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Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

5-31-1974

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1974). Winona Daily News. 1390. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1390

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Partly cloudy ?&N" Classified Ads Are Written of the through Satu rda y; Pedple; by rhe People chance of showers & For the People!

Pq& ?eacelash! Israe vvrife brolienwi^ l and Syria sddier says By JONATHAN BRODER ISRAELI "FRONT, Occupied ? Syria (AP) — The plan to- bring peace to the Golan Heights was ready for sighing, but for a /OBMEVA

¦ : ' ' ;- : '' ' ;' '\'-: '^Y--i31y. W74; - . ; :; the weather Pmceiwm¦ ; The dciifc record value.. . "• ¦ : "¦¦ .„.„. . Thefts Prom Ronald Thrune, 184 N. Spring Grove CITY ' ;¦ • • -: ' Baker St., bicycle taken from v. Memoria l hospital Two-State Deaths Winona Deaths From Mrs. Donald HarlOj 1152 W. : 5th :St. Wednesday; 733 W; 5th St., a car taken from nighit; J. C. Penney's, maroon, ¦ '" At Community Selmer Nelson Mrs; Luella Beggs front of 1770 Kraemer Dr., be- M-- .'- " .: . - ' • . - . •¦ • , .¦- ¦ ¦ ¦' ' (Special) • Mrs, Luella Beggs, 69, 614 W. tween 2:30 arid 7 a.in- Thurs- J. C. Penney Co., 1858 Hi awards ¦ : - ' .^THURSDAY'- ':'¦•- . '. , ¦ "'•' MABEL, Minn. — From . . . Selmer Nelson, 80,. Mabel farm- Broadway, died this morning at day ; 1968 green Chevrolet sta- Service Dr., fishing lure valued Admissions morning Community Memorial Hbsptal tion wagon, license BV5112. at 25 cents taken at 4:30 p.m. Mrs. Luella Burke, Lamoille. er, died ^Thursday at Tweeten Memorial Hospital, in after an illness.; . ;6£ iseyeral From Howard Goss, 222 High Thursday ; nial© juvenile siis- ; Jeff Shima, 1764 m.Broad- , twq ,; 40 diplomas -;¦ Spring Grove, where he was months, . Forest St.; power mower pect apprehended . way, . :. . . : 1905, in yellow Schwinn bicycles taken SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- admitted . Wednesday night- She was born May 27, ^¦ : ; Mrs. Shirley Riska, 525 Grand ' Rollihgstorie, Minn,, the dauglv^ from unlocked - garage Thurs- ;. ';:>\v;-;4ccitf6hts :;;--^- ' -;- -; cial ) -r- The 69th arihual gradua- St. '' ;; He was born July 24, 1893,. in loss, : . . . Hous- ter of Nicholas and.. Katherine day night;; $290 . ¦" ' tion exercises at Spring Grove Joseph Kryzer, 553 E. Waba- Black Hammer Township, From Winona Auto Sales, ' CITY ..\.- - ' ;;; ton County, the" son; ; Sharon- Morten: : ' - becorah; Iowa. One brother , Bay City, -. Mich;, Army collision ; • Allyn D.. .Ellinghuy- . son, ; Winona Rt. 3, a daughter. . /and Ronald ' ; :: The Rev. -Norman . Person Mr. and Mrsi Henry Kuennen one sister Have died. ;. Master Sgt: Alton, Ft. Dix, N,J., sen . Winona Rt, 1, 1969 2-door, , . A, Wooden,: 917 E. Local observations gave the invocation and bene- 1054 E. Sanborn St., twin ,;sons.- Services will be Vat i p.m. and Wallace; Ja cksph,:Mich;; 11 bill vetoed $50O; Corrine . and four broth- 5th St., 1973 >door, $650, ; ;: diction and the Spring Grove Monday at Our Saviour's Luth- grandchildren; WAUSAII, Wis. (UPr)-A bill OFFICIAL WINONA WEATHER OBSERVATION .BIRTH ELSEWHERE : ", eran Church Ricefprd ers, Roman Kohner of Mora, . .9:23 p'.m. — West Howard ; ' '¦ , ,; Minn., that wotild have banned the - S4 hours - 'ending at noon today. . High School Band, uhd«r the \ COLLEGE STATION,^ Tex. L the Rev. Charles Wilson; offici- Minn., Eugene Kohner, Mirine- iiear Dacota St., three-car col- . 'i- direction of Thomas Shetterly, Kohner, baiting pf bear by Wisconsin ^Maximum[ temperature .70, ; niinimum¦ .; 49,; noon 66, prec Mr. and Mrs. Charles Giammo- ating. Burial will be in the apblis, Minn,, - Arnold lisibn; WUliana J.; Speck K . 751 : pitation .16. ; ' • ¦' ¦:¦ ' ¦;• and the high , school choir, di- Reinhard Kohner , hunters was vetoed Friday . by 1956 convertible ' - - na , College Station; a daughter church: cemetery. Winona arid Gov, Patrick J. ' Lucey. E, Howard St., ^ . Ayear sgo tbday: High 77| low 52j nooii 69, no ' precipitation). rected . by Almore : Miathsen, May.;26. Maternal Rollingstone. . $806;- Daniel , J. Miiler, 851 W. grandparents Friends may call at the Meh- . The governor made ..the an- : Normal temperature range for this date 74 to 54. Record performed: . aire Mr. and Mrs. Henry Broih; Services will be- at 9:30 a.m. 5th St., 1970 2-- Mobil La Crosse and Mary's College are Are you planning ' ' • 's boating three barges, down; * Richard Maser Officiating; Buri- among 21 Minnesota, privatei col- sprinkles tonighti Low to- Anchorage .:. 68 43 . cdy session is anything like last al, will be in pakwood Cem- named to traffic ; night low to; mid 40s. High Asheville . :78 56 .01 rn year's, the , 6:05 p.m.—- Harriet M., four leges and universities sharing' to buy a hen or - ' " institute said, "hun- barges, doyvh. etery; . in $1.4 million in grants - for edu- Saturday apper 80s. Atlanta . : 88 68. . cdy dreds of Midwesterners \vill ex- may call at the safety board Birmingham : 88 70 rn 10:45 p.m. — Ann ; King, 12 Friends cation of enrolled . Minnesotans used car^? Minnesota perience water deaths." . : Goodrich Funeral Home, Dur- A Winona State College in- Bismarck ; 62 42 - .25 cdy The institute barges, up. allocated ; by . the Minnesota . :; Partly cloudy throng! ; : ' ¦'"' ¦, said besides last Small; craft ' , and, Friday night and .at the Higher Education Coordinating structor has been named to the Concerned about Boise:. - 68 42. clr year's deaths, 440:persorjs were — seven. 12:i»q fSaturday, Chance of scat- Boston 57 52 ' cdy -' - . '' : ' . -Today . ' :: church Saturday from - Commission (HECC). board of directors of the Minne- injured and a total of 4 ,270 boat- . . services. finance costs? tered sprinkles tonight into Brownsville 89 79 .. cdy .5:15 a.m, — Susan B, 15 bar p.nrii until . The College of Saint Teresa, sota Driver arid Traffic Safety ' : ¦ ¦ ing accidents were reported in ¦ Education Before you buy, fake a few -,- early Saturday. Low tonight Buffalo . . ; -73 , 57; ; ' •' ". rn " ges.,;.;up. - " , -:; was awarded $21,827. and St. Association. upper 80s to mid 40s. High a 12-state area. Property . dam- ¦ Russell Hess Named college representative nninutes to contact your All- Charleston ':. 92 V5 cdy 6:25; a.m. — Minnesota; six Minn. —: Russell Mary!s College.$15,081; Saturday 80 to 70) • ' ".:¦; • age was. $1,18 million. WABASHA, The program was established on the board is Mathew Barry, state Agent. Remember, all Charlotte-,: . . 8ai 67• cdy barges,; down. ' Hess, 57; Tomah/ Wis., formerly finance rates are - , Michigan had. the most boat- Noon by the 197i Minnesota Legis- WSC driver education instruc- . not: the Wisconsin Chicago. . 6i 53 rn ing deaths, 94, followed by- Ohio — Joseph Hendrick, 14 of : Wabasha, died Monday in .samel. - Cincinnati .- ..¦. 80 6S .51 rn , "barges, up. . lature and . provides a contracr tor and coordinator of the South- Increasing clondiness from 73; and Illinois, 69i; Other deaths Tomah. V eastern Minnesota , "Cleveland . 69 61 : . rn , 1916, tual relationship, with private "Traffic; and VVhether you're interested In northwest tonight sprinkles included Wisconsin 52, Kentucky He. was born Dec 26, in colleges under; which Safety/Center. ' . '¦¦ , De'nter . . 81 - 46 clr ' and lived in Nel- :the var- a .new or »ised car. truck possible north half. Cooler, ¦] .48, Minnesota 35, 21, Arcadia, Wis., ious institutions receive a grant Barry: received his . masters or recreational ' vehicle, ask lows upper 30s and low 40s, Des Moines 78! 55 .01 cdy Indiana 19; Iowa 16 Self-instruGtional son, Wis. and in Wabasha be- " Detroit ; 72 59 : : ; rn , Nebraska for each native . Minnesotan en- degree in traffic safety from Il- your Agent , for the facts mostly cloudy and cool Satur- ¦ ¦ 12,. South Dakota; 7 and North fore moving to. Tomah. aiid figures. He may be able Duluth ;' '::- ,•: .' • 55 44 ; .62 cdy Survivors . include his '¦ • 'wife,' rolled in excess of the; number linois State University in 1969. . day, chance of sprinkles north ¦ Dakota 2. materials seminar enrolled in 1970, Prior to :" in to help you arrang? your loan balf. Highs mostly low and mid Fairbanks 78 6ft three sons, and. two sisters, Mrs. coming to WSC ' ¦ ¦ : The institute said/ "No . mat- 1971 he taught driver education and save you some money on Wt-: -¦ ' . :¦:•:' ¦; Fort Worth 91 72 . ra ter how well designed and en- to; open Monday Herbert CEdna) Husson, Nelson, University o;f Minnesota, finance charges: Helena 53 36 .05 cdy Mrs, (Blanche) at West High School, Daven- :¦¦ gineered a boat is,. using it in and Kenneth through the family, or to St; 5-day forecast Honolulu : ¦:.- ' ' 85 70 . ..OS M : Dr. Robert Schulteis , chair- Bold, Blair, : Wis. port, Iowa, and - at Pipestone, 4 MIIWESOTA :- . the wrong waters, or trying to man of the business John!s Memorial Fund at the Minn., High School. Houston 87; 72 , .91 rh education Funeral services were Thurs- United Church of , /instate Fau? to partly «loudy 'with Ind' exceed; the limitations for which department at Southern Illinois Christ. : apous 81 63 .40 rn it was built, automatically make day in Iola , Wis. - See «r Phoii* no important temperature Jacks-ville : 91 71 cdy University, will A memorial service will be at Mrs. Tom Thompson through : ' ' ' ¦' it unsafe." conduct a DFL chairman to be changes Sunday Juneau ;;; 71; 41 - " • '. cdy three- 10:30 a.m. . Saturday at St SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- Tuesday. Highs from the credit, one-week GENE REGAN City 89 54 .43 cdy Mary's. ; Episcopal Church, To- cial) — Mrs. Tom (Ida) Thomp- in Winona June 10 SEARS STORE middle 6<>s to lower 70s. Las Vegas .93 65 . clr seminar on "De- mah, the Rev. Robert Leve of- son veloping Self- , 87, JJorchester, Iowa, died 57 on th« Plan East Lows from the lower 40s to Little Rock 89 72 .11 rn Caledonia sets ficiating. Thursday afternoon at Tweeten DFL State Chairman Hank : I n s t ructional Fischer will confer with party Phone 452-7720 lower 80s. Los . Angeles¦ 67 60 . cdy Memorial Hospital here after Louisville ' ¦ ¦: 81 64 1.10 rn registration for Materials" be- Sr. Mary Bautch officers and elected officials in Res. Phone 424-2276 ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ an illness, of brie month. The Mississippi Memphis 90 76 • ' ' : . - r'n ginning Monday ARCADIA, Wis, (Special) - The former Ida Fretheim is a Winona June 10 as part of a MISSISSIPPI at Winona ' THE Miami 85 77 cdy tractor school State Funeral services for Sister Mary native of Allamakee County, 12-city . tour beginning Monday. . Flood Staga .'M'hr. College, Bautch, Stevens Point, Wis.; a In a series of breakfast , lunch tti» today Chg, Milwaukee ; .55 48 clr CALEDONIA, Minn. —Reg- Iowa. Red Wing ...... 14 4,3 - .3 MpIs-St.P. 69 50 .45 cdy The focus of fprmer Arcadia resident, were and dinner meetings, Fischer , 9.3 —.\ . istration for tractor driving Funeral services will be at 2 Loks City New Orleans 88 78 .10 rn the seminar will held May 24 at St. Joseph Con- will discuss the DFL state con- VVoboshu ...... 1*¦ 8,5 —.J school in the agriculture depart- be on develop- p.m. Monday at Big Canoe vention June 14^16 in Minneap1- Alma Dam. T.W. „.. -..- , M -.1 New York 70 . 54 rn vent Chapel, Stevens Point, Bu- riira) /i—*»3^l WhitmanJJsni s . + ¦' ment of the Caledonia High Lutheran Church, Decor- -- v— -JtlBr^^^* -4 • *S- Okla. - City 89 63 .92 rn ment of skills Dr. Schulteis rial Was in the convent ceme- ' olis-, accomplishments of the Winona Dam, T.W ; ... ,.; ,7 +.1 School " will be' held Monday. needed by teachers in all sub- ah, Iowa , trie Rev, Emil Martin- legislature and the party's WINONA 13 7.1 Omaha 84 49 .01 rn tery there. son officiating. Burial will be in Trompoaleal) Pool . -. , 9.S +.1 Philad'phia 76 54 The session is for boys and ject matter areas for the form- The Mass of Resurrection was Dollars for Democrats Drive Trempoaloau D^m ...... 6,4 cdy gids who plan to drive a trac- the church cemetery..; . B.2 —.1 Phoenix 96 ulation of individualized study concelebrated by the Rev. Roy ' June 10-28. . gakota ¦ 67 clr tor this summer and; who are Friends may call at thie Roble ' •¦- . . m&ntgL , resbach Pool 9.4 +.1 Pittsburgh 73 62 rn packets for students. Misch, nephew of Sister Mary, ^S Dresbacti Dam 4.9 between the aiges of 14 to 16. The class will meet in Room Funeral Home here Saturday Sign in a Sydney, Australia La Croist ., It 7.0 P'tland Ore. . 66 47 clr and the Rev. James Logan, evening, all Sunday wan&£&*#JEb. • FORECAST ' Participating schools will be 307 of Mhvne Hall from 8:30 ^ay and real estate agent's window: P'tland Me. 54 47 ' cdy chaplain at the convent. Monday morning, WammmUmmt Rad Wlnj 4.1 6,0 J.9 Caledonia , Houston and Spring a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sh was born in "The greatest earth on show." WINONA ., 7.0 6.9 6.8 Rapid City 59 35 .01 clr Grove. rural Arca- La Crotst 6.9 6.B 6.7 Reno 77 40 clr Registration may he made at dia ( North Creek) S3 years ago. Tributary Stream* . Richmond 80 65 Classes will run from 8 a.m. the first class session. In 1945 she retired after having Chippewa al Durand 3,1 +.4 .07 cdy until noon, Monday through Fri- Zumbro at Thellman 30.1 Salt Lake 74 . 43 clr Information about the semi taught in five states; She noted rrempealjau at Dodo* ...... 3,2 —.1 Diego day. Attendance will: fulfill' -re- nar may be obtained from Mrs her 75th year as a sister Black at Galetvllla .,,,....., 2,5 San 67 60 cdy quirements for certification to last La Crosse at W, Salem ...... 4,2 — .1 San. Fran . 64 50 clr C, H. Hopf in the college busi June. Root at Houilon 7.1 Seattle 64 49 .02 clr drive farm vehicles. ness department. Survivors are: one brother, Spokane 62 37 cdy Lewis, Independence; three sis- Houston Co. museums Tampa 89 75 cdy ters, Mrs. Albert (Mary) Kor- set summer schedule Washington 79 64 .51 rn pal , Mrs, Paul (Anna) Marsolek and . Mrs. Joe (Nellie) Kulig, all VACATION IDEAS CALEDONIA, Minn , (Special) seums, which have many in- of Independence and Mrs , Ro- ^T ^ «- The Houston County Histori- teresting displays and histori- man (Helen) Stelmach, Arcadia , cal Society museums at Cale- cal objects, without cha rge, and nieces and n ephews. donia and Eilzen will be open In Caledonia the mu-seum is Sunday s from 1 to 4 p.m. dur- at the Houston County Fair- Berlin Coulson ing June, July and August. grounds and at Eitzen, near MONDOVI , Wis. (Special) - Residents may visit , the mu- the Stnte Bank building. Berlin . Coulson, 72, Mondovi , died Thursday evening at Buf- falo Memorial Hospital here, Kjentvct & Son Funeral Home has charge of arrangements. In years gone by Don G. Ziegler FOUNTAIN CITY , Wis. - Don ON AN Galon Ziegler, 21, a former FAMILY (Exirws from tne jucs e/ tins tiewipoperj Fountain City resident , died WE SH ^ ^t f Wednesday ^ ^ °W 2 l after a brief illness VACATION ^ Mclvin ON ThK ^ Prayer in Miami public schools. Ziegler. The family mov- "Z ^> COACHMEN "§C SPOTS ARE A ed, to Buriisvilli) YEAR! ^s JUST At Chntfiold , Minn,, the Capital Theater , closed eight , Minn,, sever- ^> . RV _ V^S years, was reopened, al years ago. Ho was a graduate MINUTES < of the Burnsvllio High School . /yl/\/v\/\{vVA^ ^l/L AWAY FR0M Twenty-five years ago Survivors Include: his par- \$s^ . . . 1949 5" WHCRE YOU ^ ents ; one brother , William at r ^VW^ N ~ZL "^ Highways and streets throughou t the Winona area were home; two alters, Mrs. Sonia See Our Display of n l\\(£, death-free throughout the long weekend, Hoflnnd , ^ ^T Madison , Wis ,, and TRAVEL TRAILERS TRUCK CAMP1RS In Winona 's glorious spring sunshlno the 111 graduates of Mrs. Betty ChnJfant • ^IAAAA , Indiana- lr KKV^ the College of Saint Teresa received their degrees in the col- polls, Jnlay three r years, including partici- grown from our shared experi- DaUy News Staff Writer tionships," she said. "It seems games with the listeners." pation in athletic events, - stu- ence will not be lost. For it is Reminiscences of the past, an sad we don't even know how SHE DESCRIBED s -u c h dent government, clubs and in our friendship and our un- , ¦ assessment of the present and to communicate with/ bur games as a forni of hide-and- various activities. derstanding that the true signifi- lopes for the future were ex- peers." 1 " seek in which "we fear our true : "Perhaps for all of us, high :cance and gain of high school ¦ ' ' ' pressed by four graduating ¦. She said she. did not like to thoughts may be in opposition school has been falling in and lift " . . . . ' : 104th annual Winona love," he observed, and Graduating with special honors-" seniors at define communication as an ex- to those oi the listener. The lit- out of ¦ Senior High: School commence- change of words -- "that is tle lies we use in order to cover added ,' "1 think tie greatest joy were Laurel Berg, Karen ment exercises Thursday night. our true feelings become such a is:.that for three years we Beyers, David Bunke, Laurie ' making conversation'! — but ¦: . ': Selected by members of their preferred to think of commu- habit that they don't even pre* shared these experiences so Buswell, Kristi Erickson, Mter- class, the speakers were Joseph : they have " become garet Franzen, . . Henderson, nication as "an exchange of sent themselves as lies in our that now . ¦ . Berkman, JuJie Keller, Laurie thoughts, ideas and opinions, own eyes. We are keeping our ours." . ' .;. ' '' , . ' - ' "' . Carol Hoenk, Karen Kane, Jul- Schloegel and Alexander Hen- ; This, he declared, seemed to ie. Keller, Rhoha Kruse, Laurie coming from the inrierselves of AMSWWUWt derson who addressed a stand- the people communicating." . him to be "the true . meaning Schloegel,. Elizabeth Streater ing-room-only crowd of more Essential to this, : she found, (For 3 complete listing of high school. It is, if nothing and Mary Zimmerman. than 3,000 at the Senior High is "much listening and under- of Wfnana Senior High else, an opportunity to interact The invocation was School gymnasium, • ^pro-: standing . taking place. Where, ¦ School graduates, see page in . a community of closely as- nounced by the Rev. Lynn R. there is listening ;-,; -: ' sociated people. During this RAIN BEGINNING at about , arivy»«»uytfuv live: and to laugh together." diction ; by the Rev. Jack A. being, heard with ; ¦true identities trapped inside night, he ment program was to begin at understand- ON GRADUATION¦ Tanner,. Winona Gospel Church. :. Jeffe'rs6n. " Field, - prompted . a ing; we find ho need to be in- with the .use!of these lies." ; acknowledged , ' ' 'the physical The Senior . High School band change in site .to the gymnasi- hibited and expressing, our true , In his ; reflection ; on "High unit .of bur lives' will begin to under the direction of Robert; ¦¦ thoughts and feelings : ' um. becomes School Experiences: ; Yours, disappear. But, 5E we are care- Ahdrus and the. choir directed ;¦ SENIOR HIGH (GRADUATES i".., Officers School Board of Wmona TndependeBt District . This was only the second time easier. But, when w'e feel; we Mine and Ours," Henderson re- ful, the warm friendship and by Meryl Nichols ' provided ; sek of the class of .423 seniors who received diplo- 861. From left: Lawrence Behrens Jr;, presi-;- time; since outdoor commence- are riot being heard with under- called /highlights -of the past human understanding that have lected . numbers. . mas at Thursday night's Wisona Senior High dent; karla Prodzihski, vice president;.Cheryl , ment programs were initiated ! School commencement ;.recdyed congratnla- Eddy, secretary, and Stephen Rorapa, treasur- ;il: years ago that the weather tions from Frank J - Allen,; -chairman ' of the er. (Daily News photos). . necessitated a change in the . locale from Jefferson Field. The last time commencement exercises . were , forced .indoors was in l9€6! : The class of 423 was present VWG seiiior QjrfimisM word suited ed by Principal Wallace H. Hitt for the awarding, of diplomas by Frank J. Allen, chairman forecast if the School Board of Winona appointed to tb vyeoffter Independent: District 861. Optimism is the word highs in: the upper-fiOs. Sun- 6Uited to the weather fore- day the fair skies are ex- SPEAKERS were introduced by Edwin J. Spencer , assistant bast for the; weekend. pected to bring Tvith them , : Prognosticates call for principal. stale beard lows in the 50s and highs of partly cloudy sides through ¦; . Computing the number : .Winona State College senior in the 70s.. ;./ hours spent in. classrooms since Timothy J. Penny has been ap- Saturday with ju st a chance of a few sprinkles tonight . Limited sunshine dodged members of the. graduating; pointed /to the . state college showers,in the area Thurs- class began school,. Berkman board, Gov. Wendell Anderson with a clearing trend begin- ning Saturday evening and! day . ..and pushed the tem- found that this.year 's class has announced today, ' perature to a;high of 70, but attended school, collectively, ; Penny , 22, is vice ; president of extending through Tuesday. years.: /. The overcast that blank- the. thermometer dropped to for about 600 the , Minnesota : .. an overnight low of 49. The He compared school to "th.e State College eted the area this morning is explaining, "It protects expected to break , into scat- area registered .16 inches womb, Student Assbcia-: of precipitation in the last us, keeps us warm until it's tered patches oi clouds;t>i- we are tioh and a form- a; 24 hours. . -;/ ' ' ' time to leave. Tonight¦ er legislative fering shower or two. being bom. . High - . •school ; has lobbyist for ; the ,!' The temperature is expects The . local record high ieen a place ;where we were ljttle! temperature was 37 degrees ¦ ¦ association, - " . .. .j ed to rise, but change ¦prepared ,', but ' :for '' what?" ' • ' . . " iri the mercwy WHlvbe fel* above Thursday's mark ':+ At Winona . but "If you; haven't decided yet, * State, he was before Sunday, Lows tonight 107"set in 1934 ^ the he told classmates,, "let me say student senator and Saturday are expected low, 35 set in .1897, was with: this. - Choose your path care- for two years to-be in the hnid-40s with in reach. fully. Ask others, ask yourself , COMMENCEMENT SPEAKERS> .' Speakers.at Thursday; , Mgh school history department who perennially is in charge of. -: a n d/-- .'student but : above all be sure that it is . . - body president the right thing for you-, not for nights Winona Senior High School commencement were four arrangements, for /commencement programs, arej from , left: in 1972-73. In Penny :.-. anyone else, but for you:" members of the senior class who hapUbeen selected by their : : Laurie Schloegel, Alec Henderson, Joe . Berkman and Julie ' : ' ' 1971 he interned for Rep, Martin DRAWING ON the theme , classmates.. Conferring with C, D. Stephens, chairman ^f the : Keller. - . ;:. . ' . Sabo - representative from started building, Boynton said rnnko it official ArL gin construction Credit Asso- nnd Hon to Call Is second annual Alma Ma- tions for lnte risers, with Weiss Builders , He- ho issued a stop w ork order Tl» o King and his Houseboat Five ciation Building, St. Chaxles, Minn . Partici- the general contractor , rina Day will begin Sunday at pating in tho ceremonies wore, from loft, Paul chcrtcr. The building will be located south of May 15 at Gernes' instruction band providing some' floating after ho learned the assessor fl:30 a.m. with n uniquo race — Stollflug, member of tho board of directors; tho St, Charles 1-90 interchange at the junc- 's tween n huge hot- entertainment nnd housoboat records had changed. competition be visitors . W, Wnyno Smith , W-Smi! h ArchitocLural En- tion of CSAI1 M and Highway 74 and will cost air balloon and a houseboat. rides for Gernes explained that bocnuso gineering Services, Winona; James Long, St. an estimated $171,473. (John Iirowncll photo) the MUD purchase 454-2961 Should the wenther fall to co- The day's activitlos will be altered Pet- Charles, manager of the association; Mayor roff ' operate, the raco will be run at open to tho public, s lot size, ho should have wiretapping On AIM 'fTfiiu^y: , weekend TV Minnesota football coach : 7^^ family show focusing on quality sity of Aquatennial queen entertainment for children , An- Cal Stoll and Mpvies Peterson. Auction con- US, ¦ ¦ ^ ' live action combine: Barbara attorn , Bii&Ms&i^£&, Ch. 19. clude Herb Shriner, - Knee defense claim have bro- illegally, monitored phone calls ers the wire tap issue was in Dusty' Trill 10 Audubon . 5 Thriller 4-9-19 ers," Sharon Tate, comedy dancers and 1 * Jacques ' -UtOO 'Movie, , - - . - Jacques Cousteau. "Octopus , Whiting, square ken laws on illegal wire tapping from Wounded Knee during the South Dakota, jurisdiction, ¦ LUcy. Show¦ ¦ ¦ 11 ' 4-11 (1967), 10:30, Chs. 3-8. ¦ Hm»riv " ¦ ¦" ' Cousteau t-Mf 12:00 Midnight octo- barbershoppers. 4:30, ch. 5. • ' ' ' at any rate." «• Hotel," Greta Garbo, Octopus" focuses oh the : and perjury. . . . early stages of the 71-day siege. . . . ¦ HiiiDillHIIIMIIIMM il Movie 10-13 . •>-'•! S-T0-" "Grand . . _ ; :. Merw erilfln il News «: pus in Pacific: and Mediterreah- Dora's World. Musical-cbmedy '• The : action shifted to Min- Bertinot admitted overhearing The defendants and Kunstler , drama.(1932), 10:50, Ch. 4. Tc Tell the Truth 1* Masterpiece Speekeasy t, ean waters. Sequences include hour with Dora Hall and Stubby neapolis and Refiner's office, several and U.S. District Judge held a sidewalk hews confer- Weshington 31 Theitre - Jl Rellolot) 1» "Resurrection," Horst Buch- an octopus intelligence test, a Kaye. 4:30, ch. 13. !!after court was recessed Thurs- Fred Nichol found during a spe- ence shortly afterward. Means holz, drama (1958) , 11:00, Ch. mating ritual and scenes of a World of Disney. "Jungle ;¦/ day .and continued , in recess to- cial hearing, the government and the attorney predicted the 11. ' mother protecting her young. Cat," a true-life adventure, ex- . day.: ! had illegally monitored calls. government would sit on its ¦ ¦ ; . .' ' Tt^&teMZ&i:/*iXX>M&£:tAi^*m-^*y^z^M^:^i^^^i^^l^i^^^^^:^^:^iM^^^i^ / Saturday Chs. 6-9-19., : lores (documentary-style) the hands..!-' ' fcHB^HflHilHBlBI^' Die Again," 8: 00, p : ¦ ¦- ' "Live Again,v - Defendants Dennis Banks and Trimbach testified at the JUInrnlnn - . ¦ Vlrsinlan '11 .. MenMnine* 31: Saturday . " / . world of the jaguar, centering jriuruiii y .. ., MovIa 1? »: JO Black . Journal ? Donna Mills, suspense (1974), :: Russell Means : and defense at- same , hearing he' , never had Said the New York attorney, ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦' ' ' " Children's Film Festival. on the animal's search for food . Afternoon 3:00 Goif . . . , j-4-a FOCUS . ¦ i ¦ 7:30, chs. 6-9-19. . •;. - ; . .;, torney. William!; Kunstler anything to. do with preparing veteran of. nrtany . cases in- 15.00 Film PMtivel »-» " Thri ller 4 Survival . '.. .. -4' "JFriends for Life,,' , a Russian arid its use of a definite hunt^ ™ ¦ Rat PatroV • V » Bowling . ¦- , - , S "Climb an Angry Miouptain,'' ; . brought copies of traiiscripts.in- wiretap applications. But he volving , activists; "No.federal M. . 4 , mbviie, focuses on the unusual ing; plan. 6:30; chs. 5-10-13. ; ¦ vuVni'. . Washington . :. 31 Documentary v 10 Fess :. Parker, western drama : ' !' Joseph backed down on this later when agent has ever been indicted by :M h|n9- » . ; Onle's. Girls. 1» . relationship between, a lynx: and Columlx), A dynamic senator- volving testimony . -of . Workshop 5-11 ' F'* ¦ (1972), .8:00, chs.. 5-10-13. : : :Trimbach special agent/ in confronted with two affidavits a .grand jury because of per- American . 4:00 Kemper Open . J-4-S . r;M A|| („ tni , a forest ranger. 12:00,. chs. 3-8. ial • cahdidate finds a perfect . , Bandstand 4-» M vbtr ;¦ . V?- F.mily 3-4-1 "Way . v . Way Out," Jerry Wide,? World.7 . Emergency Angeles Dodg- charge . of the Minneapolis FBI, prepared in connection with a jury or illegal wiretapping in Roller Ganie ' 10 ¦ J-lo-13 Baseball. ;.Los excuse for murder as a phony Dick Rodgers' •" 1» .of Sports ; e-9-1* ¦: . Partrldoe Lewis, comedy .(1966) , 10:00, and. Gerald Beftinot Jr., as- proposed tap; application at the. United States. 'Bonama • . ..; ¦ '¦'¦' ¦' ers vs. Chicago Cubs, 1:00, chs. murder threat boosts voter ; «,Vn m>iitav "show - 4 .. 10 Family , 4-M» ch: 6: • - , signed to the New Orleans, La., Wounded Knee. "A federal, judge has found ' ¦¦ " . M^i» . ' Jun. Wayne 31 5-10-13.. . - sympathy for him. 7:30, chs. 5- ¦ ¦ •ChmleleWskl I " ^'Port of Hell;" Dane . Clark, -office. . ' ¦ .' ' ' ;. He .said he'd; forgotten about Bertinot illegally wiretapped. ¦¦ CBS Golf Championship. Lan- 10-13. : ' < , ;/ ¦ nirfc onrtnen ¦ ' ij . Mr- Rogers 31 . MASH .t 4-8 drama (1955) 10:00,.ch. 19. ' ¦¦¦ Dus,v : : , Means and Banks , are ac- it in a year's time. He violated a federal law and ' ' A^rlcullur. 19 :30 '« Tra « Movie .: 4-9-19 ny Wadkins, Gay Brewer and " " Survival ;: - ". . ' - . IJ Hee Haw 11 "Hi Ya, i Chum;'* the Ritz 0-count ; indictment Means; Banks and Kunstler could be sentenced to five . . ... Electric to«.. . .•. . 31si . . • ¦ ¦ Sam Sriead compete at, Akron, cused in. a 1 , Electric Co. . ' .31 B-.OO Mary l yter '•; Brothers, i m u s i ca 1 comedy with burglary, larceny and oth- asked that Renner present the years In prison and a $10,000 1J:« Movie . . . . 4 5:00 Chmlelewskl 3 Moore . J-4-5 0>hib. : 3:00, chs. 3-4-8. :;' . ' ' - - 3 : Animal World 4 . ' ' ¦' • ' Movie 5-1M3 (1943), 10:15, ch. 10. transcripts . to a federal grand fine." ' 1:00 Cartoon - ' ' . Kemper Open. Third round at er/felonies in connection with . Baieball 5-10-13 Naitivillc Music 5 «:30 Boh Newhert 3^4-8 "White Feather," Robert Wag- Lassie - .4 Fishing 8 High Chapjrnl 11 Charlotte, NC. 4:W, chs. 3-4-8. PREGNANT Movie . '" '• '• . '¦' . Jimmy Dean 10 9:00 Susikind : . J ner, western ( 1955) , 10:30, ch. arid Distresse-d? , ' ' ,I | | ' Carol Burnett 1-4-8 ' ' " Wide World of Sports. Auto . . T ravel 19 Campers ¦ 8. : . - • . ¦ •: - . Music :¦ - . '.«. • comment .13 • . ¦ . Owen Marshall 4-M9 . racing and track. 4:00, chs. 6- Zoom 31' . Sesame Street 31 Documentary . 31 "S ha do w Over Elveron," :¦ ¦¦ ' ' ¦¦' .,/• WE CAN HELP YOU . 'M Washington 2 ?:M News ;. . . . - . - 11 9-19.. . • : ; ' | : l!M^mI , JO untamede World 4 *t . James Pranciscus, medical " ««*» «?««> 1 ?« - . H*?+1M]' ' National Geographic." Amec- ' my D.in I . * MovieJJ«j. - 4-19 (1968) ifee confidential lionr uUMt.rn 11 Reasoner . drama , iOi30, ch. 9. . : , , | | G ffifha h w& otsicam V. ' Report . 4-9,19 :Perry 1,,rMason . 11 ica's Wonderlands—the Nation- rti American Sectarian service. , .. "Picture Moinmy Dead," Su- :; ; al Parks!' details bur national || 'S- V - V i»:.5S T': ?o san ^Gordon, thriller (1966), Electric Co. -31'J!, - ' ^S:Evening 10:30 J. Carson . 5 heritage. 6:00, ch, 8. > : 10:30, ch. 13.. ' ; : 1:00 This Is The Ufa . 3 4:00 Roundhouse 2 Movie I-M3 The Chrome-Plated Night- Call BIRTHRIGHT j : . Newsmaker 4 Survival 3 ¦ Weil Slr««t 31 "I'll Cry Tomorrow;" Susan : ¦" ¦; :.; Willy's. Workshop : - 4 News , . : 4-J-1D ' , jfc'js Name ol : inare. Documentary special that Winona -' "• ' 'If ¦;#>!^ift^Bj 8¦ ' Hayward (1955) o^T^fe " biography WiJfcyi;^ Untamed World . Lawrence Welk 4-9 , , If J . . the.€ame J . Phone 452.2«1 : -:.| f«^- ¦ : Ameri- . : ; traces development -of Kova . 31 National 10:45 Moviia : . - 4-11 10:50v ch. 4.: IsSO Car ft Track 3 .Geographic 8 11:20 Saint ; lo can automobiles. 9:00,' ch. 31.:. By KIM WTLLENSON million in advance cash pay? mand from . Capitol Hill since ¦ ':. . 4; . •'Blliy Hie Kid vs. / ¦ ¦;¦ Lissla . . . Wrestling 11 11:30 It Tahes 1 Thlet 19 • ' ¦ ' WASHINGTON (UPI) — The ments, Senate sources say.- . . - January; the sources said . Oreen Acree 4 Hee Haw . 13 12:00 Movie .:. - J-13 Chuck Courtney, thriller (1966), • . " .:"./ ;. Sunday . Grumman Aerospace Corp. has . Grumman's demand for the Limits ot M.n 8 . The Cowboys 19 Jl Winters 4 ' Children's Film Festival, 9:00, The Navy action was discov- 11:00, ch. il. ¦¦-¦ ¦ it can't continue unusual:cash-in-advance!; proce- ch:' :4; '. told the Navy.. ered within the 'past week , by a "The Mummy's Tomb," ton the controversial F-14 dure cannot be met without an . A Tribute to Mahalia Jack- building Senate Armed Services Com- Chaney, thriller (1942), 12:00, "tomcat'' fighter unless the okay from Congress; but the . ' • ' '¦ son. "Got to; Tell It•" pays hom- mittee aide.: A memo detailing Ch. - 5. - ' . ; DANCE Pentagon comes up /with $125 Navy has concealed the de- age to the late gospel singer his findings -was made public "Drums in the Deep South ," EAGLES OLUB ¦ ) as films show her performing Nsw Clubrcomj, 4)h S Franklin . Thursday by Sen. .. ./ Stuart Mnrnlnd Henry Woll¦ ¦ . ¦ 5 Treasure Hunt 5 James Craig, adventure (1951 , . ¦ • v .. 'J' » - 1 ""¦«— . . . . Essence " • . ..« •:' : Secrets '.. :. - ' • . 9 12;bb ; at a youth rally in/Harlem arid Symington, D-Mo. ; 81OO- R.x Humbard . » Fishing ¦:¦' »¦ . . Wild Kingdom 10 , ch. 13. . 4-8 . telling : of her childhood and SAT., JUNE I Cartoons . . Delates ' 10 , Movie • .11 • ¦ Committee, sources said , the Religion . . » . Unlamed , World 13 Sunday :.- ; . Ralph Gordon' -Bahd ' . Dlek Rodgers 13-19 . . refusal to work in . nightclubs. ' ¦¦ ¦ ¦ group was "acutely embarrass- l4i1s F»mlly Hour ,." .«.' . . Lassia 19 "South of Tana River," Paul " . — 'MEMBERS .-:/ : K.7hrvin iJut, m,m.W¦ 1 : ¦ ¦ 9:00, Ch. :8;; 10:30, :ch . 3.. -; ed - ' by the Navy action because \ - H^ur"' 5, ¦ !:*>*. «#*¦ **:¦- »*• " Reichardt, adventure : :(1959), •wvwwy ^^MSA^ywws '^^ NAM*! ' » ^ ¦S'z ¦ ¦ ' " " WCrd , Meet the Press. Six gover- its ' - ,.$21.8 '"; billiott- 1975 arms Dour ot/Hop. 11 Answers «-?-19 " n "' .,.i, 6:00, ch; 11. . : . nors, including Minnesota's CHARCOALED CHICKEN . budget/ comes to . the Seriate *' "You Can't Win > 'Em All,' j ,, , 4-8 ¦IrOO CM- Spwtf-; : 3-4 NoJa Gov. Wendell Anderson, will be floor - today r-and the bill 8,10 CarSV ,, tony Curtis adventure (1970); ; Bay ot. Discovery 5 S, -, - t " . -7:30 Marinix60.' . ¦: 3-4-8 , interviewed . at the National SCHAFSKbpF TUESDAY contains $722.5 million more .for ; ¦ :; ¦ : ; 7:30 v j ¦ v-AP'. i ' - '.¦ -' ¦R «S-o*mt ;:. 10. 5 , chs. 6-9rl9. . - •Governors , ' • ' ¦ ¦: ¦- ¦ Knows : ^ r ^ll ' Conference in Seat- F14s. • : '.;, ^new ^ey Jor-H J . ,. - "^er , : Grjmfh "I'd Rather Be Rich," Sandra ' J ^ ,^ tle. . 11:00, chs. 5-10-13. ;. WWVWW VW«¥WWVWWVWVWW The committee is said tof ear ' ' : ::¦ ?..manshlp ; 31 : Dee,. comedy (1964), 10:30,. ch. ' fteviv. .^r., ,,-?. . «taU! ;: 13 ' " ' ¦ ¦ ' ' ' CBS Tennis classic. Opening OiOJ Merv GrlHIn : . 11 . ¦ ' ¦ • ¦ ' " '¦ ' ¦' : ' '¦ ¦ the hew. disruption ! of the i 9,00 5r« Robert, ill • ;, 0»!ds« 1» ; 9. - • • ; .: : ' . ssWyiJ»^sisss^MslssMsHfa^£fW^' '^MMsn^sHlMijjNy igB^Qr^fe^SJ^^J^^^s^^^W^iy ! b»! : C round at Austin, Tex. features ^^ trouble-plagued FI4 program Film Festival 4 ¦ - J " g"' , ! "?h„iR» « "Munster, Go Home," Her- . Faith lor Today 5 . . 1s.30.Rat- Patrol : 9v .- Theatre 31 -Australia's J o hn .Alexander ; could lead the Seriate to junk it Cartoons " . 6-9-1* % H!?h Chaparral .11. t 8:30 ' Bornaby Jones 1-4-8 mione Girigold,' comedy (1966), DANCE ; 0 ,he against Nikki , of Yugosla- Mahalia Jackson ; 8 . .. " , Fenc€ 9,00 Kup s Show 31 ' - Pilic altogether. The/ program has M. S, '»¦ ' ; ¦ 10:30, ch. 10,: .; ;;;. ;: R . X Humbard 13. > § ™}'" : ; ''- , . via; 12:00 , chs. 3-4-8. SAT., JUNE I already encountered . a cost ¦¦ rn, . .: . ,.30 M.uc.4 . •: » I ¦ ¦ I 9,30 Day ot .Discovery ¦. s ¦; .. Moora on Sunday "Someone Behind the Door," . -? tpi:: ' ' : ¦ - - Names of *. Washington Debates. J''Can \ V;. .;, : :.;. :- I W^9B'*' * J&.j^ft^ZJpii^^fflll^^^J^^fi^^^w-J i overrun of more than $1 billion, Town Hall . . .. .I . . - - the Ganii 9 Police Surgeon Charles Bronson, drama (1971), ¦^^^l^^^'99'V«\ ^siss9P *«i0t*aa?^?^*>?! Osmonds 4-9-19 . ¦ ^ •Congress Control Spending?'V- and the plane does not perform AmerlCs Mod Squad : * 10:50, ch. 4. : i ; Music by J Insight 10 P roblems 19 Good Times . » &'- 60-minute debate with Sen, anywhere near its original Soul's Harhor. 11 . ¦ : | : Arley Ihrke Band . ¦ J JJ Movie t-li-13 Great . Mysteries : 9 , "Tiimbleweeds," Audie Mur- J specifications.: 10,00 Camera Three . 3: ¦: , Acldams Family 19 CHarlie aialr 10 "William ;Proxmire, Rep. Al Ull- « Night Gallery 13 phy, western , (1953), ¦ 11:15, | BERTWOOD GOLFVIEW . Laurel & Hardy 4 ¦ 3:00 Kemper Open 3-4 ,¦ man and former Rep. John The Navy's inability- to pay Hour c-f Power t Saint 10 News 11 ch. 13: . • ; ' I SUPPER CLUB . ' Rex Humb.ro - " "«. . - Prlca Is Right 19 Byrnes.;i 2:00, -ch. 10. ; Grumman in advance, without . ii» Tennis.' :. 9 } Rushford, Minn, J Day of Discoviry 8 Baseball 19 10:00 News . 3-4-5-8-MO- ' ¦ congressional approval stems ¦ . Cartoons . 9-19 . Washington : Jl 13-19 CBS Sp*rts ; Spectacular. Top- I;.. ' Smorgasbord Sunday¦ < . . •• ' . ..This Is The Life 10 4:00 Auction 2 . '' ^ighlighfs : ¦ '¦ ¦ ' from a compromise worked out ¦ ¦ Mission ; ; notch track and field plus U. S.- t; \ ... . - 11-301p3:C0 . .; - ,.j : Wondenmi •; .. - 11 .. . Tennis ' 4-9 . '- . - Imposslbli il :.' ,- ' - Today..' ' ¦ last ;' year with Congress after Chmlelewskl 13 ; ; ' !s«siAsl*AA*AAislB*AaiiiA>\A*V (^demned rn6ncrian Kemper Open 8 10-30 News 3) Local News ' - USSR wrestling. V, 00, chs 3-4. A handful of : the company refused to build 10,30 Mahalia Jackson I . Travelogue 10 * .p.m ,„j V —. with Anne Da- He ¦ Baseball. Los Angeles Dodg- This Is The Lite 8 Movie . 11 . Ro Jk concert ' ¦"!' vis, . 6:00, Ch. 3. imppssible mission, against hopeless odds... more of the planes. "« ¦ ¦ '. - ¦ ¦ , 'Make A Wish . 9-19 " «"*!;¦« ., . 13 Moments ot Truth 8 Monty Hall at Sea World. ers vs Chicago Cubs. 1:15, ch. •- . ' • • . Mormon . Choir 10 . Bl » Moyars ;31. v Movie 9-19 • ¦' ¦ 4.-J0 NFL ¦ ¦ ¦ 8; Milwaukee Brewers vs. Oak- Grumman said, then It would „ . Treehousi Club 13 . .. 4 / Flshirg : 13 Florence Henderson, Bobby Enjoy ' ' land : 19, go bankrupt if / the Navy 11,00 Fice the Naflon .4-8 ¦: «^T * '. ' ¦ "•"s'o" 1» Sherman, Charles Reilly and Athletics^ 3:30; ch. • - ' ¦¦ . ' 9 ¦ ¦¦ ' Target : 11 insisted on buying more planes . Meet the . . . • „^^ ' ,! ¦ J.onelle AUen join Monty in this Kemper Open. Final; round, Press 3-10-11 -SSJI". «/.- .w- ' " "'35 Perspective .8 at the original contract .price of Thsl Is the Ufa • 6 „ r W J Sportsman ' 19 music-comedy special. The mu- 3:00. chs. 3-4 ; 4:00, ch, 8. . DANCING 5:M,. ¦?««» ^„nu, , " : ¦ Green' Acres, 9 : "! _ , 3-M ,10,45 Big Valley 3 $12:6 million a copy. "" ¦ sical tour of the world's largest KTCA Auction '74. To raise AT THE : Rolier Derby 19 '"' ' , ¦¦ ¦ '. In a complex deal, Grumman The^hSi, r[ \ „ „'$ * ¦ / marine life park features the money for continued program- 11,30 Face the Nation 3 speaking Freelv » .'HsOO VJestarn 11 . LABOR TEMPLE agreed; to take a $200 million Aviation 4 5:30 Untamed World | 11:05 EchMs From Carl Jablonski dancers Ha- ming, local celebrities auction ¦¦ , loss on the first 150 planes and Insight » Rookies l Calvary " waiian dancers, a killer whale, off merchandise and services ORCHESTRA , Young Issues ,9 News - 10-11 Travelooua 19 the : Navy got approval from 11:45 News 4 ,p„..L „ 11:11 Movio 13 dolphins, trained penguins - donated by area firms. Guests evening IliOO Henry Wolf $ Every Sat. Night Congress to raise the price on [,. . • ¦. MTTernOOnAfternnnn and much more. 7:00 Chs. 6-9. include: former 4:00 Gilllgan's Island 1 News ' . « , Minnesota gov- This Week all subsequent models: I 11:00 Tennis , . 3-4-8 N ews , 4 it Takes A Thief 11 Dipsy Doodle. An nour-long ernor Harold Levander, Univer- In a move to win congression- LaVern Blsek Orchestra . WEMBERS . .}' ' ¦ . al assent, the Navy and Grumman signed a contract for May keep daughter fugifrive VSHH ^B^in ^^l^^BHHHB ^iMMM 48 planes at a price of $737 million last September. Howe- ver, the ; ccntract was made A R0ASOI1TO L11/E contingent on the appropriation pJVE MUSIC | ;¦¦! ¦ ' ' . of funds by Congress. - - Hearst pu y : " Yo tuTE " "' ¦ ' ¦ When the 1074 appropriations mars blic sympathy • ( A RllSDNTOiEI bill reached the floor, Sens. By WILLIAM HELTON shootout with Los Angeles po- meeting with Dr. L.S. v Dave Klral 1-Man Band JAMES COBUR N TELLY SAVALAS BUD SPENCER Wolfe, said he had information in- • • William Proxmire, D-\Vis., a.'d HILLSBOROUGH, Calif. lice may make it easier for his father of William Wolfe,. one of dicating police may have ¦ ' " pre- f SAT., JUNE 1 . ' 75C-$i.50.$1.75 Harry F. Byrd , D-Va., tacked (AP) — Randolph A. Hearst daughter and William and Em- the victims, and the American vented firemen from fighting • BffiES 3 7:15-9:20 • PG • on an "anti-bailout amend- ily Harris | The Mellctones { fears public sympathy for , identified by. the Civil Liberties Union. the blaze until it was too late to ment' that prohibited the Navy the FBI as the remaining members Wolfe's private investigator, save anyone inside. from advancing more than $25 six . Symbionese Liberation of the SLA to find refuge ( , and Lake Headiey of Los Angeles, He charged that police > CLY-MAR million without a congressional Army members who died in a aid with . sympathizers. may okay. have incensed members of the | ZODIAC LOUNGE police shootout may mean his Authorities seek Miss Hearst, ( Its purpose was to nuke Special Weapons and Tactics i Lewlsfcn daughter Patricia will remain 20, on charges of kidnaping, Grumman borrow from the Deadline set for team by showing them pictures L ^M — _ _ < a fugitive forever. armed robbery and assault. ^ banks to finance its work of an officer slain a week ear- , "She can go underground The SLA reportedly rather than from the govern- kidnaped tickets to event lier and telling them the SLA now, I think, forever," he said the University of California CLBFF ROBERTSON ment. But Grumman's bankers was responsible, ^^ H | Thursday in an impromptu re- coed Feb. 4, She |§f withdrew from the deal because later re- honoring Art Brom "In all my years on the mark to a newsman. nounced her parents of the F14's political problems, in a taped Tickets to the Art Brom Ap- force, I've never heard of any- Wedding Dance message and said she had preciation Night Dinner the sources said. Hoarst said an increase In June 6 thing so idiotic," said a police Joy Radtkc joined her abductors, will be sold through Monday, * John Moyer sympathy after the May 17 ac- spokesman in denying the alle- A Winona Dally Now* Public sympathy coming cording to chairman Robert gations, " Welch, SAT., JUNE I ENDS Winona, Minnesota from the May 17 shootout , At a news conference, Wolfe, |^''?TtJMrfTJH| SATURDAY FRIDAY , MAY 31, 1974 which was televised live, may The event at the Oaks Supper sometimes crying, Winonan initiated Club Minnesota told news- 3 SHOCK,NG FEATURES offset some of the criticism of , Cily, includes a men, "I think that WITOKA BALLROOM g^HjJI ¦TOJn-uJ cash bar at 6:30 p.m. and a if the in- the group for ils alleged assas- quest is hold and conducted STARTS 9:05 R $1,75 Winona Daily News in Mason honor 7:30 p.m. dinner. Tickets , at $5 in Music by • • sination of Oakland Schools the fashion that we think it THE ORIGINAL UNCUT per person , are available from FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1S74 Hale Stow, 622 Sioux St., was Supt . Marcus Foster, Hearst should he done , we're still not Arnle Radtke - ' ¦ ' ' VOLUME 11B, NO. 164 banks, tho Winona Area Cham- ¦ ¦ LI LI- . I. ....,¦—.——.-¦— 1 ..-!¦ ' ^ said. going to , - Published dally txctpl Saturday and cer- initiated in the Knight York ber of Commerce, city finance prove anything but we and His Orchestra tain holiday] by Republican nnd llernld Cross of Honor at Albert Lea may find out Publlshlnn. Company, 401 Frnnklln. St., "It was unforgiveable," department, Athletic Club , Sny- something." Saturday.' The honor is re- . vVlnono, Minn 55987 . Hearst said of the Foster slay- der and Ted Maier drug stores, _ OLBWT EASTWOOD served for men who have been ing on Nov SUI1SCRIPTION RATES . 6. Two alleged SLA and H. Choate & Co. ^HBEiffiiHEaniL, Single Copy ISc Dully, 30c Sunday presiding officers in all four members — Joseph M. Remiro, State and local officials will Delivered by Cnrrler-Per Week 7J cents, Youre Invited 13 v/eebi 19./5, 14 week! 119.05, 6} weeki York Rite bodies. 27, and Russell J, little, 24 - be at the dinner to honor Brom , 13(1.10. Stow, who celebrated 60 years are awaiting trial for Foster's who retired April 24 after more as a Mason Wednesday, was than 25 years to a DANCE By mall strict ly In advance) paper stop, murder. with the city pod on expiration date . master of Stevenson Lodge No. street department, including 16 SATURDAY NITE 492 , Stevenson, Mich.; high Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, years as commissioner, Local Area — Rales below apply only GOP af the In wilnonai Houston, Wabasha, Fillmore priest of Winona Chapter No. Coroner Thomns Noguchi said nnfl Olmsted countlos In Mlnnoiolai nnd lie had not ruled out an inquest Bullalo, Trempealeau. Pepin, Jackson 5, Winona; il lustrious master TEAMSTER S CLUB into the gun battle and Stir Up Compliment! and La Crone counties In Wisconsin/ and of Tyrian Council No. 4, Red deaths. With Our Fine Potluck 208 East Third St. armed (orcos personnel with military He made tho comment after adclrosses In tho continental United States Wing, Minn,; and commander Music by or overseas Willi APO or FPO addresses , of Coeur de Lion Commandery "The Country I year 130.00 V monlhs $74 .00 No. 3. Winona. Ho currently is Picnic Varlotlos" * months tl».0O' 3 months llo.SO ¦ MEMBERS Elscyvhore — recorder for tho chapter and JOL HJIJUL In Unlloa States and Canada the commando 17. I year (45.00 9 monlhs $37.00 Stow also has served as pa- Sun., June 2 ^IMHW II Hr 1 6 monlhs 137.50 1 monlhs 112,50 TOMORROW'S Sunday News only. I year ... t!5.0o tron , Order of tho Eastern 1:00 p.m, TLAYMISTY FOR ME ' Single dally copies mailed 25 cents each. Star, nnd is activo in the Wi- — SPECIALS — Single Sunday copies mallod 75 cents 1 • Chicken Kry — Q4 QA fsSEf nona Scottish Rite. I ». per ivoek , Other rates on request. • Spanhottl «£JLf 3 IN THIS AREAI SAT., ™ "" Send change of address, nollcei. undeliv- Grant Burleigh Arthur 11, Mc- City Park JUNE I \ | ered copies, subscription ordtri end olhsr , Phone 452-4970 mull ItomJ |p Wlnonn Dally News, P.O. Donald , Merrill A. Pctorson and -%uo- Bring your own uronsllt •— Music by— O OK 10, Winona, Minn. 55987 William E, Green. DAVE For circulation Information call 434- ¦ t CALLAHAN'S and a dish to pass. KIRAL p«us I 196] i classified advertising. 452-3311) dis- jgfCOUMTRY One-Mnn Band "HANDS OF THE RIPPER" play fldvertlilng. W-niDi news. 431-3JJ4. ^ Sponsored fay I I !Area code, 307. Out of the best spots for winter ^Bf KITCHEN LIQUOR STORE , Trl-County Legislative — ¦ --..-— ...... ice fishing is Lake Slmcoc in iGsLlI U11 Service Dr. Leonard J Tichumper t -rrri - , ,, I, i ^ i r Second clan rentage paid at Winona, Minn. Ontario, Cnnnda , where each U° Main Street Committee RED'S SUNDAY • "LIVE AND IET DIE" plus "SCORPIO" yew more than 4,000 fish huts Open Friday to 9 p.m, James Morcomb, Chairman D0I1PATGII Saturday to 10 Troy, Mil ' may bo seen on tho frozen lake. WWW p.m. pn. n n in, i ,. In ITT case During massive search Jtiyvofski dc^#i ^dfee Thomson s Biffls^m^ By DONA1 O'HIGGINS tion government. run the province. identify the uhdengrpund lea> . BELFAST rm a Lower Falls Road district. Army sources reported the wake; of three resignations inyestigatton. understood to have triggered WASHINGTON a|Amycaii buys ability. ¦ :: tion .with ah. hour-long shootout because "we feel attempts present expectation of a dis- ". / ^.y in suburban East Cleveland the first time in: more, than two ¦ involvement of big busi- would be made to free them. weeks:.: ¦/• closure of such offenses." . • 'The Thursday between about 100 VFW Commander That, we don't need; at this . Sources ; familiar ' .with the ness, big labor and other lobby- policemen and: members of a point." .:;. Northern ; Ireland Seci-etary case ;said they would . not rule back stc>|en tickets ing organizations in political fi- religious sect - who tried to wants Memorial Nerlyn. Rees was making little out the possibility that the task ¦:• (UPI) _ kidnap a: man;they considered a Patrolman Gerald Schetterer, headway, however, in attempts : NEW .YORK Pan . ticket numbers with the list of nance undermines both the prin- - , , force, to be reorganized under American Airways , : drug -pusher, v. ¦ •: :•; • 31,: was in. -' poor condition at to form a, new,, power-sharing ¦ .officials those believed stolen. '. ciple of accountability, and the : Pay changed assistant special : prosecutor revealed - today . they have Five policemen were . woun- Huron . Road Hospital after prc-vincial government. Richard Davis, -would continue I The 2,0OO' tickets, soirie with basic integrity, of / our system of surgery for a .bullet wound , in Rees met Thursday with bought back about 2,000 stolen Thomson ded, one critically, and -two /CHICAGO (Wt) -\Ray F. ' the: probe ; in- the same area. airline tickets from underworld four trip coupons,; were. Valid private contributions," hostages, were; hit . by fire as the temple. .• .- leaders of all : Northern Ireland said; ' Soden . of Benseriville, 111,, ." political parties, but failed to "But right how; the case just figures for between $50,000 and for worldwide trips . on Pan • they fled from the hom ? . where . John O'Brien, 19, was in fair ¦ Thomson's bitty, co-authored by commander of the .Veterans of condition and . ..his ; brother, win, the backing of Prptestant isn't there," they said. ;. . $70,000. ;. ' .¦;. ' . American or could be, ex- a family of Iff was held during The ITT case involved allega- Rep. John N, .Erlenborn,. R-Ill., Foreign Wars, , wants Memorial Dennis, -31, was' ..: in V poor leaders who called the strike; The tickets were blank, and a changed with other airlines, the midnight battle in /which an tions ' that the government ; would ban . contributions from estimated 500 shots were fired. Day to be observed on May 30 condition, both wounded iri the "We will not sit down.with Pan American spokesman said with Pan Am getting the bill special interest groups, limit the those pebpe who are enemies agreed to out-of-court settle- the . chest and legs; as they fled the . thieves could have "simply later, in some cases, valid size of individual contributions, Charged with kidnaping and every year once again , saying house where the: gunmen held of this: country;". Harry West; a merit of three antitrust suits written but : a first class' ticket against the giant conglomerate . airline tickets ' can;¦ be ex- improve public . monitoring of felonious assault were Graig the holiday should be "for 10 members of •;. their family militant. Protestant spokesman; to . anywhere on > Pan Am's changed for. cash .- . .- ' , financing, stiffen said after tbe meeting.-¦' .';• in exchange for a: pledge of fi- routes and then campaign and Fowler; '27, East Cleveland; solemn remembrance, not for: a hpstage uiitil police gunfire. and could have:sold penalties for illegal campaign teargas flushed them put. ' The army said troops have nancial support; if* the 1972 Re- the ticket at less than the full In order to use the tickets Charles . Jordan , 22, Cleveland, three-day period of reveliy, publican convention was held in practices, : and Larry Johnson , 24, .Cleve- ¦ .-•'¦ The; affair began late Wednes- "been put: on alert across the price tb a prospective trave- thieves would have to fill them "Leisure is a marvelous for new attacks by the San Diego, Calif. .'; ' .' - '.; : ' '' : ' ' out . properly and stamp, thenv The limit, on: contributions land, who proclaimed them- day; when five men' kidnaped province lerV' '. . " '¦;: :'-;. . : ^7: - ; 500 to a .presi- thing, but the American people -IRA, which was quiet during The allegations, . based .pri- witr- a "validator," which would be: $2, selves members of the Sunni "^Andrew Jackson, 3S, - East . marily on the celebrated "Dita The ticket blanks were stolen ; dehtia . . known sacrificed to protect it." ¦' were numbered, "We made these payoffs with ' . ' he was convicted on a .drug ever transported on land was 'They . led, however, ; tb: h> arid numbers of stolen tickets the . full knowledge of authori- recbrd amount in connection -between - .the two ; Sodeh said .the VFW is trying charge a- couple years ago and ¦ organizations and jt was not ¦ ¦¦ •the 19.500 ton USS Tarawa, the tensive public hearings before are routinely , posted at ticket ties in;the hopes.of breaking tip to get Congress to: restore was. on probation. :•; Navy s newest amphibious : asi. '¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ known if any:of those held were : :• • •:" ¦;.- the Senate Judiciary Com- counters in; airports, but in organized crime trafficking of crop insurance . Ifemorial D ay to its original • . . saiilt ship. In December, 1973, ' - '• ¦ ' ¦ in the funeral.; ' ¦:, date - and Veterans Day to Nov, mittee; arid apparent Conflicts practice agents - .are - . often •too stolen tickets,": .» company - . , Scotland Yard headquarters Litton Industries, its . builder, in that testimony were the orig- busy to compare incoming spokesman: said. ; WA$HINGTON (AP) . — The During the firing Fowler was 11. Since 1971, both holidays ; government has; written : ; a was originally located near the moved the ship several hundred interviewed by telephone by a have been observed on Mon- English palace, grounds, of King feet from its construction site record $1.1 billion in: federal local radio staton. \-.; .',. ' "' ;. - . , days so. most workers; could Kenneth of. Scotland and took in .Pascagoula, Miss., to* crop insurance for 1974,. a gain enjoy a three-day weekend. of 10 per cent from last year. "We went after a dope killer its name from that •location. . nearbv launch platform. . . Handled through the Federal Gomitiocfitres ex peri says Crop Insurance ' Corporation in the Agriculture Department, Economists report^~- the policies help protect farnoA costl ers from crop Josses due to nat- grain reserves^ Ip^ y ural causes. The insurance , is, currently By DON KENDALL possibility of low . prices this . "They are supplying the bas- : available in 1,442 .; counties WASHINGTON (AP) - .A:- top year if predicted record grain ic needs of their own . peoples," —about half of those in the na- Bpij ifj i^ commodities expert in the Agri- crops materialize. Bell said . "If supplies are tight, 39 tibn-^-in states. Farmers pay By GENE CARLSON by ' Brookoigs, a respected slice of: the; pie ..than in, earlier for farmers, oil producers and culture Department ' says ... it Reserves are needed, he said they understand that the short- ; on lo- I ¦¦ : yearly : premiums based WASHINGTON (U PI) - private . research organization spending programs. other business '. sectors have would be too ; expensive:to in- last week, vto met emergency falls must be shared equitab cal production and • crop-loss , consumers from ris- ly—but they will : hot willingly Gains by poor people under the headquartered in: Washington. reduced the effective yield of sulate U.S. conditions; both nationally and history; Claims are paid from a latest; Nixon admiristratipri The study notes that in fiscal But these gains are, in part, ing world food prices by setting internationally" and to help the buy: from a country that does corporate income taxes as a fund: built from premium pay- budget may not be as big as year-1975, which begins July 1, offset by a tax system that the revenue producer. a" ; topic United States become a reliable not ; give them fair "access to its ; up grain reserves ments. first thought according : has ear- Brookings study says is ^ .in- gaining -attention* in supplier to foreign buyers. markets , to three the administraton . "If yon just leaked; a* which is ," .^ "This means that the , pre- Brookings ';.' Institution econo- marked $98.2 bilhpn for "cash creasingly regressi-ye -^mean- Congress; . But Bell said the free market Bell said the U.S; embargo on ¦ '¦ expenditures, you . would think mium payment of a Kansas mists. .; . . income maintenance." This is a ing that low-income people are that the overall effect was to ''Perhaps the crucial question allows U.S. consumers to be soybean exports last year was wheat farmer •who had; a good full 32 per; cent of the $304 carrying a heaver share of the is whether we can afford to in- served first. ''This was illus- evidence of what could occur. Increasingly : . burdensome fay : give .poor people a lot;" said crop helped pay for the crop in- taxes are wiping out I billion that the . government burden relative to their sulate American; consumers trated iii the recent tight wheat Japan, he said , underwent "ter- recent incomes. . Edward M. Grarhlich, co-author ¦¦ vestment lost 'by a Texas citrus advances in federal spending plans to spend during the next of the report.' "BiJt when you from the price levels prevailing market," Bell said, /.'Contracts rible uncertainty" . . because of grower whose grove was dam- 12:months and is a much higher For example, after examining in the world markets," Richard for wheat . exports were : can- the curbs,; ¦:;. - for social security, Medicare, j look at th* tax side, it turns out aged by freeze," Agriculture food stamps; and other: pro- percentage for such programs all. sources of government to be much less true." , E. Bell, deputy assistant secre- celed because U.S. millers and "Remember our own anger Secretary Earl L. Butz said than in recent years. • revenue, the : Brookings group bakers grams aimed at helping aged The Brookings repbrt also tary , for international affairs bid high enough to keep at the Arab oK embargo," he Thursday in a statement. ,: Government' money for "es- concluded that "social insur- and commodity programs, said the wheat: here." said. "The main effect of our and low-income Americans, the said defense spending: "seems ; "In other years, the proce- economists : said,, sentials" such as medical care, ance; . (security) taxes that poised for a turnaround ;from a Thursday. V Further . Bell: told the confer- soybean embargo was to chan- dure may be reversed, with food, housing and education weigh relatively heavily on low- "The answer must inevitably ence, "there are several prob- nel extra billions of Japanese steadly declining share of the money from citrus premiums The analysis was part of an programs has swollen to $33 income people are growing the budget to:.'; substantial real be that we cannot ," he to!d a lems with trying to reserve cer- capital into Brazil to develop going to a drought-stricken annual review of government billion, or 11 per cent of the most." - conference. "With tain quantities for domestic future , competition for Ameri- ¦ ; increases for 1975 and future consumer area'of Kansas ," he said. . -.. fiscal policy publshed Friday total 75 budget, also a biggbr At . the same; time, tax breaks years. the currencies of the world use" by setting up. governnient can soybean growers." " floating freely, and with our programs. trade balance vitally important "First, the amount of a com- to the strength of the dollar, we modity the domestic market cannot afford to give our con- will use is tied directly to the Watergate's sumers false signals, about the price," . Be>)l said ,: "If the price 423 receive real value of the things they of feed grain is low, then we These 423 members of the Nancy Curtis consume." feed more of it to livestock to spillover shakes , Steven E. Czap- Nancy Kay Hughes, Brian B; Morcbmb, Lucille A. Morello, Schpllmeier, Becky : Fae Schos- senior class at Winona Senior iewski, Debra ^Ann Dahlen, But some members of Con- produce meat. If feed grain Huling, Da vid : R. Hull, Brian Brian Mrachek , Sandra L. sow, Debra Lynn Schossow, High School received diplomas Kristi Dee Dalenberg, Douglas R. Humphries Mary Ellen gress disagree and are pushing prices are high, livestock prices , Mrozek, ¦ 'John Walter Mueller, Keith W. Schossow, Gregory A.. for bills Avlu ch'' would set : up are also high and consumers at commencement exercises Lynn; Davis, James Owen Deed- Hundorf , :. "Mark Gale Hunri, eat less meat and less grain. up state 60P Thursday night at Winona Sen- rick, Paul F, Deering, Randy Joni M, Hurlburt, Scott Hu- Mickey G. Mueller, Suzanne K. Schueler, Georganne Marie food reserves as hedges against ". RED WING ,. Minn, (AP) - future scarcity and to protect Bell said another problem in- ior High School; M. Dennis, Michael R. Deutsch- wald, 'Don S. Jackels,. Arnold Mueller, Debra Ann Murphy, Schultz, Philip R. Schultz, Su- volves . foreign demand for U.S. The spillover from Watergate Members of ' the National man, Don Patrick DiMatteo, Michele M. farm prices by setting aside has shaken up the Republican M. Jackson, Jr., Steven M. Myers, 'Richard san Lee Schultz, KeDy H. Scof- commodities during the times farm commodities. Those coun- Honor Society are designated Gary C. Dondlinger, Glen L. Jacques, Janice Rae Jensen, James . Nagle, Teresa Marie field, Phillip C. Seeger, Karen party and complicated matters (*). of surplus. tries, he said , canriot afford to by an asterisk Dornfield , Kirk Durham , *Cindy Julie K, Jensen, Lynda Kristy Nagle, Daniel . G, Neitzke, Lou Seeling, Kim D. Selke, in the Minnesota Legislature, Louise Dwjer, *Cheryl Ann Ed- Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D- buy products on a leftover , Jean Lorraine Adank , Cheryl Jilk, Clifford T. Johnson , Vicky 'Deborah Jean Nelson, Lee Nel- 'Susan Kay Semllng, Steve A. basis after U.S. consumers cor- says State Sen George Cbn- dy, "Leslie Kim Edstrom Deb- Minn ., a long-time advocate of zemius of Cannon Falls. Ann Aeljng, Jeffrey Ahrens II, , L. Johnson, David M. Jons- son, Randy L. NeLson, Regina Sherwood , Judith Shurson, Lyno reserves , says farmers face the ner what they need. Paul F. Albrecht , Debby Allen, orah Jo Ehlers, Rita M. Eide. gaard, Larry ' Jonsgaard , Rod- Nelson 'Ervin Earl Neumann, Catherine Siebenaler , Craig E. The-DFL lawmaker told the , ^ Red Wing Kiwanis C;ub Thurs- 'Michael J. Amundson , "Bar- "Donald J. Emanuel, Julie ney R Joniesgaard,' Robert A- Sandra Jean Newell , 'Irene Kay Siem, Mary Elizabeth Sillman, day the state is hit with too bara Rose Anderson , Bryon J. K. Emmons, Robert W, Eng- Jorde, LouAnn Jumbeck, Al- Newland , ; Marky, A, Newman, 'Patricia Ann Sltek, LuAnn much legislation , particularly Anderson , Craig Russell Ander- ter , James A. Erdmanczyk, lan E. Kommerer, 'Karen Rae Susan Jane Neycrs, 'Susan Jo Marie Skeels, Patricia Ann on "over concern for consumer- son, LeRoy Anderson , Jr,, * Lynn Jeffrey Erdmann, "Kristi Lyn Kane, John Kanthack , Kent A. Nienow , Russell D, Northrup, Skelton, "Barbara Jean Smith, Tornadoes, high ism, the environment and ethic- Marie Anderson, Mark Baert- Erickson, Paul Erpelding, Kaye Kantowski,. Wayne A. Kanz , Marjoric A, Oevering, Larry- Lorie Grace Smith, Paula J, al standards in government." leln , Patty Bastidas, Gloria Marie Evens, "Deborah Lynn 'Julie Kristihe Keller, Karen Lee Olness, Patsy A. O'Reilly, Snidarsic, Peggy Sue Spencer, Cohzemius said Republicans Kay Becker, Linda Bcdtka , Evenson, Dennis Ewing, San- Kenney, Marian V Killian , *E. Cindy L, Orlikowski, Iann Rene Linda Kay Speth, Debra A. had foiled to mount an effective *Vicki Lynn Beeman, "Law- dra Lou Fabian, Pam Farn- Leslie Klntzle , Kevin M. Kin- Otto, Virginia Ann Overing, Sporleder, June A. Springsteen, winds, lightning opposition in the legislature. He rence Edward Behren Jr., holtz, Dale Feller, Jean Fer- zie, Kathryn Ann Knutz, Rose Laura Maye Papenfuss, Curtis, Lucy Pamela Stanek, Janice added that legislators need Leanne Bell, Mary H. Bell, dinandsen , Jerilynn E. Fergu- S, Koelmel, Debra A. Koenig, Parpnrt , Mary Beth Pearson Ann Stark, Lurae Marie Stark:, "the competition of ideas." Robert D. Bender , David W, son, "Doroth y May Fitch , Pa- Linda Sue Xoetz, Bruce C. K«h- David Pehler, Lotty Pelaez , Richard C. Stark, Steven F, Conzcmlu s, who occasionally Benson , Daniel G. Beranek , mela Kay Fitzgerald , 'Margar- iier, SherrL Korder , Debra Kay Matthew J. Pellowski; Heidi Stark, John K. Steber , Peter has tnken some crilicnl shots at Jean Marie Berg, 'Laurel Ann et Anne Franzen , Daniel Fuch- Kostner, Daniel Richard Kow- Ann Pelofske , 'Dnniel H. Peter- Anton Steffes, Candy J. Stcin- strike Midwest Berg, *P. Douglas Berg, Wil- sel , 'Scott Matthias Garter,. Kathi Ann Kowalewski , Rainwaters caused 'aN his own party, criticized DFL alewski, son , Sonja R. Pittelko, Randy feldt , Debbie A. Stephens, Jane UNITED'PRESS and Hull. Gov. Wendell Anderson for liam Berg, Kenneth John Ber- "Patricia Ellen Gerson, Debra Patricia L. Kowalewski, Jozef O. Piachecki Ellen Stiehm , Bill Stiever, Calhoun County, 111. roads to , Peggy Poblocki , INTERNATIONAL p'.ans to raise some $600,000 on gler, 'Joseph Charles Berkman , A. Gilbertson, Shcryl Lynn Kravanja , Rick Kreldermacher , Linda Ann Pollema , 'Jayne M. 'Jean Marie Stoltman, Terry A. close. Glenna , a reelection campaign this Roger E. Berndt, "Karen Lynn , Donald John Grone- Jan Maries Krenz, 'Rhona Le Polley, Keith G-arlan Polus , Stoos, Tornadoes, high winds and Southwestern Iowa residents wold , Cynthia lightning hit the year. "After all, it is a $41,000 a- Beyers, Cynthia S. Biggerstnff , K. Groth. Kruse, Cheryl J. Kuhn , Kathy Mike Pomcroy , I vie Thomas 'Elizabeth A. Streater, *Jun« more deadly were under flash flood warn- yoar job ," Conzcmlus noted. Dan Frank Groth Jamie Sue Thursday night in a ings near the Coralville Reser- Teresa Marie Bischel, William , Ann Kulas , Owen Kutchara , Popplevvell II, Mark S. , Potter , Elaine Strelow, Gary Robert Midwest The senator compared Ander- Robert Blaisdell Lori Lynn Groth, Steven P, Groth , Terry- Bonnie Stremeha Cindy old storm system that voir. Tornado and damaging , 'Gary William Kuusisto, Randy Prochowltz, 'Karla R, , M. Styba, two-day son's plan to spend money on Blake Vickl Lynn Blom 'Bar- Lee Grzybowski, Steven L. Mae Lntky, Elaine Lageson Prodzinski Jeffrey Lawrence Sulla Duane would not quit, wind watches also were in , , , , Cherie Marie Prond- , exlensive campnign advertising bara Ann Biumentrilt, Lisa Hackbarth , Mark W. Hnesly, Timothy Lee Loib, Paul Lande , zinski , Judith M. Przytarski, A. Sultze, Pongsak Supatara- Lightning struck and killed effect, Storms dumped up to northern with the campnign on foot al- Ann Boerst, Linda M, Bohn, Carol Ann Hall; Shelly Ann Cindy Lou (Larson) Liehsch, Cheryl Lynn ' Itadcr, Steven porn, Lauritz Marie Swanson, Pntricin Trendwny, 1(1, South three inches of rain in ready begun by independent Missouri , where rivers were Robert W. Bohn , Ann Marie Halliday, Sheryl Lynn Hancr, Debra Jean Lnrson, Anne Rnmln; Frances toulse Reis- Cathy Ann Tanner , Keith A. Roxnnnn , 111,, bringing to six James Miles. Miles began his Jody Hanson lightning rising fast. Boland , Douglas E. Borkowski, , Sharri L. Hun- Michelo Laurie, Daniel J. Leda- hus, Michelle Denise Rekstad, Tarras, Lorri Taylor, Judy A. the number dead from walk in . southeastern Min- son, Craig W. Hnrders "Cnrol Ro(|er L. Lehnertz Thesing, Bonnie Jo Thomps Louis, Mo., area Larry, D. Boyer, Dawn Braith- , buhr, , Jerre Kathy Jenn Reps, Leilla L, , bolts in the St, Heavy fog caused a plane to nesota , nn area Conzcmlus said waite Thomas Brang, Scott Jean Harkness, Stephen M. L. Leisen. Terry Ann Lembkey, Rossle Robert F, Melody K. Thomas Lora EL Wedncsr ny. , , Rettkowski, , since ' crnsh into a field at Lafayette, Anderson seldom visits. Brennan , Linda Jenn Brevig, Hartcrt , Peter Hartwich , Alnn Mike Rlchflrd Lewinskl , Rol>ert Linda Jean Rico, Deborah Ann Thompson , 'Richard Scott Tlutr- Tornadoes doped their way Ind,, Thursday night, klKing the Randy R. Broyer , Richard J. A. Heaser, Kenneth W. Hons- P, Liebsch, Lisa Rene Lubin- Rinri, 'Rlcka Ruth Robb, Sally ley, James L. Turner, Hal Jay through farmhouses nnd out- pilot , Richard H. Weber, B6, 155 Wisconsin dairy Brink , Jr. er , Kimborly L, Heise, Llza- skl , Dean Luhmann , Vickl Ann Roberts, 'Jnno M. Robert- Van Fossen, 'Nancy Christine buildings In Greenwood County, West Lafayette, Ind. Fog also producers quit work *Lynn Marie Brom , Lee P. beth A. Heise, Ronald J. Hempf- Lynn Luhmann , Susan Mao son, Deborah Marie Roibiecki, Volknrt , 'Lynn Karen Vongr-o- ' but caused no injuries. At forced tho closing of Meigs Brommerich Steve A, )3ronk , ner, "Alexander David Hender- McCnbo, Cynthia L. McGee, Stephen M. Rompa , Cindy J, ven , 'Dave Walden , Steven A. Kan., to inbound T , Ursa, 111., slate police said a Field in Chicago MADISON (UP ) - A tola! of Glenn Peter Brown, Larry son. 'Bernard F. McGuIre , Gary W. Roiinenberg, Rockvvell J. Roppe, Walsky, Gregory C. Walz , W3l- twister destroyed sovon homes airplanes. Visibility at O'Hnre 155 dairy producers went out of Brown , ?Robeccn Jenn Brown , Judith Ann Henderson , Rob- McNall y, Judy Ann Mnchutt , Margaret A Rose Mark A, lard W. Ward II , Cynthia S. Airport was four , and dnmnfled four <>}] m*- International business In Wisconsin the first *EHon Sue Brugger, Bruce Al- ert W, Mongol, Deborah Kay Lori Rae MncSwain , Mark E. Roskos Dnvid E, T. Weigcl , Jerry R, Whaley, Tim- miles and planes were delayed , Rowan , Elevon person* woro injured , four months of 1074 , well below len Bublitz , Cynthia Ann Bub- Hermann , Eddie W. Hoyer , Malay, Nancy Patricia Male- Jamie iRuiz , Stovon Rumstlck, othy Allan Wiech ,, Ann Wien- ¦ up to an hour and a half. the 1 310 in tho same period in but none serlouriy. J , litz , Susan R, Bublitz , "Dnvid Debbe Jenn Hicks, Steven W, wicki. Debra Ann llupprecht, Amtn eke, Sheila Ann Williams, windstonn whipped Mar- Flash flood warnings wore in 1973, nccrdlng lo tho state Ag- 'Robort P. Marg, A in norlhcnst Bunke , Debbie Burchctl, Mau- Himrich , John David Hinds , Lance Joyce Rustnd , 'Susnn Ann Tnwny Marie Williams , Deb- shall , Minn., nnd dnmnged five effect today riculture Department Wednes- Hopnk Gary Mnllheos Rogor Joseph Meier Sabo Sue Wnuk, Missouri and west central reen Burke, Gregory Anthony 'Carol Florence , , , , Marjorio Lou St Peter , orah Wise, Mnry mobile liomes in a trailer court. day. Burns Gnylo Murio Hoff- Daria Sue Meinhard , John Mer- Jonn Elizabeth , Sftlzer Rnwinii R. Wobig, Grego ry Kllnols , Urban flooding was Tho slowdown in dairy herd , Robert Paul Bush , 'Lau- Mnrvln Iloff , , Daniel One trailer , with three persons rie Ann Buswell man Michncl Ix« Hohensuu , clor , Timothy Harold Meyer, R. Snmmnnn , Lynn Marie Alnn Wolfe, 'Laurie Ann Wolfo, 10 feet expected from heavy rains at losses reflects sharp increases , Donna Jean , inside, wns lifted about Cada , Andrea Kay Carlson , Steven Bradford Holan , Sandra Susan ICay Moyors,. Alison Sammnmi , Janios A. Sawyer, Timothy P. Woltcr , Paul J. and landed on Snn Antonio , Tox, in milk prices tho Inst half of oft' tho ground Gary E. Chadbourn , Susnn Lee Holmay, Thorn ns R. Hoist, Louise Miesbauor , Lynn Mario Greg Scarborough , Debrn Wood , Shane Woddard , Rnnrton top of another trailer. No one A little snow fell over tho last year, the department said. northern Rockies, but lt v/as The future was uncertain , how- Chase, Robin M, Chlo, Rick A. Mnrgnrct Ellen Hooper , Rich- Miller, Matthew R. Mlynczak , Minottn Scnttum , Nancy Schavf , B. Woodworth , Steven J»hn was injured. Betty Julnino Wynia damage wnR fair to partly cloudy today in ever, becnuse of drops In whole- Christenson , Thomas J. Col- ard K. Hornbcrg, Dunno J. Mogor , Larry Loren Wayne Schnrmer , Lor- Wroblewskl , Cheryl Ann , Severe wind ckmgh ilorner Dnbblo Lynn Hosech, Mogor , Cnrol Sue Mogren 'Mnrl Alys Yeake, Kntluirin© I ho Illinois com- (ho central nnd eastern Gulf sale cheese prices, lower milk , Mnuroen Connolly,- Jan , , raine M. Schevbrlng, Mtlco reported In Cotton , Dmnu Wnyno A, ; Howe , John H. Michnol Fredrick M o 11 n o, Scliowo "Laurie K. Schloegel Znclinry, 'Mnry J, Zimiaor- of Lima , Mention , Const states, the Upper Plains prices nnd higher production Kristl K. Cox , , , munities Cummings , Howes III, Lori Ann Hubbard, •James William Moore, Doaiue Debra Jean Schooner, John C. mnn, Larry D. Zittel, Fowler, Augusta, Griggsville and west of the Rockies. costs. Cumiskoy, Donna The Mirtnesofa 18mbnths of meetings highway office on wbrlcl cooperation/ A page of opinions and ideas is going public but tb v/Hat burbbse? The traditional operating procedure for the Minnesota Higbiway Department has been : 1. to an- YET PROGRESS snailed forwand. personally commit- nounce that a road was going to be" , built, and Brezhnev was: , despite the opposition 2. sometime later to open bids for" the construc- C. I. Sulzberger ted to detente of some Kremlin hardliners. He wan- tion. In recent years, there, has been a: hearing C<>x ted CSCE to wind up its Geneva Cox, with his mortar board , back procedure when; federal funding was involved; but, GENEVA — Something seems to . CHARLOTTESVILLE, Vai-When have gone wrong with the 35-nation phase successfully this spring to en- ^ on his head: talking quietly to this President Nixon dismissed Archi- in the main, public involvement in the;decision- graduates and friends, - Conference on Security and Cooper- able him to push for a summit in bald Cox as his special prosecutor company of making process has¦ been haphazard and unorgan- James Reston back in his: old; ' ' ¦ :: ;¦ ;:' :, ' ¦;;,¦.;¦ . ;;;¦: , ' ation in Europe. This has been meet- Helsinki before, August, where all in the Watergate case, he not only seemed now to be ized. ;.;; ' . ' .: : •; general addressing . ing intermittently -..for, : 18 , months 35 chiefs of government would put . misjudged the public outcry,that , fol- kindliness of a neigh- role as: solicitor . turies: arid the Court. His language • : with the idea of more or .less for- their seal on accord. : lowered, but liberated Cox to speak judge. No rancor. No vindic- the Supreme Our primary unhappiness . with the established ¦ ' ' borly his sentences , long, malizing dLetehte be : But TJrezhnev hasn't achieved - out on the rules of; tiveness. No pessimism about the was decorous, ¦ procedure has been pubUc ignorance of why a par- -what States ¦ . unmistakable: tw ee n communist he. hoped. The United. 's law ' and . impeach-: law .or the republic. But on fidelity but ;his:;:: meaning ; ticular road is built and another, not. This is eco- Soviet trade program is hi' . 'trouble President:have the right and rion-comfnunist . rrient. ' This may to the Constitution and the process Should . the nomic. With the disappearance of railroads/ the eco- with Congress. : MBFR: is in stale- impeachable blocs facing, each very . .well prove to of applying it to . the President , as tb define what was an nomic well-behig of . corrirnunities — big and small other on the Conti- mate; SALT is moving very slowly. offense; should he have, the power is- contingent on good transportation system ; To ¦ be one of; Nixon's to any other citizen,- he. was unyield- ^ a nent;.'- : '¦/ '• CSCE "hasn 't yet stamped its O.K. ¦ ¦ ¦< " to decide what evidence the . House able, ., , 'most fatal mistakes. / ing.V. .;. ;' •;¦- ' . that extent the highway department has been CSCE,; ;as it ' is: on Soviet map making after World should have, and. to refuse :the eVU- -.' . '. to determine a community's ,future with onlv mini- . Many other - men The question raised hoiv he. said, ' known in. today's War II and it embarrasses Moscow in hi s, situation dence requested, and select, edit, mal consultation with its citizens, ;.. stripped of legal jargon, was very diplomatic / jargon, to hear all the talk here on free^ •. might have destroy- and; fiddle with the evidence he pro- dom of movement and opinion when simple:: "Shall guilt or innocence in ¦ is part of the pack- their influence duced?' . . ':' . . ' IN RECENT yeans environmentalists have ex- it is having trouble with dissidents ed the criminal trials of White House age in which West by roaring around ined upon : full con- pressed their concerns, and because; they have been and East are trying af home. . aides be ..determ COX TOOK UP THE Presi- Sulzberger . the country like ; a sideration of ail; the evidence found bjr one, and Insistent the federal government .is now requiring to foster detente by Yet West European : participants Report . . ' '., : dent' s arguments one .= loose cannon, firing ; . competent and unprivi- - ' states to: prepare action plans for citizen involve- acknowledging the European status are also fed up with Soviet stone- relevant; . proceeded to argue . against them. . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' at the man who fired him, but not: ; due process; of law; ; or : ment, .- - quo left over from World War II walling on hurrian rights. : ' ¦' ' • ' ¦;¦¦ leged by;.. . . He rejected the argument that the : : " cbx. . . i:. evidence from the White and cbmnnunisim's conquests while The big trade-off had been shapr. shall the President could avoid , the jurisd ic- . confined to what.a single Minnesota's plan for: social, economic and envi- at; the same time, promoting free- ing up: more Western yield on the HE APPEARED here to address House be tion of the courts or disobey their ¦¦ President ) highly jn- ronmental considerations, in highway construction dom in trie East and reducing : issue that was paramount in Soviet the law graduates at the Univer- ' individual (the ruling if they made one. de- outcome, is willing to has been subnaitted for approval , Deadline for com- fense, costs. " eyes, ''inviolability of borders; and -.; sity of Virginia: the other day. and , forested-in the ; Arid refusal to supply, evidence to' " ,' •" ments is June 18. Copies of the;plan may be seen more Soviet yield; oh the paramount . : talked with the sweep of the cen- make available?" the Judiciary ;. Committee of : the MOSCOW is most interested iti da 1 House in: its impeachment proceed- at: highway department offices and at many college issue for the West, widening chinks ¦ and public libraries, including the ona Public jure ratification of frontiers divid- in what was once called the Iron ¦ ¦ tags, Cox arped , would be even WW ing its sphere from the West. The ; sn-frCK - . - ¦m- Library, ;; .;, . Curtain. v ' : flffijffi worse, "The President's lawyers say Western countries are: trying to in- that : he: may not ; be indicted," , Cox sure certain minimal guarantees of However, since the negotiators re- The plan m part is the work of the Minne- turned here late: last month from observed, :".and that his guilt; or in- freedom of thought and "movement nocence of wrongdoing: must be de- sota Environmental Quality Council — a .task force in the Soviet area.. a long Easter recess, the Soviet at- of citizens : cided by the. processes of impeach- 12 — which has been imeeting this year. .',- .. CSCE is linked to other bargain- titude has become noticeably cau^ '¦ tiou's.- ; • .'' ¦ '. ment. .If impeachment is to be a.. ., ing:, mutual and balanced force re- . of inquiring into al- : Things already have happened. The department viable method ductions XJVffiFR), SALT and bilater- WHAT HAS gone wrong? Brezh- leged executive misconduct, t h e has named a two-person staff to provide input from al; trade, above all between the nev is committed to reducing ten- House of Representatives — the the social and physical sciences in the transporta- United States .and the Soviet Union. sion; in the West,, possibly to strength- must tion : planning process; it is moving to- work with grand inquest of the nation — At CSCE, which includes the United en his rear . while facing a hostile have the , right to access to what- regional , development commissions; it: has named : States and Canada, every European China. . But maybe the .Soviet. lead- ever evidence jt judges ; neces-. :. " information officers in each district office ; and it government except Albania s is rep- : ¦ ¦ ¦ ' er is worried that detente takes too sary.- . V; . . ' . ¦¦';." .' has provided for public review of . highway pro- resented. Many are nonaligned. long to achieve. In. tie meantime grams , among other things. ; The argument that had been slow- he sees Washington gaining : influ- KIERE COX reached his; eohclu- ly shaping up was between Russia, ence in the Middle East at Moscow's sion:'"In niy view," he said,.' "the RAY LAPPEGAARD, commissioner of high- wishing a very precise, commitment expense and holding up they promise refusal to comply with the Judiciary : ways, believes the action plan: will work, but has against any change of frontiers; and of: commercial: goodies. Committee's subpoenas denies presi- ''rnixed emotions"; about balancing and timing "dif- the West, seeking Soviet guarantees Or . maybe Ppmpidou's death, dential accountability;>;... . failure : ferent viewpoints and uncommon information avail- to extend freedom within its sphere; Brandt's political demise , and the of the committee; to treat the re- able only from other agencies, local , governments, The West was reluctaant to con- possible . disappearance , of Mxon fusal as a major ground for ;im- . and citizens.'". •' - '- . cede .. ''inviolability'' , of frontiers, have suddenly changed the picture. peachmenf would go far to concede only , to agree they could: not be; al- Does Brezhnev have an embarras- that executive wrongdoing i? beyond That seerns to be a polite of saying that tered by violent , means. Russia was sed : feeling that his liand is tfut- the reach of any. form .of law.", way ¦¦; the department'si planning , process will, be much balky about modifying its political stretehed and there's nobody around It .would be easy to underestimate ;. more.difficult now that , the ;public is formally , in- system to; suit .Western: concepts of tb shake it?.;;; . ".:' the effect oi this;quiet man with his volved; No one will contend that the balancing act freedom. :' New York Times Hews Service coirrleous amiable mariner,- his skin- . mil be easy.; it will be a strange, experience for ny bow ties and . Haideman hair- highway builders to ask others for advice and opin- brush cut , and his carefMlly under ¦; " ion..— instead of telling them what , the department stated .volleys. ;:' - . ¦is- going to . do — but it's worth a try. But the real There $ no middle While the courts and the Congress effort will need to he by citizens. Only they can loiter, along, : these quiet cannons ., really make this an action plani — A.B. keep' talking and defining ;and add- ground i n Uliter ing evidence; and historical perspec- ; tiye to the , impeachment process. would reduce them to the minority status they feared most, or North- New York Times News Servict Americans agree Tom Wicker ern Ireland would have to be inte- grated with the United Kingdom, '' : BELFAST, Northern Ireland . ' ¦*- which was unlikely and, anyway, would mean unending guerrilla war- that Henry s Northern Ireland is a .dark and trag- fare by the relentless IRA. In the VVashin p ic ifo^ , place , bomb^pocked, fire-scarred long run, : he mused , maybe;;the . s too bad ,, fellows/' and bloodsoaked; victim of ancient Protestants had "WASHINGTON - We went to nines. "That' . better emigrate to raking in the pot. : fhe greatest hatreds and passions running deep Canada : or England or Dick's house for pokeT. said Dick, : wherever : s the idea?" .cried Pete. into the bogs of antiquity, religion they could find a home. After the first few hands at which Russell Baker , "What' It was pure chance,. . but. the day after an- and nationality. . ¦'We called you. You've got to show nouncement that Henry Kissinger had arranged a : Dick won big anf wiped . cut But Ulster, as it is usually A FEW HOURS later, us your hand.'' , disengagement between Israel and Syria the Har- called in a clut- George, Bob and Carl both noticed can't have any more cards in this here, has men and women tered office left in near-darkness '' "'I'll tell you everything you. need, ris Survey reported that the U.S. Secretary of its of by something about their cards. "My hand.'-'' moderation and generosity, the strikers' control of the to know," said Dick. "I have a royal . State had received the highest rating ever given Strug* Northern cards are making a lot of static," Archie said he had never heard gling to survive amid the savageries Ireland electricity system, straght flush." a niember of the executive branch of the federal a Cath- Bob said. of such a thing. Dick said it was his of civil war, the uncertainties of viol- olic businessman long associated "We want to see the cards," Pet« government. An overwhelming percent give Kis- "Mine are. crackling," said Carl. house, and Archie was there at his 85 ence and disorder. with the civil rights movement and Leon chorused. singer positive ratings. but "Hey,"; said Bob. "These cards pleasure, and if Archie didn't want adamantly opposed to the violent "No dice, fellows," said Dick. "It TWO SUCH men, each of are bugged," to act like a good guest, he could great tactics of. the IRA. "Provis," said get-out. Archie did. would violate the principles of con- There will be some whe believe that the U:S. sec- Irish charm and eloquence, talked that "in the last 24 hours DICK WAS FURJOUS. It was dis- fidentiality. If I did that , no host sadly with visitors I've talked retary of state should be at home. Tiimesman James the other day, as to more Catholics who are graceful, he said. Bugged cards, and ON THE next hand Leon drew would ever again he able to keep the Uls-ter Workers thinking Reston pointed out on this page last week that other ' Council's gen- of leaving Northern in his house too. He "called in H.R. five deuces, but didn't bet heavily his cards to himself ." ':• . . ¦ eral strike brought Ireland than I •departmental matters must certainly suffer by his Belfast near pa- have in five years — (Bob) who was in charge of cards. because Dick was showing four kings ralysis. and that in- prolonged and repeated absences. Still the thirst cludes me." "H. R. (Bob)," he said, "these up. "What kind of deck Is this?" EVERYBODY was almost brok* ior peace is so universal among men, that it is At lunch in the Russell Court Ho- cards bugged , and I'll bet I Leon demanded, arid began count- now , except Dick , but Pete and Within the next few days are a credit to the United States when one of its citi- tel - all but its bar and coffee . , he said, know who did it. , ing the cards.' All except Dick 's. Leon agreed to one riiorc hand. This If British Priime Minister " zens can arrange for the end of fighting else- shop closed after a car boimb was Har- "It was John Wesley," said H. R. Dick wouldn't turn his over. time Pete had three of a kind and set off in its old E. Wilson didn't put troops in the where. And who would deny that the arrangement . basement parking ga- (Bob). Without Dick's seven cards Leoni Leon a hill house. Again Dick raked rage a Protestant writer power stations and force the dis- , of a peace anywhere is not in the best interest — , who had "You bet your life it was," Dick counted only 36 cards in the rest of In the . pot. conceded the justice of tribution of gasoline and oil, "it's of this country. the Catholic said. "Tell him he's through at this the deck. What's more, 17 of them "Do you feel like telling us what civil rights movement ail over — there is no future un- that began house, and bring us another deck. " "were deuces. yoii had?" asked Pete. the "troubles", in 1968, argued that less Wilson stomps on them and no "Two jacks," D|ck said. And one can also be a cynic and say that The game resumed. It was seven- He said he'd never seen a poker since then there had been a steady apologies offered. " If the Protestant "But two jacks don't beat a full the cease-fire will not last-indeed there were re- card stud. On the next hand Ardiia deck with only 43 cards, 17 of which cease-fire an- string of concessions to the Catholic strikers were not stopped, they house," said Leon. newed clashes within a day of the minority (about would have regained was showing two aces up, with three were deuces. nouncement. The clashes seemed to emphasize that a third of the popu- practical po- more cards to come. That, "Of course they do," said Dick, lation) litical control of Northern was when "I want the rest of the deck ," he agreement , but a slop by the Protestant majority. I re- "It's right here In the book ," He the accord was not a pence land and the fi ve-year Dick refused to dear him a fifth told Dick. toward peace in the region. He acknowledge d that many of Catholic card. pulled out a small text entitled these concessions provided only "pa- civil rights struggle would have Dick said he couldn't have them. "Dick's Rules of Poker "You didn 't give nie my card ," " and started per remedies" for real Catholic come to nothing. There would be no "Why not," asked Leon. to read. Moreover, willing parties — as well as. a for- more power-sharing, said Archie. grievances — job, housing, police no more pro- "Because those cards are not rele- "Never mind , midable and competent State Department staff — portional representation "That's right ," Dick said. "You " said Leon. "1 and civil service discrimination . , new elec- vant to this particular game," Dick are required to achieve an agreement, so that Mr. Yet , tions with the know what it will say." the Catholics had wan a share Protestants trium- explained. Kissinger must be considered a catalyst. of phant, Nobody had the heart to get an- power in the Northern Ireland , Several of us grumbled about this government , gry with Dick. Everybody knew how and made other signifi- laipf ovrr so Dick agreed to hnve a fresh deck And one can also fonr that secret American cant gains, he said , so he had NEITHER of these despairing much winning meant to him. We all been moderates — each with an Wfm ^^mm ^m brought In, He put it on the table Involvements are being arranged in secret, almost glnd to see them, at last exasper- left too broke to rent a taxi. , ated edge in his voice as face down, have to make their own concession he talked "Come over again soon and we'll about how much his own side had suf- fe^PllSfe* m- "Is everything there this lime?" play high-stakes But none of this detracts from his achievement — their agreement last week to Pete asked. billiards ," Dick Americans' appreciation o£ postpone for four fered and conceded — was in favor called as we loft nor the genuineness of years, and until wmmmm Dick said he had had the deck and went inside, this singular man, after an election , (Jie full Implemen- of tho Council of Ireland proposal, probably to start warping some bil- over edited to remove cards that were tation of a Council of Ireland to which Catholics and Protestants liard cues. are so strongly at odds. coarse and unpleasant , but every president Nixon 's single great- link heavily Protestant Northern He has become These are reasonable and recent thing we needed was there. New York Times News Servict to receive Irelond more close ly to the Catholic ' est asset since the President continues ¦ men who have risked much for rea- mmWtVm DICK began to deal. He had dealt his bust ratings on foreign policy. The iimportance Republic of Ireland. ' , son and decency in a country lorn by every hand so for and somebody of (lint link , howeve r, Is diminished by the Harris II had to be underslood, the writer Insisted , that now most Protestants passions. Their similar . despairs and twi i asked when the rest of us would report that he should be secretary of state no mat- . iii saw themselves as aggrieved differing fears suggest the real con- get a turn. Dick said it was out of ter who is President, — A.B. - the question for their secure political position chip- flict here — Catholic determination mmmm anybody else to do ped away, their lives and property not (0 accept minority status and the dealing, because the deck was threatened by the Provisional |Wsh the repression it for so long permit- confidential and It would set a bad Winona Daily News Republican Anniy, ted , against the general Protestant pililil precedent if It were passed from much local power An Independent Newspaper ~ Established 1855 (hey had wielded given over to the fear ths.it every Catholic gain Is a hand to hand like a bag of peanuts Mm at a baseball game. cenlrnl Ulster government , a unified step nearer to Protestant minority MMmmm MEMBER Of T1IK ASSOCIATED PIIEflB Ireland likely to follow the Council status in n unified , Catholic Ireland, Both Pete and Leon showed strong hands on the next deal ^ W ILUAM F. WIUT« Publisher of Ireland proposal No wonder tho nnd the church dominance over their Relapse , but SERVICES FOR lives most Protestants assume Dick wasn't showing anything be- C. E. LINDEN . . . , t Bus . Mgr., Adv. Director Protestant workers had seized Ilia that GEO. W. KR/VGE, $R. mean, I survived cause he dealt all his own ADOI.PJI UriKMER Qditcr-in-Chiaf Initiative from their political lead- would a stubborn had 2:00 p.m., Saturday GAKY W. E VANS ...k .... Managing Editor ers and staged the strike that This conflict leaves nlimost no Virus cards face down. St, M*rtln» Ev. Lutheran M. SUE R OXTIIELK Asst. News Editor was destroying the Northern Ireland middle ground for moderate men on And tons of horri d Pete and Leon let that pass be- C, G OKDON JHOI.TJC Pills ' mAATin ....,„.. Sunday Editor government, either side; it permits no real con- cause they had such good hands 1 > WILLIAM H. ENGLISH ....,.., Controller A complete relapse and Dick pu.ne.ftAu Hut for the long pull , ho said , the sensus on the future of Ulster; it was betting so- heavily that HomE. A J. KiEKimscii . . , , . . . Circulation Mnr. VV.is imminent lt looked as if they might finally re- FotmstV tide was running against the Protes- gives room for arr- Before I, : put my neck that it. was aU . right, but that physical effort. Today all : the heavy work is done . by ma- and with your justifications into this buzz saw, let me make he should;know .regular addi- ah; automobile. The 'new math,* tives than that which was reported; in last Tuesday's article in on thb other hand, is like ge- chine. So through lack of physical exercise man becomes a parentheses. How about doing bie thing — to coin a phrase -r tion, subtractioh, multiplication . heap of; blubber and flabby muscle. concerning the combiaed jail proposal. City Cc4incilman Rupr perfectly clear. I checked with and division first; . . ;. ometry; it helps a .person de- pert and' County (^hunissioner Malewicki criticize^ the local the same thing with, the wisest the Health Resources AdMnls- velop his mlndi"-^H.B:H., Pen- THE QUESTION ^^ ¦ ' The school tore into thft 'new K: is man on tie way to physical de- judge for failing : to put more people in lie county jail, and in men of all time?'', •— -L. -J.-, txation of the U.S. Department math' .with- a will and ignored sacola,' Fla. : generation? To quite an extent that is already apparent. at Keokuk, Iowa. of Health, Education and Wel- / A—Well put This isn't an When . those swivel ; chair pencil particular they^directed their remarks County Judge Chal- : regular math, but T held a class pushers and whisky-glass ¦ '' fare on this questiori and: I'm "eitherror" proposition. But I lifters go deer hunting! .-leen:- ' . 'V' '¦'¦; :¦' ; ' '¦' ¦¦ :';- ¦ : A — I'll try, but you must with my son every afternoon the exertion arid excitement seems - S. . .- -v • ' ... ' .. .; " passing; their findings oil to you before he went out to play. He suggest that parents who; want too much arid way too many fall oven Man may degenerate These remarks were uncalledi fw, unfair, arid in com- remember that we don't know with absolutely no comment to be. sure Junior isn't getting to the point that he may the names of several of hu- learned both the old , and the ¦ ¦ ; not be ; able¦ to partake of many plete disregard of the facts. I persohally went to the sheriff's from me. The department says new- just half the math he's going sports. • •- - . ;; ' .:. ' v ': : ' . '.\" " ' :' •' y: '.' - four years of all mariity's greatest geniuses: the matt at. the same : time. ' office and checked the records oyer the last thatr lntelligehce tests of 6,768 Within a; short time he was at to need can do a lot worse than No trouble like that"in the past. I.walked to school a the jail sentences that have^ baea imposed. The records re- fellow who invented : the wheel, children age 12 to 17 show that f ollowyour example. distance of two railes; then climbed the bluff! The school was for example, or the one who the head of his class. He has Veal that frorn March 3, 1972, to llarch 7, 1974, Judge Challeen >'boys attained higher mean now completed four years of Los Angeles Times • . . on the high plateau./ No snow plowing[ those days. If the ordered 253 persons to jail whiie his predecessor (Judge Mc- found but how to kindle a fire. scores than did girls at almost snow was two f eetdeep and 20 below Nevertheless and at your re- math and is on his fifth. It's W/nbna , that was it. GilD from March 8, 1970, to March 7, 1972, sentenced only 145 every grade level." easy Daffy Newrt "f When young, I worked hard in the field for farmer. quest, here are the 12 most m- for him,, arid T believe my : Winona, Mlnneso-ta ¦ a persons to "the county jail ; Judge ChaUeeh's jail sentence re^ 'Now, Master B.L.T., tell your insistence..on,;:his: After chores me and some boys walked nine miles tb a coun- cord is average with other judges across the 'state. .(See Min- telligent men who ever lived: learning the FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1974 try dance. We danced during the tiight, then :walked nine ' 1 Jesus Christ (No one has sister not to come after rhe nesota Crime Information, page 115.) . .: — Avith . blood in her eye. Mr. miles hbrne,; When we got .home th& sun. was shining, anid ¦/¦¦\ Apparently, Oouncilmari Ruppert and (^homissionver Male- had'['&: greater, more; lasting in- my boss was :;: , James Scanlan of HEW's Na- already in the field harvesting grain.: So I wicki must: equate jaiil: terms with justice. I inquired of Judge fluence). :;- . ., ;. tional Center of Health Statis- quickly changed my clothes; gulped a little breakfast, then Challeen as 'to his philosophy to jail terms. He replied, "If 2 — Moses (He created arid went shocking grain all day. tics is the ope she'll have to INDUSTRIAL Winona County had a decent jail facility to help rehabilitate codified what today we call zero in oh. eRfeDJT That sums up, two days of work, one night of dancing, offenders as well as punish thern, combined with the. resourc- Judeo-ehristian morality.); and. an 18-mile walk without ' sleep or rest. That was fun; es of our community such as the mental health center, the 3 — Leonardo da Vinci (The Q — . - 'Some weeks ago you Tb^MouM. But no obesity trouble; whatsoever. Eat what you 'want and as psychology departments of our three colleges; the employ- polymath; the most versatile ^ much as, you like;. quoted some national poll v/hicti EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY ment department, and vocational rehabilitation center, etc., virtuoso of them all.) showed that American college he would certainly sentence more offenders to jail if they 4 —; Socrates (Wise enough to ANOTOER REGRETTABLE cause for pleasure is the is piesenUy attempting ;in students . are getting more re- trend for; over-population.; The, result of which is pollution, could benefit from the jail term." He know that reality he knew ligious: and more .'middle-bf-the- hunger and to organize such a program. - nothing.) MONDAY-^ . misery. One may askr What is really the cause public apology by (He road' .politically. What poll was of over-population? It. must be man's Inability to refram from In hght of the; above facts I believe a 5 — Shakespeare held up this, and what else did it show?". the lure and temptation of sex. the councilman and commissioner is in order. Perhaps their a mirror in which man might If the: feeling of sex would is one judge ) - C.N.N., ¦ West; Palm Beach, TUES. thru FRl 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. be like pulling the eye teeth without an anesthetic,: or pain unfair criticism of Judge Challeen: is that here see himself. \ : Pla;:. " ;;- ' who will not be controlled, who would put a businessman, a 6 — Newton (Gravity;was only - . killer, then there would be no oyer:p6pulatibn. But. in;the A — It was the . annual sur- days when man struggled; with country clubber, or a local politician in jail as fast as the one of his discoveries.) al the invention of the wheel. usually get kicked around. If ¦r ' ' vey of the American Council on Arid found out that- a load pulls easier on wheels than , snak- nobodies in our society that 7 — Plato (The first to ex- Education, directed by . UCLA industri Credit Plan Inc. ing on the ground. Even long before that when man s rea- these two public officials could manage to take the time to plore the eternal problem of mtf ^k > ' sit in Judge Chalieeri's courtroom, they cannot help but walk professor, Alexander ,W. Astin. Service IVlakesThe rence son was at low ebb, sex must have been a:matter of lusting . the ideal state.) It showed,. ainphg other things, 'W/J ^B'. Total piffe instinct; Else,"there would be no propagation oi the specie. away, with a: feeling that the court is trying, to: be fair and ; 8 — Galileo (He was the first about understanding the offender that a much higher percentage " , it one who is more concerned to see the worlds which we are ," 163 WALNUT ST. —WINONA; ; It seems in that category of human- activity or. evolution and attempting to change the offender 's concept pf .society. of new freshmen plan to stay . hasn't/changed;rriuch to this: day. how: preparing, to expLore;);;, in school after -they graduate in ..- , ' For as the judge has stated, "if you send an alcoholic to 9 — Einstein (He permanent- TO THE world Itself man is of ho beneficial purpose jail for 30 days, he's still going to be an alcoholic when he ly altered man's concept of whatsoever; Rather : detrimental. Many people have yet to leaves; if you send a man who is mentally disturbed to jail, space and time.);; learn that there are laws that govern their behavior.. Even he is still going to be mentally disturbed when he leaves. A 10 — Thomas Jefferson (He the Watergate tricksters found that : out. Those .laws are good judge tries to help a person at the same time as he refocused the world'¦ ¦ ¦ s¦ attention fa natural, moral, civil, and ecbnpmic-i-in reality God's ia-w. puriishes.and protects society." upon freedom.) " '- '¦ .'. ' . - Man cannot circumvent those laws and prosper and be a man Others in the state have recognized Judge Challeen's 11—- Aristotle: (The founder of repute in the eyes, of God and humanity. It is man's choice manner of'conducting a court as a fair arid equitable one of ^systematic knowledge and between hell and heaven here on this earth.; It depends en- for the Supreme Court has seen fit to select .him for special deductive logic. ): tirely on his behavior; If those laws are observed and lived; duty in other counties this, spring and' also has recently se- 12 — Goethe (Modern Eur- fine. And a natural cataclysm does not happen . If riot man lected him to; head a seminar this fall to train other judges bpe!s most accomplished: phil- may go the way of the dinosaur. . : on the subject of; sentencing. Therefore, if the best legal osopher arid writer;) ¦ And once again with a smile the sun. could shine down minds in this state feel by- their selection that our. judge must . ' , perhaps our two It's interesting to. note that on : a peaceful world—like it had for billions of years before have something constructive. . to offer others the top 12 fall into only four WMi^i^^^^M reappraise their pubhc: criticism and man set his foot on it. local politicians should or five categories: philosophers, HERMAN RUSCH stand solidly behind this dedicated man. ::.;. •• ¦ ^, , SEBASTIAN Ji PAGLIARELLQ reUgionists,. - scientists states- Cochrane Wis. men and writers. No military leaders, dictators or. millionaires In the bunch. Nor any syndi- Nixon slpokesmSn: cated columnists, alas. But at least two educators. There's al- ways, at least . .. a, rudimentary silver lining. Medio cotistbriil^ Q • -!¦ ; "I'm training to be a DALLAS. (UPI ) r- An ad- Herschensohn, deputy special Akron Beacon Journal, United rating had increased a little teacher and I want to know ministration spokesman . dis- assistant to the President. Press ; International and the despite the release of the what localities to avoid -when Washington Post which he said Watergate transcripts. I'm out looking for a job next patched to drum .up - support: for Herschensohn said the news against the slanted stories 'despite?''' Herschen- year. Where is the very worst President Nixon said Thursday media have : never liked Presi- President. He said everything ^Why . place to teach' '' ¦• ¦'. school??';— the news media are constantly dent Nixon because he is that happens to.:the President sohn said. '-Maybe, it's because R.A.S!, McComb, Mich. harassing President Nixon and Republican and conservative and everything the President of the Watergate transcripts.'* ; . A — It's got to be New York this : has . led to attempts to arid because the most powerful does is seen in a critical', light He displayed a , headline City; That educatioJial version impeach him. news organizations are; "in the ' : by members of the media. snipped from the May 11 of a Vietnam fire base is giving "Any administration , could liberal spectrum." •;.- "I think it: has had a great Beacon Journal that said its 60,000 teachers "self-defense" have been brought to this point "I think.this liberal bias is by effect on ; public opinion," he "Nixon's Resignation Reported handbooks so that fewer of and beyond if the most and large ; instinctive and said; . : Hours Away." He said the theni will be mugged, raped powerful news organizations terribly destructive,'' he said. headline was based on a New and maimed in their, classrooms had created the medieval Herschensohn displayed news "When the President went to York Times news story. : from here on. : climate that they have created stories carried by the New Huntsville (Ala.) recently,:NBC in this case," said Bruce York Tifnes News Service, the reported federal employes had Herschensohn said the tran- been given the " day off , scripts have not shown Nixon is implying they were let out tb guilty of any crime for ;which Mazeppa woman greet the President, when in he could be impeached, so the fact they were celebrating media is how attacking ills elected president gets foot Washington's Birthday, which is "immorality." of ca ncer unit : Patman always a holiday." "I don't believe any man 'He-; said a UPI story should sit in judgment of LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) published on May 23 said a another man's morality," Her- — Mrs. Daisy Pjfeiffer, Mazep- recent Harris Poll showed the schensohn said. "I'll leave that pa, was elected president of the in door ofTRB President's job performance up to God.'' Wabasha County American Can- By DON PHILLIPS stronger stand for accountabili- cer Society at a meting held at WASHINGTON (U P I) - ty and;openness- in all elements the . home of Mrs. William .P. of the federal government¦ ," Gjerde. Wright Patman got his foot in Patman said. "This ' is '.;: the In California the door of the Federal Reserve Others named: Mrs. Marion sentiment in , the nation today. Kasper, Wabasha, vice presi- Board Thursday after a decade It's just a little slow reaching dent; Mrs. Dorothy Hager, Wab- , of trying. the Congress." asha, secretary, and James The 8tt-year-old Texas Demo- Opponents of Patman's bill, Woman buys town Siewcrt, Lake City,, treasurer. crat, dean of the House and including Rep. Wilbur MiEs, D- Douglas Sinclair, area repre- chairman of its banking com- Ark., - charged . that- - 'It. would sentative, presented the bylaws mittee, won only a very smaK erode the Fed's independence for $300 of the American Cancer Society ® victory in his long effort to In setting monetary policy, 000 to the group. : make the nation 's central bank making it subject to politics By MIKE SILVERMAN ly acting as an agent for clients Next meeting will '^e Sept. 9 more accountable to Congress, and short - range economic SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - who didn't want their names at 8 p.m. Persons interested in but ft was more than he had pressures. . The town of Idria , Calif., popu- revealed. becoming members may con- lation 2, complete with 48 bun- TONITE TILL 9, SATURDAY 9 TO 5 ever been able to do before in The Fed Is not subject to tho "Their principal interest In tact Mrs. Alvin Safranek, Lake year after year of effort. galows, a general store, church the property Is for mining rea- City. control of either the White and an abandoned mercury sons," she said. The House passed Patman's House or Congress. It manages mine, fetched $300,000 at a pub- The plush hotel meeting room Your old coat beginning to look shabby? The collar bill . to allow a General the nation's money supply and lic auction. beside a bustling freeway pro- down permanently in May 1972. Accounting Office (GAO ) audit regulates banks. Claire Seipp, a Los Angeles vided an Ironic setting for dis- The 150 families living in Idr- needs an overhaul? The sleeves need a paint job? The but attached an For decades Patman has about two ia at the time, mainly Basque of the "Fed ," realtor^ outbid dozen posal of 3,600 acres of remote ' amendment that would limit be eft the nemesis of Federal other prospective customers in central California mountain- and M e x i c a n-Amerlcans, hem is rusting out? DoiT't fret . . . bring it to us, and the audit to administrative Reserve chairmen. Ho charges tho auction held in a mote! in land, including the ghost town moved elsewhere last fall, leav- expenditures only, not the Fed's that they have contributed to San Francisco Thursday by and icKo quicksilver mine, ing behind the bl acktall deer we'll g ive you a generous trade-in allowance for your, monetary policies or transac- the nation 's economic prob- Milton J. Wershovv Co. of Los But the New Idria Quick- and quail that inhabit the area. tions, lems, and lately he has been Angeles. silver Mine had seen better ^IH^BBiHB^^Bi^flBi BHHHiaMHVHHSH pld coat on a shiny new 1974 spring model, "I'M be back next year and I attacking the Fed for keeping days, Founded In 1952, the suspect that the attitude of the interest rates at a "high, Mrs. Sclpp said she had nev- , mino, located 165 miles south of 04th Congress will support a exorbitant , usurious" level. er been to Idria and was mere- San Francisco in San Benito TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES: County, was for many years £TcluuuLiu u one of the 10 largest and rich- ¦ ¦ est mercury mines la the $ f SINGLE VISION { JHk world. BICYCLES 5 off coats priced $20 to $42 ':''|^ ' ^ Birt the price of mercury fell — 'ALL SIZES - . coats iced $44 to disastrously In the late 1960's. O °^ Pr $55 The low price and ecologists' KOLTER'S •US? criea that the mine was causing IALBI ft IBRVtCB $ off coats priced $58 to $68 GUBSB J H| dangerous mercury pollution, "5lnt« IWi" 10 led the owners, New Idria Min- 401 Wink«lo »vi. >hons m-UO ing and Chemical Co., to shut it ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ $ ¦W ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ I ^P^^A ' ¦ m, , . H ^^fl M^L m, 1i^^Hli«ft ^_ ^\--*JKH^^Hr ' J 12 off coats priced $74 to $90 • Notice To Members * Any old coat is acceptable as long as it is clean and serviceable. Bricklayers Local No. 7 All Coats Traded In Will Be Given To Local Charities, VISION M 1 X vl YOU ARE REQUESTED TO MEET IN A f SINGLE MM ^*i^rfHlsSBL T ^PS BODY TO PAY LAST RESPECTS TO DE- CONTACT §7 PARTED BROTHER — ¦ tJ- .L- l-*«l MtJ L- l- i I , Smi^¥^^lmM^B ;; v ^ ^lil ^^ L K h-^sMs^s^sff^ftviJ WOMEN'S FASHIONS fL^^^T0J « MAIN FLOOR George Krage jrmlf JH^ 111 MAIN STREET S I f/ilWiJfci — TONIGHT, 7:30 P.M. — NE 454-3711 offpa^ te TELEPHO BE iBMBHEfiBBl t j/J II «4 "Whw* PwiOltol S«Tvivf ¦ At The Martin Funeral Home \«y Jff StIB fwjjortartt DAY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY l! gg sl fL ^ Vl OPEN ALL ^ ^ f mJSemt giMSSg to &e*iH to etu^t\\ PLEASANT VALLET 'i FIRST CONGREGATIONAL GRACE BRETHREN CHUTRCH (West Broadway and Johnson) EVANGELICAL (West Wabasha and Ewlns) Rev. John A. K««T FREE CHURCH Hartman, pastor The The Rev. John The Rev. David J, Hpdak, (1363 Homer Road) Patrick J. Clinton, . 10 i.tri.—5undey school, classes lor all Assistant pastor ' ¦" .' agis,. 'adult lesson: "The Resurrection In Pastor . Teacher • ' •¦' Prophecy"; John 5:21-29. »:M a.m.-Worshlp servlci. Child care . 11. a.m;-rWorshlp. Sermon : "The Hln- through- second grade. PitWdtr "Com- Saturday, B a.mi-AII-church elianup.. ' , I Thess. 3:14-19. . .., of the Blbllt **rtr " , Stairs. Offertory: selected solo Sunday, »:30 .a.nr-rSchop! , . a p.rn.—Teen-time. munioh" everyone.- . ¦ • ¦ ' ¦- ¦ ' " 'kitad. Holy communion. classes tor .. . , . • . .•' -7(30 p.m. . — Worship.- Sermon: "The. by Donna Re 10:45 a;m.—Service- , and Instruction: :• Blood of His Cross", Col. 11!4-20. - . Meditation:- "Tre Day. Ood Shouted", Ministry of Music by the Edward pahl- For transportation to any servlca call My. ¦ ¦ ¦ Rev. John .A, Kerr. Postludi: "Largo''. en fami ly, choir, "Lord, Open Thou ., . 45J-7402. • ' ; message by Mr.. Clinton, - . Rti ¦' - Eyes" ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' . Lorenz. iponslble,Education.^ . . . ' ;" ' ¦ ' Noon '— Cliureh picnic il Farmir'i ¦: j p.m — ' installation servjee In LB. Community Park. ¦ Crosse..: '¦»;.p.m. Hlgli FCYF at the Da* : . Tuesday-DladMni for news Items, for —Junior . Lutheran Sefvici5s id !Sklff rcsldonce. th» June ntwslitter. ' 7.-30 p.m.—Evening- fellowship hour. ¦ ST. MATTHEW'S LUTHERAN Wednesday, B:30 p.rn.-SotlbjII oame » p;m. — Senior High FCYF.at the at Athletic Outnild I against Oasis Cafe. Sieve James residence, Nursery cars for. Synod) ' ' ¦ ¦¦ (Wisconsin ¦ '¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ' ' ' ¦ ¦ . all' Sunday services- - • ' ' . ' -. (Walt WabasliB and HUh) . .-rt-' -Church council . Toesday, 7:30 p.m. ¦ ¦ The Rev. A, L. Mennlckc, pastor CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST meeting. ¦¦ . • ¦ .; : . ' ;' Vicar Thomas Ziebell Wednesday. Noon—Senior. Saints ' pie.. , OF LATTER DAY SAINTS nlc at the Percy Burros' residence. . ' . (MORMONl ¦ <:15 p.m.-^Mcn's' softball at Jefferson. . . aim.—Worship; . sermoni "The Work Christian Educa- * (I45i Park- Lini) . 7:30 p.m.—Board ol of Ihe Holy Ghost . Throuflh the Gospel." tion . . . ' Miss . Wary Nelson, organist. Eldred R. Hamilton, Thursday, 6:33 p.rn,T-Cholr rihearsal. : 9:15. a;m.—Sunday school and . adult . . ' :¦ - ' Branch President ; . 7:=30 p:m; .— Slble study and prayer - Bible class. . . . . Youth: . Insight' Group, ¦ - 10:30 a.m.—Worship. service,. , p.m. —Frleslhood. . I p.m.r-Home Blbl« shidy, (call Jack. . Monday, 6 —Wlen'l club' plenle, 10:30 a.m. ion Herri. ' : :¦ meat *\ church. 10:3O a.rft—Relief Society. ; - 11:45 a.m.—Sacrament. ¦*• p.m.—.Hcnie Bible, study (call Jay . 6:30 p.m.—Luttieran Pioneer* and Luth-: Harnernick). •ran Clrl Pioneers. Tuesday, 4 p,hn.—Prlmiry. . Thursday, 2:30 p;m\—Ladles' Ale). 7 p.m.-MIA.. '. ' . '; Friday, S to 7 p.m.—Communion reo- '» a.m;—Sunday school. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE? ' -' Istratlen. at the parsonage. ' ; (West Si'nbom and, aAalnl;;. GRACE PRESBYTERIAN >;30 a.m.—Sunday school. ' FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH n a.m.—Service, sub|ect: Anclant anef ¦ '¦; .Modern NecromancY, alias Mestrierlim ; .; ; (The Lutheran ChiiTcb fsVsnkJJn end. Broadway) and-Hypnotism. Denounced. . In America) Rev. Lynn R. Davis. Pastor . Wednesday, I p.m. — Testimony meet- . ¦' " • " ¦ '¦• 0717 Wi Service Dr.)- . ' . ; - . ing . • ;" 10 a.m.-Comrriunlon sirvlcat sermon: Reedlrg Room open . Tuisdays and The Rev. William P. Kallestcd, "Self Eximlhatlon." Isaiah 53:1-11. I Fridays, except holidays, from "1:30 la .. - ¦ ' ¦ ' - -' ¦ ¦ ' ' ;¦ :)7rJ4. Text: I Corinthians 4:30 . p.m. -;- :.. ,. . > , , . . ' . ;. . Pastor .;; Corinthians 11 ' ¦ ' ' . . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ Ander- ¦ . • - ,.. ¦ 11:38-29. Quest organist).' .Carlis . .: . —Worihlpi sermon: "The Birth- son will slno -the anthem Nursery pro- t i.m. In the din- day - of the.Church." Mrs. Robert . .Tre- vided; Cotiee and fellowship main, organist. Prelude: "See How Great ing roorri following, the worship lervlce. Csithblic services at St. Paul's A Flame", Smith. Offertory: "Holy Spir- June 4-e-Sy-nod. meeting¦ it, Truth Divine", Haydn.. Postlude: Maealester College.;. . CATHEDRAL ¦ ."The Lord -Is .My Rock", Otis. Coffee ¦ OF SACRED HEART ¦ and donuts In the •fellowship hall follow- . Ins the service. CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH (Vain ano Wtst , , WaMsM) : . l:W p.m.—Softball against Lemmings • 167* W. Sarnlf. SU The Rev. Msgr. Joseph ,R. ¦ ¦ at Franklin. Joseph Scbcny Wednesday,. 7 p.m.—Softball igelnst The Rev. McGlnnJs. rector . Gorman : Foundry at Jefferson.. ' «:45 ' a.m.—Sunday school hour with The Rev. John T. Snrprenanl classes for alt ages. Including a nursery. The Rev; -;'.T. Bonn, ¦ En^ene: ¦ MARTIN'S LUTHERAN Adult study top)c: 'TThi 'W»a-Called ' " . associates .: .• ' - ' ST. Joshua" (studies In Joshua). ('.Missouri ' Synod) 10:45 a.m.—.Morning , worship- .service ¦:•' Sunday MBSsis — (5:is' p.m. Saturday). : (Broadway and Liberty) with Chris Beuer, recent graduate of KWNO), .11 , the Grand Ripids School of the Blbla 7, «:15, 9:30 (broadcast, The Rev. Armin U. Deye, Rapids, Vleh., bring- a.m., 1J:15 and -5:15 p.m. Nursary pro- and Music, Crand Masses. ; pastor ing the measage entitled: "Wisdom." vided: at- 9:30 and 11 Sacrament of Penance: Dally: 4:45 .t» Choir 'Special. Nursery ;»nd unlor church ¦¦¦¦ Tlie Rev. Kenneth Krneger, - ¦¦ 5:10 p.m.; Safurdav: 3-5 and r.JC-t p.m. . ' provided. Communion. a.m. and 3:13 p.m. . . /assistant pastor 6:15 p.m.—"Youth group for teens, and Daily Masses: 7 college . aje with 'Dr. and .Vrs.- Archie Belghley,. .director!; ST. STANISLAUS J and 10:30 «.m<—Worship service, ' - ' sermon thema; /'Requirements . and Re- 6:15 p.m.—Junior Wah group. The (East 4th . ana -CarlrAea.it sponsibilities of a Christian'?, Ttxl: Luke Young: Ambassadors, meet with Pah and The Rev. Donald -W. GraMsch, ' ¦12:47- . , Lyn Belghley,' youth leaders. ' '-[' ¦ ' ' ¦¦ 10:30 a.m.—Confirmation service. ' . 7:30-p.m.-Evenlng serytce.: S*rm>n: . pastor . . . •-.15 a.m.—Blbla class. "the Wrong Message." . The Rev. : Peter FaHnskt 9:1 5 a.m.—Sunday school.: Monday . through . Friday, * a.m. to ' noon — Vacation Bible School.' The Rev. Hilary Brixlns / 3:3:0 p.m.—Sauer¦ Memorial Horrie strv- •' • Ice;- - ' •-. " - ' .'. - ' Thursday, 7 p.m.^ChoIr pfaicflce, The Rev. James. Lennpn 5 p.m.—Valley View Tower service. « p.m.-Prayer meeting and Bible stu- ¦" ' ¦¦ '- . Monday—Vacation Blbla School begins dy. Theme ter. discussion: "With the - . associatei . . ¦ . at » a.m. ' . . Seme Mind." . .. . : *:30 . p.m.-*HendfceII Choir. . ' .Fridays 7:30 p.m. — Closing D.V:B.S. Sunday . Eucltarlitie . eelebritlofli— (7:J9 : Tuesday, 10130 «.m. — Lldlai Bible program tor thi family. p.m. Saturday, 3:15 p.m. *nhni. . -«n> ' iless In youth room. ,.¦ ndunced): , 6:15, «:30, f:«! ,ind 11:11 .: • V a.m.- and'5:15 p.m. . ' ' 8 p.m.—Board of Stewardship. celebrattons-e:3a Wednesday, 7 a.m.—Men'i Bible.break- Weekday Eucharlstlc . fast at Llnahan'i. and. 8 a.m. and S:15. p.m. 12530 p.m.—Ladles Aid plenle at Park Methodist Se rvices . Saturday Eucharlstlc cel«bratK)ni-«:J» ; lode*. : and I a.m. anil MM p.m. ' ' ' First Frldays-«' r30 and I i.m. Sjhd J:1l 7 p.m.—Board of Education. - . CENTRAL . p;m. Saturday, 7 p.m.-Worshlp itrvlc* with ealabratlpni, :. Iioly. communion. . UNITED METHODIST Holy Day Eucharlstlc . (West Miln) 6:15, t, 9:30 a.m. nd; 5:13 P.m.' (?:» Broadway:ana p.m. day before and . 1:15 p.rn. ivnan- The Rev. Harlyn Hagmann, announced). ¦ , ' • ' " REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN Sacrament ot Penhance; Calry—1 anU senior pastor 7:30 a.m.; Saturdays-3-5 p.m. and 7 to (Missouri Synod) :and after (1717 W. Broadway) The Rev. Roger A. Parks 7:30 .p.m. ' the 7:» P-m. BU' - associate pastor charlstle celebratloni Thursday befora R*r. -WilUam Flesch, Pastor y first Friday—3 tea 5 ».m. snd T H t ;. cm. ¦ . . ' is ¦ .' Vtt »:M s.tn^—Worshipnrvlca . featurlnj fi» •.m.—Uturpy wlth My commu- e » a celebration of the founding of thi nion. Tha Rite of Confirmation. Sermon ST. MARY'S 4rL" TT"^ i ^'"' ' | T^' ^ -~^ church, the Rev. Harlyn C. Hagmann; text: Acta 3:1-11. OrsanUt; A. J. Klek- 111i * ¦ i« H \l\ *« ii giiw"*"" i^r (1301 w. Broadway) * !* - w jjj Service) to bi held »t Prairie Island, fol- , bu*eh, trurnpeter, Rpbert Ourari, Recep- ¦¦ !£¦¦ t« i «#!»»* ii iiiti i ""~*~rHS^^ (,, II jt' jit-'" *^ _ ii ii»rtr w % i i 'i^ " ^^___i ^jMMs»Hs ^Bl^MBWW ^aeaai \IM• I mi .aaat^^ c* 'P" i l«fl ' ¦> I1 , i , | ii in "' The Rov. Joseph Monntah), tion to follow tho-service for the eon- ^iV n " i i J^ >**** ' »'* ' a^aaaaJaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaW*^^- lowed by a time of fellowship. . drhnandi. ?£• ¦ik ' - Hi i" 1 " 'i n 0 I ^siis^ysMsWP* Monday, 7 p.m.—Boy Scout troop. pastor Wednesday,7 a.trv-^en'a Bible Break- S" ¦aaUlA"'''"! .^tiZSZZ- **^-^*^^ ' Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Board of trustees, fast, Llnahan'i. Saturday, e a.m.—Auction sale, church The: Rev. James Kuni 1 p.m.—Eldira meat at the -thurch.' parking lot. • associate J'-i i »a vn 1"! :^<^*amK^n&BBBmm8^Km '>^it\^M^m^Sm^m^l' • GOODVIEW TRINITY ^' ' IBfMANUEL UNITED Sunday Mams—.|4:4J p.m. •sturdayli LUTHERAN CHURCH 7:30, 9, 10:30 a.m., noon. METHODIST Holy Day Masses— (4:45 p. m. on evi , (Wisconsin¦ Synod) ' (West Kins and South Bakarl ot holy day): 6:30, S a.m.< 12:1S, 5MS ."" (H».S7tri. Ava.l . 7:30 p.m. ' The Rev. James W. Haun Jr. bally Masses—7:30 a.m.) 5:15 p.m. The Rev. Norman C. KnsVe Sacrament of Penance—4-3 and 7iJ9- Pastor S:30 a.m;—Stockton morrlng worship. 1:30 p.m. on Saturdays. 9:3« a.m.—Stockton Sunday school. 1:30 a.m.—Communion aervlea, Sermon 9 a.m.-lrnmanuel Sunday school. ST. JOHN'S a,m, text : Acts J:37-47. Sermon theme: "True 10 —Immanuel morning worship. (East Broadv/ay ana Hamilton) . Sermon, "A> Spiritual Body" by the Rev. • Repentance shows." - Rt_ <:30 a.m.—Sunday school. James W. ' Kaun Jr. Recoonttfon or sen- . The Rev. Msgr. 4 p.m.—Couplos Club picnic, iors. Muile by the Children' s Choir. Or- James D. Habigcr, pastor ganlst, Mrs. Frances Rend . Nurairy pro- CENTRAL LUTHERAN vided. The Rev. Robert P. Stamschror, Wedniiday, 11:30 »,m.—7th and lih associate (The American Lutheran) Grade Y.F. Canoe Trip, (Wabaiha and Huff streetil Sunday Manes - t and II a.m. (5:M The Rev. C. H. Hnggenvlk, p.m. Saturdayi.) . pastor MCKINLEY Weekday Masses—I a.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH SEVENTH DAY VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST ST, PAUL'S EPISCOPAL UNITED METHODIST ConlessIons-4 and 7 p.m. on Saturdays,- The Rev. H. J. Sortland, pastor visits ol faail days and Thursdays be- (American Baptist Convention) ADVENTIST CHURCH (SBC) (Instrummtall (East Broadway and Lafayette) 1601 Wast Broadway) fore first FrWayi (West Broadway and Wilson) (East Sanborn and Cheilnun') OU Main SI.) Rev. Ray Getter, pastor The Rev. Albert S. Lawrence The Rev. Glenn L. Qaam. First Friday Masses—I l.m. T IM i.m.-Worshlp with holy eommu- Holy Day nlont aermon, "I Believe In the Holy The Rev. E. L. Chrlstopherson The Rev. Bill Williamson Jr., rector Misses—9 i.m and 1:30 end Pastor Charles L. Klart M5 a.m. — Christian education how pastor 7:30 p.m. (J.'JO p.m. en eva Holy Spirit", John 15:2«-27» la:4b-n; \ Day), *> 9:15 a.m.—Wonhlp with holy eommu- 1:4$ a.m.—Sunday school directed by a.m.—Sunday school with Blbla Classes for the entire family. f: 45 a.m.—Sabbath School , loson stu- »:30 10:45 a.m.' — Worship. Sermon: "Thi 8 a.m.—Holy communion. t:45 a.rrs,—Worship) sarvlee of holy tilon and sermon sama as above. Vocal Supt, Mrs. Milton Lueck, dy: Survive Or Not" ; lesion lext: lessons for all, 10:30 ' a.m.—Holy communion and ler- "To Responsibility Is Ours", Mark 16:15. communion. Organlil; Mrs. Larry ST. CASIMIR'8 trio anthem — Julie Keller, Jan Krenr 10:45 a.m.—Mornlno worshlpi the Rev, Rov. 7:1-14, 8:1. 10:45 a.m,—Worship sorvlce wlth Reiv. mon. "Recognition Sunday" for church Moore. Choir director: Mrs. Dennis Gop- and Karen Bayers. Supervised nursery 6:30 p.m.r-Evenlng worship. Study ol •West Broadway near E*vln»> Lee Chrlstopherson will speak on thi 10:45 a.m.—Worship service. Williamson: Valerie Snnford, pianist. Prophet Isaiah. school and choir numbers. Nursery pro- len. Acolyte: ,Son|a Arntsen, Special (or tots. Tha film "The ClubHousa N oon-3 p.m. — Polluck dinner, Liki —Dlb|a> itudy. vided, Hamllni oflerlng. Nursery provided. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. B oat" , will ba shown In topic Prayi For Ui, Aislstlnpj In 7 p.m. Transportation pro- e!30 p.m. —Youth groups. Fellowship Hall "He " Pork Lodge. vided for all services, . ¦ 7:30 p.m.—New minvber s' class In par- 10:45 a.m.-Coffee hour, Adult Bible Emmett F. Tlghe, pastor to children who have completed one worship will bi organist, Mrs. Duam ¦ ¦ , . ish house, "' study. year of Sunday School thrcuoh) ith orede, Rledllnoer, and the Chepcel choir. The KRAEMER DRIVE Saturday, 10 a.m.-Conflrmatlon class. The Rt. durlno 7:30 p.m.—Appreclitlon recaption for Rev. Msgr. . the sermon. Lord' s Supper will ha observed. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Pastor and Mrs. Quim and family. Jnllug 5 p.m.—The •rite of conllrmallon; ser- 11 :55 a.m.—A> spaghetti dinner will be WINONA GOSPEL CHURCH CHTJRCH OF CHRIST W. Hann, pastor emerftni mon, (Center and Sanborn streets) (Orrln street and Hlohway el) (1660 Kraemir Drive) Tuesday, 1:15 p.m,-Mlnneiota stati "Golno His Way." Mrs. Robert ¦erved by the young people, SALVATION ARMY and Nallonal Mother of 1he Year,, Mn, T remain, crnanlif, "Omnipotence", Schu- Wednosdny, v:30 a.m.—Bible study In Tho Rev. Jack A. Tanner Rev. vSteven Oliver Mr. Braco Loguo Masiaa - (1:13 p.m, fafurdayl, luiv bort and (113 W, 3rd St.) Ruth Youngdahl Nelson, speaki at Cen- days, a and "Festal Fanfare", Bach. In- the fellowship halt, tral Lutheran Church, Open to the pub- 10 a.m. strumental and vocal by Mrs. Glenn 9:15 p.m.-Sollball In Ihs Athletic out- »:4J a.m.—Mornlno worship, a.m.—Sunday school. 10 a.m.—Bible study for all sots. Capt. Eugene Bradshaw, Weekdiys-JilJ a.m. *:45 lic. Holy days-5:30 p.m Carlson and Andrea Carlson, "Seek Ye Held, 10:30 a.m.—Sunday school, 10 :50 . a.m.—Mornlno worship. 11 a.m.—Worship ilrvlce. Commanding officer Wednesday, I p.m. . on evi ot holy f»ia Lord. 7 p.m. -Adulf Blbla itudy. dey and T «,m. ind 7 p.m. on the holy " Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Mid-week service. —Prayer. 4 p.m.—Choir practlci. a p.m.-Evenlng worship. Wednesday and Thuridey—7th and llh day, Wednesday, 10 a.m.—Ladles Bible itu- Adults meet In tho church library and 7:30 p.m.—Evenlnpj ev«ho«llill< serv- 7 p.m.—Evening service. Tuesday, 6:45 a.m. — Christ In Our ¦ 1 p.m.-Sunday school In Thurtey grade canoe trip. F |r,l Fridays—«:is and nis i.m. tty. itudy John's Gospel. Baptist youth meet ice. 8:15 p.m.—Fellowship. Time, KWNO. » Home community room Thunday, 7 p.m. Thursday, 7 a.m.—Men i breakfast . —lenlor choir. Confesslom-Switurdays evis and holy ' and In the fellowship Hull, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Blbla iludy. Wednesday, 3:30 p;m, —Bible study. Wednesday, 7 p.m.-Smalt prouo Blbla Tuesday, ; em.— Homv Leaow «l I p.m.—Patlort) feliffant commlltie days Thursday Blbla sh/dy, 8:30 p.m. Dally, 6 p,m, before firit Frldayi — —Chan Area church jhwqkiLj o/LtL ibh ^^ Alma pastor to atierid 'classesf or services ministry degree ¦ ' AUMA - . Blessificjs lost Ar^ St. Jsnn Lutheran Church, worship ALMA, Wis. — : The Rev; service, »:30 a.m. Siturdiy — Worship ^ service, I p.m. " James I. Mkkelson, pastor ol ¦ ' ALTURA St. John Lutheran Church here, fo Hebron Moravian Church, Wtiitwndiy spbw tioly communton, 10:30 i.rn. Monday praye has been accepted by the Min- •thrbuph Friday—Bible sehodl at without ehorch, r ? a.m.-J p.m. . Thursday — Children's nesota Consortium of Theologi- Idvi feast ind. By THE REV. KEN KRUEGEft • - open house at church, af St- Charles * p.m. St. Martin's Lutheran Church cal Seminaries as a candidate ; Jehovih UitJiiran Church/ .Wisconsin ST; CHARLES, -MinD. — An Synodi worship, 10:30 a.m. monday - A recent, local news- broadcast deinonslrated that the for the doctor of: ministry de- Lutherin Plorieers and Lutheran . Girl old custom of having a prayer service for one's farm land at ' ¦¦ old - fashioned political candl* PlPnMrt, 7 p,irn. • gree. date's rally , will be held , - the beginning of the planting season has almost become ex« her* '. BBTHAHY Pastor Mikkelson will attend Suflday by three area county Bithany Moravian' . church, Sunday tinct/The broadcast showed there is only one town in Min- school and mornlno worship '"with cele- nesota where the local clergyman still goes but to each of his classes from June 10-28 at Republican organizations. bration of.Pentecost holy communion, The rally will start at 1 p:rir. 10:48 i.m. •:¦' • member's farms and prays for God to bless the soil, the Luther and United Theological : C«OAR VALLBY crops and the work that year. : . ; seminaries in St; Paul, - , ; in City Park and is sponsored ; Cedar Valley Lutheran Church, Sundiy by the Republican parties of •chMI, »;30 aim.;, worship, 1} a.m,i Perhaps the death of this custom is ah indication of what The doctor of ministry de- Luthir Ltagui., I p.m. Is happening to prayer in many other areas of 20th century gree is the.highest professional Winona, Wabasha and Olmsted ; " ¦ ¦ . BLEVA Christian lives; Some just don't take prayer: seriously any- degree for ordained persons in counties. . Slave¦ Luthera n Church, Worship, 10 i.m. ' ¦ Jnbre. There are those who pay glowing tribute to prayer . Principle speaker at the rally : ¦ ' ¦ the parish or related ministries. . ' • ,'.:, HOKAH . will be Rep. John Johnson Min- . while at: the , same:tinie being a stranger to its use aid power, It is different from the doctor , United Mtthoollst Church, services ? heapolis, GOP . candidate for •.rn; ¦ Such a person may be characterized: as a Christian by pro- of theology, and doctor of philo? • - HOMER '. ' governor. Johnson, 45, has been fession but an atheist in practice. : sophy degrees in that its pri- : Homer United Methodist Church, sir- , Prayer is a member of the - Minnesota . vleei with sermon by.- the Rey.- David povyer. Prayer is the : mbaris of movini; the mary emphasis is on the prac- . Achtirhlreh, • :30, i.m. House since 1966. Before that omnipotent hand of God. Prayer is the combination that can tice of ministry rather than L* CRBSCENT re- he -was . a Minneapolis City .;: La Criscent United Mithodlst Church, open a vault full of God's blessings. Jesus said, "Ask and it ' ¦ . search and ' .teaching;: Its course ' • .'. • mornlno worship at •Dakota-Dretbaeh at will be given you,' ' or again "Whatever you ask in my name, ' ' ' 1 Councilman. . l:3o a.m. and «:30 a.m. at. U Crescent, of study combines both 6n-6am- . . WINNING QUIZ . . TEAM . : . The Junior ' ; Bublitz Bobby Biiblitz (captain) : ' I will dp it." Prayer is like a blank check from Howard . , ; ,:: Coach He is. a lea ding contender for : Monday throujh . Friday ^ Vacation pus - and . on-site study and Church School,, a.m.-noon for "kinder- Hughes with his name signed on it all we have to do is fill in ¦ High Bible Quiz Team from Pleasant Valley ; David Skiff , Janet Tillman aiid Dean Dahleri. : state:GOP endorsement in th« , '* , writing. / " ' :. . •":' . Barren throuoh dfh orade, 9 a;m.-3 , p.m. the amount : . Evangelical Free Church here received a ; Not pictured is alternate 'gubernatorial race. ' for lunldr hlcjh aehool, • . .; Bryan. Huhnerkoch. LANESBORO God is hot, of course, ari^ IBM machdue who, if you press first , place trophy in [ North Central District . Also in: the Moorhead competition, Debbie Potential candidates for. th« ; . Elstad Lutheran Church* worship serv- the right button, will answer all our requests. There are ' ¦' ' District 34A house seat — . now. ice, t:30 a.m. Sunday school Cathedral schedules competitibn at Moorhead, Minn. May 10-11. , Dahlen: placed first . in drarnalic interpreta- picnic loU many things we may ask for that are not good for ns or any- held by DFL Rep. Richard Lem- (swing servlca. they will go on to the national competition tion,. Jolen Myers . placed second in poetry, LEWISTON: one. But there are many blessings we lack because we have Pentecost celebration ke, rural Lake City: —, are also Church of tre Brethren, church next month. Team members, from left, are: and Bryan Huhnerkoch and David Tillman ¦ ¦ ¦ ' school failed to ask. James says, "You do not have, because you do : expected to speak. " classes for ali ases; 10 a.m. Mornlno A parish celebration , Jerry Moore :( altemate); David Tillman John placed second worship, "Seek Ye First",. Hebrews 2:1- not ask." Are we lacking some of God's most fantastic gifts of Pente- , , with a trombone duet/. While the . rally: is sponsored IS, 11. i.m. Coffee . hour In church tel- simply because we haven't asked? cost at .the Cathedral of the by : the three county GOP or- lowshlp hill, noon. WedMsday—scripture Sacred Heart Sunday will be- study In paraonaBe, -I Piter/ chapter 3, If/there was ever a time.when we needed God's gift of ganizations, it is open tp anyone) , 7:30 p.m. Creolr prlctlce at church, • gin at 3:45 .p.m. interested in government and p-rn. wisdom and direction, it's now uv the Watergate era. Our LOONEY VALLEY country and government need our prayers. St. Paul urges The event will include pre- rally . chairman James Mor- Ldoney Valley Lutheran Church, Wor- : ¦ "that supphcatiohs, prayers, intercessions . . .be made for paration for the liturgy and c6m.b,. St. Charles, has extend- ( ship, 9:30. a.m. • ¦' ' ;¦ MINNESOTA CITY all men, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we a 5:15 p.m. Mass followed by a eda special invitation to politl- ' St. . Paul . Cilholle ' Churcti, Saturday may lead a quiet and peaceable life, godly and respectful in potluck stipper, Aria cal independents. Man, 7;X n.m.< eonlettlonti 7 p.m.; every way:'1 Pray your President and Parishioners will meet in Holy |^ The rally will begin with » Sundiy Masses, i and 10 i.mi- .Holy for , Vice President, Day Missis, • 5:10 ind 7:30 p.m. Dally Congressi Let it never be said of us that wel a c k e d God's Family Hall. A nursery: will; be potliick dinner at 1 p.m. and Misses, I a.m. - except . Wednesday ind ' ' :' ¦ ' ' Friday, S:30 . p,m; blessings;because we didn't ask. . provided. . . . . , .: , . those attending are asked to First Ev. Liithirah - Church, . Sunday bring their own: utensils and a school, t a.m: Communion . surniii iBr servlca, ^cBidiii^s¦ dish to. pass, In case of incle- "Trul Resentence Shows", Acts 2:31.47. Changes : in yearly schedules and many handwork projects CHURCH, Trempealeau,. Wis., 1« a.m. Couples Club picnic, i p.m. ment weather, the event ^vill be ¦ and special events make this a for students from age will.have confirmation services NBHON ' . 3 held indoors. " : , M Oriee Lutheran ,- Church, Wisconsin week area . church-goers should through junior high school. Chil- for seven confirmands, at 10:15 synod, worship service, 10:15 a.m. (Sun- pay particular attention to their dren who are not members of a.rh, Sunday; the Rev. Fredrick day school recessed for summer). Mon- day-Vacation ' Bible church's weekly schedule, v the parish: will be accepted if Neumann officiating, v ASSEMBLIES OF GOD School begins, ». :¦ • 'y il:45 a.m., dally for one . week. Wed- With the end of the regular they prerregister by' Saturday; LIVING HOPE LUTHERAN , (311 Center), . . . . nesdiy^-tadlas Aid, 2 p.m. WUllam W. Shaw, school year and the beginning CALVARY FREE CHURCH, CMURCH, OAK.RIDOE Ettrick, Wis., will Interim minister. Immleulita Concept I»n Catholic of ; summer, many area churches Spring Grove, Minn., will , have have confirmation services at Church, Siturday Mass. 8 pjn. ¦ ' ; •' " 'PETERSON •' • :-¦' ;¦ ' .. ' are changing worship service daily vacation school from 8:30 10:30 a.m. Sunday for eight, con- r. *S e,m,-Surday, ichool. : Highland . Prairie Lutheran Church, schedules this wieek to summer. a.m. to noon daily ' Monday firmands. -: The confirmation 10:45 a.m.—AAornlng worship. j»enteeost worship service. 11 e.m. Tues. . 7:30 p.m.—EvenjriB eervle*. • schedules that will prevail until through Friday for 1st.through , class of 1924 will be guests for ' ¦ day—Upper level eorhmltfeii. 7:30 ' p.m; ' Thursday, 7:» p.rnl—Bibla ettitfy and •'• PICKWICK Labor Day. • 10th grade. a 50>year reunion dinner at prayer. - St. Luke's Lutheran Church, Sunday ' ' . Serturdey, t ¦ p.m.—Meesage for Aniert. •ehool, 10 i.m.I service, 11-a.m. IN ADDITION, m an y G R ACE LUTHERAN noom CB , KAGE. . . - . • . . . / RIDOEWAY churches will . mark Pentecost CHURqi, Nelson, - Wis., will Orice LutNran' Church, services, •:*) have vacation Bible,school from B.m.t Sunday school.- 10:3M i.m. this Sunday, and a number this StOLLINBSTONI week will also have special con- 9- to 11:45 a.m. dally next week Trinity Lviheran Church, Wiieonslii firmation ceremonies. wth the theme,. . "The Story of Synod*, worsfilp, « . a.m.) Sunday scnool, 10 a.m. Monday—Lutheran Pioneers and Weekly release - time! school God's Love." The school is for Lutheran Girl Pioneers, 7 p.m. and Sunday school has now end- preschool age through 6th grade. STOCKTON Oriee Lutheran Church, worship .serv- ed for the summer at most LA CRESCENT UNITED ice, -•. '-a.m.f Sunday school, 10 a.m. churches, and a number next METHODIST CHURCH, La STRUM Crescent Minn! Imminuit Lutheran Church, special week will begin vacation Bible , , has scheduled ^N DAYS Pentecost ' ' SiLAD communion, worship services), school. ; ' . vacation church. schooL daily S:M . ind 10 i.m. Mondayr-Church coun. Many of the week' next week,.from 9 a.m. to noott ONLY! ell meetlncv I p.m. : Wednesday—ALCW : , s special \m W W*. meetlna, "A Family Birthday ' Calibra- events appear in church sched- for kindergarten through 6th * tion",- , t: p.m. ' ules , on this and the facing grade, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for TREMPBALBAU ' ..Mt. Calvary. Lutheran Church, wer- page ; others are below. junior high: school students. :. ahlp, 1B:lS .a.tn. (Confirmation with holy CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,. ST. MICHAEL'S EVANGELI- communion). Monday-Service with holy communion, I p.m. 676 W. Sarnia St., will hold daily CAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, WHALAN FORM NEW CHURCH .. . Fathers Lucius : : form the newer one."We've put Satan be- vacationV Bible school from. Fountain City, will con- Whalan Ititheran Church, servleei, Wis., H a.m.: ¦ ' cf London, left, and Malachi of Irelaaid, ar«V hind us instead of out in front," says Father 9 a.m. to noon Monday through duct vacation Bible school for ¦: -WILSON : two weeks Trinity two of the founding nihiisters of the Fbunda- Lucius, referring :lo a doctrinal conflict which Friday next week. For:; kin- beginning Monday. Lutheran Church, worship serv. : ice, \a.m„ with seminarian Joel Schroe- tioh Church of the Millennium. Both quit a he says has caused most leaders of the Pro- dergarten through : 9th grade, Scheduled to . run from 9 to der. .Saturday_YPS softbair practice Jt the school's . theme this year 11:30 a.m. daily, the school will Oervln Helohts, 1-3 p.m. relatively new cpunterculture church called cess church to quit, (AP Photofax) ¦¦ is 8 -.:¦ WITOKA "Living Life God's Way," have the theme "Lord! Teach Us "' Off 8 Wltoka United Methodist Church, serv- the Process Church of the. Final Judgment to and will feature awards crafts to Pray" and will teach about REGULAR S LAB-z^zp PRICES * ***^ * , , . ' Yi ice with sermon by the Rev. Kathirlre Th en choose o ne of Sussel's exclu- Horn, 9 a.m. games, Bible stories and re- prayer using the Lord's Prayer ways to build freshments. Free transportation as sive money-saving a keystone. Selected Bible i your garage, will be provided. A closing pro- stores wll be llustrated wth Bids sought on work gram for the entire family will filmstrips.. . J^^^^^^ Now's the best tlma of year to build Foundatic>rv Ghurch rises r^" ; ^^3/^ .- your newSusse! garage. cement Start garage it but right ; at Y/moria be at 7:30 p.m. Friday. TAMARACK L U T H E R- i , ' Post Office FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, : v^¦ Li a^^^C^' with a slab AN . CHURCH, Arcadia, Wis., : Tffff^^rrWKMBiii:nut i» Bnrj save 25%. Call one of Sussel'8 The U.S. Postal Service is 917 W. Broadway, will conduct will have confirmation services vacation Bible school Monday Garage Design Centers for a free, no obligation estlrriata In seekuig bids through June 11 on from couhterciilt ure base for five confirmands at 8:30 your.home. . ' , improvements for , the Winona By GEORGE W. CORNELL They objected to the peculiar or less inspired belief, we feel through Friday from 7 to . 8:30 a.m. Sunday, the Rev. Fredrick p.m. - . ' " Uri'Blir-ihB lowest cost way to build a Susse! garage. We Post Office. Work includes in- NEW YORK (AP) - The Process teaching of the "unity it will be in our lifetimes, per- Neumann offlciatng. deliver the dimension lumber pre-cut, marked, stacked and stallation and some "Processeans" — in large : part haps toward the end of the cen- G R A C E BRETHREN MT, CALVARY LUTHERAN remodeling of Christ and Satan" — a cu- banded iri order of usage. You build the :; . ^.-^jfc of heating-cooling ntilts on the — have become the "Found- tury."v CHURCH, West Wabasha and step-by-s1ep w ribusty convoluted concept that garage using our easy, a*f ^7 'lhllW> roof , plus installation of humi- ers." - In the break-up of the Proc- Ewing streets, will conduct va- instruction manual, Susse! will had become a sort of hallmark . cation Bible school from 1G "^^ MrallFr ^^^ difiers, roof hatch and walk- They've quit a relatively new ess: Church, Father Lucius, one . . a.m. Emergency repair evengiveyoufreehelp.lfneeded. . ifflHD Km of the group. to noon Monday through Friday KM way, lighting for mail sorting counterculture church, the of. its British founders in 1963, Near-BIIP -The economy way for pre-schoolers through age ^ffly lfi jM\$&%? cases, end a paging Process Church of the Final "To many of us it made little and Father Malachi editor of OKed for tunnel to build a Susse! garage. We do all the system. , U. The course will include Bi- ^ *sti^P*>^ Electrical modifications Judgment, to form a still newer seme and it generally was mis- its streetnsold magazine, "The rough stuff. That Includes laying the concrete .^"^T and a ble study, crafts recreation and portable one, caKed the Foundation construed," Father Lucius said Process/'-estlmated 99 per cent , on biking trail slab, erecting the frame and installing the overhead door.You telescoping service music. Free bus service is avail- platform Church of the , Millennium. in an interview. "Many people of its approximately 450 minis- do the easy finish work and save. also are sought. able. ...:-::! " .,. . -. ' ..: . MADISON took it to mean Satan was held ters are leaving it to take part - , Wis. (UPI)-- Gov. Ail-BitP—TheeasiestwaytobuildaSus5elQarage.Susseldoes'.. Bid forms are available from they've changed ST. MARTIN'S LUTHERAN In doing so, up as an ideal. Although this In the new organization. Patrick J. Lucey has approved everything from laying the slab to shingling the roof. You'll the local postmaster or the their black garb to hopeful CHURCH, East Broadway and $8,000 in emergency repairs save money without lifting a flngerl wasn't BO, jt was misleading on M nnir .a»i\ postal service, P.O. Box 69069, blue, and abandoned their for- These ministers oversee ..a Liberty Street, will confirm 35 a tunnel along the Sparta-Elroy St. Paul 55169. and obscured the church's bas- movement that has grown in 10 ^* **&$!£$ ^%, NO 60WNPAYMENT- mer symbol — a cross en- ic message ." students at the 10 : 30 a.m. wor- bike trail ordered closed re- PAYMENTS ¦ ¦ ¦ ' years to an estimated 500,000 ship service Sunday. They wiLl NO free TIL L 19751 circled by a serpent — and also cently. ^"H^y-^ifj M? estimate FAMILY NIGHT the idea which it represented. The message — as set forth foKowers, mostly clustered receive their first communion The state Department of Nat- JJ ^^ J H j^aB Por a or a free around a half-dozea centers in H'HcHP catalog of garage design Ideas, SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- "We've put Satan behind us by the newly launched Founda- th*> following Sunday. ural Resources ordered Tunnel ^— uil 2^^t=" this country. *^~" -^~- --1t ilL >--^ call any of Sussel's offices. cial) — Mr. and Mrs. Dale Instead of out in front," says a tion Church - is that world INDEPENDENCE CHURCH, Number 3 closed recently be- , to be The , communal-type centers Independence, Wis,, will have Wiste and family, Austin. founding minister called Father civilization soon will end cause of the danger of falling OFFICE HOURS: S-5:30 Monday-Friday, 8:30-5:00 Saturday. Minn,, will furnish the program Lucius, referring to a doctrinal replaced by a new age free of to be maintained by the new vacation Bible school June 10-14 rocks. Sparta's Bike-A-Rama 12:00-5:00 Sunday. OPEN HOUSE: All offices-Saturday for family night at the Water- conflict which he says has strife and evil and ruled by group are in New York , Chi- from 9 a.m, to 2 p.m. This celebration , featuring racing e- 8:30-5:00, Sunday 12:00-5:00. Free Gifts and Refreshments. loo Ridge Church Sunday. caused most leaders of the God's coming Messiah. cago, New Orleans , Miami and year's study Is called "Bible- vents alorg the 32-mile trail , had " Fa- , Canada. One in Cam- times " and will feature Bibl e TWIN CITIES MANKATO ROCHESTER EAU CLAIRE Wiste is the son of Arnold Process Church to quit it for "He may come any day, , been scheduled for June 14-16, ¦ 821-3rd Aye, S.E. 1316 Fairfax St.^ Wiste, Spring Grove. the new organization. ther Lucius said, "As a more bridge, Mass., has been closed. study, fllmstrips, role-playing The State Building Commis- 1850 Como Ave. 11BS. Front St. 645-0331 (507| 3B7-8247 (507) 285-0440 (715) 835-4351 sion had approved at (he DNR's ¦ Downtown Behind K-Mart Bitwaan Snytfcrs t AcioMlibm ¦ request $158,000 to repair , all Faiigioundi Mmkalo . . ihe.Co-0 p three tunnels on the trail, Lucey's appropriation of emer- gency funds will now allow for DFL to consider stands against abortion the immediate installation of a steel culvert inside the tunnel THE GAR^GE BUILDER IL/ UjO I fllOo MINNEAPOLIS Minn. CAP) said the recommendations were nated is a personal , moral and first six months ol pregnancy, of the Vietnam war, : : , to prevent the rocks from fall- ' _ The Minnesota Democratlc- drawn by the 14-membor com- medical decision. He called for Barbeau's resolution said the • Said government charges support of tho 1973 U. S. Su- abortion question Involves con- should be dismissed against all ing on cyclists. Farmcr-Lahor convention -will mittee after several public consider stands against abor- preme Court decision which flicting ethical values. He Indian defendants in tho hearings around the state. should "not Wounded Knee S.D., cases, tions and for insuring full granted women the right to de- added that the DFL , abortion resolution calls position on abortion Criticized the Minnesota rights lor homosexuals. Tho cide on abortions during the advocate a • amendment to commit DFL Highway Department and "con- The recommendations are for support of an nor attempt to Constitution to "give 'ingle point of demned" Commissioner R»y among those drawn by a plat- the U.S. candidates to a r- equal protection under the law Court halts military " Lappegaard for "their lack of form committee. ITie 54-page, viev/. to all human life from the mo- sensitivity to local input 5n 459-resolutlon report will be probe of suspected ment of conception to natural The plnttonm committee their policy-making process for presented to the. 1,223 voting death." unanimously recommended an highway construction." delegates at the convention streaking officer Gene Robinson of Min- amendment to the state Con- • Supported a $3 per hour June 14-16 at tho Minneapolis neapolis and Bill Barbeau of NEW YORK (UPI) — A stitution which would guarantee minimum wage, Auditorium, Golden Valley submitted sepa- military Investigation to decide equal protection of the law to • Opposed any attempt to re- all persons and forbid dis- The report vns released rate dissenting resolutions on whether Navy Cmdr. William store capital punishment, crimination regardless of "sex- ¦ Thursday by cochairperaons tlio abortion question. Robin- D. Martin , 40, streaked' across ual orientations creed, religion, SENIORS HONORED John Suel, Shakopce , and Lynn son's proposal said whether a the ballroom of a Manhattan , ancestry, birth, social origin or SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- Bolnlck. Brooklyn Park, They pregnancy should be termi- hotel has been temporarily stopped by a federal court condition,.." Homosexuals were cial)—Trinity Lutheran Church order. not mentioned specifically, here Sunday honored 27 seniors U.S. District Court Jud«e However, another resolution for completing 12 years of re- Thomas C. Piatt agreed with called , for "opposition to any tease time education. oTci^ Martin's agrument that the form of discrimination for ex- rp^' LARGESTaRGANS^ STOCK , t WINONA'S • Navy had no right to probe into pressions of gay life-styles." ' t> CURRIER • WURUTZER • MELVILLE CLARK ' his off-duty hours activities , On national Issues, the com- ) Piatt also agreed to a hearing mittee urged the immedlato im- aaVaaV ELECTRIC PIANOS June 14 on whether to make his peachment and subseuent trial ) FENDER RHODES WURUTZER order permanent. of President Nixon, A minority HALTS PLUS MlHHy - ' Martin , a former Vietnam report by Ray Anderson of De- Prevents. Cruboraji ^^^^^^^^^^^ j^^^^^^^^^ H I W PLAYER PIANOS fighter pilot, was under Investi- troit Lakes opposed Impeach- and Faede Lawn. ' gation for allegedly dashing ment at this time bocauso Min- DADD BROTHERS Buy Now and naked across the ballroom of nesota congressmen "have not IWP P STORt?. Inc. I ^f Save ' New York's Belmont, Plaza as yet heard the evidence." Hotel during the annual conven- On other Issues, the proposed tion of the Reserve Officers platform: HARDT'S MUSIC STORE Association May 3. Ho has Called for "unconditional ! Phom 453 J7IJ ! • KRB> DBLIVIRY 114' UVM PI»M ¦»»? { declined to confirm or deny tho amnesty for all draft refusers, 171 t. l)f 4H-WT alleged streak. , deserters," and other opponents ™ |-£eli^ ipmbeipp (j QriMtierismfie3 |p s|<7y< drive wpanlzeri friend ma^^ sfy ol^smdn person I can turn to wth saW DEAR ABBY: You are the only : select officers ' ashamed to tell anyone 'else, : al- level of government . : 'lp*^ '. : this problem because I'm Organizers of the Winona MESNEAPOLISi - Mian; -(AP) attention to> critics, and^ busi- ¦ ¦*¦. ' .' ,'.•;¦'. ' .. ' , " . ' ' . v;' ' ; .'" :.' though I haven¦ 't done anything wrong. YMCA fall membership ness should, consider profits a. mention, • ' " • . . - ' ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ " ' ¦•"• ' ¦ ' ; ; " ¦¦• ;¦ ¦ • - " ' " " ¦ " ' ¦" " drive — Consumerism is hete to stay ¦ ' vice-presi- : : Tin : " - ''^ ' - ; , ' . , ' . , met Thursday at Sambo mechanism : to serve ., con- .Dianne McKaigi . ** __ ; ¦ ' ¦, ¦' ' ¦¦ ; '¦ 's Ees- and won't fade away as some of the Six weeks ; . .;;. - ¦:;. ', ¦ - '"' ' • • ''• ' *' ' taurant, 405 Highv?ay 14. sumers,': not a "religion." dent for coiisumer affairs segments of . . Industry might Coca-Cola Co., said modern ago my nus- Dear Abby:¦ Thomas Martin again will :¦' He. criticized business: adver- band was; : ' ,¦:' . : .•! head .-the drive, which'.'seeks like, says, a spokesman for the " too many corporations are being asked to $60,- ¦ tising for calling as killed in- , : ;; gy Abigail¦ Vdrv Buren: OOO in hev/: and.renewed mem-; public's, pqiietbook. • '. ' • '"•. products great" or "stu- be "socially ; acceptable" : ¦ ¦ * . ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ Jy- ¦ '¦ ' ¦ ¦ '¦¦ . • ' . ¦ .- ' ¦' .: •' successful inar- . staritly. in a ', | , ." . , . . " . ': . - " berships. Other officers are co- "If Ralph Nader hadn't been pendous," adding;" • well as being ino torcycte chairmen Thomas . Henderson ketersV' ; ' " '. married only eight months¦ ¦ < born, somebody would have somej respects, industry accident. Jimmy and . I had been and Alan Nelson; James Ander- : ''In more v and were fantastically happy. My whole world fell apart. I . son had to invent : him, because the and: its', verbiage have created a "VVlien critics demand , YMCA executive director, from cor^ didn't want to go on living and even thought of taking a bottle , and : Forest . Arnold,, publicity time is right," Edward J,/ M"et- seedbed for consumerism." . social . responsibility . , they .are not attack- of sleeping pills so I could join/Jimmy'; chairman. zeh told a conference on con- Gregory B. Hoyendon, chief porations . a.month I sat and stared at the walls. Then Jeff , a affairs section ihg-.the free enterprise system; . For , Captains are Xeon Nesbilt, sumer marketing Thursday. of the consumer friend of Jim's, came over to cheer me up, I looked terrible. :.: Frank^ Wohletz of the government's antitrust They, are dpmg -us : a .favbri" , James Carlson , ' , He made me fix myself up,. and ;he' tobk me for a long drive. Father James l«nnon, . Steve . Metzeh described the con- division, predicted cohgression-: said Miss McKaig. I don't: know how to say this, Abby, but : all of a sudden all the Miller, : Ken Mogren, . James sumer; movement as "very, con- at approval of a consumer ad- Virginia.:F. Cutler, :chairper- 1 and now I think I'm in love with son7 of the Major Appliance , . hurt about Jim left me, ¦ ¦ Fleming and Dr. Fred. Foss. servative;" asking little , more vocacy agency.:; ¦ Jeff.. :/ " .:- Cr ' . ¦;>:- v' .-.O V;.' /: V ' ' ', . Mrs. ' agen- Consumer .Action Panelj de- ¦ ^ / Everett Edstrom ; will from industry than is promised Hoyendon: said such an . - . ';' Is it wrong to have these feelings so soon? I loved Jim captain the women's team, while cy is provided in: the,Consumer scribed efforts of the appHanca " , : •with but now I think I love Jeff. I think Jeff by textbooks On free enterprise. handle complaints. 69TH ANNIVERSARY . Mr., and Mrs. A. H. Rohrer; all my heart, . C. Paul Venables and John Protection Act pending before industry to J .> feels the same way about me although he hasn't said it in so She said the carpet and furni- Cochrane, Wis., : observed their 69th wedding anniversary : Glenn captain the "Y" seniors; The professor of . family and Congress/ , . many words. Should 1 feel guilty?/ Can this be love? : The drive praised ture industries have set up sim- Monday with a faniily' dmner The former Ada Prader and ¦ ' will run from -Sept. agricultural ecbrjomics .: at . the Two woirien panelists . ". , ";' .' MIXED EMOTIONS 13 -to 24, with prerdrive enroll- the efforts of Industry to solve ilar , consumer complaint pan- - : Rohrer were married May 27, 1905, at the Reformed Church, University of Missouri said con- ¦ ' ¦¦ ' " ¦' ' : : " ' ' ' ments this' summer. consumer problems below the els, ' - .;' : ¦:. .:/¦/ : . . - , : . .: . . . ; . .-. . ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' " ¦ ¦ Alma, Wis. They have seven children: Miltoii and Mrs; Ed- DEAE MIXED: Yes, it can lie love. It could also be a / . sumerism is not anti-business, ward Lyons, Cochrane; Herbert, St. 'Charles, Mhin.; Alfred desperate desire to replace. Jim: and escape from depres- .- -[\ Oonumers are no brighter than Jr., Kenosha, Wis.v .Mrs. Herb L6p, Phoenix,: Ariz.; Mrs. : ision. Don't rush into anything, and don't make any deci- . Bank pays premium years , ago, hut: there, are more : sions or announcements until you are sure of your' feelings. ' sophisticated . and they are : Leonard Norcio,, Philadelphia, and Miss Vilma Rohrer. The ¦; tor pennies brought in ' couple have lived in Cochrane suice You need not feel guilt or shame for honest emotions. faced with , a . greater , array of their marriage. Rohrer . ; Good -Suck and God bless : NEW:. HAVEN Conn. (UPI) much-advertised products Met- -: is 97 and his. . , , wife will celebrate her 90th birthday Monday. .— The Second New Haven zen said. , . ¦ (La Croix .Johnson photo) . .: ,. 1)EAR ABBYi Oiir daughter; was married ,for ; only five Bank paid $1;10 for every: 100 The average consumer, Met- weeks last'year. The marriage was annulled because her hus- pennies brought in Thursday. ; : zen said, should be able to band went back to his boyfriend. (Yes, you read right. I said Citizens responded with $6,273 make an educated choice,; not a tor rate increase ''boyfriend/').''.: •. worth, and one persons cashed guess, when he plunks down his ¦\ ST. IAUL, Minh,: (AP) : - dial soundness and to mainiain ; ¦¦ : ¦ Our daughter then resumed her . friendship with a fineN in 12,700 coppers. : It cost the money. '. Northwestern Bell ¦ Telephone its credit;. ' . young man she had known since childhood, and .they are bank $627.30. ¦ "He wants the system tb The economist related North- , Co, should be allowed to earn a ' planning to be married in church this summer "It was /worth it,'V said Louis work, like page one of every cent western Bell's earnings heeds .. Should ,we send wedding invitations to our friends and Hemingway Jr., a. bank . vice free/ enterprise textbook says It return of tip to 8.6 ^er on to those of the entire Bell Sys- relatives? I hesitate to do this because .they already gave her ' its rate base, in Minnesota, the : which includes .American president, who said the purpose should work.'-' :. . tern, ' ¦ one wedding gift. She didn't send the gifts back because she of one-day special ' was to That means, ' . Metzen sug: state Public Service Commis- Telephone and . Telegraph ',Co. never got around to -it. . IN DOUBT . bolster the. bank's dwindling gested, ; that products should sion (PSCD was told Thursday.;- (AT&T ), Western Electric Co., : Laboratories : ' ¦ ' supply of pennies. .: , perform, industry should pay Paul J. Garfield - a consulting Bell Telephone DEAR IN: Invite whomever you want. The matter of . economist ! hired by : Nprth- and ,/ 23 operating telephone a gift will be up to them. : . western Belli made the state- companies in addition to North- DEAR ABBY: Your advice about what to:say when mak-v ment at , a hearing where :.the western Bell. ¦ '. ' ing a condolence call was particularly timely for me. ' ,; '• " telephone company is seeking a Northwestern / . Bell . : :- also; , . X recently went to the\hospital to have a baby I desper- rate increase that: would gener- brought in two spokesmen , for- ' ately wanted, t returned home with empty arms. Our precious ate $56.7.. . million annually ' in AT&T and one for Western ; . : ¦ ' ¦¦ Iiaby was stillborn. . new' revenue. "' ' Electric . to testify at. Thursr You are right. Not everyone handles his grief in the same • ; By Ma rgaret Dana day 's' session; manner. Some find comfort in talking about it. ' Other's' :'.do not. That is equal ti> an 8.5 per- jean© . cent : retutrh on a . somewhat Jack Van de Nort h , 8. PSC Your horoscope -T-^ Dixon 3n my case, I was so crushed, I couldn't bring myself to talk " ^ about it.. Sensing this; the friends who came to see me said broader: rate base than is now staff attorney, . called iriuch of ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ accepted b the PSC; The the testimony "irrelevant;" He enly: "I'm. sorry," ' . ' ""'"'.' ' . '•: '.:¦'.. ' : y For SATURDAY, June 1 hope those who complain will (orglve rate base is the "fair value" of and Michael P.. Sullivan , spe- . ',. Your birthday today: From a mixed you later.. ' MI could say was: ''Thank you." ' ';¦' beginning your enterprises take a simp- Pisces (Feb. It-March 20): Creative : Abby, please tell your readers that' in circumstances like , plant and equipment used to cial counsel for Atty. Gen. War- . . ler, Iresh direction and should prosper work comes through a little awkwardly provide telephone: serv}ce; with- ren Spannaus, indicated: they within > few weeks In. a steady upward but works out okay. Favorable Influen- mine,, the one thing friends SHOULDN'T say is: "Don't feel . path toward a higher plateau . of devel- ces abound for special relationships and so sad. You'll have another one," because I will never have in the state. may request that much of it be now understandings With younger people. ^ opment. Relationships sustain you ¦ :¦ ¦ Garfield said his findings stricken from the hearing :• ¦ ¦ ::- THISj Oiie again, • EMPTY ARMS eaus^^^^ . \ In proportion to what you've put Into : record: • ' : '- .them; Today's natives are logical, some- were: based on three tests of a what' critical, quite alert to change and ¦ DEAR : ABBY: lie condolences years ago A Weekly Information Service for Consumers fair : rates of Teturn-^-returns A session scheduled for today opportunity. : Many, many An interesting .ietter came to my desk recently, and is a Aries (March 11-April 19)i A firm Dairy bakerOff we lost our first child . earned on investments in other was - canceled because North- , : . when he was only a few monlhs old. sample of. a great, many others from, many parts of the coun- Choice has to ba made as to how to Of the many things written or said 'to me, I recall only one, businesses : . having similar risk western Bell finished its ; pre- spend your money. Tha needs of busi- winners named try. . See if that writer's complaint is one of yours. She. wrote: levels a return sufficient .to at- sentation sooner than . expected. ness may conflict with spendthrift Im- "then or now. . .. "'•; bought a dress hot long ago and paid quite a bit of ^ pulses In your family: Property deals Someone close said: "The only thing ! can think of to say "I tract investment capital and a The next session, for; testimony are favored late In the day. WHITEHALL, Wis. — Mrs; is that I love you, money for it. It had a label on it which I needed—giving; di- return sufficient to assure con- from the public, will be at 7 . Taurus (April 10-May 30): Revise: your Bedy Marsolek, Arcadia was " rections fot care of the dress m washing: or dry-cleaning it. schedule, give yourself a belter chance . i Reaffirmation of one's love is important. MRS. A. M. K . fidence in the . company's finan- p.m. Tuesday. ';" : . to deal with friends and neighbors. Help- . It was a permanent label wWch was good the winner in the Trempealeau ,:," GONFIDENTIAL TO B. L.: No one said it better than :, . , but it also was ful agreements are fairly easily reach- County Dairy Bake-Off contest ¦ permanently scratchy;.Where it hits my neck it scratches un- ed. Later hours provide romance. -' Sibyl Krausz: , . Ortmltil (May 21-Jime 20): Go slowly, for dairy yeast: snack breads. , know what every woman needs , til thie skin is red and irritated, even sometimes raw. 'Is see tha way open before-you. Time In- "I there anybody who Would listen to this complaint from an St. Gasim!r s Annual vested In meditation produces unusual Her. winning :entry was fruit As she, perforce, grows older; . Insights. For those eligible, love and braid,.:; :; ,;A true and: understanding.'friend average consumer, or is it too unimportant for a manu- caring strikes a responsive note. Mrs. Vernon Young, Gales- facturer, retailer or consumer protection agency to bother CHICKEN FRY Cancer -s . i ^BBBB«r / lH allllno iub|act ' / »WU H BfwL H Hr / fim 'Additional iub|acls-Oroup3 or , A^. tZ V ¦ as Sons, Lloyd Bentsen and inmiiy—»i.oo For BmWIriJ 'J^ mmwmm Individuals in nmo ^Bk¦ « J*»aBBV Wk More Your Furs John Tower believe tho grass- K^mmimmTtbJK&mwM peraub|oct finished v H We Do ! No proois-ciiocso from v MJ ¦ ¦ M roots concorn of Americans Is ^Mapi ^mS ^mmm ^mu portraits (poses—our ¦¦ ^^ ^ ¦ HH j ^^ H mmr m , d mcssemr sioro the economy. ^ ^^J * S°p wc are haw to ani re- HHHHaaaaHaH You moy SATISFACTION I In a survey by United Press I. . , • i i I trills oflorod ai low prices m Excluslvo cleaning nnd tP™r V°"r ivrs regardless of International, Bo'ntscn, a Demo- GUARANTEED H revitalizing right on ^ — where they wore purchased. crat, said most Tcxans are I" '!'' ' ' Studio Houn: WW mm sM ¦> _. . „ I the premises. ¦ MMMMMMMMMMM *Am faal BfJ ill . I ' ¦ "concerned by the high cost of MMMW^MMMMMMMM MMt M I aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaB Thursday, Friday, Salurday. I THURS,, 9 A.M. - 5 P.M. ¦ • In and out storage at I *W- living and feel the administra- May 39 May 31 Jwn« 1 I 10 A.M. - 8 P.M. ¦ I ff FRI., no extra cost, f r|t/)Mfft tion is doing a poor job of ^aaaaaaa«aaaaaaaa «saaaa«a« ^ 9 A .M. - 4 :30 P.M. ¦ l Ut<* Uli I riWl l/lJ ^^H[*J^^^ftHfl ^^^^^^^^^^^^ HB|HHHHHH ^HH^BMMHHI ^^^^^^|^^^Kaji ^^^| SAT., • Fur trimmed doth coats * *" w*J managing tho econortiy." Tow- cleaned and stored , too. er, a Republican , said most 51 PLAZA WEST B w • #0 »-S«OS» • lot us pamper your f ur*, " ' *'" *' people are "concerned with the y2 they'll Jove it. Phona 452-5550 economy and the energy crisis."

I ' ' WHS' demise wasn't unexpected By STAN SCHMIDT; three senii-iinal victory . over Case to put out WHS' last threat home : befewsv- Bill Branca the. opening game of the Re- , Daily News Sports Editor Piiie Island a 1-0 triumph.in •: popped out. ' , . of the game. . ^v gidn One tournament¦ in Fart' which Lee struck out 18. JM, ori the other' hand, got to JM, which will ^tacry^a 12-5 baiilt; • -;•. PIJViNVifEW,. Minn! — Coach :;;• ' "He was struggling out there Lee in the first mning and nev- record in the Region One>tQUxn- Austin arid Southland were to Jerry Raddatz sort ol expected er let up as the Rockets claim- ament next week, scored-tw» it to happen'sooner or later, but today,'' Raddatz ad mi 11 ed. ujeet for : the District Two crown. "The . pressure's been building ed their first District three more: runs in the third inning tocnajT after Thursday's game . Winona High's demise in the, crown ever by handing WHS its on Kangas' single, an error arid i District Three championship up?: the last cqupje games and was rased out. :; we just' haven't got any runs worst defeat of the season; singles by Branca¦ arid Randy ¦ baseball game here Thursday '; '' Appropriately enough, it was 'Hottort;. ' -,• : ' Roth. JM (w\¦ . .- . • (o) .il _^. a surprise. for - him.?V.\. ;. . '^ aBr h .. '¦- ab r h stW came as Kangas who started." the on- ' ', Ctepp.if ¦ 52 2 Behrens,ss 3 0 0 . "Winona,.which ;won the dis- . The . Rocfcets .. really . nailed . ¦ ¦¦ 30 "I mentioned it a few weeks slaught by :"¦ dravyinij a two-out Flndl!iV,Jb -¦ 2 1 0" R.Muelter^b: 1 trict - crowni last year and shared the . lid down-on the Hawks : in Kangas.p 32 2 Scrborough.cl 3 0 1 ago," Raddatz said after Ro- walk; , Consecutive . singles by a-Hopa,pr 0 1 ,0' j.Mueller«c , 3 0. 1 the Big Nine /Conference title'; the sixth irinirig : when Randy : chester John Marshall pounded Mike Bailey, Jim Alkei\ and Clapp,. doubled, Tom'". Findlay Bolley.Tb . 401 Lee,p-lb . , 309 his Winhawks 8-0; "hitting with Austin before finishing, with Alker,3b 3 2 1. K.Sco«lel cehter- Mixing an effective sidearm District One championship feLd with a stiff arm. He walk- delivery with his. normal selec- game.. .;' ' ed both men he faced, with his ton of pitches, Ballard proved The LlOris, - who "technically" fiiial-.' offering sailing over. Bob equal to. the . task and blanked won the Root. River title on the Conway's head. the Lions oh four hits ; for. the Winona basis; of .. . percentage- points, Kim Sherburne, a: junior left- first five innings. After back- HAWKS' LAST OUTING . ^v ffi gh saw its 1974 baseball season pitcher; Keithi Kangas :watches. At i^hty WlK ;shortstop Larry Behrens tries, ¦ —- ?¦ * . ' '. '. . ¦ . . . . ^^ - . . ' ' ', , ' , ' . ^ ' td-back singles by Sherburne . ' come to an end Thursday; in -an 8-0 loss to Rochester John Marshall. In the to stbp.JM's Mike Vinz (14) from stealing second while: second baseman Hal and: Randy Ellingson with . no- photo at left, WHS ' Kelly; Sco>ffie]d steps on second base while JM shortstop Van Fossen and umpire watch. (Daily News Sports photos by Jim Galewski) body out in the; fourth, Ballard Bandy Holtorf (173 awaits the relay from rightfield following an error. JM retired the ¦ next three batters in order. - ¦. . But in the. bottom of the sixth an error by sophomore third baseman Meyer — on.a solid one-hop shot off Ellingson's bat |§ik — gave Spring Grove the break lfa^lcs i rip Braves10-2 it: needed to tie the game at Winona High/has not had a relay events. or improve on the fifth place I mile relay in the conference The same foursome took I . BLO0MINGTON Itinn, (AP) 2-2. V qualifier.-.for the Minnesota State Unfortunately for Flings time recorded in the state meet , pitched six ; innings and was Bentley drew a walk: to put meet with the fastest time in second behind, Owatonna with 1 — The Minnesota - Twins, credited with the victory; Vic High School Track and Field squad, the distance medley re- the past three years. : I: sparked by Bobby Darwin runners oh first and second with Meet / since pole -vaulter Al iii which the Hawks finish- the state this season, 8:23.9, is a time of 3:37.4 in the con- . . -. . 's Albury and Bill Hands also «ne out, and' Russ\ Morken fol- lay,, Winona's foursome of Tod I two-run triple, bunched eight- pitched for Minnesota/ Nordsving in 1968, ed a close second to Rochester Duffy, Dean Emanuel, Rich seeded No; l in the event, John ierence meet, ancV that wa« - hits and six-runs In the fourth lowed with a single up the mid- Marshal} in the Big Nine Marshall | | Lew Krausse took over in the dle to drive in Ellingson. The After the Winhaw/ks' perfor- John Thuriey and Mike Aeling al. , with durable Mike after Emanuel, Aeling, and I inning Thursday night and. pow- fifth inning for Atlanta: and mance in the Big Nine Con- meet, is not included in state ready bettered the qualifying Newman running the anchor Thuriey had each participated ered past the Atlanta Braves runners wound up on second I gave up one run in two Innings and third as Conway's throw ference Meet last Friday, Coach competition. , time of 3:27.0 in the mile relay leg, is seeded . second, and Al- in the distance medley relay less ( | | 10-2 in an exhibition game. Jim Flim is convinced the best . But Winona's mentor, who is with its 3:26.6 effort In the Big Jack Aker finished up with two from center hit the mound and ' bert Lea deprived the Hawks of than an hour before. I Darwin, who also hit a. solo scoreless Minings for the Way to end the five-year drought s'tiil somewhat weakened by the Nine meet, But only times re- the No. 3 seed ; when it placed borne run in the third inning, dribbled in to home plate, and . Flim is counting on the same 1 Braves.;' :' '.; then Craig Otterness flied to will be to keep his strongest injuries he suffered in an aitto corded in regional competition its top sprinter , Mark Simunds, I led the. Minnesota attack off At- four runners to place Jn the 880- Baseball's all-time home run medium deep leftfield enabling runners in the relay events. accident May 22, feels the serve as. official qualifying in the anchor spot. yard relay and is looking for lanta pitcher Max .Leon, who Hawks have an excellent chance times. surrendured 9 runs and 12 hits king Henry Aaron appeared Bentley to. tag up and score the So when the Class AA Region- John Marshall and Owa tonna strong performances from Glen twice in the game as a desig- tying run,. ' al gets: under way at Hammer of qualifying in both the sprint Duffy has been hampered by are seeded 1-2 in the sprint Brown in the 180-yard low hur- in four innings. Conway started the top medley and mile relays. slight hip injury in practice medley relay, Luis Gomez, Harmon Kill- nated hitter for the Braves and of Field in Albert Lea : Saturday this but Flim thinks dles and Mark Haesly in the pole popped out both times. Min- the seventh against Sherburne, afternoon , Winona runners will To qualify; for the state meet, week, and if he is unable to Winona's quartet of Dave Wal- vault. ebrew, Eric Sodcrholm and " ' ; - Phil Roof drove In the other nesota's Harmon Killebrew' sin- who appeared to be tlring some- be distributed in much the same- which will be held at' Apollo compete- Saturday, sophomore den (220 ) ,' Dean Emanuel (220), The finals begin at 4:30 p.rn.y ;. gled once in three at bats. what, with a single through .the way they were for the con- High School in St. Cloud June Mike Trainor will take his place Aeling (440) and Thuriey (880) and the final event s the mile Minnesota runs in the fourth middle and promptly stole sec- with base hits. Roof doubled in Mike Lum and Correll each tfeirence meet—with the best 7-8, a relay team must, either in the mile relay. also has « chance to qualify relay, is not scheduled until the uprising and tho others sin- had a single and double for At- ond. Aft er Birkeland filed but , possible combinations in the finish first in its event or equal Owatonna, which won the for state, 7:40 p.m. gled. lanta. Dave Otterson beat out an in- Aaron and KiKebrew each hit field hit to put runners on first mmmmmmmmmmummmmmooamamammmmaMaaaaaaaaammaaaaaaam Three Minnesota pitchers and second. spaced eight • AUant a hits. three home runs in a pregame¦ Twins starter Dill Butler contest. • ; '. . . I Ballard helped his own cause ¦ considerably by belting a long ' ' double down the rightfleld line , p . r-s lAfestand that somehow managed to NFL owners layers elude : Mitch Bratland (some Now your new life fans thought the ball hit a guy- behind our wire from one of the light \_\ poles. Conway scored easily on insurance can keep the play, and then Phil Auge- : : agdjn. ./ / mowersso dahl, a ninth grader who was now ;tatkind . ^4 \ the hero of Tuesday's victory NEW YORK (UPI) - The ance premiums again will at owners made counter-demands thal with inflation. over Chatfield, dropped a bunt National Football League own- least stop the two sides from after the players presented l^VX you'll pace down the first-base line to bring ers and players have stopped hassling each other on that their Initial set of 57 demands in Otterson. hurling epithets at each other point., on April 4. They added 33 more One thing seem! sure — tha cost of living will con»lnut to Ballard scored on Steve and are now talking again. The owners had stopped demands in a letter on May 16. ^&^a want B» up. Schmltz' , second double of the The owners decided this week paying the premiums because Tht players insist the owners One way to prepare for ft Is with Metropolitan's cost-of- game, and the Warriors ' owned to pay the health insurance they said the contract had didn't respond , but virtually Llving Rider which can be Included In « new Metropolitan a comfortable three-run mar- premiums for the players for expired. The players insisted walked out of the April 4 gin. six weeks as a "good y/lll the owners had previously meeting. Whole Life Policy. "I thought we'd have a pretty gesture" and the two sides agreed to pay the premiums "We don't accept that charac- Before buying any now life Insurance and before living costs good year " Stark admitted aft- have agreed to start meeting until the start of the 1974 terization ," Thompson said, , Lawn-Boy power mowers are backed by the only go any higher, lot's talk. Just call us. every Tuesday-Wednesday- season and Insisted they were "we responded very definitely erwards when asked if he felt , because we build his team has lived up Jo his Thursday starting the week of reneging on the agreement. In very specific lnngaug* but single warranty In the business expectations. "We've got some June 9. Tho players had gone out and we can't stop thorn from saying and sen/Ice the mower and the engine. For 12 gotten their own insurance thero was no response." months aftor purchase Lawn-Boy will replace to young players who still make Tho two sides had not gotte n parts of a Lawn-Boy a few mistakes, but I figu red together from April 4 until last which was costing about $30 per When the meetings resume the original purchaser any we had a good chance to win Tuesday and Wednesday whem player per month and the NFL the week beginning June 9, they power mower which fall in normal use due to faulty the district," they met under the auspices' of owners will now pick up those will ba held in Now York. They material or workmanship, But we seldom have to "Ballard did a fine job," add- the Federal Mediation and premiums for six weeks, will switch to Washington the because Lawn-Boy Is designed and built better. ed the veteran mentor. "He had Conciliation Servico In Wa- In the meetings this week, Ed following week and then rotate The Lawn-Boy engine Is designed exclusively good stuff and mixed his pitches shington. Garvey, tho executive director back and forth between the two for powor mowing. Solid State Ignition has proved up real well. 1 think we all "In tho interest of getting of the NFLPA, Leonard Lind- cities. Itself virtually 100% froe of starting problems. wanted to boat Spring Grove things going and as a good will quist , the group 's labor counsel, The NFL exhibition season Is And It's safe standing behind It. Chute In front pretty bad. " , gesture," said John Thompson, and three players—Bill Curry, scheduled to start on July 26 discharges through the top and away from the Caledonia (5) Spring Orove (1| the executive direclor of tho Kermit Alexander and Tom whon the College All-Stars meet operator. A defleotor bar In the chute sends flying abrh nbrh , ob|ects down Into the grass. M»Y»r,3b 1 1 0 Schroader .ss 4 0 0 NFL Managomont Council , "tho Keating — represented the Miami, St. Louis is scheduled to ' G»nsmer,2l> 3 1 1 Slirburn», The lightweight Magnallte dock and lighter en- Kensili ¦oiho, e.t,tf •><**' w;?»"",r Dtv !, ^',r}lon cl-p 4 o 1 owners have agreed to pick up players , meet Buffalo in the Hall of 4JJ.4JU 454-270 4M-1JH ConwnyiCl 411 Plllnoscw, c 3 11 gine design make Lawn-Boy easier to maneuver Blrkalnnd.c 3 0 1 nonlloy.p-cl 1 1 o these costs from June 1 to Ju-ly Thompson , special consultant Fame game in Canton , Ohio on Oltorson .lb 41 1 Morkon.lb 30 1 15." This "gesture" will cost Jim Finks, labor counsel Ted July 27 and the: rest of the and control. B»ll»rd,p 4 13 Oltarnnns.lf 2 0 0 teams start on Aug. 2. SOLID STATE AuoodnhUl 3 0 1 0«k«i,3b 3 0 0 the owners almost $60,000. Kheol , general counsel Sargent SchmlU.II 302 Mvhr«,3b 30 1 In Washington, an NFLPA Knrch and Wellington Mara , When the two aides signed a H»yei,rf 4 0 0 Brnlland.r' 30 1 spokesman said the gestu re the owner of tho New York four-year contract in 1D70, LAWN-BOY* ToUli « 5» Tolnll JjTS was an "encouraging sign ," Giants, represented the owners. Kansas City was permitted to CALHI50NIA ..,' 3 made the obser- aid runner-up: ter than, match par 72 in the Cleveland :..,.....; 22 24 ,478 3Hr. pro golf tour, chance to win in Los Angeles. winner this year New York ...... 23 2S Ml 4 • vation Thursday after his And I was in pretty good shape in last week's /Memphis Open, hot, muggy, and almost wind- :. WEST ' . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' course-record matching 65, sev- ' ' ¦: less weather. Oakland ...... :.. 26 21 ,5JS .' . ' ' :. ^_ i ™mm --—¦ - _ MJIIrrl " '.' inSanViegO;/: . was in a large group at W. Kansas City .....; 24 22 .522 1W en under , par. It gave him the "My trouble is that I've been At 69 were Billy Casper, Ben Watson, who has finished Chicago' ...... 21. 21 .500 V/k first-round lead' in the $250,000 inconsistent. . Crenshaw and Lanny Wadkins, ninth or better: seven times this Texas ...... 23 24 ..489 3 ' California- ....;.,„ 22 26 . .458 414 Kemper Open. • . . "I just haven't finished as who had a wildly erratic round season didn't get . in serious Minnesota ...... 19. 23 .452 4V4 Australian . veteran 'Bruce fast: as I'd" like to this year. I've that included eight birdies, trouble in his solid effort over THURSDAY'S RESULTS ¦: No games scheduled Grampton was one shot hack at had.some good starts then let it three bogeys and a double bo- the , . 7,085-yard : Quail Hollo^ TODAY'S GAMES 66 in. this- ^ 'designated tourna- get away. v.. gey., '" Country Club course. Milwaukee (Kobel 3-2) at Oakland ' ". .' (Hamilton 3-01/ night Detroit (Lolich 5-J) at Cillfornla (Slng- . er 6-3)r nloht. Baltimore ; (Grlmsley 5-J) at Texai Sports in brief (Jenkins 7-5), night- New York (Tldrow 4-4) at Minnesota 2 Winhawks (Decker W), night . Kansas City (Fltzmorrls 4-5) at Clivt-' land (Kline 3-7), night . . Chicago (Wood 7-6) at Boston (Lea »-4), night SATURDAY'S MMES¦¦ ¦ by Gordon Bea enter M5HSL Connors opp Milwaukee at Oakland ¦ . ' REDEYE ¦¦ Detroit at California, night Compiled from Daily News wire services .' Point, ¦N.C. (32-8), Sam Houston State (38-9) Baltimore at Texas, night (26-16) : New York at Minnesota JIMMY CONNORS and JBvonne Goola- meetingFort Hays State and UW-Osn- Kansas City at Cleveland gong, bqth members of the VVTT, filed suit in kosh (27r9) meeting David Lipscomb (45-9) ... v Chicago at Boston, night , \ girls' track challenging -a ban imposed on THE GREATER MILWAUKEE OPEN SUNDAY'S GAMES a Paris court . Milwaukee at Oakland : .. Nancy Brown and Liz .Hart- them in the French Open Tennis Champion- Golf Tournament .announced the signing of 17 Detroit at: California ships . , -. ', '. /.' : .¦ . ' :¦ ' r more pros for the June 30-July 6 event, in- Baltimore at Texas, night . . wich of . Winona will be among • . New Yorlc at Minnesota COUNEKBACK CALVIN JONES signed a cluding ; Bert Green, CihiChi Rodriquez, Dan Kansas City at Cleveland . some 282 qualifiers .when, the multi-year ' contract with the NFL's Sikes, Mason Rudolph, Bob. Goalby, Ken Still Chicago at . .Boston • ' : :; ¦ : ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦;' Minnesota State High School Broncos: ; . ."' .' .-¦• ;•' . . • . .• '.. and Dave Eichelberger . . ... RATIONAL LEAGUE BOB McKAY, starting offensive tackle for WIDE RECEIVER FAIR HOOKER of the EAST- " . ',' Girls Track and Field Meet gets W. L, FCt. OB s Cleveland Browns, signed with the NFL's Cleveland Browns has sighed a three- ' ¦ under, way at Richfield High the NFL' Philadelphia . . ,' .. .;•.'25. 22 . .532 . s Chicago' Fire for 1975/. ' ' year contract the WFL's Jacksonville St. Louis .,...;,... 23 22 .511 1 WFL' .. /. with ¦ ' School at 9:30 Saturday ' ' ¦ Montreal ...... ;.', ., 20 20 .500 IVJ morn- SAM WALTON, a former New York Jets Sharks starting in 1975 .. ':. •'.. .' " ¦ ¦ Chicago , ...... 18 24 .429 41* ¦ ¦ ¦' ' ¦ , '• New York 20 ing- V ¦:.. - " . • \" offensive tackle, came out . of retirement to , BOB HESS; lS-year-old first amateur draft ¦ 27 ,426 5 : Pittsburgh ' ' ..' ; . .: 17 26 .395 6. " ¦ 'b 0 ;¦ sign with the WFL's New York Stars'.".-. . choice of the NHL's St Louis Blues, signed a ¦ ¦ ' " ¦ ¦ BUZ ' SAWYER - :;: ' ' ; »^ :^rafl* . The. Winona girls, along with . ¦ " • ' ' '" ' .WEST .; * . , ' :;' .. Los Angeles ...... 35 14 ' two other area qualifiers ED WESTFALL captain of the NIIL's contract . .7)4 , Laur- New York Islanders, -was awarded! the Charlie DOUG FAVELL, the ' Cincinnall ...... 26 19 .578 7 ie Olsen: of Elgin-Milrville and Atlanta ' .....,. ',.... 26 '22 ; ,542 . PA Conacher Memorial Trophy for his work with goalie, makes his debut tonight as a member Houston ...... 26 24 .520 9Vi San-Francisco .... 26 25 .510 - 10 Lori Bearsp-n:of Lanesborp, will the retarded and physically:handicapped .. . '" of the Philadelphia Wings of the National La- ¦ " ' ¦::¦¦ ¦¦" San Die^d ....;... 18 ' 35 .340. 19. '¦• ' have the opportunity to compete v FORMER GREEN BAY PACKER line- crosse League .; : -. THURSDAYS RESULTS backer:Ray Nifschke has been proposed as an THE PITTSBURGH STEELERS will open Chicago .5; San Francisco 3 . ' on the newly-installed Chevron Houston 4,' Montrea l 3, (10 ' . industriai development promoter for Green a three-day rookie camp at Three Rivers Sta- Innings) Track at Richfield, the latest ' ' '¦ ' TODAY'S GAMES Bay . ;, . ' •' -• .: . dium today, with 40 first^year players expect-¦ Atlanta (Harrison 3-6) at Montreal : workouts .. ¦:.' (Renko 3-5)i night, In artificial track surfaces. THE 18TH NAIA baseball tournament • - ed to participate in the weekend . Houston (Wilson 1-3) at New York • opens today in . St. Joseph, ' Mo., with :La EDDIE WILSON, a quarterliack with the (Koosman 5-2), night ' Brown, who won the Region Los Angeles (34-7) meeting: Point. Park, Pa. Kansas City Chiefs, from 19624964; has been (Rag¦ 4-1). at. .Chicago ' One discus, competition last Fri- Verne, Calif., (Hooton .5-4 ) , - " • ( 17-3) , Le-wis University (35-12) taking on High: . named coach of the team's receivers. ... San Francisco (Bryant t-4) at Phila- day. . in:. Rochester, : will be try- delphia (Schueler 3-4h night " San Diego (Arlln 1-6) at St, Louis ing to place in ah event where (Siebert «), night , 8h ; ' p,JLsJi!ir .

Prices Effective 5 p.m. Friday, 5/31/74 through 5 p.m. Alas, poor England Sunday, 6/2/74. While Quantities Last, Limit Right Reserved. fll* __ FIGURES FOR THE relative popularity of dogs hi the ^^^^^^_ ^ United States and England have recently been published and we can't help but feel sorry for the English.Eng The Irish setter has made it to 'No., 3 in this country, on ______-_ ^% w the popularity list, but the red setter is just No. 8 in England S m^~mm\ ^f vU£JS3k —those poor people don't know what they're missing, but tlien the Irish and the British aren't getting along too well right now. The top dog in this country is the poodle, with 193,400 registered by the American Ken- nel Club (AKC). The toy poodle is fifth in Eng- land with only 6,616 registered. \NeekenJ __ The top dog in England is the Alsatian — % German shepherd — with 15, 185 registered. - Five of the top 10 breeds in this country aren't even found in the British Top 20 — the beagle, dachshund, mini- ature schnauzer, St. Bernard and doberman pinscher. Leave it to England to come up with at least one fancy sounding breed that we can't match . On the British list3 in 10th place, is the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel — whatever that is. ¦¦ " ^ ¦^ ¦¦ ^^^^ ¦^ ¦^ Mi ^«M ™i»«M«M ^^^^ w»M ^^^^™^™ | |aiBBnaaaaiH ^^ anBaaaBaB ^ naai_n ¦¦¦¦ ™ ¦¦ p ¦¦¦¦¦ ™ ¦¦ ^ ¦¦¦ ^™^ ¦¦¦¦ ™ i ^™^ ¦ • ¦ ^ ¦ ^™ " ¦, ^ ¦¦ l,, ™ ¦ ^ "

Recycling collection m K00L THE BAND PARENTS Association from Winona Senior _ Wr\ '•»»- ONE-MAN [* __W r-" 1 urn AAB ¦ ¦ ¦ * . Ill -^ ,..,„. High School is still sponsoring a recycling collection and it will be the first Saturday of each month through the summer. RUBBER Saturday, the collection center, In the Latsch Block on Iffl AID Laundromat In th. Handy Con West 2nd Street, next to the , will be open from ^LI-^H^fBWS^*" ...... 1 *530 (Jin\(JS)/ ' OZttTTU~~W~~~LI LJL* 9 a m. to 3 p.m. " ___t . DACT 1 yJafeSglkr/1 „ . ,. ™ _—wTm\Ki Tt JByC""** Imft Summer» Drinking Fun l ^am^^ *i * As usual, contributors are asked to separate glass by * *"^T f U 1 r I 1 tr^tr^K I 1 l lf color, have metal objects removed from bottles and have the cans cleaned and, if possible, crushed. I NiSSfff Xj Makes 10 Quarts I T6-02. BOTTtE Parents and band members will be on hand to accept i*jk ^ HLJP ^ \l* 1] recyclable items. *$8fe win* Jf\ *"" » . If i\ EXTRA RICH SHAMPOO A birthday on the river ^ ^ MW j j M M M % NEXT WEEK THE Upper Mississippi River Fish and ^C^Bfi^^E5B^^^^^!^3^r^^^ A* ^^^. \ m^^^^^** ^ ^ ^^^^^^ Wildlife Refuge will be celebrating its 50th "birthday. The huge refuge was established June 7, 1924. With the headquarters of the refuge in Winona, this area .69*3 inches. $ 1 fl ?/ #/ Wt»\ will be the center of the birthday party plans. Right now ( ) /^SK / I 7 / I t_f\A plans call for several public programs and a tour or two. • 4 oar holding snaps. V | ^J j ___ / / V^-TUMM^VI I %M \M I More than 3% million people use the Upper Mississippi J /^ it ^ JI \ I-beam construction. V jffVI X __ ¦ River each year for boating, camping, fishing and hunting, • / j \. \^_ ^ S I *TL _ _ . - T^ M \ / but few realize that all the while they are on a national 2-Man Rubber Raft $29.97 S 8 p ^^ "/ ACK KOOl AID 10/67^ ^ wildlife refuge. /L/ * ^^2___ _ ~S___J V^ _*+ While the staff celebrates the birthday they will be trying ^^ to make people aware of the wonderful resources at their fingertips.

—^m—wmm——m_—wm——mmim————————mm_——mmm——mm—l——m—————————rt —^mi——mm^——mmm—^m—m——mMm—^——mm^m*————mm——m—m———mm ^——n mm—mmwmmmmT—m—m— ^————m—t^—m——mmmmm—mmm——m——m——————mmmm ^m Muskies are the thing ^— TALK OF BIG MUSKIES is filtering In from throughout the north — both in Minnesota and "Wisconsin. An eight-year- old Wisconsin boy turned some of the state's older anglers green this week when he landed a 30-pound muskie in Oneida County . M in II i ¦ II PQWER-Q-PEAT pRS^ A couple ol 30 pounders and a 30 pounder came from the l—m '¦JJMHlli ^_\\_____\\^^^m_\\ -^**^^ cold waters in the Leech Lake area of Minnesota. *w^fcKMB _ J Locally, pike fishing on the river has been VxHunSl ^k^^^^ ^^'*^* ^_ ^_jf^wJ_ %___wf tm^mwm^MMMMM^'* ^^^HBBBBBBBBBBV "SB * » ^ *Jv"ffif§?' ^ • Throws beam V* mile long. As the waters warm, fishing should level off soon with • Dupont product; screw-on lid keeps wax Iresh ^^ *-^—--^^ e Tough plastic case. those big bluegills and crappies — not to mention some fine HEAVY DUTY POLISHING WITT . . . J7< POWER-O-PEAT TOP SOIL .. . $1.1? BATTERY NOT INCLUDED bas — lurking in the shallows, ""• ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ MHiMl ^iHHBMH nHI^H^MHMaVMMHMW ¦^^¦¦¦^¦^¦¦¦¦^¦MMnH ^^^l^^H^Ha ^M^HlMl ^^Ma^aa^^^^H^MMaBHMMMBMI Rochester Elks MALIBU Infants' 2-Pc. Play Suits ' w F eate ¦ weren t certain of wfcfcim^ iifcw • STRAWOII\Rn . SEERSUCKERw JwlP^a^ » • Nylon/notion™' * . . . . /fTt^vV black's sincerity' JR > *^Vf *| l l|w\^J i ST. PAUL,. Minn. (AP) - discrimination was involved in Two Rochester Elks Lodge the rejection of Gibbs' appli- leaders say they believe mem- cation and If the lodge's liquor license should be denied. bers rejected the lodge's first black applicant because of He . decided against the club doubts that George Gibbs was earlier. The Elks appealed and ''sincere in wanting to join Elk- a Rochster judge , ordered No- dom." vak to hold a formal hearing David Enquisl , present ex- and return June 18 with a deci- sion based on testimony. * $ ¦ alted ruler of the Rochester r j« j [ $125 ' 'Xf c &^Q wy lodge, and Richard Lundquist, Lundquist admitted that he J *' r ^l^\ ' l&^SBf - '/ who was exalted ruler when (o!d a reporter the day after Gibbs was rejected Feb. 13, tes- Gibbs' rejection. Like any oth- tified Thursday at a hearing be- er organization our size, we fore Liquor Control Commis- also have our far-out fringe, a sioner Joseph Novak. group of blgols." Enquist said he told the Novak will decide if racial Rochester Human Rights Com- mission that Ive beliovod Gibbs ¦ ' MIB1BHBBB1 COUPO N l lll ||||| J • - . - HIW 'tiJ? *r *\ . 'l/LdT-v ' H¦ t^M^MM^ai^fPt^WMUihiiWwidCooinn. ¦ __ • •m Hftnw^fi"neavyjo cnamrhnln it\.M'll W&\»>, antXIO tt ^^atai^^ivBr J^_. .FM MM Tlie council did grant the ex- ^ ^ . I 1 . J. .|| tension and the nntional rule PILLOW CASES g later was changed. ¦ REG. $4.67-S10.87 _ -~— iffl |fl ^ It. Bohac P. Lnvcrty Both Enquisl and Lundquist PILLOW CASES, Re0. VJ3.37 . .... 2/tS.50 ¦ »- ¦ MJw V E said they voted for Gibbs, but AA f\£t \-IZi.L. ¦ /^»•«• fgl ALMA CENTER , Wis. - John doubl thoy would again because .W,N SHEE,S, ».,. 3,S7 . 2/MM 'S 51.00 Off Wlttt S, Bates, principal of Iincoln I hey now believe ho wanted to Y $|66 » H, J Illgli School here, announces the join the lodge only as a racial PUU SHEETS, »., S, W ....- , 2/M.00 top two graduating seniors in test, g Tllis COUpOll i | tho Class of 107-1. Gibbs received nine negative ' J ^^sAW^*5d£S^^ FULL SIZE CC Q7 ¦ m Explro.B i Jun.¦ ,.« "S V Limit J / Valedictorian is Linda Bohnc , votes on tho first ballot and MATTRESS PADS ^3«0f *J , 1974 ¦ S SAFETY FLAG $.1,47 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don- eight in a second ballot after ^Z_L* ald Bohac, club officers urged his accept- SaJutatorlan is Patricia Lav- ance. Three no votes are suf- I . _! Iniii iiiii iiiiuiiuiii I erty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, ficient to deny membership, M. V, Laverty, There are 1,200 Rochester Both are of Alma. Elks. About 70 attended the MIRACLE MALL — Tho United School District No. meeting at which Gibbs was re- WINONA--FREE PARKING ALWAYS S encompasses Humbird, Mer- jected and fi ve white men were OPEM 9 TO 9 MON. THRU FRI., 9 TO 6 SAT., NOON TO 5 SUNDAY jrillan and Alma Center. accepted. I