent.
| By THE ASSOCTATEN prrece
| [
[
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1389.5903320312,
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[
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375.7283325195,
1357.6240234375
],
[
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1403.8958740234
]
] | [
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1078.0681152344,
417.7554626465,
3020.3498535156
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17,
30
] | Body Found
| PuuNt, NHC. (Ar) -— A
body found in the Flint River
has been identified as the 1¢-
year-old son of a woman whose
hody was found Saturday im the
northwestern part of the city.
Police said security guards at
the Buick complex found the
body of Ricky Mitchell of Flint
floating face down in the river
Wednesday.
Detectives said the boy, who
was last seen early Saturday,
suffered knife wounds in the
neck and back. The boy’s moth-
er, Dorothy, 46, was found
strangled Saturday, police said.
Police said they had no good
leads in the slayings.
| [
[
421.5059814453,
2461.0300292969,
811.1522216797,
3025.1799316406
],
[
446.2998352051,
2374.9306640625,
783.6569213867,
2442.0817871094
]
] | [
421.5059814453,
2374.9306640625,
811.1522216797,
3025.1799316406
] | 1 | 1_15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 15,905,036 | front_page_20_99 | 14,143 | 14,143 | [
14143
] |
|
15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
11,
9,
24
] | Lobby Group
Hits Dems »
In Conaress
| WASHINGTON (AP) — Com-
Mon Cause, the self-styled citi-
zens’ lobby, said today that
Democratic congressional can-
didates received’ more than $1
million from special interest
groups in 1972 and accused the
Democrats of stalling electoral
reform. .
The foot-dragging charge was
contained in a full-page adver-
tisement in today’s editions of
The Washington Post, appear-
ing on the same day the party
holds its annual fund-raising
dinner,
The figures on 1972 Demo
cratic receipts from special in-
terest groups were contained in
a report to be published by
Common Cause next week on
ithe role of special interest mon-
(ey during the presidential year
campaigns.
Common Cause said various
political committees gave
Democratic House candidates a
total of $667,226 while senatorial
candidates received $550,947.
The largest single donor on
the list was the National Com-
mittee for the Re-Election of a
Democratic Congress, a quasi-
official fund-raising committee
headed by Robert Strauss, who
later became chairman of the
party.
The Strauss committee was
listed as having raised $376,507
for House candidates and $260,~
802 for senatorial hopefuls un-
der the party banner.
The largest. giver among
business and professional ranks
was the Committee for Thor-
ough Agricultural Political
Education, the political wing of
the Associated Milk Producers
Ine. It gave $87,500 for Demo-
cratic House campaigners and
$72,000 for: senatorial. candi-
dates.
The biggest labor union gifts
came from the national AFL-
CIO. Committee on Political
Education, which’ gave over
$43,000 to Democratic congres-
sional candidates.
Common Cause has been ac-
tive in electoral reform and is
a chief advocate of public fi-
nancing for federal elections. _
It was a Common Cause law-
suit that foreed President Nix-
on’s.-re-election committee to
disclose the sources of his early |
eampaign receipts, including
money that figured in the Wa-
tergate scandal. |
“However, Common Cause
eontends that it is Democratic
leadership in Congress, particu-
larly Chairman Wayne Hays of
the House Administration Com-
mittee, which is holding up
electoral reform.
| [
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],
[
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805.0697021484,
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]
] | [
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|
15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
5,
28
] | Gill Net Ban
Rejected
By Senate
| LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The
Michigan. Senate has rejected a
ban on gill net fishing proposed
by the state Natural Resources
Commission because the plan
contains no repayment for com-
mercial fishermen who would
be put out of business.
The Senate unanimously ap-
proved a resolution Wednesday
that. if passed -by the House,
would prevent the proposed
regulations from taking effect
as scheduled next Dec, 31.
The regulations were recom-
mended by the Department of
Natural Resources.
“That’s a hot one. I imagine
there will be caucuses and
plenty of discussion before we
do anything,” said House Ma-
jority Leader Bobby Crim, D-
Davison. He scheduled the reso-
lution for debate Wednesday.
Commercial fishermen con-
fend thatthe Jarge mesh gill
net. ban would put them out of
business. About 80 of Mich-
igan’s 180 licensed commercial
fishermen use gill nets, said
Sen. Daniel Cooper, D-Oak
Park.
The DNR contends gill net-
ting is “non-selective,” taking
both protected and sport fish
aieng with commercial species,
“The department is the typi-
,cal runaway bureauracy that
doesn't listen to anyborly.” said
Cooper. Cooper voted lo oppose
the gill net ban when Wayne
Tody, DNR fisheries director,
reiected amendments to the
rules which would pay com-
pensation to commercial fish-
ermen and extend the deadline
date for gill nets “where cir-
cumstances justify.”
Tody said Wednesday he fa-
vors the coneept of com-
pensation for cammercial fish-
ermen —- bul not as an integral
part of the rules.
Tody noted Gov, William Mil-
liken’s budget contains $1.5 mil-
lion for compensation to com-
mercial fishermen and “we
support that fully, but as a sep-
arate legislative act and not as
part of the rules.”
| [
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21,
27,
22
] | Watergate Grand Jury
Report Goes to House
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
grand jury report on’ President
Nixon’s role in Watergate goes
to the House impeachment in-
quiry today unless the U.S.
Court of Appeals intervenes.
The appeals court agreed to
hear arguments today from
Watergate defense lawyers who
hope to reverse U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica’s order
Sending the report to — the
House.
In scheduling arguments fox
10:30 am. EDT, the appeals
eourt said it will consider re
quests for an additional delay
in transmitting the report anc
also hear arguments on the le
gal issues.
John J. Wilson and Frank
Strickler, attorneys for forme:
presidential aide H. R. Halde.
‘man, and John Bray, counsel
for Gordon Strachan, anothet
former - White House aide.
asked the appeals court to or
der Sirica-not to send the granc
jury report to the House
Judiciary Committee.
Special Watergate prosecutor
Leon Jaworski opposed the re.
quest,
Sirica refused Wednesday to
delay sending the report to the
House until the appeals court
had ruled. He did postpone ac-
tion until 4 p.m. today to give
the defendants a chance to ap-
peal.
The grand jury gave the
sealed report and a_ satchel
filled with evidence to Sirica
March 1, the same day it in
dicted Haldeman, Strachan,
and five other former adminis-
tration or campaign officials in
the Watergate cover-up.
On Monday, Sirica ordered
the report sent to the House.
Tn his petition to the appeals
court, Strachan said that if the
report is sent to the House
Judiciary Committee and made
public, intentionally or inad-
vertently, he “runs the distinct
risk of being put on trial by the
legislative branch of our gov-
ernment and of being prej-
nudged by the general public.”
| Haldeman used a nearly identi-
eal argument saying that if the
report is leaked “the defend-
ants will stand convicted before
their slorics are told.”
Meanwhile, a study delivered
on Wednesday to the Senate
Watergate committee called on
Congress to make it clear to
the public that any president
ean be impeached ‘without
first being beheaded, jailed,
fined, indicted or even in-
dictable.””
The 169-page study prepared
by the National Academy of
Public Administration, also ree-
ommended that the aitorney
general be barred from giving
presidents political or personal
advice.
Sen. James L. Buckley, Con.-
)R-N. Y., who has ealled on Nix-
on (o resign, said ne thought
support for the President
atnong conservatives is thinner
{han many suppose. Buckley
eaid he belicves conservatives
have been reluctant to make
their doubts known because
they are unwilling to seem to
‘align themselves wilh political
and philosophical tocs of the
President.
| [
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10,
1,
25,
20
] | Princess Anne & Husband
Narrowly Escape Shooting
| LONDON (AP) — Ian Ball, a
26-year-old unemployed Eng-
lishman, was brought into court
today and charged with at-
tempted murder during an at-
tempt to kidnap Princess Anne
from her car in the heart of
London Wednesday. night.
Ball, lean-faced and bearded,
stood ‘stiffly in the dock at the
Bow Street Magisirate’s court,
handcuffed to two detectives.
He spoke only once during his
60-second appearance, saying in
a London accent: “I want to
apply for legal aid.”
The court ordered him held
for another hearing on March
28 on the charge of attempting
‘to murder Princess Anne's per-
sonal bodyguard, Inspector
James Beaton.
Beaton was one of four per-
sons wounded as the would-be
kidnaper fired repeatedly at the
royal limousine. The others
were Anne’s chauffeur and a
policeman and a passing jour-
nalist who tried to intervene.
Beaton and. the policeman were
reported in serious condition,
The 23-year-old princess and
her husband of five months,
Capt. Mari Phillips, were not
hurt. But police: experts said
‘the holes left by one of the bul.
lets fired into the car indicated
it passed between them, miss:
ing them by inches.
A police informant said i
was believed. 11 shots were
fired. by the assailant. Experts
were studying two revolvers
found at the scene. They saic
five shots had been fired from
one and six from the other..Au-
thorities said earlier only six
shots were fired.
Police also found in the white
Ford that Ball rented for the
evening a typewritten ransom
demand addressed to Queer
Elizabeth II, Anne’s mother.
along with three pairs of hand
| cuffs, a driver’s license and en
)velopes addressed to two com
panies. . .
Officials declined. to discloss
any further details of the ‘dis
coveries. But the Daily Tele
graph said the letter asked’ for
a $2.3-million ransom, and the
Daily Mail said it was full ot
ravings about alleged in
justices,
Police said Ball had no fixed
address. Following the attack.
there was speculation that- i
was the work of Irish nation-
alists, but the- police said they
believed the motive was not po-
litical.
The gunman was, over.
powered by police from Buck.
ingham Palace, 150 yards away
from the royal limousine.
Witnesses said the gunmar
ran into St. James Park, ther
turned and’ leveled a pistol at
the police. One officer, Peter
Edwards, 21, brought him dowr
with a flying tackle, and the
other officers rushed in to hel
Edwards.
The attack was the first
against any member of the
British royal family since 193€
when a man threw a loaded re-
volver in front of King Edward
VII. The royal family occa-
sionally has received deat
threats but is not normally sur-
rounded by heavy security ar-
rangements.
Police gave this account of
the attack on the princess:
The queen’s only daughter
and the army officer she mar-
ried last November were re-
turning from a showing of a
documentary film about 8 p.m.
when a white Ford forced the
limousine to a stop on the Mall,
the ceremonial avenue leading
to the palace.
A man got out of the Ford
and began shooting, hitting
Alex Callender, the royal chaut-
feur, and Inspector Beaton and
shattering the front and rear
windows of the limousine. Beat-
on tried to fire back, but his
gun jammed.
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6,
23
] | House Sets
Minimum Wage
Rate at §)/Hr-
| WASHINGTON (AP) ~— The
House has passed legiglation
raising the minimum | -wage
from $1.60 an hour to $2 this
year for most workers covered
and to $2.30 for all by 1978.
The bill, approved. Wednes-
day 375 to 37, also would in-
crease by 7 million to 56.5 mil-
lion the number. of workers cov-
ered by, the minimum wage
laws. .
The bill is a modified version
of one President Nixon vetoed
last year. However, he is ex-
pected .to sign this one if it is
finally approved after adjust-
ment with a similar Senate-
passed measure, although it
does not meet all of his earlier
objections.
For most workers covered by
the minimum wage, the min-
imum would increase to $2 this
| year and then in two steps to
$2.20 in 1976.
Other nonagricultural work-
ers brought under coverage in
recent years would have a $1.90
minimum this year, reaching
$2.30 in 1977, while covered ag-
ricultural workers would have
a $1.60 minimum in 1974 and
reach $2.30 in 1978.
Coverage would be extended
to some 5 million federal, state
/and local government employ-
es; to domestic service employ-
es and some categories of em-
ployes of chain stores.
Overtime provisions would be
extended to $.5 million persons,
including government employes
other than police and firemen,
The bill does not contain an
across-the-board lower min-
imum wage for young persons,
'one of the provisions sought by
the administration. However, it
‘does permit full-time students
| to be employed part-time — not
more than 20 hours a week —
at $1.60 an hour subject to
regulations intended to assure
‘that they do not displace adult
| workers,
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15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
7,
0,
3,
4
] | Food & Fuel
Prices Jump
Living Costs
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
pace of inflation quickened in
February with food and fuel
prices pushing the cost of living
up 1.3 per cent, the second big-
gest monthly jump since 1951,
the government said today.
The Labor Department said
last month’s rise sent consumer
prices 10 per cent higher than a
year ago and marked the first
time since 1948 that the United
States experienced double fig-
ure inflation.
It was the highest 12-month
increase in the cost of living
since consumer prices rose by
102 per cent in the 12 months
ending January 1948.
Nearly half the February in-
crease was attributed to higher
food prices with the price of
beef raising 7.5 per cent, the
sharpest jump since a 9.6 per
cent inerease in June 1947.
Gasoline and other energy
items were responsible for
about a fifth of last month’s in-
crease in prices.
The Consumer Price Index
| climbed last month to 141.5 of
its 1967 average, meaning that
it cost consumers $141.50, to buy
the same amount of retail
‘goods and services that $100
bought in 1967.
While consumer prices con-
tinued their sharp rise, real
spendable earnings of workers
dropped another six-tenths of
one per cent in February and
were down 4.5 per cent from a
year ago. This was the largest
decline over a year since the
government began keeping that
statistic in 1964.
The February price report
showed inflation holding a firm
grip across the economy. Food
prices rose 2.5 per cent; non-
food. commodities, 1 per cent,
and services seven-tenths of 1
per cent.
The Nixon administration has
said it expects inflation to con-
tinue its sharp pace throughout
the first half of the year before
beginning to ease during the fi-
nal six months. Director John
T. Dunlop of the Cost of Living
Council said Wednesday that
February’s surge in food prices
would be followed by- more
moderate increases in March,
April and May.
“Our own estimate is. that: it
will be the last month with a
really ‘poor record,” “Dunlop
said.- ; *
Soaring gasoline and motor
ol: prices played a large part: in
the over-all increase in con-
sumer prices last month, rising
5,3,per cent to a level 30.9 per
cent above last. February. Fuel
oil and coal jumped 3.8 per
cent, the smallest ‘increase in
five months’ to a level 58.8 per
eent higher than a year ago.
Average prices. for gaSoline
alone increased 5.5 per cent
The average price for regular
jumped 49.1 cents.’ per . gallon
and for premiwny .5.27.c:
gallon. ae he Oe wae
‘| Prices: “of “regular gasoline
have now risen 22 per cent anc
premium gasoline 19.8 per cen
since the Labor Department be
gan publishing average prices
four months ago after. the star!
of the Arab oil embargo.
Grocery prices — the major
‘portion of the food index —=—«
jumped three per cent in Feb
ruary, substantially more than
usual for the month, The prica
of restaurant meals and snacks
~~ food away from home — was
up seven-tenths of one per cent,
The big increase in beef
prices followed a smaller in-
crease in January and declines
in the last three-months of 1973.
Fresh vegetable prices also
were up last month instead of
declining as they usually do,
About the only decline in food
prices was that fer poultry. =,
The Agriculture Department
has forecast. record crops of
wheat and corn this year, but
the full impact of those crops
will not reach consumers for
mnany months. They. are, how-
ever, counted on heavily by the
administration for a boost-..in
livestock ‘production through
mid-1975,
Meanwhile, Agriculture, Sec.
retary Earl-L. Butz said his des
partment’s .. earlier prediction
that grocery. store. food prices
are “most likely’ to‘rise’12:per-
cent this year still is sound. In
1973, food store prices jumped
16 per cent, according .to-.the
USA method of averaging them
aver an entire 12-month span.
Butz told reporters that he
believed most of the 1974 food
price rise already has Ot
curred.
In-its report on workersearne
ings, the Labor Department
. said the average weekly earn
ings of.a married worker with
three dependents.was $147.10 in
February, compared with
$139.10 a year earlier. But -be-
cause of the effects of. inflation
and a decrease in average
weekly hours, real average
| weekly eafhings” ‘Ove the year
were down 3.9 per cent, the. re»
port said.
The 2.5 per cent jump in. food
prices followed increases of 1.6
per cent in January and De-
cember’s jump of three-tenths
of one per cent,
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|
15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15905036-daily-globe-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
13,
8,
12,
16,
29
] | Private Schools May Get State Aid
| | LANSING, Mich. (AP) ~ Pri-
vate colleges in Michigan would
be the recipients of nearly $2
million of public money under a
bill which went to Gov. William
Miltiken’s desk Wednesday.
Although the bill docs not
contain an appropriation—that
will be included in a budget bill
later—the measure expresses
the legistature’s intention to
send about $1.9 million to pri-
vate schools in an effort. to re-
duce the gap in costs between
private and publi institutions,
The bill, which had passed
both houses, won approval on
its Senate version in the Touse
on a 95-5 vote.
The first time around, some
lawmakers raised questions as
to its constitutionelity—since it
resembles parochiaid—and
Rep. Lynn Jondahl, D-East
‘Lansing, said it “blurs the dis-
tinction between public and pri-
vate institutions.” Wednesday,
however, it passed with little
debate.
Tho bill grants money to pri-
vate schools on the basis of de-
grees conferred. The schools
would receive $200 for each as-
sociate (two-year) degree and
$480 for each bachelor’s degree,
|unless the same student had
; Won an associale’s degree car-
ilier, in which case it would be
$200,
Although the payment is
made to reduce the gap in tui-
Ition costs between private and
‘public colleges, there is no re-
,quirement that the money ac-
tually be used to lower tuition,
according to the bill's support-
erg.
Degrees awarded in theology
cr divinity are excluded fron
the bill, as are duplicate pay-
ments to those institutions al-
ready receiving money for law
and dental degrees.
In other action Wednesday,
the House:
~<Approved, 76-16, and sent
back to the Senate for con-
currence in minor amend-
ments, the transfer of about 30
acres of Jand in Washtenaw
County from the Department of
‘Mental Health to the Depart-
‘ment of Corrections to permit
the construction of a women’s
prison.
The measure aroused the op
position of Rep. Perry Bullard,
D-Ann Arbor, who charged that
constructing{ a women's prison
is a step backward in prison re-
form,
Others, however, pointing te
the penal horrors of the Detroit
House of Correction, sald such
a facility was needed until the
legislature could be persuaded
to approve more community
placement of inmates,
—Passed, 90, and sent ta
the Senate a bill to permit sur
vivors of a deceased veteran ta
receive reimbursement from
the courts of $308 in funeral ex
penses if the total estale doem
not exceed $30,000.
The present limit on estates
is $15,000, but backers of the
bill said the limit is too low and
point out it has not been raised
since 1959, although thera has
fheen a great incroaso in the
valuo of land, houses and other
property,
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14150
] |
|
244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
35,
34,
21,
36,
33
] | STREET SCENES
| JUAN GARZA of Alice will
be able to come home and
visit for the weekend if a
hospital bed with rails can be
borrowed for the family
Juan was injured in a hit
and run accident last year
and has been in a children’s
hospital in Corpus Christi
since then. This will be his
first visit home if a hospital
bed can be secured.
If you have one or know of
one, contact Elizabeth
Overand at 664-6137 or the
local Red Cross Office.
THE ANNUAL Premont
Cub Scout Blue and Gold
Banquet will be held tonight
at 6:30 at El Tropico Hall in
Premont. The five Premont
Dens will participate.
The Cub Scouts did their
own decorating and will have
their handiwork on display
at the covered dish banquet.
Awards will be presented
and announcements made
concerning Premont Cub
participation in the Cub
Dlympics and _ District
Pinewood Derby, both to be
held in Kingsville.
Banquet guests of honor
will include Mr. and Mrs
Cliff Visel, Bob Knupple
district scout executive fron
Kingsville and Mr. and Mrs
Raymond Edmondson 0
Premont. Edmondson 1
district Scout commissioner
Board Candidate”’ will be th
program at the Alic
Classroom Teacher
meeting Monday, March 2
at 7:30 p.m. in the Jim Wel
County Courtroom.
All citizens of the Alic
Independent School Distri
are invited to attend.
Women’s Club will preser
their annual Style Shot
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in S
Teresa Parish Hall.
The show will feature th
lastest fashions, el
tertainment and refres|
ments. TicketS are now ¢
sale by club members f
$1.25.
A DONATION BOX has
been placed at Dena’s
Restaurant for cash
donations or gift certificates
for Mrs. Sofie Huebner of
Alice whose home burned
last week and destroyed all
her belongings.
It is requested that these
donations be made by
Sunday and that they be
placed in an envelope with
the name and address of the
donor on the envelope or
inside with the donation.
These donations will help
Mrs. Huebner start
housekeeping again and she
will be able to buy the things
she needs. All her clothing,
household items and_fur-
niture were destroyed.
| Ry tinda Smith
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15,
17,
26
] | Stock Market
| NEW YURNA SUP? Sir itto
opened higher today in light
trading on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Brokers were gratified that
the market moved upward
during Wednesday's trading
despite the increase In the
prime rate posted by a number
of banks. Bankers Trust began
the action with a one-quarter
increase to 9 per cent before
the market opened Wednesday
and several other banks fol
lowed. Some, however, said
they would hold their prime
rate, the percentage charged
favorite customers, at 8') per
CeTIL.
Shortly after the opening
bell, the Dow Jones industrial
average gained 1.56 to 873 a0)
Advances outnumbered
declines 205 to 17) among the
560 issues traded
Volume was 530,000 shares 1n
the early minutes of trading.
Oils and motors were mixed
Armco Steel was the most
active stock, up '« at 24'». The
company said Wednesday tn Its
annual report that 1973 was its
most productive year and i
expected the demand for stee
would remain high during 1974
| [
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14152
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|
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1,
0,
3,
25
] | BE CAREFUL
It’s Snake Season
| After nearly a lifetime spent
farming and ranching in the
Alice area, Charley Carter,
currently leasing the Floyd
Estate property on the old
Kingsville Road has become
very familiar with the
frightening crackle of a ral-
tlesnake preparing to strike.
The six-foot male Carter
killed Wednesday near an
abandoned road on_ his
property emphasized the
danger these critters pose lo
residents of this area al this
ume.
Carter said this is the most
dangerous of all seasons for
pedestrians walking through
brush or picnicking by the side
of the road. The snakes have
recently come out of hiber-
nation and still carry their
winter skins which blend in
perfectly with the vegitation.
Carter pointed out that until
the rattlesnakes shed their
winter overcoats, they are
virtually blind, and will strike
out at any sound, aiming by ear
rather than by sight.
/ “A snake can hit anything
three quarters the distance 0!
its own length away,” saic
| Carter. ‘That means it cat
| strike up to four feet fron
where he may be coiled ant
waiting for his prey.’’
| The rancher went on t
| suggest a few safety measure
for pedestrians who may b
forced to walk through brush 0
grassy areas at this time ¢
| year.
| “Always carry a stick or
rod if you don’t have a rifle or a
hand gun with you,” he
cautioned. ‘‘A shovel or a hoe is
even better.”’
If you see a rattler, Carter
suggests keeping a_ safe
distance away, never letting
the snake out of sight.
Juveniles ought not to try and
tackle the reptile alone, but
should call for help and wait
until an adult is on the scene
before trying to kill a rattler.
‘Killing a rattlesnake is the
act of a good citizen,’’ said
Carter. ‘The snake you kill
may be a danger to someone
else if you let it escape.’
| [
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18,
11,
13,
9,
16,
19
] | Princess Anne Unharmed
Accused Kidnaper in Jail without Bond
| LONDON (UPI) — The man
accused of attempting to
kidnap Princess Anne was held
without bail today in a briet
hearing in which police
revealed he had a large sum of
money in a bank account and
may have had the help of
associates.
The specific charge against
lan Ball, 26. a slender though
powerfully built six-footer, was
the attempted murder of
Princess Anne's bodyguard.
Detective Inspector James
Beaton, one of four men shot in
the bizarre ambush of a royal
limousine a few yards from
Buckingham Palace Wed-
nesday night
Ball was brought into Bow
Street Magistrate's court
under the heaviest security
precautions there in memory
He was handcuffed to twe
detectives. Everyone in_ the
courtroom was searched. Out
side the narrow street was blue
with police lined up on both
sides. A busload of police
preceded his black maria and
another busload followed if
The measures were so
stringent as to underline the
police theory that Ball may not
have operated alone
Ball. who spoke in’ what
appeared to be a London ac
cent. was completely com-
_ posed in the dock as Detective
Chief Superintendent Roy Ran-
son asked for him to be held a
| week without bail on the
| ground it was “imperative”
police have ready access to
him
“It is a matter of state
| security which | cannot!
_ enlarge upon,” Ranson said.
Asked by Magistrate Ken.
neth Barraclough if he had any
| objection to being held without
_ bail or to the police examining
| his bank account Ball saic
_ quietly:
| “No, but I'd like to apply fot
legal aid.” |
He wore a good quality gray
chalk stripe suit, a white shirt
and a dark tie
He has a_ neatly trimmed
short beard, hardly more than
| a few weeks’ shaving stubble.
In addition to the uniformed
police some 15 plainclothes
detectives were among the 40
or so newsmen and public tn
the courtroom
Until that moment it had
been assumed that the at
tempted kidnaping of the
daughter of Queen Elizabeth
was the work of a_ lone
operator. But Ranson said
“We are endeavoring !0
trace his associates.”
Ball was listed as “‘unem-
ployed and of no fixed ad-
dress.”’
Princess Anne and her
husband, Capt. Mark Phillips,
went about their usual chores
today at Sandhurst Military
Academy, where he is an in
| structor. But police and armed
soldiers patrolled near their
house and guard dogs were Ir
evidence
All but one of the gates inte
the academy grounds wer
closed and troops mountet
| double guard.
| Mark and Anne drove ¢
| Sandhurst after resting a
Buckingham Palace, wher
they were taken “very shaken
| by the attempted kidnapin
| which, had it succeeded, woul
/ have been without parallel |
modern times. The abductie
of the Queen's daughter wou
have been tantamount |
holding the entire nation
ransom
But the gunman taile
Police reaction apparently
| quicker than he had expecte
Neither the Princess nor h
husband was hit in |t
macabre scene in which th
scrambled for their lives on |
back seat of the Princess |
maroon Austin autorfMobile
while the frantic gunman
alternately tried to get a shot
home and shook the car in his
frenzy to force the doors open
Since he had in his pocket a
ransom note to the Queen about
her daughter, it was assumed
the bullets in the car were
intended to kill only Capt
Phillips as an obstacle to
escaping with the 23-year-old
princess, who 1s fourth in
succession to the throne
Realizing he had failed as
police reinforcements came
up, the gunman raced into the
dark of nearby St. James’
Park, pursued by police con-
— stable Peter Edwards, 21, who
~ brought him down with a flying
tackle. The coincidence thal
helped in his capture was the
presence of more police thar
usual in the area for that hou
when the queen is not i
residence at nearby Bucking
ham palace
Within hours the act ha
changed, perhaps for all time
the British attitude to protect
ing royalty and other cele
brities. Orders went out to ste
up security around Quee
Elizabeth and Prince Phill
who are on a state visit |
Indonesia, and the Prince |
Wales. heir to the throne, wt
is serving on the British friga
Jupiter at San Diego. Califo
nia
Scotland Yard summoned
meeting of experts which w
expected to recommend bull
| proof glass and armor for roy
automobiles, more arm
guards and a closer inspect!
of royal routes, among ott
. | measures, even though it is_
years since a top Brit)
r political figure was ass
sinated
Even police were shocked
the incident. ‘What the hel
the world coming to” said a
senior officer He added thal
security had not expected
anything unusual
The drama on the Mall, the
broad thoroughfare that leads
to Buckingham Palace, began
at 7:50 pm (2:50 pm. EDT)
while Princess Anne and Capt
Phillips were returning from 4
private showing of 4 film
“Riding Towards Freedom”
made for the riding for
Disabled Association, one of
‘ner charities She appears in
the film
Hospital spokesman early
today described the condition
of all four injured men as
“satisfactoory.”
Miss Scott saw Miss Brassey
leave the limousine crouched
or all fours to try to get to one
‘lof the wounded. She asked
'|what was the matter
*| “Get down,” said the lady
) in-waiting,"’ there’s a maniac
- foose.”’
i The gunman then fired Six
“bullets into the Austin. Miss
» Scott said Phillips kept his
_ | arms around his wife trying t
| shield her as they shifted fron
. | side to side. She saw Anne ant
Mark try to escape out of th
és door on the sidewalk side whil
af the gunman was on th
otherside of the car “shakin
wi the door madly and firing
* When he saw them trying t
get out he rushed around an
they huddled back in the ca
The Princess and her hu
band were taken to Buckin;
‘a]| ham Palace where
ed| Spokesman said they we
| sanhhurt.
Ms
et
| [
[
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[
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[
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[
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[
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4002.4624433594
],
[
103.9287719727,
877.3258056641,
3834.5786132812,
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]
] | [
103.9287719727,
877.3258056641,
3849.5317792969,
4456.6555585937
] | 3 | 3_244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 244,584,674 | front_page_20_99 | 14,154 | 12,867 | [
12670,
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12421,
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13835,
10103,
11537,
10901,
11673,
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10655,
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13217,
13607,
11176,
11433,
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9190,
10599,
13161,
10094,
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14190,
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10999,
11384,
13561,
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] |
|
244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
23,
12
] | Gas Price
Increase
Predicted
| WASHINGTON (UPI)
Federal Energy chief William
E. Simon says gasoline prices
may reach 75 cents a gallon
this year.
He predicted prices could
range from 60 to 75 cents per
gallon, with the highest prices
likely on the East Coast which
relies more heavily on im
ported oil.
| [
[
3269.5788164063,
6398.754109375,
3988.7038984375,
6987.7078046875
],
[
3246.2927246094,
5913.0112304688,
3957.490234375,
6380.1401367188
]
] | [
3246.2927246094,
5913.0112304688,
3988.7038984375,
6987.7078046875
] | 4 | 4_244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 244,584,674 | front_page_20_99 | 14,155 | 13,162 | [
12416,
10625,
9797,
12805,
13162,
14155,
14186,
11374,
12110,
14162,
10646,
12251
] |
|
244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
6,
20,
10,
5
] | City-County Firefighting
Pact Discussion Slated
| Alice City Manager Frank
Reed is scheduled to appear
before the Jim Wells County
Commissioners at the weekly
session at 10 a.m. Friday to
discuss the agreement between
the city and the county in
regard to the sharing of the
costs of fighting fires outside
city limits.
In the last city council
meeting, Reed released the
percentage of fires fought by
Alice firemen in both city and
county areas, which showed a
rising number of calls an
| swered in the county as
| compared with those taking
place within city limits
Reed was asked by the
council to aquaint the county
commissioners with the
problem and attempt to work
out a reasonable agreement!
between the two governing
bodies to help defray the cost of
fighting fires in county areas
Also on the agenda for
tomorrow's commissioners
court will be a request from the
Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department to install six buoys
or Lake Corpus Christi within
_ the Jim Wells County boundary
,
| line.
Other items on the agenda
tomorrow Wii De.
A request by Counts
Attorney «arnoldo Garcia 10
have the court approve [ax
waivers, and to get the court's
approval to settle a con
demnation sult,
Approved a_ request! by
Justice of the Peace Alberto
Garcia to attend a Veterans
Service Seminar in Victoria,
—Hear a request by Ben
Allen to hire a deputy constable
in the Premont area
Approve the county's
weekly payroll and other
outstanding bills, and hear any
person or delegation with
business before the court
| [
[
3310.2768144531,
7410.2668046875,
4033.4414472656,
8458.249796875
],
[
4064.8649492188,
7407.842,
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8449.730265625
],
[
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8422.5652265625
],
[
3299.5161132812,
6988.9462890625,
5452.56640625,
7395.6748046875
]
] | [
3299.5161132812,
6988.9462890625,
5549.5735273437,
8458.249796875
] | 5 | 5_244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 244,584,674 | front_page_20_99 | 14,156 | 14,156 | [
14156
] |
|
244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
22,
24
] | Police Blotter
| Two Alice men physically |
assaulted police officers as the |
latter were attempting to take |
them into custody in unrelated
incidents Wednesday evening
Officers E. W. Sherek and
Joe Page reported a 28-year
old man found driving while
intoxicated fought to prevent
being taken to counts jail
adding an aggravated assault
upon a police officer to the DWI
charge
Sgt. Sherek reported the two
- officers stopped the man at the
corner of King and Schley Sts
shortly after 9:15 p.m. on an
expired license plate violation
charge. When they cited him
for DWI, the man reportedly
| cursed the officers and fought
all the way to the jail
Officer Fred Olivares also
reported a physical assault
while attempting to take a man
into custody who was creating
a disturbance at a restauran!
in the 1100 block of Fk Main St
| around 9:30 p.m
Olivares reported he had t
| wrestle the man to the groun
before he could place him 1
the patrol car, during whic!
time, said Olivares, the mat
stuffed some pills in his moutt
| Following a search of bh
person prior to being
. | earcerated, the man was foun
. | tobe in possession of a quanti
. | of what police allege to b
marijuana, hidden ina pack al
cigarettes he was carrying
The suspect was charged with
the possession of weed alony
with the drunk tn publie
citation
Earlier, Olivares surprised
three would-be gas thieves as
they were attempting to siphon
gas from a car parked in the
800 block of E. Main St The
Olivare
suspects ran off as
ther
approached, leaving
equipment behind
Les Wheeler. principal of
Wilham Adams Jumor High
School, summoned Detective
Pete Hinojosa to the school
shortly after 4am Wednesday
when two 14-year-old students
were apparentls suffering
| from the after effects of an
overdose of an unknown drug
The two youths said a man on
a red motorcycle had given
them pills, which left therm
dizzy and unsteady on their
feet. Hinojosa released the pai!
in the custody of their parents
following consultation witt
their family physician
» | Another juvenile relates
i | incident made the Alice polic
o blotter when a security guar
| for an K. Main St. shoppin,
, | center reportedly discovered
© | 16-vearold youth trying !
- | Jeave the store with a pair ¢
i | new pants worn underneath h
y | old pants
e | Officer RW. Magoun
| escorted the patron to tt
| police station where he wi
| charged with theft! under $5 at
| released to the county Juvent
officer
| In other police activity,
| theft of over $150 worth
| lumber and construction W1
was reported by Reinho
| Ender from a storage yard
Lo 763 Glendale. Ender said t
1x | theft must have occurr
| within the last two weeks
| [
[
4736.2921953125,
4677.967,
5477.4934492187,
6952.7053632812
],
[
5484.0719804687,
4681.5954179687,
6241.9172773437,
7650.7175703125
],
[
4839.486328125,
4470.2885742188,
6074.1826171875,
4641.7353515625
]
] | [
4736.2921953125,
4470.2885742188,
6241.9172773437,
7650.7175703125
] | 6 | 6_244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 244,584,674 | front_page_20_99 | 14,157 | 14,157 | [
14157
] |
|
244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/244584674-alice-echo-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8,
14,
37,
27
] | Pipeline Approval Sought
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
U.S. and Canadian govern-
ments were asked Thursday to
approve construction of a $5.7
billion pipeline to carry natural
gas from the north slope of
Alaska and the Mackenzie
river delta of northern Canada
into major energy consuming
areas of the two countries
The application was filed by
the Alaskan Arctic Gas
Pipeline Co. and Canadian
Arctic Gas Pipeline Limited,
who termed the proposed 2,600
| mile pipeline ‘‘the largest
construction project in the
history of private enterprise.”
They said it could be in partial
operation by 1978 if given
prompt approval
Robert G. Ward, President of
Alaskan Arctic Gas, sa'd thal
when full capacity was reached
the pipeline would deliver
“well over’ four billion cubic
feet of gas a day, or an amoun!
equal to about 6 per cent 0
3
North America’s current
demand for some 24 trillion
cubic feet a year
When other firms are
brought into the project, he
said, the total investment may
reach as high as $8 billion with
a resulting “dramatic impact”
on US. employment, energy
supplies and the economy
generally. The line would
stretch from Alaska’s Prudhoe
Bay to distribution points along
the U.S -Canadian border
Noting the sensitivity of
environmentalists, who fought
unsuccessfully to block the
Alaskan oil pipeline, Wood said
more than $50 million was
spent on planning which will
| result in “measures that will
enhance the environment oF
| mitigate adverse en
| ‘
| vironmental effects of con
struction and other
operations.’
“These intensive and expen
sive efforts have produced
information that places us In «
preeminent position to link the
enormous gas reserves in the
far north to US market:
where the need for this cleat
fuel is so tremendous,” hi
| added
/ Wood said U.S. consumers |}
the Midwest, Fast Coast, We:
| and Far West would receive a
the Alaskan gas and any exces
| from the Canadian fields afte
Canada’s needs are met F
said an estimated 122 milli
consumers live in the ares
| that would receive Alaské
, | Bas
: “This project will allow tt
United States to use the huj
| Bas reserves of northet
Alaska,’’ Wood said
The project must be ap
| [
[
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3940.456828125,
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],
[
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[
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[
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] |
|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
27
] | Then said the Lord unte Moses, beheld |
will rain bread from heaven for you. —
Exodus 16:4.
God is anxious that His children enjoy
limitless abundance. But He likes ap
preciation for real bounties too.
| [
[
137.161331665,
7127.824890625,
1094.1327509766,
7474.85675
]
] | [
137.161331665,
7127.824890625,
1094.1327509766,
7474.85675
] | 1 | 1_304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 304,859,837 | front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorial|masthead_5075+general-manager | 14,159 | 14,159 | [
14159
] |
||
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
26,
38
] | Will Rogers says...
| I think you can learn about the same
at all schools — outside of football.
Harvard is the home of culture and poor
football. Everybody in Harvard can
speak good English but almost nobody
can make a touchdown. In the old days
boys wanted an education; they had
gone there for their heads and not their
shoulders. Today it’s open field running
that gets your old college somewhere
and not a pack of spectacled orators or
a mess of civil engineers. It’s better to
turn out one good coach than ten college
presidents.
College athletes are always coming
up to me and asking ‘“‘when should I
turn pro?” And I tell 'em, “Not until
you have earned all you can in college.”
(Lecture, 1933)
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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1061.9160761719,
6257.6423945312
] | 3 | 3_304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 304,859,837 | front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorial|masthead_5075+general-manager | 14,160 | 14,160 | [
14160
] |
|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
34,
42
] | Spiro’s Maryland successor
guilty of extortion, evasion
| BALTIMORE (UPI) — N. Dale Anderson,
who succeeded Spiro Agnew as Baltimore
County executive and ran afoul of the same
grand jury investigation that forced the
former vice president from office, was found
guilty Wednesday of extortion, conspiracy
and tax evasion.
A U.S. District Court jury convicted
Anderson, 57, one of Maryland’s most
powerful Democrats, on 32 counts. They in-
cluded extortion of more than $38,000 in kick-
backs from engineers and architects seeking
contracts. He was also convicted of evading
payment en more than $67,000 in federal in-
come tax.
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 5 | 5_304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 304,859,837 | front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorial|masthead_5075+general-manager | 14,161 | 14,161 | [
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] |
|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
36,
30,
41
] | Spotlight
Simon says gasoline prices
may climb to 75 cents in ’74
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — Federal Energy
chief William E. Simon says gasoline prices
may reach 75 cents a gallon this year.
Simon Wednesday told a House
Appropriations subcommittee the lifting of
the Arab oil embargo had eliminated the need
for gasoline rationing, but the price increase
imposed on the foreign oil would drive the
price of gasoline higher.
He predicted prices could range from 60 to
75 cents per gallon, with the highest prices
likely on the East Coast which relies more
heavily on imported oil.
| [
[
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2700.2445683594,
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[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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3421.1709589844
] | 6 | 6_304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 304,859,837 | front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorial|masthead_5075+general-manager | 14,162 | 13,162 | [
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|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
18,
21,
4
] | Gambling indictment names
peace officers, farm bureau
| BEAUMONT — A Jefferson County peace
alter. group 02 well a anther coumsy-onted
operation were nam gam in-
dictments returned Thursday by the grand
jury here.
The Jefferson County Peace Officers
Association and the Jefferson County Farm
Bureau, Inc. were true-billed on counts of
gambling promotions.
According to investigating officers, the
peace officer group consists of about nine or
10 officers from the Beaumont Police
Sheriff's Department.
The indictment resulted from a lottery
being conducted Feb. 21 for a set of tires,
police said.
Officers reported tickets were sold for §1
each with the tires to be given away Feb. 22.
The gambling promotion indictment
against the farm bureau organization in-
cluded a lottery also, police said, with tickets
to be sold for 81 each.
A draw for a 30-06 rifle and an electric
| [
[
143.8343510742,
7936.578796875,
1112.8922724609,
8595.0413203125
],
[
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8576.4534296875
],
[
150.2957000732,
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2070.6384277344,
7910.9545898438
]
] | [
143.8343510742,
7505.9526367188,
2121.526671875,
8595.0413203125
] | 7 | 7_304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 304,859,837 | front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorial|masthead_5075+general-manager | 14,163 | 14,163 | [
14163
] |
|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
10,
5,
14,
31,
17
] | Beaumonters due coliseum issue
| KOUNTZE — The City of Beaumont will
go to the voters with a $25 million bond issue
for a convention center-coliseum in late
spring or early summer, city tives
told the executive committee of the regional
planning commission Wedncsday night.
Civic center proponents from Beaumont,
South County and Mid County outlined their
plans for civic centers to members of the
South East Texas Regional Planning Com-
mission (SETRPC) meeting at the Hardin
County courthouse.
Beaumont Mayor Ken Ritter said
proponents from his city had completed the
planning phase, having received feasibility
studies and market analyses in December,
and were well into the implementation phase.
Barry Humphries, general manager of the
Central City Development Corp. in
Beaumont, said a Beaumont facility is
projected to serve an entire region, 15
counties in Texas and 11 parishes in South
Louisiana.
The Beaumont facility would actually
consist of three components, he said, a con-
vention hall. a combined theater-auditorium
component and a coliseum-arena
Ritter added that it is possible that not all
the components would be at the same
location.
Several citizens became interested in a
regional convention complex two years ago,
Beaumont city manager Ken Devero said.
But, since the civic center proposal would
involve general obligation tax bonds, plans
were postponed for more pressing basic
needs, such as streets, sewer and water.
Beaumont’s proposed facilities would be
compatible with the South County civic center
proposal, Humphries said.
Rebuffed by voters in Pear Ridge and
Groves at a Novernber, 1973 bend referen-
dum, the South County Civic Center Authority
has been involved in a fund raising campaign
with 11 local industries, according to Sam
Aquilina of Port Arthur.
Voters in Port Arthur, Lakeview and
Griffing Park approved the general
obligation proposal, providing authorization
for 76 per cent of $2.7 million of the estimated
$3.6 million cost of the South County facility,
he said.
Since $900,000 was denied by Pear Ridge
See BEAUMONTERS, Page 2
| By TOM AYRES
Of The News Staff
| [
[
1170.5563359375,
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],
[
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14164
] |
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
9,
11,
29,
32,
22
] | Amendments pelt charter finance article
| AUSTIN —- Sections of a proposed Con-
stitutional Finance article dealing with the
manner of levying taxes withstood more than
a dozen attempted amendments Wednesday.
Though nothing was formally adopted,
delegates showed their sentiments through
what they rejected during a day of debate.
They tabled 119-35, a proposal by Reps.
Wayne Peveto of Orange and Charles Evans
of Arlington, to impose a Constitutional ban
on any property taxes levied by the state.
Presently, the state imposes a 10 cents per
$100 value tax to support higher education.
As the finance committee report stands
now, the state may levy taxes by general law
only, but there is no restriction on the type of
tax levied.
ve convention kicked around, and even
tried for a noon-hour compromise, on an
amendment to the finance committees plan to
provide for a single tax appraising authority
in each county.
In the committee report, ‘each county
shall provide for an appraisal of all taxable
property within it’s boundaries.”
Currently, said Rep. Neil Caldwell of
Alvin, chairman of the finance committee,
jurisdictions within a single county — each at
different rates.
Amendments were attempted to allow the
legislature to set up some agency other than
the counties to provide for the single
assessment.
Rep. Gene Jones of Houston, proposed that
the constitution set up county-wide ‘‘local
appraisa) districts’ to value property in each
county.
All taxing authorities within the county
would have to levy tazes on the basis of the
values determined by the ‘‘appraisal
district.’
“All this does is add another level of
See AMENDMENTS, Page 2
| By RICK FISH
News Capitol Staff
| [
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[
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[
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[
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14165
] |
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
20,
13,
25,
33,
16
] | Festival activity to open
| NEDERLAND — Besides being the first
day of spring, Thursday is a special day in
Nederland. It's the first day of activities of
the Heritage Festiva! this year.
A fireworks display at 8:15 p.m. Friday
will officially kick-off the fete. The event is
sited at the Weingarten Shopping Center and
is free to the public.
Saturday's events include a parade at 10
am 4 flaa market in the Naderland echan!
district administration building parking lot,
an outdoor show at the Weingarten center, a
sidewalk art show at the center, a pet show,
queen's ball at the BRAD Club and a style
show.
A special treat Saturday will be a per-
formance by the Langham Elementary
Schoo! tumbling team and melodica band.
The event is set for noon in front of the city
office building on Boston Avenue.
Friday night at 7:30 p.m. a new Tulip
Queen will be crowned in ceremonies at the
Central Junior High School auditorium.
Sixteen contestants will vie for the title in the
pageant sponsored by the Westernaire
Alumnae.
Sunday morning at 9 a.m., a monument
dedicated to the Nederlanders who died in
action during World War II will be
rededicated at its new location at the Wind-
mill Museum on Boston Avenue.
Again Sunday the flea market and outdoor
show will be open to festival visitors.
A noon buffet, scheduled for 12:30 p.m. in
| By BRENDA FRENCH
Of The News Staff
| [
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14166
] |
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
1,
8,
0
] | Jump 1.3 per cent
February living
costs skyrocket
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — Pushed by higher
food prices, the cost of living jumped 1.3 per
cent in February, its largest increase in six
months, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
said today.
The BLS said almost half the increase was
caused by skyrocketing food prices, and
higher prices for gasoline and other energy
sources accounted for about 20 per cent of the
increase.
The impact on the American consumer was
aggravated, the BLS said, by a decline in the
real gross of weekly earnings of workers.
The index for food rose 3 per cent, well
above normal for January, with higher beef
prices accounting for about one-third of the
total food hike.
The increase in the Consumer Price Index
was the largest since August, 1973, when the
cost of living rose 1.8 per cent. January's
increase was just under | per cent.
The BLS said the price increase in gasoline
and motor oil was not as large as January,
when a 6 per cent rise was
The index for fuel oil and coal rose 3.8 per
cent—the smallest boost in five months. But
that was an incredible 58 per cent above
Feburary, 1973.
The index for household services, including
charges for gas, electricity, housekeeping
and rent, rose .7? per cent in Feburary and
medical care costs increased even more
sharply.
The BIS said the spendable earnings of
American workers declined 6 per cent from
January, almost entirely because of the in-
crease in the cost of living.
Over the year, average weekly earnings
were down 3.9 per cent. The rise of 6.6 per
cent in average hourly wages was more than
offset by a 10 per cent hike in consumer prices
and a 8 per cent decline in average weekly
hours.
Among the few items cheaper last month
were new cars, used cars, and poultry —which
normally go up in February.
Fresh vegetable prices increased sharply
last month instead of declining as they nor-
mally do, the BLS said.
Over the past year, the BIS said, real
See LIVING, Page 2
| [
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|
304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/304859837-port-arthur-news-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
12,
2
] | Princess’ kidnap
try is thwarted;
man in custody
| LONDON (UPI) — The man accused of
attempting to kidnap Princeas Anne was held
without bail today in a brief hearing in which
police revealed he had a large sur of money
in a bank account and may have had the help
of associates.
The specific charge against lan Ball, 26, a
slender though powerfully built six-footer,
was the atternpted murder of Princess Anne's
bodyguard, Detective Inspector James Bea-
ton, one of four men shot in the bizarre am-
bush of a royal limousine a few yards from
Buckingham Palace Wednesday night.
Ball was brought into Bow Street
Magistrate's court under the heaviest
security precautions there in memory.
He was handcuffed to two detectives.
Everyone in the courtroom was searched.
Outside the narrow street was blue with
police lined up on both sides. A busload of
police preceded his black maria and another
busload followed it.
The measures were so stringent as to un-
derline the police theory that Ball may not
have operated alone.
Ball, who spoke in what appeared to be a
London accent, was completely composed in
See PRINCESS Page ?
| [
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[
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|
209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
18,
6,
7
] | End to embargo
preserves jobs
| DETROIT (UPI) — General Motors
Corp. said Wednesday that it has can-
celled plas to close seven plants for one
week because of the lifting of the Arab oil
embargo against the United States.
GM Chairman Richard C. Gerstenberg
said the move meant it would not tem-
porarily furlough 27,000 workers em-
ployed at assembly plants across the
country.
The plants, which were scheduled to
close down for either the week of March
2 or April 1, are locatec in Flint and
Lansing, Mich., Arlington, Tex.,
Framingham, Mass., and Tarrytown,
N.Y.
The Michigan plants include the cor-
poration’s home assembly plants for
Buick and Oldsmobile.
Gerstenberg said it is possible that all
of the 65,000 GM workers currently laid
off because of the impact of the energy
crisis on the auto industry may return to
work by mid-April.
“With a continued improvement in the
business,’’ Gerstenberg said, ‘‘we are
hopeful no further temporary layoffs will
be required.”’
But he said that despite the lifting of
the oil embargo, ‘‘a limited number’”’ of
previouslyannounced plant closings over
the next two weeks will go ahead as
planned.
Gerstenberg said GM dealers were
starting to report an upswing in the sale
of used cars, a movement hecalled a first
step to improved new vehicle sales.
GM has been hardest hit among the Big
Three automakers in new car sales since
the energy crisis hit the industry last fall.
| [
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11,
15,
21
] | Classes offered
for spring term’
| To permit some preliminary planning
for spring, a schedule for ‘‘spring term”
of Marshall’s Community Education has
been announced by the Marshall Public
Schools.
Possible classes in 18 subjects are
being offered. Some short courses will be
four weeks in length; others six, and
most of the swimming lessons eight
weeks in length.
Monday classes will include: slim-
nastics, sewing, swimnastics, and
beginning golf.
Radio and T.V. repair, men’s physical
fitness, adult tennis lessons and care and
maintenance of multi-speed bikes will be
held on Tuesdays.
On Wednesday evening Slimnastics is
repeated along with women’s swimming
lessons, auto tune up and upholstery.
The school week will conclude on
Thursday with the second session of adult
tennis lessons and men’s physicaL fitness,
plus cooking of foreign foods and men’s
pool exercise class.
Additional information may be
obtained by calling extension 23 at the
Marshall Public Schools, 781-5171.
| [
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14170
] |
|
209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
24,
12,
9,
28,
10,
5,
36,
39,
40,
34
] | PSNQH STUQCTHS IflrervieweQ
What is attraction of private schools?
Best cake decorators
Marshall students interviewed
| Concepts in public education seem to
be changing every day, or at least every
year or so. As high school students are
required to have better qualifications for
college entrance, or for specialization in
their world of work, public education
attempts to move this way or that, trying
to fill the diverse needs of many types of
students.
In Marshall, the birth of adult
education happened within the past five
years. In Calhoun County, a vocational
education center has offered training in
more varied fields than ever before
available, serving all the county’s high
schoo! students.
Experiments on non-graded teaching
have been successful, according to
Marshall educators, first at Conley
School, now other elementaries and the
Marshall Middle School.
With all the present attention, and
money, spent on Marshall's school
system, is it surprising to find some
students and their parents opting for
private education? Maybe, but students
still leave Marshall for study at private,
or ‘‘independent’’ schools elsewhere.
The Marshall students at private
schools say they’re getting a better
education away from home. That’s the
most important thing, of course, but how
much better is it, how is it done, and w
are the costs?
Other questions include what kind of
other benefits are available for private
education students, what is campus life
like at the high school level, and what —_
some of the problems?
Mark Carrington, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Carrington of 769 N. Kalamazoo, at-
tended Cranbrook School, Bloomfield
Hills, four years and is a freshman at Al-
bion College. He says he was an
‘‘average’’ Cranbrook student and isn’t
having much trouble handling college
work at Albion.
Cranbrook. which actually includes
two schools for high school boys and
girls, and an elementary, plus an art
academy and a science institute, is a top
ranked private school. In its quarterly
magazine the Cranbrook president,
Arthur H. Kiendl, says, ‘‘We are not
attracting as many highly qualified
students, particularly boarders, to
Kingswood (girls) and Cranbrook
schools as we would like.”’
In another paragraph: ‘‘As costs have
risen, we have had no alternative but to
raisé tuition. It is now $3,900 for boar-
ders, $2,400 for Kingswood and Cran-
brook day students and $1,800 for full-day
Brookside (elementary) pupils.’’
That's nearly $4,000 per year tor a
Marshall student to attend Cranbrook.
Add incidentals, and the figure can easily
hit $5,000 per year, which Kiend]l admits
can price good students right out of
Cranbrook schools.
But the private schools have strong
selling points, and the parent who wants
an excellent education for his child can
justify the expense.
Cranbrook has kept its standards high
enough to keep good students in and poor
students out. It's a happy situation to be
in because many private college prep
schools are closing their doors now,
unable to make ends meet, or reducing
entrance standards to attract any ap
plicant, so long as he has the tuition
price.
The private school strongly em-
phasizes guidance and counseling to
attract applicants. Mark Carrington says
it implies high school years are most
uncertain for most students. ‘‘There is a
greater need for guidance during these
years, so the school emphasizes guidance
for planning a future, or social guidance
for personal problems.
“The idea is to make sure parents
know their kids will have proper training,
or someone to answer important ques-
tions for them,”’ Carrington says.
A student-teacher relationship
paralleling that of parent and child is
encouraged, though it’s more like a
‘‘buddy"’ system. Parents are replaced
by teachers as guidance counselors and
specialists are present as well for
specific problems.
The studént-teacher partnership is
essential to more varied learning exper!-
ences as well, according to Carrington.
Rather than separating at the end of
classes, the student and teacher can
experiment together with special pro-
jects to expand learning beyond class-
room lectures.
Also. if a student seeks help for pro-
blems that lead to punishable offenses, it
ig the teacher who hears about it first. ‘If
you're honest with a teacher, and ask for
help. you won't be punished for anything
there,’ Carrington says.
The ctidente make the schoo] — anv
school -- and Cranbrook students nave
varied backgrounds. In fact, Carrington
stresses the point that students ait Cran-
brook should not be stereotyped as the
well-to-do children of great Detroit aree
business executives
There are some such Studeéi.s chore
but Carrington says students co...
Cranbrook from rural and big oy e:
vironments; many are on schofarship:.
there, and the only certainty 1s that few
poorly prepared students can handle tne
studies.
“There's arother stereotype about
Cranbrook students, that the unis xo-
getters come from poor families Stu
dents from more affluent families work
just as hard for their grades Thev are
enthusiastic, and as capable as arsyone
else.”
Carrington points this out because he
was discouraged from attending (ran
brook while a student at Marsnaics
jyumor high school “An adminisirater a
coach and a teacher were ore vnticed
against private schools jike v:
brook,” Carrington Says, “hecause hes
are supposed to be full of mens o>
something
(Continued on page 3:
| By SKIP MOSES
(First of three parts)
| [
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209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
17,
3,
13,
16,
41,
37
] | Could save energy
we? 5 F fw SS JT
New building methods
| The federal government has proposed
new methods of constructing federal
buildings in a move to save additional
energy and suggested its effort could be
adapted to all new buildings.
Arthur F. Sampson, General Services
Administration administrator, said new
features for such construction would
include the collection of rain water for
cooling and irrigation, solar energy
collectors and the covering of exterior
walls with earth.
‘‘What we are saying is that these
design criteria ought to be applied in the
construction of all federal buildings and,
eventually, to buildings built with federal
assistance,’’ Sampson told a news con-
ference Wednesday.
{t was called to disclose the ef-
fectiveness of efforts within the federal
government to conserve energy. He said
he would recommend legislation to ac-
complish the new building criteria.
“The energy conservattion program
we have instituted in our buildings can be
applied by any building owner,’’ Samp-
son said. ‘‘These measures cost little or
nothing and can save the building owner
money. Energy conservation makes good
sense.”’
In other energy developments:
—Rep. Jerry L. Litton, DMo.,_ in-
troduced legislation he said would
prevent future energy crises which he
termed a ‘‘Plan Ahead Bill.” He said it
would create a cabinet-level department
to report to Congress and the President
on all of the nation’s human and natura!
resources.
—Chairman Herbert D. Clay of the
American Gas Association wrote &
members of Congress asking ‘or
“decisive action’ on lJeg'station
remove, Federal Power Commissir
regulation in the field of pricing for ne
natural gas.
—During the last three months of 197
Sampson said the federal bureaucra‘
reduced energy consumption by 19
percent. This he said reflected a saving
of 11 million kilowatt hours of electmcits
2.4 million gallons of fuei oi], 18.900 tor
of coal and 1.16 million galions
gasoline.
| [
[
2540.8001640625,
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[
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] | 7 | 7_209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 209,251,944 | front_page_20_99 | 14,172 | 13,500 | [
10626,
14172,
14189,
13647,
11377,
12497,
13395,
11668,
10774,
12859,
13500
] |
|
209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
0,
23,
19,
26,
4
] | House OKs tax relief.
to preserve good lands
| LANSING (UPI) — The House adopted
revised legislation Wednesday that
provides $6 million to $10 million in tax
relief for farmers who agree to keep their
land in agriculture for 10 years.
The proposal, a Senate-passed version
of legislation that pasesed the House a
year ago, is aimed at preventing urban
sprawl from gobbling up farm and open
space land.
After approving the Senate amend-
ments and adding 46 of its own changes,
the House passed the proposal on a 80-17
vote. It now will return to the Senate,
where little opposition is expected.
The bill will permit farmers and open
space owners to apply for a 10 year
contract with the state, pledging to keep
their land from development.
In exchange, the state will give land
owners credits on their state income tax
equal to the amount their property taxes
exceed 7 per cent of their househol@ in-
come. In _ addition, no _ special
assessments for sewers, water, lights or
non-farm drainage could be imposed on
land under state contract.
Land under contract could be sold
without penalty if its continued use
complied with the terms of the
agreement. However, an owner or
successor pulling out of the contract
would be subject to a penalty equal to the
total tax credit received, plus 6 per cent
compounded annual interest.
The penalty imposed by the House was
substantially softer than the version
approved by the Senate. In its bill, the
Senate would have penalized farmers
and open space land owners breaking the
contract by requiring them to forfeit up
to half the market value of their
property.
The House lessened the penalties for
fear the stricter version would scare
away prospective contract signers.
A prime backer of the legislation, Rep.
Quincy Hoffman, R-Applegate, called the
farm tax relief ‘“‘landmark legislation.”’
‘This has been in the works for years,”’
Hoffman said. ‘‘I think it is a very good,
significant piece of legislation.’’
Similar measures have been in the
legislature since 1965.
The bill’s Senate sponsor, Harry De
Maso, R-Battle Creek, said the measure
will make Michigan the 33rd state to
combine farm tax relief with a program
to preserve agricultural land.
The Senate will take up two bills
Thursday designed to provide sales tax
relief for food shoppers. However, one of
the bills may wind up back in committee
for good.
De Maso said he would call back ;
proposed constitutional amendment tc
repeal the sales tax — a move that woulc
cost the state $150 million in revenue:
and force an increase inthe income tax.
But Democrats were expected to try anc
block the motion.
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14173
] |
|
209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209251944-marshall-evening-chronicle-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
1,
8,
2,
14
] | Swimming coach resigns
| Bill Ryan, Marshall high’s first
swimming coach and a social studies
teacher at Marshall High School,
yesterday submitted his resignation to
Superintendent Gordon W. VanWieren.
Last week he was accepted to a
masters program in the coaching of
swimming at Indiana University,
Bloomington. He noted he ‘‘really en-
joyed” the city and the persons he
worked with here. However, he said it
was time for him to continue his
education.
“This is a wonderful opportunity to
pursue my vocational dreams. If I don’t
do it now, I never will,’’ said Ryan.
Ryan said he did not know what he
would do after he completed work at IU.
He said he has coached at all age levels
and possibly would try coaching ‘‘a big
age group team’’ as at a private club
under the American Athletic Union. This
would be coaching all age levels for
competition.
Ryan said he wanted to give special
thanks to VanWieren and William
Crumrine, his first principal in the
Marshall system. He said he also wanted
to give thanks to Kent Esbaugh, prin-
cipal, Joseph Cooper, administrative
assistant and athletic director, and
Philip Wuroi, chairman of the social
studies department.
“This is a wonderful opportunity for
Bill and I am sure I speak on behalf of the
students, school personnel, school board
and community when | wish him well in
his new position,’’ said VanWieren. He
also noted it was inevitable for a person
like Ryan to be admitted to a graduate
program or be offered a more prestigious
coaching position.
The 1970 graduate of Dartmouth came
here in 1971 after being an assistant
swimming coach at Western Michigan
University where he was a student
While the high school was being
finished, he took over the pool program.
During the 1972-73 season his swim team
had about a 500 record. This year the
swim team had a 7-2 record.
Both years Marshall won the Albion
Relays Invitational. The first. year the
team took two of three meets with Albion
High School. This year Marshall twice
beat Albion, the only other schoo! in the
Twin Valley Conference with a swim
team.
Ryan has also coached at the private
Riverside and Battle Creek Swim Clubs.
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14174
] |
|
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
2,
5,
14
] | Plum Brook Cuts...
| during questioning. He frequently described Plum Brook asa
‘national resource’ which was “‘in the national interest’’ to
maintain. Several times he asserted there was sufficient
‘“‘mutuality of interest’’ between NASA and other potential
users for NASA to share more of the costs of Plum Brook's
operation.
But, answered one of the NASA officials, ‘‘There is not
enough mutuality of interest in private contracts to justify
shared costs,”’ by NASA.
‘‘We will certainly bend over any way we can to see that the
facility is used and is in a position to be used,”’ the official
said.
He said the 50 employes would continue to be paid by NASA
until either new Plum Brook users are found of until new jobs
can be found for the employes.
Toward the end of the hearing, Mosher started to press for
a one-year commitment by NASA to pay the employes’ sala-
ries,
‘Could we have some sort of an agreement right now fora
year’s opportunity’’ in which to work things out, Mosher
asked.
The NASA official refused the commitment. ‘We can as-
sure you OMB is sympathetic and would not precipitously”
withdraw funding, he said. But he said he could not promise a
full year’s funding.
Mosher then said he would ask the subcommittee to strong-
ly recommend a year's additional funding through June 30,
1975initsreport.
The other three subcommittee members attending the
hearing including Chairman Rep. Ken Hechler, D-W. Va., ap-
peared to support Mosher’s position.
“I thoroughly agree with Mr. Mosher that to put this facil-
ity on what you call standby is a waste of great national re-
source,” Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr., R-Calif., told the NASA
officials.
‘It seems to be a natural, ” said Rep. John Wydler, R-N.
Y., of Plum Brook. ‘‘This would be a very active facility if we
had avery active space program.”’
A committee staffer said, ‘‘It seems in the national inter-
est to keep it open.’’ He supported Mosher’s proposal for a
one-year extension of money ‘‘to work things out.”
After the hearing, Mosher said in an interview he is ‘‘very
hopeful that we will put something in the bill to encourage
NASA” to maintain funding for an additional year. He said,
however, it would probably be impossible to make such a pro-
vision ‘‘mandatory if OMB doesn’t want todoit.”’
The NASA officials told the subcommittee that use of Plum
Brook’s Space Power Facility (SPF) ‘‘is presently to be con-
sidered by’’ the Air Force, the Navy, the National Ocean and
Atmospheric Administration and the Atomic Energy Com-
mission.
| [
[
131.4725942383,
527.8558950195,
1317.4584970703,
2582.2520761719
],
[
1387.3004140625,
536.9396962891,
2546.6932382813,
937.8873300781
],
[
601.9880981445,
258.568572998,
2021.0914306641,
464.7292785645
]
] | [
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2546.6932382813,
2582.2520761719
] | 0 | 0_138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 138,707,639 | front_page_20_99 | 14,175 | 14,175 | [
14175
] |
|
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
7,
11
] | Women Become
U.S. Citizens
| Two area women became naturalized
citizens of the United States in Ohio
recently. Mrs. Jane C. Bublitz, 406 East
6th St., Port Clinton, and Mes. Lillian H.
Rogers, 18 Newton St., Norwalk, recited
the oath of citizenship during Februarv.
| [
[
1739.3591298828,
2827.9412832031,
2525.7156992188,
3124.6073007812
],
[
1762.7810058594,
2626.9677734375,
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] | [
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3124.6073007812
] | 1 | 1_138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 138,707,639 | front_page_20_99 | 14,176 | 14,176 | [
14176
] |
|
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
19,
18
] | Locals
| Fish Fry: American Legion, W. |
-Washington Row. Fri. serving
5:30-8:00.
| [
[
1728.42053125,
3428.660765625,
2533.218140625,
3590.8668222656
],
[
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14177
] |
|
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
4,
16,
22
] | Kidnapping...
| yguard, Detective Inspector James Beaton, 30, fired
three shots at the gunman, then was shot himself.
Hearing the shooting, Policeman Michael Hills, who
was on The Mall, ran up to the royal’car. The gunman
shot him. Hill fell, crying into his radio transmitter, ‘‘I
have been shot.’’ One of the gunman’s other bullets
struck author and journalist Brian McConnell, hes was
in a passing taxicab.
At that point, the carload of plainelothesmen
slammed to a halt beside the royal car and officers col-
lared a man standing near it, apparently the gunman.
Ina graphic description of the incident, Miss Sammy
Scott who was driving behind the princess’s car, said
she had been forced to the curb by a passing auto then
heard the shots. Leaving her car, she ran toward the
Princess's limousine, stopped near St. James’s Pal-
ace,
Looking in, she saw Princess Ahne and Phillips, the
latter with his arm around his young wife, huddled in
the back seat.
“‘Are you all right, luv,’’ she asked the Princess.
“Yes, I’m fine, thank you”’ the Princess replied_.
The young couple were ‘‘very brave,’”’ Miss Scott
said ina television interview. ‘‘There was a time when
they were completely on their own in the car. There
wasnoone there atall.’”’
| Continued from page 1
| [
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14178
] |
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8
] | Continued from page |!
couple. and typical of most people's re-
action.
Asked if it Was obscene. he said, “No, 1
didn’t think so,’’ and his wife added, ‘I
wouldn't want the kids to see it, but for
adults it is all right. { do not see where
‘the sheriff gets off doing what he did.”
A young man, with long hair and wear-
ing blue jeans, and who said he went toa
large number of films said, ‘‘I think the
sheriff must have been crazy. As far as
obscenity is concerned, this picture,
compared to ‘‘Deep Throat’’, is like run-
ning a mule in the Kentucky Derby.”’
Other reactions to the film and the at-
tempt to block the showing were:
— “T didn’t like the film, but I don’t
want anyone telling me what I can and
can’t see.’
— ‘‘Ilike it, I think I gota lot out of it.”’
— ‘It was a waste of money, but no I
did not think it was obscene.”
— “Boring. Actually, I came to see
who was going to try and stop it. But, I’m
gald I got to see the picture. I just wish I
did not have to pay for it.”’
Anticipation of trouble was reflected
in the actions and statements of many at-
tending the film opening.
Lines began to form about 6:30 p.m.
When the doors opened to customers,
only 50 persons were waiting. But a
steady flow of people filled the lobby un-
til all tickets were sold.
Standing near the ticket girl, Robert
Hollis the Ohio Theater manager and Ci-
nema World Theater manager for the
night,. looked worried and talked about
the situation.
‘‘T don’t know what’s going to happen. I
sure would hate to see anything happen. I
don’t particularly like the picture, but I
think people have a right to see the pic-
ture,”
Interrupting his nervous explanation,
he learned toward the girl collecting
money. ‘‘Check her ID, make sure she is
old enough,” he said, indicating a young-
looking woman standing at the counter
with money in hand.
. “We are always careful, but I want to
be especially sure tonight, because I am
afraid they (opponents of the film) are
going to try and slip someone under
eighteen in on us.
‘‘Oh, I don’t know, people should have
a right to make up their own mind. Don’t
you think so?”’
Just then the phone rang, and he an-
swered it, telling representatives of
United Artists Corp., the distributors of
the film, that everything, so far, was
okay.
During the movie, audience reaction
tn tha filrm annanradn favarahla
| [
[
2568.6004628906,
505.6633291016,
3372.3575449219,
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505.6633291016,
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14179
] |
||
138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
1,
0,
17,
20
] | Norwalk Leader...
| and hardware back to merchants in Nor-
walk.
In 1923, the Norwalk Truck Lines Co.,
destined to become the sixth largest
trucking company in the nation, was
formed. He started in 1923 with two
trucks and by 1931 he extended his lines
to Chicago, Pittsburgh and in Michigan,
renting dock space in Cleveland, Toledo
and Detroit.
The business then expanded to 15 ter-
minals in Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. In
1953, he purchased the Shirks Motor Ex-
press, gaining the Buffalo, N.Y. and
Washington, D.C. markets.
In 1955, Norwalk Truck Lines was sold
to the Ohio Co. and in 1956 when Er-
nsthausen retired, the system had 5200
employes and owned 5,000 trucks, oper-
ating 62 terminals in nine states.
He bought band uniforms for nearly
every high school in the area, donated to
hundreds of civic projects and provided
scholarships for many to various col-
leges.
He was a large contributor in estab-
lishing the Firelands Campus of Bowling
Green State University. He was a major
benefactor of the First United Methodist
Church of Norwalk and various Method-
ist homes and agencies. ©
He was a trustee of Baldwin-Wallace
College, where a resident hall is named
in his honor. He was also a trustee of
Bowling Green State University, from
which he was awarded an honorary de-
gree in 1949.
He served for two yearsas president of
the Ohio Trucking Association and for
five years as vice president of the Ameri-
can Trucking Association, based in
Washington, D.C.
He was elected to the Huron County
Banking Co. Board of Directors in 1938
and became president in 1941, serving
until 1959 when he was elected chairman
of the board. He became honorary chair-
man of the board in 1971.
He was a member of all Masonic bod-
ies of Norwalk, a member of the Fire-
lands Scottish Rite Association, Valley
of Toledo, and a member of the Shrine, a
member of the Norwalk Moose Lodge, a
member of the Elks Club and a member
of the Kiwanis Club.
He served as chairman of the fund-
raising committee for the construction
of Fisher-Titus Memorial Hospital, and
enlisted the financial support of the late
William Fisher, whom the hospital was
named after.
In 1959 he received the Horatio Alger
Award, given annually by the American
School and College Association. The
award is symbolic of the American tradi-
tion of equal opportunity which enables
enterprising youths to overcome humble
beginnings and achieve success in their
hard work, honesty and determination.
Surviving are his widow, Fern; three
step-daughters, Mrs. Alice Cochenour,
Republic, and Mrs. Edward (Mary) Stoll
and Mrs. Clifford (Jane) Mills, both of
Norwalk; a step-son, Ray Marett, Nor-
walk; 16 step-grandchildren; a sister,
Mrs. Mabel Geisler, and a brother, Clar-
ence, both of Elmore, and several nieces
and nephews. .
His first wife, Doris, died in 1968 and a
sister, Mrs. Bertha Anstedt died in 1970,
Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. to-
day and from 2 to4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
at Kubach-Smith Funeral Home, where
Masonic memorial services are sched-
uled for 7:30 p.m. Friday. ,
Services are planned for 1 p.rh. Satur-
day in the First United Methodist
Church, with the Rev. Wilbur Meiser, the
Rev. James Scott, the Rev. Dr. A.B.
Bonds Jr., the Rev. Dr. John W. Freiling
and the Rev. Paul Bailey officiating.
The body is to lie in state in the church
from 11 a.m. Saturday until time of ser-
vices. .
Burial services are to be conducted at
3 p.m. Saturday in Harrison Elmore
Union Cemetery, Elmore.
Expressions of sympathy, if desired,
may be made to the building fund of the
church or to the donor’s favorite charity.
| Continued from page 1
| [
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138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
6,
3,
9,
23
] | Sunday Gas Sales...
| formulated a response to the or-
der.
Locally, dealers agree there
will be little change in the Sun-
day-closing situation until at
least the first of April, because of
fuel allocations now on hand.
“Not this month; we’ve al-
ready got our allocation for this
month,’”’ said Bob Rogers of
Bob’s Union 76 station, 519 Tiffin
Ave. ‘‘Maybe next month we can
be open Sundays, but we haven’t
heard a word from our suppliers,
so I can’t tell. But certainly not
for the rest of thismonth.”’
Ed Burdue of Bus’s Shell Ser-
vice Station, Perkins and Colum-
bus Avenues, agreed, ‘‘No, we’re
not gonna be open Sundays this
month; we can’t get the gas.”
Carl Grimani, owner of Gri-
mani Sohio Service Station, Co-
lumbus Avenue and Campbell
Street, confirmed the March allo-
cations have not been modified,
‘‘and I’m not sure yet about
April.”” He said he has heard
nothing from his supplier about
an increased availability of gaso-
line.
“I don’t think we’ll be able to be open
on Sundays for a couple of months,” Paul
Niehm of Niehm’s Marathon, E. Monroe
and Warren Streets, said. ‘“‘I’d say it
won’t be until about May; it’d have to
ease up awful quick for us to be able to be
open seven days a week before that.”’
Sam Stipp of District Petroleum Prod-
ucts Inc., 1832 Milan Road, agrees with
the dealers. ‘‘I was somewhat surprised
at the President’s statement (lifting re-
strictions on Sunday sales). the volume
that I can buy for March hasn’t been
changed appreciably.
“If there were no longer a petroleum
shortage, that would mean to me that I
could buy an unrestricted amount of
gasoline, but I can’t. I’m just a marketer
and I can only sell as much as they allow
me to buy, so as of now I can’t see any
change.’’. ;
| Continued from page 1
| [
[
3448.359984375,
3230.1671132812,
4120.241578125,
4477.7171640625
],
[
4190.8863515625,
3255.11975,
4977.5159921875,
4484.5496835938
],
[
3436.5688476562,
2946.0749511719,
4916.640625,
3143.7160644531
],
[
3477.7473144531,
3166.8701171875,
3911.9348144531,
3234.9096679688
]
] | [
3436.5688476562,
2946.0749511719,
4977.5159921875,
4484.5496835938
] | 6 | 6_138707639-sandusky-register-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 138,707,639 | front_page_20_99 | 14,181 | 14,181 | [
14181
] |
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8,
29,
41
] | FHleights
battles
continue
| FO Sew So Sve aes”
The Golan Heights front exploded
into artillery battles between Syrian
and Israeli forces for the 10th
consecutive day today. The Israeli
Knesset debated whether they would
affect the coming talks im Washington
on disengaging the forces.
The 10-day series of clashes was
the longest since Oct. 24 when the
United Nations ceasefire halted the
October war.
The Israeli military command
reported sporadic shelling for more
than two hours beginming at 10:30
a.m. (4:30am. EDT) along the part
of the salient which Israel carved out
in the October war. No Israeli
casualties were reported.
A mnilitary spokesman described
the renewed outbreak as scattered
artillery and tank fire that continued
for several hours. He said the Israelis
returned artillery fire.
The Syrians reported the firing in
the central and northern part of the
salient. A Syriam_ military
communique said the Israeli fire was
aimed at shepherds and other civilian
targets,
The communique said the shelling
started ‘‘when the enemy tried to
reinforce his frontline positions in the
central sector.”
| Rew United Prece Inte rpational
| [
[
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],
[
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311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
28,
10,
21,
35
] | February cost
of living up
Some area gas stations
to start Sunday sales
| WASHINGTON (U P I) — Pushed
by higher food prices, the cost of
living jumped 1.3 per cent in
February, its largest increase in six
months, the Bureau of Labor
Statistics said today.
The BLS said almost half the
increase was caused by Skyrocketing
food prices, and higher prices for
gasOline and other emergy sources
accounted for about 20 per cent of the
increase.
The impact on the American
consumer was aggravated, the BLS
said, by a decline in the real gross of
weekly earnings of workers.
The index for food rose 3 per cent,
well above normal for January, with
higher beef prices counting for
about onethird of the total food hike.
increase jn the Consumer
Price Index was the largest since
August, 1973, when the Cost of living
rose 1.8 per cent, January’s increase
was just under | per cemt.
The BLS said the price increase in
gasoline and motor oi! was not as
large as January, whem a 6 per cent
rise Was reported.
The index for fue} oil and coal rose
3.8 per cent-the smallest boost in
five months. But that was an
incredible 58 per cent above
Feburary, 1973.
The index for household services,
including charges for gas, electricity,
housekeeping and rent, rose 7 per
cent in Feburary and medical care
costs increased even rmore sharply.
The BLS said the _ spendable
earnings of American workers
declined 6 per cent from January.
| [
[
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]
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2656.0017089844,
7154.196640625
] | 1 | 1_311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 311,855,516 | news_specific_masthead+editorial-comment|front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorials | 14,183 | 9,740 | [
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|
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
7,
11,
16
] | Keystone supreme court
tohear Boyle argument
| PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Argu-
ments are to be heard by the Penn-
sylvania Supreme Court tomorrow
as attorneys for W, R. (Tony) Boyle,
former United Mine Workers presi-
demt, continue to fight against a
murder indictment accusing him in
the death of dissident leader Joseph
A. Yablonski.
The court agreed to hear
arguments on appeals from two
Delaware County Court decisions
which refused Boyle’S motions to
quash the indictments and to delay
the trial scheduled at Media next
Monday.
Boyle’s counsel, Charles F. Moses
appealed to the court after being
rejected by the Delaware County
court. Special Prosecutor Richard A.
Sprague has asked that the appeals be
rejected.
Boyle is the ninth person charged in
the deaths of Yablonski, his wife and
daughter on Dec. 31, 1969. Presently
he is confined to a federal prison
hospital ona charge of illegal use of
wnion funds.
| [
[
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7558.3214257812,
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],
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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3111.5667578125,
8410.01890625
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14184
] |
|
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
12,
1,
2,
42
] | Anne shaken but cool
after kidnap attempt
| **I’m all right, thank you’, said
Princess Anne when police
ov@rpowered the gunman who
armbushed her and her husband, Capt.
Mark Phillips.
She was somewhat shaken but
cooler than might be expected, The 5-
foot-7, blonde only daughter of Queen
Elizabeth has proved her courage
many times on the riding field where
she won the European Championship
in one of the toughest events on the
sports calendar.
Princess Anne ig 23. She has thick
hair, a fine figure and slightly
prominent teeth. She is a healthy
looking girl, a strong swimmer,
always in good physical condition, a
nonsmoker and a mon-drinker.
She is tireless, gets up early and
often goes to bed so late one of her
detectives once threatened to quit. As
a child she never played with dolls.
She cannot cook or sew and hates
housekeeping though she is giving it a
try since her marriage to Phillips in
Westminster Abbey last Nov. 14 and
especially since she and her 25-year-
old husband moved into their first
home at the Sandhurst Military
Academy three weeks ago.
Her fascination with horses
extended to the men who rode them
and after the Mexico Olympics of
1968 she met Phillips who had been on
the team as a reserve rider.
Phillips, 25, is the son of a director
of a sausage and ice cream firm but
the Princess leaped the social
barriers as easily as she jumped the
barriers on the equestrian field.
It was obvious soon after they met
that they would be more than friends
though they denied a romance until a
few months before their marriage.
Phillips was not Only a boy friend but
a riding companion. He helped Anne
train for the Munich Olympics of 1972
in which he won a gold medal. Anne
was heartbroken when her horse was
injured and she had to withdraw.
Despite the cymics the marriage of
handsome couple drew a vast
worldwide radio and television
(Continued on Page 12-A)
| Ry United Press International
| [
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311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
19,
22
] | 72 cents
a gallon?
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — Federal
Energy chief William E. Simon says
gasoline priceS may reach 75 cemts a
gallon this year.
Simon Wednesday told a House
Appropriations subcommittee the
lifting of the Arab oil embargo had
eliminated the need for gasoline
rationing, but the price increase
imposed on the foreign oi] would
drive the price of gasoline higher
He predicted prices could range
from 60 to 75 cents per gallon, with
the highest prices likely on the E:ast
Coast which relies more heavily on
imported oil.
| [
[
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|
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
27,
24,
18,
23,
14,
20,
34
] |
PROJECT COST IS $5.7 BILLION
U.S., Canada asked to approve gas pipeline
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — The US.
and Canadian govermments were
asked Thursday toO approve
construction of a $5.7 billion pipeline
to carry natural gas from the north
slope of Alaska and the Mackenzie
river delta of northerm Canada into
major energy consuming areas of the
two countries.
The application was filed by the
Alaskan Arctic Gas Pipeline Co. and
Canadian Arctic Gas Pipeline
Limnited, who termed the proposed
2,600-mile pipeline ‘‘the largest
construction project im the history of
private enterprise.’’ They said it
could be in partial operation by 1978 if
given prompt approval -
Robert G. Ward, President of
Alaskan Arctic Gas, said that when
full capacity was reached the
pipeline would deliver ‘‘well over’’
four billion cubic feet of gas a day, or
an amount equal to about 6 per cent
of North America’s current demand
for some 24 trillion cubic feet a year.
When other firms are brought into
the project, he said, the total
investment may reach as high as $8
billion with a resulting ‘dramatic
impact” on U.S. employment, energy
supplies and the ecomomy generally.
The line would stretch from Alaska’s
Prudhoe Bay to distribution points
along the U.S.-Canadian border.
Noting the sensitivity of
emvironmentalists, who fought
unsuccessfully to block the Alaskan
oil pipeline, Ward said more than $50
million was spemt on planning which
will result in ‘‘rnmeasures that will
enhance the environment or mitigate
adverse envirommental effects of
construction and other operations.’’
“These intensive and expensive
efforts have produced information
that places us in a preeminent
position to link the enormous gas
reserves in the far north to U-S.
markets where the need for this
clean fuel is so tremendous,”’ he
added.
Wardsaid U.S. consumers im the
Midwest, Bast Coast, West and Far
West would receive all the Alaskan
gas and amy excess from the
Canadian fields after Canada’s meeds
are met. He said an estimated 122
million consumers live in the areas
that would receive Alaskan gas.
_ “This project will allow the United
States to use the huge gas reserves of
northern Alaska,” Ward said. “‘At the
same time, it will result in closer ties
between the United States and
Canada.”’
The project must be approved by
the U.S. Interior Department and
the U.S. Federal Power
Commission, Canada’s National
Energy Board and Department of
Indian Affairs and Northern
Development and numerous other
federal, state, provincial and local
agencies in both countries.
| [
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|
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
6,
13,
3,
9
] | SupremeCourt may rule
on probe’s tape request
| WASHINGTON (UPI) — John J.
Wilson had his good white shirt
ironed today, the one with the stiff
collar.
If he puts it om, he goes before the
U.S. Supreme Court.
Wilson, attorney for H.R.
Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman
in the Watergate case, Wednesday
asked the federal Appeals Court to
stop Monday’s order by U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica which held that
the House Judiciary Committee can
look at material concerning Nixon
and Watergate.
The committee is studying the
possible dene ay eer ent of roa ke
report, b e grand jury which
indicted Haldeman, Ehrlichman and
five others in the Watergate case,
dealt with Nixon’s handling of
Watergate.
Wilson said giving the report to the
House committee would mean its
contents would be leaked to the press,
depriving his cliemts—Nixon's former
top aides—of a fair trial.
The appeals court considered
Wilson's petition Wednesday. Then it
told him to appear for arguments at
10:30 am. EDT today. If it ruled
against him, Wilson would have to
consider going to the Supreme Court.
After a series of appeals and
counter-appeals Wednesday, Wilson
refused to say specificially that he
would go to the high court. But if he
did, he said, fhe would have to dress
properly.
“I won't wear my buttondown
collars up there,” he said, fingering
his throat. ‘f° tl wear my white shirt
with the stiff collar. But no morning
coat!”
Wilson begam Wednesday's round of
filing with two petitions, both on
behalf of Haldeman.
One petition was to the appeals
court. It asked for a writ of
mandamus ated-or prohibition against
Sirica’s order that the report to the
grand jury which indicted the seven
be sent to the House Judiciary
Committee.
The other petition wag to the
district court, asking for qa stay of
Sirica’s order. Sirica originally gave
the defendants two days to seek an
appeal that would halt transrriission
of the report to the House committee.
Special prosecutor Leon Jaworski
answered those petitions, saying
grand juries had the right to make
reports. But Sirica then granted a 24-
hour reprieve in his original two-day
stay sayimg Wilson could seek a
general stay of his order fromm the
anneale enirt |
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|
311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
15,
17,
4,
40
] | New building plans
may conserve energy
| The federal government has
proposed mew methods of
constructing federal buildings in a
move to save additional energy and
suggested its effort could be adapted
to all new buildings.
Arthur F. Sampson, General
Services Administration ad-
ministrator, Said new features for
such construction would include the
collection of rain water for cooling
and irrigation, solar energy
collectors amd the covering of
exterior walls with earth.
‘What we are saying is that these
design criteria ought to be applied in
the construction of all federal
buildings amd, eventually, to
buildings built with federal
assistance,’’ Sampson told a mews
conference Wednesday.
It was called to disclose the
effectiveness of efforts withim the
federal government to conserve
energy. He said he would recommend
legislation to accomplish the new
building criteria.
“The energy conservation
program we have instituted in our
buildings can be applied by any
building owner,” Sampson _ said.
“These measures cost jittle or
nothing ame can save the building
owner momey. Energy conservation
makes good sense.”
In other energy developrments:
—Rep. Jerry L, Litton, D-Mo.,
introduced legislation he said would
prevent future energy crises which
he termed a ‘‘Plan Ahead Bill.’’ He
said it would create a cahinet-level
department to report to Congress
and the President on aj} of the
nation’s human and natural
resources.
~—Chairman Herbert D. Clay of the
American Gas Association wrote all
members Of Congress asking for a
“decisive action’ on legislation to
remove Federal Power Commission
regulation in the field of pricing for
new natural gas.
| By United Press International
| [
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5,
31,
25,
30,
43,
0
] | Elias explains University
position on transit system
(Story On Page |-B)
Princess kidnap try
suspect in custody
| LONDON (UPI) — The man
accused of attempting to kidnap
Princess Anne was held without bail
today in a brief hearing in which
police revealed he had a large sum of
momey in a bank account and may
have had the help of associates.
The specific charge against lan
Ball, 26, a slender though powerfully
built six-footer, was the attempted
murdererof Princess Anne’s
bodyguard, Detective Inspector
Jarnes Beaton, one of four men shot
in the bizarre armbush of a royal
limmousine a few yards from
Buckingham Palace Wednesday
night
ll was brought imto Bow Street
Magistrate's court under the heaviest
security precautions there in
memory. ;
He was handcuffed to two
detectives. Everyone in the
courtroom was searched. Outside
the narrow street was blue with
police lined up on both sides. A
busload of police preceded his black
maria and another busload followed
it. :
The measures were so stringent as
to underline the police theory that
Ball may not have operated alone.
Ball, who spoke im what appeared
to be : ate oat aap vas
cormpletely co in t as
Detective Chief Superintendent Roy
Ranson asked for him to be held a
week without bail om the ground it
was “‘imperative’’ police have ready
access to him.
“*It is a matter of state security
which I cannot enlarge upon,”’
Ranson said.
Asked by Magistrate Kenneth
Barraclough if he had any objection
to being held without bail or to the
lice examining his bank account
ll said quietly :
**No, but I'd like to apply for legal
aid.”’
He wore a good quality gray chalk
ig suit, a white shirt and a dark
tie.
He has a neatly trimmed short
beard, hardly more than afew weeks’
shaving stubble.
In addition to the uniformed police
some 15 plainc lothes detectives were
among 40 or so newsmen and
public in the courtroom.
Until that tmoment it had been
assumed that the attempted
kidnaping of the daughter of Queen
Elizabeth was the work of a lone
operator. But Ranson said:
“We are endeavoring to trace his
associates.’”
(Continued on Page 12-A )
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[
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[
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] | [
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202.6054534912,
6133.2729492188,
5602.5071875
] | 11 | 11_311855516-morgantown-dominion-post-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | 311,855,516 | news_specific_masthead+editorial-comment|front_page_20_99|masthead_5075+editorials | 14,190 | 12,867 | [
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
14,
37,
34,
46
] | House Panel
Gets Nixon
Report Today
Intervention
By Appeals Court
-Could Halt Move
| ee ogee gg EN TE i Ee eS:
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
~ grand jury report on President
“Nixon’s role in Watergate goes
to the House impeachment in-
quiry today unless the U.S.
Court of Appeals intervenes.
The appeals court agreed to
hear arguments today from
Watergate defense lawyers who
hope to reverse U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica’s order
sending the report to the
House.
In scheduling arguments for
10:30 am. EDT, the appeals
court said it will consider re-
quests for an additional delay
in transmitting the report and
also hear arguments on the le-
Bal issues.
John J. Wilson and Frank
Strickler, attorneys for former
presidential aide H. R. Halde-
man, and John Bray, counsel
for Gordon Strachan, another
former White House aide,
asked the appeals court to or-
der Sirica not to send the grand’
jury report to the House
Judiciary Committee.
Special Watergate prosecutor
Leon Jaworski opposed the re-
quest.
Sirlea refused Wednesday to
delay sending the report to the
House until the appeals court
had ruled. He did postpone ac-
tion until 4 p.m. today to give
the defendants a chance to ap-
peal.
The grand jury gave the
sealed -report and a satchel
filled with evidence. to Sirica
March 1, the same day it in-
dicted Haldeman, Strachan;
and five other former adminis-
tration or campaign officials in
‘ (See ‘E’ on Page 2)
| By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press Writer
| [
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103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
20,
21
] | Vice President
Pays Tribute
To Late Newsman
| BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) —
Vice President Gerald R. Ford
says the world will miss the
“unique abilities” of former
television news anchorman
Chet Huntley.
. Huntley, 62, died at his home
Wednesday after a long bout
with lung cancer.
Family spokesmen said a me-
morial service would be con-
ducted for Huntley Sunday at
the Big Sky of Montana resort
and recreation area south of
Bozeman, Huntley was chair-
man of the Big Sky board of
directors.
Another memorial service is
scheduled Tuesday in the.New
York studios of the National
Broadcasting Co.
A spokesman said Huntley
would be buried in his native
(See 'C’ on Page 2)
| [
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[
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] | [
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
10,
7,
35,
41,
12
] | House GOP Leader Attempts
To Head Off Inguiry Split
| WASHINGTON (AP) —~—
House Republican Leader John
J. Rhodes is trying to head off
a. confrontation between the
White House and Judiciary
Committee over the impeach-
ment inquiry.
Rhodes is urging both sides
to soften their positions and
seek a compromise settlement
of their dispute over a com-
mittee request for tapes of 42
presidential conversations.
After meetings with White
House lawyer James D. St.
Clair and Republican members
of the Judiciary Committee,
Rhodes, held a news conference
Wednesday to urge that a third
party be permitted to review
the tapes and determine which
would be relevant to the com-
mittee’s impeachment inquiry.
He did not spell out his pro-
posal but said it could be along
the lines of the one made by
President Nixon to special pros-
‘ecutor Archibald Cox calling
fer Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss.,
to listen to tapes then in dis-
pute between the White House
and the Waergate grand jury:
Cox's refusal to accept the pro-
posal led to his firing.
Rhodes’ suggestion seemed
unlikely to fare much better.
The White House has indicated
no interest in it and the chair-.
man and ranking Republican
on the committee have flatly
rejected it.
“The committee has a con-
stitutional responsibility to con-
duct. the inquiry,” said Rep.
Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich.,
(See ’G’ on Page 2)
| By JOHN BECKLER -
Associated Press Writer
| [
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103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
3,
17,
32
] | House OKs Legislation ©
Raising Minimum Wage
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
House has passed legislation
raising the minimum wage
from $1.60 an hour to $2 this
year for most workers covered
and to $2.30 for all by 1978.
The bill, approved Wednes-
day 375 to 37, also would in-
crease by 7 million to 56.5 mil-
lion the number of workers cov-
ered by the minimum wage
laws.
The bill is a modified version
of one President Nixon vetoed
jast year. However, he is ex-
pected to sign this one if it is
finally approved after, adjust-
ment with a similar. Banat
passed . measure, although —
does:not-meet all of his earlier
‘objections, | : “
For -most workers “eavebed by
the minimum wage, .the min-
imum would increase to $2 this
year and then in two steps to
$2.30 in 1976.
- Other nonagricultural work-
ers brought under coverage in
recent years would have a $1.90
minimum this year, reaching
$2.30 in 1977, while covered ag-
ricultural workers would have
a $1.60 minimum in 1974 and
reach $2.30 in 1978.
Coverage would be extended
to some 5 million-federal, state
and local government .employ-
es; to domestic service employ-
es and some categories ‘of em-
ployes of chain stores..
Overtime provisions would be
extended to 9.5 million persons,
incisding government employes
other than police and firemen.
The bill does not contain an
across-the-board lower min:
imum wage for young persons,
one of the provisions sought by
the administration. However, it
does permit full-time students
to be employed part-time — not
more than 20 hours a week —
at $1.60 an hour subject to
regulations intended to assure
that they do not displace adult
workers.
| [
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|
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29,
6,
11,
15,
44,
24
] | Suspect Brought To London Court
In Princess Anne Kidnap Attempt
| LONDON (AP) — Ian Ball, a
26-year-old unemployed Eng-
lishman, was brought into court
today and charged with at-
tempted murder during an at-
tempt to kidnap Princess Anne
from her car in the heart of
London Wednesday night.
Ball, lean-faced and bearded.
stood stiffly in the dock at the
Bow Street Magistrate's court,
handcuffed to two detectives.
He spoke only once during his
60-second appearance, saying in
a London accent: “I want to
apply for legal. aid.” 7
The court ordered him held
for another hearing on March
28 on the charge of attempting
to murder Princes Anne’s per-
‘sonal bodyguard, Inspector
James Beaton.
Beaton was one of four per-
sons wounded as the would-be
kidnaper fired repeatedly at the
royal limousine. The. others
were Anne’s chauffeur and a
policeman and a passing jour-
nalist who tried to intervene.
Beaton ana the policeman were
reported in serious condition.
The 23-year-old princess and
her husband of five months,
Capt. Mark Phillips, were not
hurt. But police experts said
the holes left by one of the bul-
lets fired into the car indicated
it passed between them, miss-
ing them by inches. .
A police informant said it
was believed 11 shots were
fired by the assailant. Experts
were studying two revolvers
found at the scene. They said
five shots had been fired from
one and six from the other. Au-
thorities said earlier only six
shots were fired.
Police also found in the white
Ford that’ Ball rented for the
evening a typewritten ransom
demand addressed to Queen
Elizabeth II, Anne’s--mother,
along with three pairs of hand:
cuffs, a driver’s license and en-
(See ‘D’ on Page 2)
| By PETER EBERT
en eee ee ee ee
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103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
9,
28
] | mn xa Ue m
Prince Charles
‘Deeply Shocked’
Over Incident
| SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —
Prince Charles of Britain has
been described as being “deep-
ly shocked” by the shooting in
London in which his sister and
brother-in-law narrowly es-
caped injury.
The 25-year-old heir to the
British throne is here as a com-
munications officer on the Brit-
ish frigate Jupiter, which is due
to end a visit to Southern Cali-
fornia today.
Princess Anne and her hus-
band, Capt. Mark Phillips, es-
caped unharmed when a gun-
man fired at their car in what
British authorities have termed
a kidnap attempt. Three other
persons were injured.
The prince talked with his
sister by telephone after the in-
cident and was assured that
she was not hurt, said a spokes-
man for the Jupiter, which is
on a round-the-world training
cruise.
| [
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
16,
19
] | Sunday Gas
Station Closing
May Continue
| CHARLOTTE (AP).— The
Carolina Motor Club predicts
most. gasoline stations in the
Carolinas will continue closed
on Sunday, despite President
Nixon’s lifting of the voluntary
ban.
Dick Pitts, public relations
director: for the club, says
that’s because supplies won't
be available ‘for seven-day
sales.
One service station operator
in Charlotte said of the Presi-
dent’s action, “‘There’s only one
‘thing wrong with that. He
didn’t tell us where we’re going
to get the gasoline.”
Pitts said that is probably the
feeling of most operators in the
“Carolinas.
| [
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8,
23
] | Dynamite
Blast Fatal
To Bladen Man
| CLARKTON — O. B. McCall,
Jr., 27, was fatally injured in a
dynamite explosion Wednesday,
and a friend, Dick Miller, was
seriously injured.
Report of the investigation by
Sheriff's Deputies Broadus
Hester and Charles Yarborough
showed that the two men were
blasting stumps on the McCall
farm, six miles east of here,
when the accident occurred
about 3:30 p.m.
Both were rushed to Bladen
County Hospital where McCall
was declared dead on arrival.,
Miller was given first aid for a
severe eye injury and was then
‘transferred to Cape Fear Valley
Hospital in Fayetteville.
The funeral for McCall will be
conducted at 3:30 p.m. Friday in
Bluefield Methodist Church,
with burial in McCall Cemetery.
Surviving are the widow, Mrs.
Faye Priest McCall; a son,
(See.‘A’ on Page 2)
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
26,
22
] | Tobacco Plant
‘Setting Out’.
Now Under Way
| One of the first to set out
tobacco plants this season,
Roland Pittman began the
chore yesterday, with the
help of his wife, Winnie,
aud sister, Mrs. Louise
Branch, on his farm on
State Road 21200. Pittman
said rapid growth because
of unseasonably warm
weather has somewhat
damaged his plants, but
hopes they will be
established in the field
before another cold spell
has a chance to do any
more damage. (Bill Price
Photo)
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