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3-17-1972

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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chance of rain ' **« 117th Year of Publicallon Detailed plan sent to Congress Nixon: halt busing, upgrade schools By FRANK CORMIER _ would focus our efforts where they really belong — on tutionality of Nixon's proposals with newsmen who regularly WASHINGTON (AP ) — President Nixon formally asked better education for all of our children rather than on more cover the Supreme Court. Congress today to block temporarily all further pupil-bus- busing for some of our children." Declaring that he spoke for "the great majority of Ameri- ing orders by the federal courts while it wrestles with In his message to Congress, Nixon argued that his re- cans, black and white," Nixon reaffirmed his oft-stated long-range proposals to equalize the quality of education in commendations "would not roll back the Constitution, or undo opposition to massive busing to achieve racial balance in all schools. the great advances that have been made in ending school schools. He added : In an 8,000-word special message, Nixon recommended segregation , or undermine the continuing drive for equal "What we need now is not just speaking out. against more that a moratorium on new busing remain in effect until rights." . . . busing but action to stop it. Above all, we need to stop it July 1, 1973—or until Congress acts on broader legislation He said "this administration means what It says about in the right way—in a way that will provide better education at some earlier date. dismantling racial barriers, about opening up jobs and hous- for every child in America in a desegregated school system." The chief executive said he was convinced that the ing and schools and opportunity to all Americans.'' The chief executive said action is urgently needed be- Senate and House have the constitutional power, under the Nixon told a nationwide TV-radio audience Thursday cause of some recent decisions by lower federal courts that, 14th Amendment, to call a temporary halt to further court- night that his program will "focus our efforts where they he said, "have gone too far—ir some cases beyond the re- ordered busing. really belong—on better education for all of our children quirements laid down by the Supreme Court .. ." In addition to calling for the moratorium, Nixon proposed ratV.er than on more busing for some of our children." Nixon acted two days after Floridlans, in a straw vote a new equal educational opportunities law that would chan- He said a constitutional amendment to ban busing de- with no legal effect, voted by a 3-1 margin against fcusing nel special federal aid to schools with a large enrollment— serves consideration but is not the immediate solution be- and after George C. Wallace, campaigning against busing, over 30 percent-from poor families. . cause of the time required to enact such an amendment. won the Florida Democratic presidential primary with 42 The amount of aid would total about $2.5 billion and y As a first step, Nixon ordered the Justice Department to percent of the vote. ; would amount to roughly $300 for each pupil coming from a "intervene in selected cases where the lower courts have The President unveiled his key proposal in these words: poor family. gone beyond the Supreme Court's requirements in ordering "First, I shall propose legislation that would call an im- Before sending his message to Capitol Hill, Nixon held busing." :' '. mediate halt to all new busing orders by federal courts— an early morning White House conference with the Demo- The President called Democratic and Republican leaders a moratorium on new busing." cratic and Republican leadership of the Senate and House. of Congress to an early-morning White House conference to (Continued on page 2a, col. 2) The message was a follow-up to a television-radio ad- review his recommendations. And White House aides ar- dress Thursday night in which he argued (hat his proposals ranged to have five legal authorities talk about the consti- Nixon: halt busing Summary of Nixon request:

¦ busing plan newif V fuel for WASHINGTON (AP ) — Here is a summary of President Nixon's statement on busing Thursday night: MORATORIUM — He wants Congress to pass legisla- tion halting all new court-ordered busing, and requiring every controversy school district to provide equal educational opportunity for all children. By JOHN BECKLER a solution to the busing 7 LITIGATION—He wants the Justice Department to in- WASHINGTON (AP) - problem. tervene in desegregation cases where lower courts "have Southerners whose school gone beyond the Supreme Coiurt's requirements in order- President Nixon's request systems are already busing ing busing." for legislation to halt fur- under court orders found lit- MONEY—He wants Congress to appropriate more than ther busing and upgrade tle comfort in Nixon's call $2.5 billion over the next year to improve equation for poor inner-city schools promises for a halt to "new busing." CHAT WITH NEWSMEN. " '.. Howard Aibel, ITT senior children, . .\- . . GOALS—He wants a national commitment to upgrading to add new fuel to the con- "What about the old bus- vice president and general counsel, pauses as he chats with troversy raging in Congress. ing" asked Rep, Joe D. newsmen prior to delivering testimony Thursday before the central-city schools and providing better educational oppor- tunity for all. Reactions ranging from Waggonner, D-La. Senate Judiciary Committee. (AP Photofax) angry denunciations of the To Clarence Mitchell, President by black leaders Washington representative to warm commendation by of the National Association After learning Anderson had memo busing opponents made it for the Advancement of Col- clear Nixon's apparent at- ored People, the key part of tempt to find a middle Nixon's plan is his intention ground has failed to bring to have the Justice Depart- the warring factions any ment intervene in the courts closer together. in opposition to busing or- ¥T^ "In effect he has declar- ders Nixon considers have Sy TOM SfcPPY chine. 7 ed war on the Constitution gone too far. WASHINGTON (AP) - Within a day of learning that Five days later, Anderson published a column based of the United States," said columnist Jack Anderson had a private ITT memo in his on the Beard memo which he said linked ITT's pledge to "Mr. Nfxbn has boldly an- Henry Marsh III, the black nounced die will use the full possession, International Telephone & Telegraph mobilized help underwrite tiieTRepublican National Convention with the vice mayor in Richmond, its full Washington staff to destroy all documents that settlement of three antitrust suits against ITT power of the Justice De- . Va., a focal point in the partment to deny black chil- might be "misused or misconstrued'' by Anderson. Hume testified last week that Mrs. Beard told him some busing controversy since a On Feb. 24, an Anderson associate, Brit Hume, appeared of the material put through the shredder dealt with the sur> dren fair hearings and long- federal court ordered wide- overdue remedies in the fed- at ITT's Washington office with a memorandum written by ject under investigation by the committee. ITT officials have spread busing covering Dita P. Beard, an ITT lobbyist. denied it. eral courts," said Mitchell. three counties. "This is a stunning exam- The next morning,. W. R. Merriam, head of the office, told Aibel told the committee that ITT officials did not'know goodness some- the staff of 25 there was a possibility of theft and that they exactly what material was destroyed but it consisted mainly "Thank ple of government sanction- one has spoken for the chil- ing hysteria and cbaos." were to clieek to see if any documents were missing. of old speeches, press releases and clippings, old corres- dren of America, black and "At the same time they were told to remove any docu- pondence'eurrent with issues in 1962 and 1M3 and brochures House Republican Leader ments that were no longer needed for current operations as dealing with hotels in San Diego, white alike," said Sen. Bill Gerald R. Ford of Michigan Brock, R-Tenn., a leader of praised Nixon's approach, well as documents which, if put into Mr. Anderson's posses- Sen. John V. Tunney, D-Calif., told the ITT official: "Do antibusing forces in the Sen- sion, could be misused or misconstrued by him so as to you know how incriminating this looks on its face? Hume as did Rep. Norman F. Lent, cause unwarranted embarrassment to the people mentioned comes in with a memorandum and the next day huge amounts ate. R-N.Y., sponsor of a con- Nixon withheld details of stitutional amendment de- therein," the Senate Judiciary Committee was told Thursday. of documents are thrown into a shredder." his proposaLuntil today but Howard J. Aibel, ITT senior vice president and general Aibel: "But senator, if they had no use..." AFTER THE SPEECH 7 . - President Nixon poses for signed to bait busing. Lent counsel the outline he gave the na- and other supporters of the , said that after the meeting staff members and their Tunney : "No use? They would have been of use to this pictures in his White House office Thursday night after -de- tion Thursday night was secretaries reviewed their files and disposed of what he committee in determining if the destroyed material had a moratorium amendment had hoped Nix- livering a television address. Nixon called for a enough to convince some of on would endorse it but tho called unneeded documents, most of them old and outdated bearing on this matter." he has decided against backing materials. on new school busing and said those on each side of the is- President said it would take (Continued on page 2a, col. 3) busing. (AP Photofax) not provide Most of the material was disposed of in a shredding ma- IT&T hurried a constitutional amendment to ban sue that it will too long to go into effect. Only one of the Demo- If^jSSg^^ cratic contenders for the White House, Sen. George McGovern, came forward 11 believed Connie Trimble the inside Thursday night with a com- I On. 1 ment on Nixon's speech. He . Time T,1C 'ieaci of "ie Wisconsin Motor Vehicle Division | | called it a "complete col- | | | | III CO has said it is up to counly officials if Ihey want % lapse of moral and political acquittal: || to enforce trie agency 's regulation against the use of studded j| dead in crash ! after story, page 2a. leadership by the President jf snow tires — p of the United States," nlcss is measured % Plnntlinoy ^ substantial precipitation & "Doubtless it will appeal If rlUUUlllg within thn next three weeks there appears to % to many frightened people," of helicopter no bad feelings % be little chance of serious flooding developing along the g§ McGovern said, "but they % Mississippi River and ils tributaries this spring — story, |j SAIGON (AP) - A U.S. heli- ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) - ought to understand it for J PaSe 3a. what it is a backdoor copter carrying combat rein- "I can only thank God" said 1 | — Constance Trimble after being li AhnfliAII In n rf!l,orv certain to stir bitter debate, | | sneak attack on the Consti- forcements into a minor ground i found innocent of first-degree j | MOOriltP il r\ presidential commission has recommended |f tution of this country." fight crashed and sank in the il abortion on request nnd contraceptive services to minors to |j Similar criticism came j minder in connection with the population growth — story, page 5a. Dong Nai River 21 miles nortii- , 1970 ambush slaying of a St. ; | halt U.S. |j from Sen. Edward M. Ken- ¦^ M> nncaoln liis Joined Reserve Mining Co in east of Saigon today, and all 11 Paul policeman. MininO' ' . p| nedy, D-Mass., who said j | | inilllllg asking the state Supreme Court for a quick f| Nixon "seems to think it is Americans aboard were feared "It's a victory, that's all ," ' : % decision on the company 's practice of dumping taconite * more important to seek po- dead. i added the 20-year-old St. Paul Superior — stor\ , page 10a , defendant. % tailings inlo Lake litical gain than it is to There were no casualties in ~ f / zz~ - show political leadership." The jury returned the verdict !w&:^%^^ &' ~~ "i ^ --t . the ground fight. j with surprising swiftness The cause of the crash was Thursday, deliberating only six hours after tlie 3'/i-wcek trial. In North Ireland not known but it appeared to be The verdict was greeted with mechanical trouble in the cries of approval from Miss UH1H Huey helicopter, Pilots Trimble's supporters in Olm- of three ouher helicopters on j sted County District court. Miss 2 more killings usher the mission said they observed Trimble softl she plans to spend as much time as she no enemy fire and sow smoke can with her 2-ycar-old daugh- coming from the helicopter just ter, but said she will move before it crashed. away from St. Paul. The small squad that the rifle I .She said she had "no harsh in St. Patrick's Day platoon was on its way to help j feelings" about her in- BELFAST (AP) - Two death. said in a speech that these was later picked up by other carceration of nearly 17 more killings Thursday This brought the death toll would offer the province's helicopters and suffered no cas- months. night ushered in St, Pat- to 278 in the province's re- Catholic minority "a real ualties. Reports from the field I However, she must serve 30 rick's Day in Northern Ire- ligious warfare since Au- and meaningful part in tho said it had engaged half a doz- [ days in j ail for contempt of land amid reports of stead- gust 1969 taking of decisions which en enemy troops, and the rein- court as a result of her refusal unrest The British also reported shape their future ." to ; ily rising Protestant forcements were on the way to reveal on the witness stand and the consequent threat of at least two sni pers wound- But the British newspaper exploit the contact. the name of the person she said retaliation for the terrorism ed in a gunfight with troops The Guardian reported that Elsewhere In the war , U.S. j instructed her to make the tele- of the IRA's Roman Catho- on the outskirts of Belfast the army had warned B52 bombers made their Ihenvi- \ phone call that set up tlie shoot- lic guerrillas, and said one was captured. Heath "serious trouble, in- est raids in two weeks in sup- ing. A bomb exploded in a Two other civilians wero volving significant numbers port of South Vietnamese oper- Miss Trimble admitted dur- public lavatory Thursday shot and wounded in Bel- of Protestant s, would almost ations, and the South Vietnam- ing the trial that she made the night in Lurgnn , killing a 19- fast , but the army said its certainly follow any sort" ese claimed their forces killed call, but insisted she had no year-old woman. men were not involved . of major concessions to tho 10O North Vietnamese troops knowledge that a policeman British troops found tho Premier Jack Lynch of Catholics. and destroyed six tanks and 11 would be shot. body of a young man In a the Irish Republic demand- Ono senior army officer trucks. ; Mls» Trimble was accused ot Catholic pnrish hall north of ed in a political speech that said today: "Our studies that thcro More than 30 B5Zs dropped Montagnard soldier , were nomadic forest dwellers making a fake emergency tele- Belfast's Ardoync district , a the British government im- lead us to believe A NAP SACK? ... A tain people phone public the could almost certainly bo 750 tons of bombs on North before the war but now many serve as call to St. Paul police stronghold of the under- mediately make pulls on his boot, while balancing his child on May 22, 1070. The policeman Irish Republican concessions to tho Catholics some very horrible acts, in- Vietnamese base camps, stor- afternoon di in a soldiers for the South Vietnamese govern- ground corri- a back sling, after a late p who rcsponscd to the call, Army. He had been shot in which it has been debating spired by Protestants, in age areas and infiltration l Highlands city of Plei- ment (AP Photofax) and dors in tho northern and cen- •'stream in the Centra . James Sackett, 27, was shot by (ho head, and the Army said for weeks. British Prime some areas of Belfast tral sections of SouUi Vietnam. !ku, South Vietnam. Montegnards, or moun- an unknown rifleman. it was not Involved In his Minister Edward Heath in tho country.'* McGovern on Nixon plan: In Wisconsin 'Total surrender to Wallaceism Mondovi students County officials told tire By MICHAEL K. ROBINSON Wallace, he wants the Ameri- dents watched Nixon'i busing flew on to Bloomington for an forget about the message on television. (AP) - Demo- can people to appearance at Illinois State URBANA, HI. real problems of this country." cratic presidential contender After the broadcast University. score high in Since arriving in Illinois what we enforcement is up to them McGovern reacting McGovern said that " At a Milwaukee George S. , Wednesday, McGovern has complete acws confer- MADISON, Wis. (AP ) - Ashland County said he would say we're not going to enforce to President Nixon's proposal have just seen is a hammered on the Florida pri- collapse of moral and political ence, McGovern said that he is County officials don't have to enforce the regulation, even it," he said. "Whether the,sher- to block court-ordered school mary victory scored by Wal- very interested" in forensics meet iff's department or law leadership by the President Of " the March enforce the ban against the use though he disagreed with it. enforce- busing, says it is a "total sur- lace. 21 Illinois primary but said it MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - of studded tires in Wisconsin if ment personnel look the other render to Wallaceism and the the United States." "What I will do," he said, Of the Wallace victory, total surrender on the was crucial that he "finish near With 13 out of a possible 17 en- they don't want to, the state Di- way, I couldn't say. That's demagoguery that it repre- "It is a recommend min- McGovern said it is not attrib- part of the President of the the top" in the April 4 Wiscon- trants receiving "A's," Mondovi vision of Motor Vehicles admin- "would be their business." sents." utable to racism but came sin primary. High School led the six schools A spokesman for the Mari- The South Dakota senator lik- , United States to Wallaceism istrator said Thursday. imum fines." about because large numbers of and the demagoguery that it McGovern is not on the ballot participating in the sub-district James Peterson said after Sawyer County EHst. Atty. nette County sheriff's office ened Nixon's stand to that of up with things forensics contest held at Me- said tihat, although the order Alabama Gov. George C. Wal- voters, "are fed represents," McGovern said. of the non-binding Illinois pref- the deadline for removal of the Howard Hanson said it was up as they are." He called it a "back-door sneak erential primary with Maine nomonie Saturday. The partici- tires at midnight Wednesday would be enforced in that coun- lace in a University of Illinois pants spoke three times, and to law enforcement authorities ty, warnings would be given at speech Thursday night as he McGovern stressed the prob- attack on the Constitution Of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie and that the agency realized the or- lems of "the little guy who has this country." former Minnesota Sen. Eugene had to receive at least two ps" in to follow up the state directive. first. campaigned for the March 21 der "created hardshi out and trouble paying his taxes" and McGovern spent most of J McCarthy. But he is cam- "A's" to be eligible for the dis- some areas of the state due to ''I just couldn't come Lincoln County Dist. Atty. Illinois presidential primary trict contest at the University election. "loopholes for rich people and Thursday at a Milwaukee paigning for slates of candi- weather conditions. ' James Rogers accused other powerful corporations." strategy session with tpo ad- dates for Democratic National of Wisconsin, Eau Claire^ March district attorneys who said they McGovern said Nixon put the He waited on the stage of the visers after campus talks Convention delegates in 17 of 25 "We have no control over Spring Grove would not enforce the ban of busing "monkey on the back of university auditorium while an Wednesday night in Alton and the states' 24 congressional dis- Ten Mondovi speakers receiv- whether the ban is enforced," "grandstanding." Congress because, like Mr. overflow crowd of 3,500 stu- Peoria. After his stop here, he tricts. : 7 ed a perfect score of three he said. "That is their pre- schools ask "A's." They are, Terry Pace, rogative." "The Department of Trans- extemporaneous s p e a k i ng; Pederson commented after poration made its decision, and bids on bus when any arrests Charles Forster, significant Dist. Attys. Ralph Bingen of if and are speech; Randi Hagen and Paul Douglas County and Alex Rain- SPRING GROVE, Minn. - made, it would be my absolute Kisselburg, original oratory; The Board of Education of In- duty to prosecute the law," he eri of Iron County announced " Humphrey avoids busing issue Virginia Unger and DeAnne they would not prosecute viola- dependent School Disrict 297 said. provoked, Moe, declamation ; Gwen Tom- tors of the ban as long as win- will receive bids for a 1972 Studs have strong ter, poetry reading; Marilyn ter driving conditions exist, school bus. Specifications are opposition because theyy make Ringger, four-minute speech available at the office of Supt. grooves in highways, which The studded tires are allowed against their use main- and Sharon Odegard, public ad- on Wisconsin roads between V. E. Lewis. those tain are hazardous for summer during campaign in Wisconsin dress. Nov. 12 and March 15 under a All bids must be accompan- Those receiving two "A's" in- ied by a certified check for 5 driving. But those supporting STEVENS POINT, Wis. (AP) him about his role during the gaining power for farmers, and Humphrey aides said the sen- MVD rule, which was amended studs claim their safety bene- clude, Roxie Komro, poetry last year from an earlier regu- percent of the bid and will be — Hubert H. Humphrey arid antiwar protests against the he called the response the best ator would return to Wisconsin opened at 8 p.m., Way 8, in fits for winter driving over- George S. McGovern strove to Johnson administration. reading; Connie Bauer, public lation allowing their use from he has received on the subject Sunday for several consecutive address; and Ana Hernandez, the office , of the superintendent. whelm any negative, effects. bypass the bus issue Thursday A vice president, the Min- in more than 200 campus Oct. 15 to April 15. as they tuned up to detour Ed- nesota senator "doesn days of hard campaigning. four-minute speech. "If put in the position where" said, 't speeches. In addition to the district mund S. Muskie in Wisconsin's call the signals, but lhe some- "The farmer has to have the McGovern forces similarly enforcement of any law in un- April 4 presidential preference times has to run contest, the above students plus reasonable and detrimental to the plays." right to bargain just like labor reported their candidate will the following speakers will com- primary. "If you want me to say I'm has," Humphrey said. the public, I would decline to work full-time on the Wisconsin pete in -the Eau Claire Memori- prosecute," Raineri said. The senatorial trio represents sorry, that's fine," he contin- In Arnott, he said farmers circuit following the Illinois al Invitational Contest on Satur- 25 per cent of the primary's ued. "But what are we going to cannot survive economically But although officials in other ^Kpurgeoji^H popularity contest with Muskie day, March 18; Debbie Giese, parts of the state said rural Democratic list of White House do tomorrow? If we don't learn without better prices for their Ann Rieck, and Lureen Zmolek, hopefuls. McGovern has said something from it, we will get goods, and rihat they need help and former Minnesota Sen, Eu- roads were still in poor shape prose reading; Pam Pace and following recent heavy snowp, Muskie's fourth-place showing into another." against the fiscal competition gene J. McCarthy7 Cindy Lehman, declamations; in (ihe Florida primary con- of agricultural conglomerates. Gene Pdkorny, McGovern's thaws and overnight freezes , no He received a mixture of Jill Langworthy and Joan other district attorney indicated verted the Wisconsin primary jeers and applause when he "The difference between cor- Midwest coordinator, insisted Ward , poetry reading; Patti to the status of a Humphrey- the results of the Florida pri- he would ignore the ban. Some said he does not support un- porate farms and the state- Pattison ahd Beth Pospishil, ex- hinted enforcement might be McGovern showdown. qualified amnesty for draft owned farms of Russia is mary won't especially sway temporaneous speaking; - McG-overn away lax. . addressing 3,000 dodgers. little," he said. "There is not 's game plan Mrs. Vernon Schroeder is the Humphrey, from the domestic issues he University of Wisconsin-Stevens Applause was hearty when he one family farm in the Soviet forensic coach. Dist. Atty. William Chase of called for greater price bar- Union/' has been stressing for months. 1 ¦ Point students after a farm Wallace scored in Florida be- ^— i ^ —^^^^^ M ^^^^^^^^^^^^ M ^^^^^ ^ ^*^** ^^^ *^*^*^* ^^^*^* ^ n mm _ |». ¦¦ ¦ ! ¦ — ¦ speech to 250 persons in nearby cause voters are generally ang- Arnott, stressed President Nix- Nixon: halt busing ry, the coordinator said. on's attitude toward economic "George McGovern is also Blair Junior agricultural topics. and mad," he said. "Unlike Wal- McGovern, addressing a Mil- lace, we have solutions." waukee news conference prior High students to a private strategy confer- $2.5 billion ence with his Wisconsin cam- G-E-T High paigners, insisted the issue of solve problem forced school busing which dominated the Florida primary forensic winners BLAIR, Wis. (Special) — has secondary value. for improvement Roberta Thorpe and Marjorie are announced Johnson, Blair Junior High "Let's dismiss it in Wisconsin (Continued from page 1) tain that they, too, will have and get on with tlhe real is- School students, were listed equal opportunity." GALESVILLE, Wis. - Gale- among students who had sub- sues," McGovern said. In his live TV-radio message, In urging legislation rather Ettrick - Trempealeau High The South Dakota senator mitted correct solutions to prob- C Nixon omitted 7 most details of than a constitutional amend- School students who received discounted the value of Ala- his proposed Equal Education lems published in the Mathe- ment to deal with the busing A's in the sub-district forensic matics Student Journal. bama Gov. George C. Wallace's Opportunities Act. question, Nixon argued that the contest Saturday at Codhrane- Florida victory on populist is- The Journal is published He said the legislation would amendment approach "has a Fountain City High School were four times each year by the Na- sues, but said he will step-up concentrate federal school-aid fatal flaw—it takes too long." as follows: tional Council his stress on what he called funds in areas of greatest of Teachers of At the same time, Nixon said Cheryl Wason, significant Mathematics. Each issue in- fundamental issues in Wiscon- educational need. speech ; Lynita Docken and Pat cludes a problem department sin and in next week's Illinois "That means," he said, "di- the question of constitutional amendment "deserves a thor- Douglas, prose reading; DebWe and students are invited to send CASH primary. recting over ?2.5 billion In the ough consideration by the Con- Lund and Carla Severson, pub- original solutions to the Journal Humphrey told his central next year mainly toward im- lic address ; Kathy Butman and Wisconsin audiences the Nixon proving the education of chil- gress on its merits." editor. Rochelle Landers, oratory; Mar- Both girls earned recognition 24 administration is falling short dren from poor families." Declaring that "busing is a ei Johnson, declamation; Derek And This Coupon for their independent solutions of meeting rural sewage, ecolo- bad means to a good end," Nix- Harvey, extemporaneous speak- gical and farm-loan needs in He further called for "an on argued it is "dangerous non- of a "missing digit" problem ing, and Kathy Twesme, four- which appeared the President's latest budget educational bill of rights for sense" to contend that opposi- in the Novem- Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ri- minute speaking, ber issue. Although correct so- program. tion to busing means one is an- These students will speak in cans, Indians and others who tiblack. lutions' were received from oth- The former vice president's start their education under lan- La Crosse March 25 at the dis- er- parts of the country, the student audience questioned guage handicaps to make cer- Although he acknowledged trict contest. girls shared recognition with that race prejudice underlies Mrs. Elaine Nelson and Mrs. only one other Wisconsin stu- some opposition to busing, he Kirn Twesme are coaches of the dent. . said "millions of concerned winning entries. Roberta is an eighth grader, parents ... oppose busing not The team tied with Arcadia and Marjorie, a seventh grad- because they are against deseg- each getting 42 points. er. regation but because they are for better education for their PRESTON FUND DRIVE children." BLAIft , Wis. (Special) _ The Television pictures Nixon said he probably would town of Preston's combined beamed from cave y not satisfy those on either ex- fund drive for Red Cross, RUNS MAR. 24 ONLY! treme of the national debate on heart, cancer and mental health MABEL, Minn. (Special) — H ff HUM J KfHB'^VaiK ¦ llll B busing but said : "I believe that will be held in the near future. According to state geologist Dr. the majority of Americans of Cards will be mailed this week Sam Tuthill, the first closed cir- al/ races want more busing and pickup night will be Mon- cuit television pictures of the ^^^^^^M^^^^^^ggP^J^^^M stopped and better education day between 7 and 9 p.m. at Goldwater Cave west of Bun- started ... ." the Preston town hall. Oak, Iowa, were beamed \x_ Friday. Main purpose of the television IT&T hurried — exploration is to make sure this location would be suitable for Will Buy An 18-Word construction of a larger shaft that would permit human en- trance. Once television explora- Hearing recessed tion has been completed , bids on building the larger shaft will

be let and work may begin lat- ¦ Want Ad For Mar.l 24 er this spring or early summer. until Wednesday The area that will be under extensive exploration is about (Continued from page 1) when Anderson actually would 17 feet wide and 16 feet long. publish the memo, nor did they Advertisement The special hearings were know they would have to pro- CARGILL SOFTENER SALT convened after acting Atty. duce documents from their files Hea ring Tests Ads Must Be O Gen. Richard rdered G. Kleindienst for the committee or any other asked the committee for an op- BIG BEAR AA. governmental agencies. Set for NO. 70-3222 __W portunity to answer Anderson's Aibel said no copies of the al- suggestions of impropriety by leged Beard memo could be Winona Justice Department officials in found in the files and that the tho ITT settlement. Free electronic hearing tests No Later Than SALTED PEANUTS ITT lobbyist, now hospitalized will be given in Winona. Kleindienst's nomin ation to in Denver with a heart ailment, Anyone who has trouble hear- NO. 74-0201 ... AAA succeed John N. Mitchell, who supervised the destruction of ing or understanding is welcome 2-LB. BAG OOC resigned March 1 to head Pres- documents from her files . to come in for a fr«e test using ident Nixon s re-election cam- the fastest electronic equipment ' At the end of the 12th day of Mar. 22, lo determine his or her particular 4 p.m. paign, was approved by the hearings Thursday, chairman loss. 'D' SIZE BATTERIES committee 13 to o but action by James O. Eastland , the full Senate D-Miss., Diagrams showing how the ear Ad Must Be has been de- recessed tho Washington ses- ft 18 Words or Less NO. O7-O207 ... m ( m layed because of the hearings. works and some of the causes tor ^ sions until next Wednesday so of hearing loss will bo available. REG. 13f EA £. J.3C In his prepared statement that a seven-member This Offer Is Made to Individuals Only and in answers to questions subcom- Visitors can see statistics of how ft , Ai- mittee can travel to Denver to thousands of people havo been bel said ITT officials did not take bedside testimony helped with a simple ear oper- Ad Will Run on Mar know at the time the docu- from ft . 24 ONLY at 24c BLACK & DECKER Finishing Sander Mrs. Beard Monday nnd Tues- ation to hear again. And how the ments were being destroyed day. latest electronic developments No Blind Ads Accepted are helping thousands more. ft 63-0205 12.99 Everyone should have a hear- "Adi received without Ihe coupon or without the money will not be published and will not ing test at least onco a year if be returned." there is any trouble at aU hear- ing clearly. Even people now BIG BEAR STORE HOURS: RENT wearing a hearing aid or those j—., who have been told nothing could — NO PHONE CALLS — A PIANO bo done for them should havo SATURDAY 8 a.m. to 5:00 p.m Sunday 1 to 5 a It n^^SSifl1 a hearing test and find out about ¦^^^^^ HHj ^^B tho latest methods of hearing cor- for your monthly rental 1 rection. payment, ^^^^^^^M^^|^H And you can apply I H^^BHB|^^H^I Tho free hearing tests will be the to tho purchase I ^^^ ^ ¦¦HH held at Park Plaza from 12 to Winona Daily & 5 p,m. Monday, price. Call us now. 1 ' | T^^^ March 20. Cull ?Plus 452-2801 and nsk for John Hnhn dollvcry charge. I between these hours for appoint- ment at another time or write Beltonc, 1533 Lohso Blvd., Ln Sunday News HARDT'S MUSIC Crosse, Wis. 4540 Service STORE Drive •— Goodviow 116 levco Plow* East FREE TESTS COURTESY OF 601 Franklin Pheno 452-2712 BELTONE HEARING St. Winona, Minn. 55987 M—— ¦—_^^______^_^____. . ._ AID River crest here predicted at 3V-2 feet over flood stage By C. GORDON HOLTE This year, Strub noted, frost • Red Wing — One foot above River will hold at about flood Daily News Staff Writer penetration has been deep and flood stage. stage. Barring unusually heavy pre- any significant precipitation be- • La Crosse—Two feet above cipitation during the next three fore the frost is out of the flood stage. THE ROOT River already has weeks spilled out of its backs in the , Winonans are advised ground would result in substan- • Eau Claire — The Chippe- today, the Mississippi River's tial runoff and could produce wa should crest \Vz feet above Hokah and Houston areas with spring crest here shouldn 't go crests above anticipated levels. flood stage. flooding caused by ice jams which have caused water to • more than 3& feet above the • Durand — The Chippewa 13-foot flood stage. IN ADDITION to the 16.5-foot will rise VA feet above flood back out and flow over farm And, stage, predicted, for . Winona, stage. 7: lands. said Joseph Strub Jr., A four-foot overflow was re- chief meteorologist at the Min- these crests are expected at • Zumbro Falls and Theil- , other communities in this area man — The Zumbro will crest ported at Hokah and observers neapolis-St. Paul Weather Sta- predicted fluctuations to con- tion, unless more than l% inches of Southeastern Minnesota and at about flood stage. Western Wisconsin: Galesville — The Black tinue in the river stages for of rain are measured in the • the next few days. next three weeks there ap- ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ y ' ' : *¦ ¦ ' - Here in Winona, the Missis- pears to be little chance of . . ' i;V ^. . " + A sippi rose about a ball a toot serious flooding elsewhere ' in the 24 hours ending at 7 along the Upper Mississippi a.m. today and was at 6.79 feet , and its tributaries. compared with Thursday's read* The crest predicted here by Breaks develop ing of 6.30 feet. Strub in his first annual spring There was only negligible river advisory would be about snow cover in the immediate 4.25 feet below the record level Winona area today on level, of 1965 and about 2Vn feet high- exposed areas. er than last year's April 11 in Hokah dike A year ago there was no snow crest. HORyAH, Minn. — Considerable flooding was reported in cover on this date but four fields and lowlands along the Root River in this area today inches of snow fell during tho ALL OF Strub's predictions after the river rose to a record crest and two breaks de- next tyo days. are based on existing conditions veloped in a dike. in the Upper Mississippi River The river this morning swelled to §2 feet, or five feet THIS DISAPPEARED when basin, normal weather during above flood stage, topping the former record of 50.8 feet temperatures rose to 40 for the next three weeks and rain- set in l965. three consecutive days. fall of i% inches or less during Ice jams downstream were blamed for the sharp rise Today the only remnants of that period . and water spread out over farmlands when a dike on the the 54 inches of snow that have ^mmm **^*v^sv94ri *™xmrrr-'.r .-/,'.-j,.,..j..-,t-.;..-.-.. ' .;.vw, ^^^^Vy ^*my W9t9^^Bt^9e9^^9UK^^^WU99^I^^Wm9^M(affjSUOK ^^^^^^^^9nffj imKK^ One significant factor in the west side of the river broke in two places. fallen this season were seen in BRIDGE REPAIR PROCEEDING . . . A piece of con- fall b drifting barge which development of spring river Highway 26 traffic was temporarily rerouted between La shaded and hill areas. y a had broken loose from a tow- Last winter produced a near- struction steel is hoisted into position by a crane as a crew boat upstream. Since that time crests is different this year Crescent and Hokah. , C&NW trains have traveled from last. record 83 inches of snow but works to rebuild the south abutment of the Chicago & North through city on 2nd Street The National Weather Service said the river is expected the trackage of the Burlington By March 16 a year ago there to fall slowly but probably will remain above the 47-foot comparative absence of frost Western Railway bridge. The abutment was knocked over last Northern Railroad. (Daily News photo) was no ground frost here flood stage for from one to three days through the winter resulted in . . ground absorption of most of the spring melt. Winona Dally News -1 « The snow melt this year has Winona, Minnesota y ••» been hastened by an extended FRIDAY, MARCH 17. 1572 period of thaw. On only six days since Feb. City, school officials Stillwater convict asks 28 have daytime temperatures remained below freezing and the mercury has moved into the 40s Woodworth is daily since March 11. discuss bus pa rking post conviction relief STRUB TODAY said that the greatest threat of flooding this Possible solutions to the prob- ing school hours made it neces- City officials suggested the appointed to Wmona County District Court the leaves and had started to request of Sheriff Fort and spring is along the Mississippi lem of school bus parking on sary for school patrol boys to possibility of parking buses on Judge Glenn L. Kelley has tak- rot from being alternately wet County Attorney W. Kenneth downstream from St. Paul to West Broadway in front of the step far into the street to be West Mark Street, near the en under advisement testimony and dry. It still contained a por- Nissen. Kopstein told the court La Crosse and frorn Prairie du seen by oncoming traffic, that and evidence presented Thurs- tion of a $10 bill as well as a two Winona Junior High School Winona State College heating hospital board that Henderson could not be Chien, Wis., to Guttenberg, there was a danger of children plant, and at Washington-Kos- day afternoon in a post convic- social security card and iden- located to testify. Iowa. Crests along this portion buildings were discussed at a darting out from between park- ciusko School. Leslie R. Woodworth, presi- tion relief hearing. tification of Homer Hender- of the river will range from meeting of School Board and ed buses and that motorists' dent and treasurer of Winona Leonard Gaulke, formerly of son." KOPSTEIN said that the jury one foot over flood stage at THEY also considered the pos- never had the benefit of the ma- City Council representatives vision was obscured by the Knitting Mills Inc., was ap- Winona, presently serving a 14- Gaulke, testif ying in his own Red Wing to 3% feet over at buses when they attempted to sibility of bus operators obtain- to 60-year sentence in Stillwater behalf , said that following his terial evidence at the time of Winona. Thursday. ing pointed Thurs- the original trial in May 1946, drive onto Broadway. off-street parking for their day to the State Prison on a 1953 rape release from Stillwater in 1950, In Wisconsin, uhe Chippewa The bus parking has stirred The school delegation pointed vehicles and said that if the op- board of direc- conviction, requested the hear- he met Henderson at a bar in and on ttie basis of the found River and the upper and lower concern among parents and city otit that partial alleviation of erators wished to appear be- tors for Com- ing regarding a previous con- La Crosse, Wis. At that time, billfold he was requesting the reaches of the Wisconsin River officials because of possible the problem had been realized fore the council to discuss the munity Memori- viction he received in 1946. Gaulke said, Henderson told court to set aside the convic- are expected to have minor problem they'd be welcome. tion and that Gaulke be dis- safety hazards posed for pedes- by parking some of the buses al Hospital. Gaulke was found guilty by Gaulke he lied wihen he testified overflows, compared with rec- between the two buildings on The city representatives also Woodworth at the trial that Gaulke had tak- charged from further court pro- ord floods in years past. trians and motorists crossing or a jury in May 1946, of second ceedings. entering Broadway in the high Washington Street and that only noted that proposed changes in will serve the degree robbery following an al- en his billfold. When Gaulke The eather Service found three buses now are parked on parking regulations might affect unexpired term leged incident on Garvin asked him why, Henderson sup- County Attorney Julius Ger- that, because of the mild weath- achool area. state. Attending Thursday's meet- Broadway. school bus parking. of the late Wil- Heights on April 21, 1946. posedly said he did so at the nes represented the er of the past week, the snow ing were Superintendent of The street in front of the two The School Board representa- liam P. Theurer melt rise already has begun Schools A. L. Nelson, school di- buildings is posted for' nd .park- tives agreed to study the mat- who died last Homer Henderson, an itin- along the Minnesota River up- Ii. Korda and ing during the hours of arrival ter and discuss the problem year, inv apr erant factory worker, then liv- stream from Mankato, along rectors Dr. L. Woodworth Daniel Sadowski and Paul W. and dismissal of children. , with the operators. pointment to the ing in Winona, said he was as- Southeastern Minnesota streams and along the Black and Kicks- Sanders, the school district busi- 12-member board was made at saulted and robbed oh Garvin SEAAAPO pkay poo rivers in Wisconsin. ness manager, and Mayor Nor- the regular meeting for Marchj Heights and that Gaulke took part in the incident. Most high water marks are man Indall, City Manager Car-: according to E. W. Hagberg, Councilmen Earl The billfold that supposedly expected to be recorded during roll J. Fry, Durand hospital hospital administrator. the second or third week in Laufenburger and Howard Hove- was stolen from Henderson was is sought for Sgt. Dale A resident of Winona since discovered in August 1946, with April. land and police traffic THE Weather Service warned Schafer. 1946, Woodworth moved here the money still in it, but a new from Cleveland to join the local trial never was scheduled. that temperatures in uhe 70s remodel ing proposed during the - 'last 7-week' of this THE CUT officials pointed firm as president - general man- Although Gaulke had served . out that parking of buses in DURAND County month, ice jams or more* than , Wis. —• Preliminary On the first floor, the kitchen ager. He is a member of St. his time in prison for the rob- Fillmore front of the two buildings dur- sketches of remodeling propos- would be enlarged and re- bery conviction, he was given a 1% inches of rain could produce Paul's Episcopal Church and the PRESTON, Minn. — Substan- county levy for the purpose. crests higher than those now ed for Chippewa Valley Area equipped. A chapel would be in "double" sentence on the rape Several County com- Hospital were presented at a quarters near the nursing home Winona Country Club and serv- tial support for atn incipient Fillmore forecast. conviction in 1953. Under state Southeast Minnesota Areawide munities are faced wtih Pollu- K)nference Monday. The remod- dining hall, the office of the ad- ed two terms on the Winona law at that time, the court was In addition to last year's eling is necessary, Planning Organ ization tion Control Agency orders to 14.34-foot reading, crests over state offi- ministrator would be moved, X- Board of Education in the early able to double the sentence due disposal Three injured cials say, to qualify the medical ray facilities would be merged 1960s. He also is on the board (SEMAPO) was indicated here upgrade their sewage flood stage here Ln recent years to two convictions involving vio- Thursday night by more than systems, Garness noted. The center for continued health care and the laboratory enlarged, of directors for Merchants Na- lence. have been recorded in 1969 when benefits. Several rooms on the first floor tional Bank here. 80 representatives of Fillmore need for federal and state fund the river went to 19.44 feet; would be made into living quar- If the 1946 conviction is set townships and municipalities. grants to lighten local tax lev- 1965, 20.75 feet — the record If requirements are not met Woodworth and his wife have aside accident ters for the elderly. two sons and one daughter ana' , then Gaulke would be Voting by a show of hands, the ies for such improvements has - 1952, 17.93 feet, and 1951, in within several months, the nurs- eligible for parole in 1% years; fostered interest in the plan- ing home could lose federal The Minneapolis architects live at 402 W. Wa basha St. assembly demonstrated nearly 17.35 feet. if not, he will remain in Still- unanimous approval at an in- ning review body, he said, y Precipitation here this month Medicaid payments and surgery feel because working spaces are water for 28 years. ¦ could be halted. separated, it would be possible formational meeting at the has been runnniilg well above near Houston Maguolo fc Quick, Minneapolis, to complete remodeling without Whitehall Lions GEORGE L. Fort, sheriff of county courthouse here. Pre- normal with more moisture re- of the Sunglasses are Three persons were injured in Minn., architects who made the an interruption of services. Winona County in 1946, was sent to explain details corded now than normally can a two-car accident at 7:05 p.m. remodeling sketches, suggest Representatives of the archi- plan country subpoenaed by assistant state SEMAPO proposal was Winona taken from sto re be expected for an entire month the hospital and nursing home tectural firm suggested Monday Mayor Norman E. Indall , who of March. Thursday two miles north of public defender , Emanuel Z. The Piccadilly, 152 Main St., Houston, Minn., on Highway 76. be divided horizontally in the the city should anticipate an music festiva l Kopstein. Since Fort could not is chairman of a SEMAPO The normal precipitation for According to the Minnesota building, with the entire first expense of about $200,003. Du- recall the incident or any de- steering committee . reported that a pair of sunglass- March is 1.66 inches while rain Highway Patrol, Richard J. floor to be a nursing home, and rand Mayor Clarence Noll said WHITEHALL, Wis. - The tails of the case, Kopstein re- The five-county organization , es was taken from the store at and melted snow so far this Doboer, 21 , Houston Rt. 1, was the entire second floor a hos- issuance of city bonds would be Whitehall Lions Club is sponsor- quested that statements in the whose development is being 2:50 p.m. Thursday. One of the month measure 2.06 inches. The spell of mild weather is southbound on Highway 76 when pital. the only possible means of fi- ing a country music fest to be Aug. 26 issue of the Winona Re- pushed by the steering commitr clerks reported two men about he hit a deer in the road. The An original chapel on the sec- nancing hospital changes. There held at Sunset Memorial School publican-Herald (now Winona tee, would act as a regional expected to continue into uhe floor used recently to house will be a special City Council auditorium, April 8, with shows planning review agency. Its 21 years of age, took a pair of weekend. impact of the collision caused ond , Daily News) be used as evi- sunglasses from a display Doboer to lose control of his children, would be remodeled meeting called soon to consider at 7 and 9:30 p.m. dence. function in this area would be Thursday afternoon's high into a sterilizing area for the an agreement with Maguolo & Featured will be Jim Ed meeting the requirement of fed- counter. The glasses are val- temperature was 42 and this car and strike a northbound Quick. direct Judge Kelley agreed to ac- ued at $5. car on Highway 76 driven entire facility. The present hos- Brown and the Gems, eral agencies for an area-or- morning's low was 27. by from the Grand Ole Opry, Nash- cept the following portion of the Mrs. James E. Turner, Port- Lowell E. Lansten, 38 Houston pital chapel would be made into The hospital was erected 20 iented review of each public IT WAS 42 at noon today, a , ville, Tenn., along with Jamey newspaper article as evidence: appli- land, Oregon, told police that Rt. 1. an operating room, with facili- years ago, and was operated improvement fund grant low between 22 and 32 is pre- medical re- under the direction of Sisters Ryan, Nashville. Norm Herman, "Fort said today that Homer within its her billfold was either lost or Mrs. Doboer 21, a passenger ties for doctors and cation originating dicted for tonight and a high , cords. Additional toilets and from the Order of St. Benedict, the singing disc jockey, and his had apparently been confused stolen about noon Thursday between 40 and 40 for Satur- In the Doboer car, was taken as to where boundaries. baths would be installed on the Eau Claire, Wis., until last year. country ambassadors will be the assault had while she was shopping in Wi- day. with Doboer and Landsten by second floor , a new area for With the exception of the con- featured before the main show. taken place, as the billfold was IN ADDITION, Mayor Indall noa. She valued the billfold and Houston Village Ambulance to found about 100 feet from the Fillmore group, contents at $50. The normal temperature coronary and intensive care pa- struction of a nursing home ad- Proceeds will be used for com- told the ¦ range for this date is from 42 Winona Community Memorial years ago munity betterment. Tickets are place pointed out by Homer at could provide certain tients would be created, and the dition several , no SEMAPO to 24. Hospital. Landsten remains hos- present maternity area enlarged major construction or remodel- available from members of the the time. services to smaller communi- COLD-HEARTED THIEF pitalized with a fractured ankle modernized. ing has been done. club. contract or fee basis Skies which were mostly sun- and "Tlie sheriff declared there is ties — on SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - ny this morning were expected and Mrs. Doboer remains with little doubt that the billford he — that they can't supply for Doboer was These could in- City police were looking for an to become partly cloudy later lacerations while found is the one lost during the themselves. strong—bur- treated and released. lanning consultation, ambitious—and in the day and occasional cloud- assault, The billfold, he said, clude p glar tho one who removed the Both the 1969 Doboer sedan had development and enforce- , iness was in prospect through formed an indentation in code furnace from Robert C. Berry's and the 3970 Landsten station financial administra- Saturday. ment and home. The forecast mentioned a wagon are listed as total losses. WSC-vo-tech teacher tion aids. some rain or Also under investigation is an The theft followed Indiana's slight chance of William Kunstler Estimates are that each coldest winter weather since snow tonight and possibly a lit- accident that occurred at 7:55 , member county would need to 1893. tle rain on Saturday. a.m. today in Dakota , Minn., leftist advocate, make n financial contribution on Highway 61-14. program is explained of from 10 to 20 cents per capi- According to the Highway Pa- to speak at WSC ta, Mayor Indall said. The trol, a tractor-semitrailer driven A new program permitting tomotlves, tool and die, draft- satisfactory college credits, Dr. amount would vary according by John H. Hill, Mankato, the transfers of credits from ing, construction, electronics Capron explained. After the stu- William Kunstler, advocate to the services SEMAPO would CITY OF WINONA area vocational - technical and air craft maintenance all dent has completed his 192 Minn., was southbound on High- , and attorney for civil rights nnd be expected to furnish, he ad- left lane schools to Winona State College two-year technically oriented hours of study at the college way 61-14 in tlie fnr New Left causes ded. preparing to merge onto the in- was discussed at the banquet programs at any Minnesota (including the 72 hour bloc of , will speak at to Ordell Garness, 8:15 According side lane when it collided with hosted by the college Thursday area technical school. trust credits) he will bo grant- p.m. March 24, at Somsen chairman of the Fill- Dog Licenses Due Now Auditorium Canton, a car pulling a camping trailer for local program directors of Students taking one of the ed a bachelor of science degree at Winona State more County Board, the vocational edu- College. driven by Marcel F. Carpenter, area center schools and direc- approved programs in a two- with a major in SEMAPO proposal will be tak- The* 1972 dog licetmi ara available now at tha off lea Carpenter was tors of vocational - technical year course at the technlcnl cation . H1 s appear- the board as soon as Rochester , Minn. ance i en up by of the City Treasurer, Room 2, Basement of City Bldg. The on tho in- schools in Minnesota attending school, can take one course in The certification for teaching 8 being ascertain the wishes of also southbound and sponsored it can City Ordinance provides that every owner of a dog mutt a two-day session being held general education at tho col- will be for the trade area of b y townships nnd villages, Ho said side lane. t h e college purchase a license for It, failure to do so Is a violation of Damage to tho right front of at Winona Area Technical lege, Dr. Capron said. When the student only. 's tho board hns weighed pros tho Stato Concerts subjects the owner to arrest and was set at $125 School. tho student completes the two- Certification by and and eons of various regionaliza- the City Ordinance and the tractor Department of Education re- Lectures Com- while damage to the left rear This is a program tliat has year course at the technlcnl tion plans, including the state- penalty as for a misdemeanor. State school transfer to Wi- quires tho student have actual mittee. and left side of the camping been set up by Winon a , he may proscribed Region 10 plan College designed to train teach- nona State College full-time work experience in his trade Dr. Augusta The 1971 llccnm expire March 28th, 1972 and the now trailer is sot at $230. No injuries which hns yet to be implcmont- ers for vocational schools nnd where he will complete his gen- area, Dr. Capron advised. This Nelson, com- license must be purchased by April 1, 197Z (fl penalty were reported. ed. secondary vocational centers, eral education work and a .16 includes 1,500 hours to qualify mittee chair- ' added after April lit). Dr. Hugh Copron told those at- quarter hour bloc in trade for tho secondary center pro- man , said that GARNESS estimated thnt the WINONA CO. NFO tending. Dr. Capron heads the teaching skills. This will in- grams and 4,500 hours for the nrlmknlnn mill Fillmore County contribution to Rabies vncclnallon must be presented for new registra- LEWISTON, Minn. — Tlie college industrial education de- clude 16 hours of supervised area vocational technical pro- be limited to Kunstler SEMAPO, if authorized , would tions before license will be Issued. regular monthly meeting of the partment which is handling the student teaching. grams. students nnd employes of Wino- total about $4 ,400. Ho sold he Winona County National Farm- program. The credits from the voca- Dr. R. A. DuFresne, Winona nn Stato nnd tickets may be ob- would favor n per capita , con- License Fees are: Mole Dog, $2.00; Spayed Female, ers Organization will be Mon- It docs not apply to every tional school are held in trust State College president, greet- tained at the Winona State tribution from each township $2.00; Female, $3.00. day at 0:30 p.m. nt tho Lcw- area In tho vocational school, until the full-time student has ed tho 130 persons attending Union desk upon presentation of and village electing to partici- iatoa Village Hall. he advised. It will apply to au- completed 60 quarter hours of tho banquet. an identification card. pate rather than an overall 1 ' wwwa g ^ —— i ^S&^SS|^^KSS>5- "..«W» wtmlinkingksfr.. * Television highlights 'Television movies ISSSt^asSssy^r^^ *_ th» •*«*#•(w«i» j5A««Aovt «*...• Tonight, weekend TV tSS ^^^F^l9 ^^^ ..morf»riifmoiw»tit/kfins SSSXfSmB A&~* _ cutting tht wattr... Today * v ' *++ fC <* - * 1 * ** * ...THOR HEYERDAHl (x 1 Today- : *VmP^r _ ^ Ap^> , 1:00 and WISCONSIN TOURNAMENT \ Tonight "GO FOR BROKE," Van Johnson. Adventures during 7:00, Chs. 13-19. World War II of a young Navy lieutenant. (1951). 3:30, Ch. 4. ^ NEWS, 5:00, Cable TV-3. LOCAL SiOO EIIMIIVI Writing » 0»y Paradt 4 Rovlow j "THE ," Jeanne Craft). A look at manners and mor- COMMUNITY RELIGIOUS NEWS, 5:15, Cable TV-3. Ntw j 3'4-J-S'lO-IM* O'Hara, U.S. Singles 4.1 (1949). Wm SW\ Truth er Com*- Treaiury 11 Love, American tals of 1890 London. 3:30, Ch. 6. CITy HALL, 5:30, Cable TV-3. Buneh . quencoj * Brady . *•» Style «.» "INTIMATE LIGHTING," adult character study of an IOWA BOYS' BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT. 6:30, Ch. 3. ' To Tell the Truth » Virginian tl 9:J« Don Rlcfclet 4* High school Night out 3 urban couple spending a weekend with provincial friends. TIME OF MAN. Anthropologists present a study of man Street J WiotMEXPEDITIONS ^s * 1:10 Wall DasKelball Dr. Simon Locke 10 (1965). 7:30, Ch. 2. trace the evolution of life lows. Boys ¦ B RU and his environment and films ' Tournament 13-lf. Mows n "AROUND THE WORLD UNDER THE SEA," Lloyd H S , Chs. 5-10 Baikotball 7:30 Movlo 2 »: 45 David Llttlelhon . and examine extinct species. 6:30 . Tournament » Double Play 5 10:00 Newi 3-4-1-t-s-i-io Bridges. An underwater scientific team investigates earth- PARADE-highlights 7:00, Ch, 4. Juvenile Jury « ST. PATRICK'S DAY . Parlridge Dragnet u quakes and brings excellent filming of the Bahamas and the Cable TV-3. Time ol Man 3-10 Family i-» Newi ' ij. *» "BREATHING EASY." 7:25, Oreon Acres t-19 Regional Basket- 10:30 Movie 3.3 Great Barrier Reef of Australia. (1966). 10:30, Chs. 3-8. ' "Ghost • ¦ Moore s DOUBLE PLAYS. Pilots for a planned series: ' . Mary Tyler boll Tournament 10. J. Cirscn S-10-11 "DETECTIVE STORY,'' Kirk Douglas. A tough New York Story" and "Movin" On," mystery-drama and adventure. Truth or conse- 8:00¦¦ Living End 3-4-B Dick Cavort *.\* ' ¦ ¦ quencei t Room .1 t-9 Movlo MI cop is the star. (1951)710:30, Ch. 9. JM '5.7 . .. . .7. . Stand Up A Cheer II j :30 Oh, NuriOl 4-B 10:50 Movie 4 *^SI ^¦ ¦ - 7:30, Ch. • , "THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE," Enrol "^K«L. v v&%V_-* WiWt^^a_\v QBw£?jf** REGIONAL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT—Region 1 Ij00 Your World Odd Couple t-9 13:00 Movie j-lj ^ ¦ ¦ BBP ^^ ~ ^^^^ This Week » Perry Mason 11 Oalloplng Flynn, Two Army officers love the same Woman. (1&J6). ' Jltmfr^* ^^SSBBB ' * V KtBSzSr^^, __4_ T _ ^__^^ action; 7:30, Ch. 10. St. Patrick's »:0O World Press Gourmet \t 10:307Ch. 11. LIVING END. Comedy pilot featuring pro football. 8:0O, "DONOVAN'S REEF," John Wayne. Comedy and carous- ^^Sf^^xWi Chs. 4-8. ' ing in the South Seas. (1963). 10:50, Ch. 4. ^^^g^H^k "-* OH, NURSE! Comedy pilot about student nurses and H; * Saturd ay ' ^ j "THE HOUSE OF FEAR," BasU Rathbone. Typical Sher- J their frustrations. 8:30, Chs. 4-8. lock Holmes mystery. (1945). 12:00, Cb. 5. A work hard to 2 Western Lassie 4 ^2s t ^& ' SINGLES. Ruth Buzzi and Michele Lee morningMnrninn -*° * Yoti must see RA! An astounding Mag|c C|rcu| 8 Moulo FiC,ory i "JIGSAW," Bradford Dillman. A tale of science, am- rehabilitate a careless burfilar. 9:00. Chs. 4-8. 7:00 Cartoons Muslx Box ll Truth or Conse- nesia true-IHe adventure for the whole family! 3-4-5-M0-13 1:30 Pro Bowlert quenc«l f and murder. (1968). 32:00, Cb. 13. Saturday 11- - . 8:30 Story Time . Tour t-9 Sanford * Son 10 ENDS SATURDAY CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL. "Blind Bird", set in »:00 Bewitched 1- . 19 . Lloyd Bridges' 7:00 All In TIT* Saturday Moscow, tells of a child's love for his blind pelican. 12:00, Sew Smart . 11' . ' Water World It Family . <•» 7 »:30 Lldsvllle 4-M9 3:00 Golf Clasic 3-4-8 Emergency! 5-10 "THE BLAZING , Chs. 3-8. . Tow n & Country 11 Flshin' Hole " 11 Bewitched «¦?-)? FOREST" John Payne. A woman de- NCAA BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT. East regional 10:00 Curiosity Shop'6-9-19 3:30 Outdoors 11 Pro Hockey tl cides to cut. timber on her land so that a relative can have VHSB^45M172 Talk Ir. '» 4:00 More For Your Hogan/* Heroes 13 enough money for city championship, 1:00, Chs. 5-10; Mideast regional, 3:00, Chs. 10:30 Madaglno 11 Money 3 7:30 WIAA Basketball living. (1952). 4:00, Ch. 11. FRIDAY 7:00-9:00 5*10; 3:00, Ch. 13. 11:00 Community Managers Mall 4 Tournament 13-19 "SUDDENLY SINGLE"-, Hal Holbrook. A young man SATURDAY 1:00-3:O0-5:00.7:0O-9:OO Outreach 11 Auto Race 6-9-19 Mary Tyler Moore 4 cautiously searches for new companionship following his di- CHAMPIONSHIP AUTO RACING. At the Carolina 500 11:30 You Are There 3-4-8 . perspective 8 Movie it ADMISSION $1.75 NO PASSES Ch 9. News 11 Movio It Flying Nun 8 vorce. 7:30, Chs. 6-9. Stock-Car Race Richard Petty defends his title. 10:00, . UNDER 12 750 OR GOLDEN AGE HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT—Wiscon- Afternoon NCAA Basketball 13 j.-oo DJck Van "THE AMERICANIZATION OF EMILY", James* Garner. 12:00 Children s Film . 4:3° F °n .Env,r"V D ka 8 telecast from Madison. 1;00 Chs. - ' Tnin 3 - . - " In this satire on wartime heroics sin. Consolation round , Festival 7 3-8 ™L. „ , Wovle 5-10 an Army officer enjoys a 4- ' n 5 13-10 ; championship game, 7:30, Chs. 13-19. News ° "°" l7."; : . 8:30 Arnie 4-8 carefree life—until the axe falls. (1964), 8:00, Chs. 5*10. Sports Action 3 ¦ ¦ U S.A.—USSR TRACK MEET. Americans and Russians social Securltv 8 »¦<» Mission "ALL HANDS ON DECK", Pat Boone. Comedy aboard . " ¦ ¦" ¦ A n Impossible t-f A. 00^_^ MBSsBssi^BSSSSSSSSSn^BCS^^BlBS^^^SW^S 3-4, BandstandBlndi.nd 616-9 A-.45 mrVJor ^Z ship. (1961). 9:00 Cb. 6. compete in men's and women's indoor events. 1:30, Chs. MOIIGV 8 Movie 6 , Roller Game of Sixth Sense 9-19 MAGIC CIRCUS. An hour of magic with Mark Wilson ¦ ¦ : ¦ MIHSL 3 "DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS", Richard Widmark. the Week '« " rl'-Ji "' .110 Emergency9 ! ' n Fred 8. Friends 11 Adventures of a cabin boy aboard a whaling shi (1949). and bis feats of illusion. 2:00, Ch. 8. tfuslc Coro^se" 8 ?•» New, u p. PRO BOWLERS TOUR. Five finalists roll in the Miller 10:00, Ch. 9. High life Open from Wauwatosa, Wis. 2:30, Chs. 6:9. "SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER", Elizabeth Taylor. Vio- MuidJiTk i^HM. CBS GOLF CLASSIC. Irwin-Douglass vs; Littler-Barber ,0:30 S- 3 lence and horror surround the death of a fashionable poet. CffnTf7fTT% STARTS IBifl3sfflMBJ In the quarter-final rhatcb. 3:00, Chs. 3-4-8. : :MK*u5r : ^ 7 t (1959). 1:30, Ch. 8 I k SUNDAY tWHMSKMm- the Jimmy Bryan Phoenix 1-- .00 NFL Action -4 'Bz,ol 'Sn Movie ' . 8-10-11 . IM&Jiffi AUTO RACE. Live action at NCAA Basketball R0"'"mh ' "MISSISSIPPI", Bing Crosby. A young Philadelphia!! re- Tne K,ver ,, It Takes" A Thief. 13 150. 4:00, Chs. 6-9-19. Tournament 5-10^ . -. °" ' 10:45 Movie 4 ' fuses to fight a duel—and is called a coward. (1935). 10:30, Cartoons 6 IOWA BOYS' BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT, Class A eveningPu-oninn 11:00 Hee Haw 3 Ch. 10. Against All Odds 8 J. Carson 5 and Class AA finals telecast from Des Moines. 7:00, Ch. 3. Auto Racing 1 6-M News 3-4-3 It's Your LIU 19 "SVz" , Marcello Mastroianni. Strange portrait of a movie PRO HOCKEY. Minnesota North Stars vs. Montreal Mister Ed .11 Lawrence Welle t-t 11:05 Movlo 19 director and Ms fantasies (1963). 10:30, WIAA Basketball Hollywood 11:30 David Frost t . Ch. il- Canadiens. 7:00. Ch. 11. Tournament 13-19 Showcase 10 American "ISLAND IN THE SUN", James Mason. A blend of poli- ' Sunday 7 1:30 USA-USSR Hoe Haw 13 Adventure u tics and romance (1957). Track Meet 3-4 Dairyland in the Caribbean. 10:50, Ch 4. - Jubilee 19 11:3S News )0 "ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN", .„ 7 : In 77^v city Make A Wish 6 «:30 lowa Boy's 11:50 Saint 10 Jose Ferrer. Comedy and THIS YEAR IN JERUSALEM. A filmed iook at a Patty Duko 11 Baikotball Tour. 3 12:00 Movie 13 romance involving a shy immigrant and a New"York stenog- JH In transition focusing on changes since the 1967 Six-Day War. THE 1 rapher. (1952). 11:05, Ch. 197 ^j ^^ ai ^ '¦•••fcZT' '*^. *'^t' V % 9:00, Ch. 8; 10:30, Ch.3. "BLOOD AND SAND", Clergy-laity cooperation " Tyrone Power. Adventures of a SOME KIND OF PRESENCE. \\: ' ' Sunday - - * j bullfighter—and his women. (1941). 12:00, Cb is seen in this report on church involvement in the com- . 13. munity. Mornina Focu$ N««s » Sunday Thl5 The ' Roll| 0n "CAPTAIN FROM NIT BASKETBALL. First-round action in the 35th Na- 1-0000 RertalonglO - fill " L"» " n' CASTILE", Jean Peters. An Army •• O^ RVr., 'Vll n CrUSad Th R,V r fugitive joins the Cortez expedition to Mexico. (1947). tional lnvitation Tournament. 12:00, Chs. 3-4. n-45"¦" SsNew5 ° '\4 ° ° " ¦ 6:00¦ , Gospel Hour 9 ¦=.,««;«#. Ch . 7 . . ' :. . 7NBA BASKETBALL. Seattle Supersomcs vs. Philadelphia Biiiy James Afternoon evening n. l,,r '-2. "EASY COME, EASY GO", Elvis Presley. A Navy frog- 76ers. 1:00. Chs. 6-9-19. 1 ,.. 8"' V- 12:00 NIT «:00 Zoom Basketball 3-4 . Doris Day 3 man hunts for Bruins ''" SousXiif' i HarborutX^ 6-9A buried treasure—with competition . (1967). 6:30, PRO HOCKEY. Minnesota North Stars vs. Boston . l' News ¦ 5 News <-5 I Believe In Woitern 6 Chs. 3-4-8. 2:00 Chs 3-4-8. • ¦- . Mo F y Miracles ti Money t-9 High Quiz Bowl .» .-• ^'DAY OF THE EVIL GUN", TENNIS TOURNAMENT. The $10,000 best-of-three-set Revival Fires 13-19 Glenn Ford. An ex-gunfight- Dick' Lawrerice Welk 9 er searches for his family who finals , with Rod Laver, Ken Rosewall, Tom Okker and Clif 1:00 Oral Roberts J Rodger* 8-10-13-19 Wild Kingdom ¦ ¦ 1013 ¦ have been kidnaped by Indians. Flm ¦ ' ¦ (1968). 8:00, Drysdale. 2:30, Chs. 5-10-13. FeS 4 ¦*«*"!!? I . * ,- - • ¦"• Chs. 6-9-19. y "THE SUNSHINE PATRIOT", RACING. Profile of Richard Fam, M ' <--30 f«nch Cher ¦ .J Cliff Robertson. Suspense- CHAMPIONSHIP AUTO " ThisThii Yearv.«T? In 'y " « ¦ . Organ Notes 9 Movlo s+8. drama with Cliff in a dual role: espionage agent and busi- Petty, stock-car racing's only million dollar winner. 4:00, World of - . , ri™?!™ 9, »=M Meet «„» Pres, 5 nessman visiting Chs. 6-19. Cartoons 4-9-194 Issues /Answer* «-9 Dsney 5-1013 behind the Iron Curtain. (1968). 10:30¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦Ch¦ . Re> Humbard n-13 ' 10.7, -'7' . • , ¦ . GOLF TOURNAMENT. Pros shoot for a $25,000 first Echoes From Untamed World ¦ 19 .. 7 9:10 Look Up 8. Live 2-8 calvary a T--00 Firing Line : ' 3 ' "THE SPANISH MATINEE SATURDAY-SUNDAY prize in the Greater Jacksonville Open from Jacksonville, Fla. Religion Town challenge of FBI : 6-9-19 GARDENER", Dirk Bogarde A story of H" 1 5 Truth 10 7:30 Jimmy strange relationships between a young lad 4:30, Chs. 5-10. ^ ' ¦ ¦ and the gardener. M5--AU SEATS S5(* Davey A Gollalh 10 i i0t F T rooo - '¦ 5 Stewart MO.13 (1957). 10:30, Ch. 11. WORLD OF DISNEY. Story of adventure about a jungle »:45 For Better Or NBA 8:00 Theatre J ¦ ors "THE STOOGE" orphan and a treasure thief. 6:30, Chs. 5-10-13. ,» ' ». - ,u 11 ¦ Basketball 6-9-19 Bonanza 5-10-13 , Dean Martin-Jerry Lewis comedy. 10:00 Camera* * Three 1-8 , . young Artists 8 Movie . 4-9-19 (1952)710:80, Ch. 19 FIRING LINE. "Genocide" 7 probes reported atrocities Laurel *. Hardy 4 Echoes From Success Story 11 . in Bangladesh, William F. Buckley Jr. hosts the discussion. some Kind calvary 10 8:30 Cade's County 3-4-8 "SIX OF A KIND", Charlie Buggies. While traveling a of Presence. f Movlo 11 Fishing 11 young 7:00. Cb. 2. Re» Humbard ? couple unknowingly carry stolen money in their lug- Hour ol Hope 13 9:00 Bold Ones 5-10-13 gage. (1934). MASTERPIECE THEATRE. Final chapter of "Eliza- Cartoons 9-19 i;3o Mayberry 5 Jim Klobuchar 11 10:35, Ch. 137 ' Church Sarvlce 11 Comment '72 10 9:30 Washington Week "TERROR beth R" as the queen approaches death and is involved in an 9$ Fal,h ON A TRAIN", Glenn Ford. An engineer tries ,» ,» 5u- «?f ¦ " Roller Game el In Review I to prevent absurd romance. 8:00, Ch. 2. 10:30 This Year the Week 13 All In The sabotage of a munitions train. (1953). 10:50, Cb. 4. In Jerusalem 3 2:00 Pro Hockey ^4•8 Family 1 THE BOLD ONES "Broken Melody" features folk-singer B B on . F. i *!!• ,Hft! -,! Wild Kingdom S This Is Your Life 4 •^¦BsxsssssnBt ^^^^^^^ BnHHL ^HHssssssssm Jennifer in her acting debut in the story ot & deaf recording Make A Wish J-19 Meet the Press 10 Dragnet 8 CIRCUS TRIP star and a battered child ¦'— and how they help each other. Mormon Choir 10 2:30 World Champion- News 11 Minnesota ship Tennis 5-10-13 10:00 News 3-4-5-8-10-13 CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) »:0O, Chs. 5-10-13. Dental Ass'it. II Movio ll : Sixth Sense < TASTE TEMPTING Blackwood 3:30 American News 9-19 — A total of 100 children from m tn , , X} CBr . : ,» „ B^0,lle '' Al; Sportsman 6-9-19 Dragnet . 11 the Caledonia FOOD FOR LESS BRM fl! |p^^ fl | ^_ * * :.. s ' area attended tbe ! K n«T^ , -rh .,. ,'L 7 4:<» Auto Racing 6-19 10:30 David Frost 5 11:00 This It The Life 3-8 Movie 9 Go-pel TV Inc. 8 Shrine Circus in the St. Paul Face the Nation 4 Wostern 11 "lek Cavett 9 Civic Center on March II. Their Kerry Woll 5 4.30 Animal World 3-4-8 Movlo 10-11 Cumnt 'ssues « tickets were purchased *^ ^^ ^^ Golf Tourney 5-10 Inspiration 13 by 14 ^SHSs^ssssssssssssV^ W^Ln^ SssssW '^'a Bkvft ^>W ^ ^ LIVE MUSIC Roller Derby 9 . :- . . .poeal - Plonf , 6 Movie 79 local residents. j M 10:35 •S, u»ir ,? Echoes From Golddlgger* 8 T SATURDAY Town Halt ll calvary 13 Movie 13 Accompanying them on the J Y SATURDAY¦ , MAR. 18 j Oldtime Gospel Outdoors 19 10:45 Hawaii Five-0 J bus trip were Shriners James ¦ ¦ ; 5:00 w 10:50 Movio 4 W SPECIALS V ¦ ¦ DI™„ W. lo Minutes 3-4-8 King and Philip Carlson and . ' .•»/ 'i , Untamed World 6 li:0O David Frost t ¦ 11:30.. .. 7.Face tho! Nation.. . 3. Hee Haw 11 11:05 Big Valley 8 the Mmes. Mary Lou Amund- Aviation 4 Snowmobile '72 13 11:40 Hllchcock . 13 m BAR-B-Q 1 High School Bowl 5 son, Merlin Christensen and ^Sfe JEHE AND THE COUNTRY MACHINE Roller Derby 19 12:00 Henry Wolf 5 s^As > *ifft\ir j Insight 8 5:30 Lassie t News t-9 Arnold Fruecihte. tfy wkif^itMM. A iiura it at th6 | B ROAST M ' HIAWATHA WW ' The day Wil son apologized - Valley inn M NEW YORK - One les- Barbara and after a half son I've learned from Show WALK hour I asked where she 4 Miles North of Cochrane Business columning that ap- m^_W Earl Wilson was. "Still taking a show- SUNDAY or 4 Miles South of Alma *^ . plies in the normal world er," he said . . . "Somd JT \ ^^^ A on Highway 35 ^B^BW of human behavior is that shower," I mumbled. t SPECIALS I it's often good business, When I became a col- *A^AAAemAAAAAAJhAB ALL YOU <¦»•> nr Children s SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' TA During World War II , I ground on this tour not SAT., MARCH 18 WA\ CAN EAT 4>£.*33 Portions $1.75 \M Slnols Copy ISc Dally 30c Sunday wanting to get any publi- Delivered by Carrier—Per Week 60 r.cnts Interviewed handsome mov- BUTH'S — at — — Music by — 16 Weeks SIS.30 5J weeks , S30 60 city that would detract Wl • Wot). & Sat. Special — Prlmo Ribs of k« ie star Robert Taylor , then estauranf DUANE PICHELMAN Rpg. Ex. By mall strictly In advance- paper ttop- in U.S. Navy Air Force from the picture. It was my fa Bocf, Cut $3.50; Lo. $5,25. R ped on expiration date: uni- J form , on tour for n Navy patrotic duty not to stfe 126 East Third St. L B BAR — nt — film "The Fi 1 you!" Local Area — Roles below apply only , ghting Lady. ' 315 Steuben St. PARK PLAZA wllhln a 50-mllo radius ?• the city ot Barbara Stanwyck I saw my error. What fc] H Winonan end armed forces personnel , ihen Convenientl y Located RED'S D0GPATGH his wife and could I do? Write a para- Troy, with military addrosaes within the con- n leading Hol- in Downtown Winona The Thill Trio Minn. tinental United States or overseas with lywood glamour girl , was graph, maybe two para- APO or FPO addresses graphs? I year StS.OO *» monthi ,. S507S with him in his hotel. As a (I months S15.00 3 month! . . 5 9.00 Elsewhere — girl-watcher , I wns more tn United Statea and Canada interested in her . Taylor ex- JCPenney Coffee House announces I year HO.OO *> months S30.SO plained to me LIVE MUSIC 6 months SJ0.7S 3 Months .. su.oo , "U-irbnra 's taking a shower, She 'll bo Bud and ths Weitem CLUB Sunday Newt only I year si 5.00 out, " Ramblers ^P LEGION ^ I I p/ NO. 9 '^te. Slngta Dally Copies moiled n cents oncn ALL YOU CAN EAT Single Sunday Copies mailed 75 each "Good!" I nskrd DOII PEHCHEV £T ST. PAT'S DANCE Subscriptions lor less than one monthi him V' otdAUotekutim SAT., MARCH 18 | | DANCE ^j l 11.00 per week. Other rates on request questions, but I panted for T H SMORGASBORD - BUFFET ¦ ¦ ^'? J.. § SAT., MARCH 18 H Send ctinnno ol address, notices, undeliv- CONCORDIA B Davon Klral—1-Man ered copies, subscription orders and other Ewor Brew Available S ¦ Stir U HALL —LA CROSSE A Bnnd-lrlsh I Music by B mall Items to Winona Dally News. P.O. p Compliments Hat* Box 70, Winona, Minn. 559B7 . With SAT., MARCH 25 % & Boutonnlores ¦ T ->«> M«Hotonei" JM Our Fine Second class postage paid at Winona, Saturday; 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Aik for New Album THE FRONTIER Both Dances Main Ballroom — 9 to 1 Minn. Across from Wast End ^^^ ^^p LUCKY POLKA FAVORITES Fire Station Sundays: 12 Noon to 4 p.m. By DON PBACHEY ot^J^s Downtown NODINE, MINN.

ffiKS^ Holp yourself to choice of 3 main dishes, pggjgjgg lj^yp^g^jH^ LARGE potatoes, vegetable, rolls, 4 kinds of salad, Enjoy IsSlJr beverage & dessert. 1.75 adults. 1.25 children " A REMINDER . . . under 12. DANCE MOST I COMPLETE STOCK DANCING TO AIL MEMBERS OYSTER IN THIS AREAI SATURDAY NITE AT THE Phono 452-4970 «t th* LABOR TEMPLE ELKS DINNER & DANCE CALLAHAN'S TEAMSTERS CLUB ORCHESTRA STEW JCPenney 208 Eait Third St. at tho LIQUOR STORE Every Sat. Might TONIGHT — 6s30 P.M Leonard J, The values are here everyday.' Music by Tschumper This Week 119 Main "Tho Wooplrro Willows" ., PRIZES & FAVORS Street Arnle's Orchestra Open Frldny to 9 p,m. Open Sunday, 12:00 ta 6:00. M8MBDRS Steak Shop .MBMDBRS Saturday fo 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 9:00 to 9:00. '^11111111011 ^ Presidential Report newsmen, government commission — ignoring antisecrecy law 450 corporations Report asks abortion on demand By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL By CARL C. CRAFT failing to use it more often and ments are actually demands for contraceptives; for prenatal, affirmative statutes creating a lished by Congress two years WASHINGTON ' (AP) — attacked agencies for trying to access under the Freedom of disclose state WASHINGTON (AP) - In a delivery and .first-year pediat- clear and positive framework ago on request of President Newsmen and ric care; for voluntary ster- government circumvent it. Information Act." report certain to stir bitter de- for the practice of abortion on Nixon to study "Population and agencies alike have ignored a - ilization, abortion and medical the American Future. Its Moorhead said nearly 2,200 Some ... agencies, he said, bate, a presidential commission request." " four-year-old antisecrecy law- requests for access to federal "keep no records and apparent- farm operations recommends, treatment of infertility. All but chairman, John D. Rockefeller designed to increase public ac- abortion on re- $1 billion ef this cost~Ts~n6w Msgr. James T. McHugh of III records were denied completely lj have no interest in imple- ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) —A , said "the commission rec- cess to the bureaucracy's files, o- in part. For each refusal, 17 quest and contraceptive serv- borne by public and private the United States Catholic Con- ognizes and would stress that menting the law." He cited the total of 450 corporations dis- ices to minors as ways a House subcommittee chair- requests were granted, he Civil Service Commission as an to halt agencies, the commission said. ference said the preoccupation many of its recommendations man declared today. closed Minnesota farming oper- America's population growth. " added. example. deadline for with finding an effective way to seek to achieve social goals de- Rep. William S. Moorhead, D- Many government agencies ations before the The commission, which set Criticism of the report came sirable and important in their Moorhead such reports passed 'Wednes- out the need quickly, particularl eliminate the unwanted child Pa., Chairman of the House "seem to be doing everything said corporations for stabilizing y its recom- has led the commission .. . into own right—for example, great- government information and lawyers representing pri- day. growth in the first of a three- mendation that "women should sub- possible to ignore" the law, he any corpo- an ideological valley of death." er opportunities for women and committee/ released an asserted. But others, "and the vate interests appear to be us- Under a 1971 law, part report issued last week, be free to determine their own children and freedom of choice ing the law tlie most: "Those rations owning or leasing farm- said public and private fertility, The four Catholic members of analysis by the panel snowing Air Force is the worst offender , health that the matter of the 24-member commission and in reproduction," how federal agencies have re- who can afford the expensive land in Minnesota must file an- services should . assume all abortion should be left to the try to make their information nual reports. Aim of the law is Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., The repprt placed emphasis acted to the Freedom of Infor- operations look good by claim- and time-consuming process of costs connected with fertility. conscience of the individual on "creating social conditions fighting for their right to know to disclose the number of farm It would dissented from the section on mation Act. ing that thousands of requests mean an outlay of concerned, in consultation with abortion wherein the desired values of He criticized newsmen for government wjll do so." corporations and the acreage up to $8.1 billion a year, the her physician and that states . for routine docu- they control. individuals, families and com- Moorhead said he is "sur- commission said, to pay for should be encouraged to enact The commission was estab- munities can be realized." prised, however, that the re-* The reporting requirement porters, editors and broad- was enacted as a substitute for casters whose joh it is to in- other bills which attempted to Commission endorses form the American people have ban corporate farm operations. made so little use of the Free- The secretary of state's office dom of Information Act. They said it will compile a complete strict gun control were the major supporters of listing of the corporations and those in Congress who created the amount of land owned or By GERRY NELSON said. the law. leased in various counties. ST. PAUL, Minn. . ' CAP) — Martin said the Committee "The free and responsible Among the bigger corporate The Governor's Crime Commis- for Effective Crime Control is press is the keystone of an in- landholders in the st ate are sion has given Atty. Gen. War- not an opponent of gun control. formed, democratic society and Minnesota Farms Co., Apple- votersmayhavewidmmpqci ren Spannaus an early victory "I am not opposed to gun ton, with 14,666 acres in west- it should be the major user of By 7RICHARD A7EGGLESTON tion. involved. in his bid to make gun control control," he said. "The ques- the law designed to guarantee ern Minnesota; Green Giant ' residence halls. She cited a tion is what kind." Co., Minneapolis-based produc- MADISON, Wis. (AP)-A rul- Asst. City Atty. Phillip Steans Steans said, the case belonged Kentucky case in which a pre- a major issue in the 1973 Legis- the people's right to know." ing on whether lature. er of canned and frozen foods, 10 University of told Boyle Langmack was act- in state courts. sumption against the residence He called for a three-pronged Wisconsin-Stout students should ing purely as a private citizen , The commission Thursday en- The analysis covered the pe- with ownership or leasing of The two sides were also at of university students was de- attack, making it illegal for riod from July 4; 1967, when the 11,560 acres in 15 counties, and be reinstated on Menomonie and that Mrs. Husby had no odds over whether Langrnack's clared unconstitutional. dorsed the concept of strict gun convicted felons to possess fire- law took effect, to July 4, 1971. , con- voter registration rolls is ex- choice but to process his chal- control in the state. Owatonna Canning Co. ¦ ¦ ¦ action was directed against stu- Steans said afterward there arms, putting teeth into a law Conclusions were based on re- trolling 6,646 acres in Dodge, pected in U.S. District Court lenges. ' ' ' "- . -. . ' dents merely because they are were only 131 new voter regis- Spannau$, a member of the for extra penalties when a gun ports from 32 federal agencies Steele, Freeborn and Mower early next week. The "color of state action" in students. trations to choose from when commission, had pressed for is used in a crime and restor- which responded to subcom- counties in the southern part of Its impact could be felt in a civil rights case alkrws feder- the challenges were issued. controls on the sale and trans- ing the "three-time loser" rule. mittee questionnaires. . the state. college communities across al courts to take jurisdiction. Mrs. Kessler said Langmack Two of the challenges were fer of handguns. His proposals Martin called it "primarily a Major government agencies Whitney Land Co. reported 3,- Wisconsin, some of which are Mrs Kessler also argued Doyle directed Mrs. Husby to pick withdrawn after officials along those lines met with al- fabrication of the media" when took an average of 33 days to 990 acres in Benton, Dakota, unhappy at the prospect of stu- should take the case because new registrants whose address- learned they involved resident most no support in the 1971 referring to claims that guns respond to a request, but the Douglas, Morrison, Pope, Sher- dents voting away from their federally protected directors of a dormitory. ; rights were es she knew to be university Legislature. cause many needless deaths response took an average of 50 burne, Stearns and Todd Coun- home towns. Mrs. Kessler compared the The commission's vote was "The central fact : remains days in cases where the first ties and Minneapolis Star and Judge James E. Doyle heard action with black voter chal- unanimous. that firearms don't kill very decision to withhold was ap- Tribune^ Company with 1,847 arguments Thursday on wheth- , lenges by a white citizens many people " Martin said. pealed. acres in Otter Tail County. er he should issue a prelimi- group in Lousiana in the 1S60S. "It points out to legislators nary injunction ordering City State Supreme Court and legislative candidates mat Clerk Vada M. Husby to rein- "In Lousiana it was blacks, this is a matter of great con- state the names of the Stout in Menomonie it was students," cern to a very responsible students, who gave dormitory upholds conviction Mrs. Kessler said. group," Spannaus said. Students more aggressive addresses on voter registra- Her suit also charges that a The meeting was spiced by tions. ¦ questionnaire Mrs. Husby used some heated debate betwen to determine the students' resi- Spannaus and John Martin, at- A key issue in the case may on obscenity charge dence after they were chal- torney for the Committee for be whether City Manager ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - erative at Tyler. The firm con- lenged was unconstitutional. Effective Crime Control. That as job market tightens George Langmack was acting The Minnesota Supreme Court tended that it need not pay "Students are being required committee merely as a private citizen upheld today a second is often referred to By JOHN HENRY ter kept." tight employment market for obscen- sales taxes on the Ml purchase to do more than other residents as the gun lobby in Minnesota. , when he challenged the regis- ity conviction against the owner price of its merchandise be- to prove their eligibility," she NEW YORK CAP) - College "There used to be a very this year's crop of graduates The crime commission, made cocky attitude of 'here I am, recruiters say. trations of 129 dormitory resi- and clerk of a sex-oriented cause part of the price was lat- said. up of policemen, lawyers and and university students are dents at the school last Decem- bookstore in Duluth, but or- er rebated to members of the coming to job interviews better I'm an MBA, what are you go- The College Placement Coun- ' The questionnaire included laymen, is expected to adopt ing to do for me?" says the re- cil, which represents recruiters ber. dered a reduction of the fines cooperative. specific policy language at its prepared, better dressed and Milwaukee attorney Joan imposed by a Duluth court. questions about place and more anxious to please as a re- search director of a Wall Street and placement directors across The court said the sales tax length of residence, where the April meeting. major, Kessler, representing the ID Robert O. Carlson, the book- sult of intense competition in brokerage house who inter-: the nation, says the 835 store owner must be paid oh the full origi- student moved from, whether The attorney general has pro- views on campuses for his companies it surveyed recently plaintiffs, argued that Lang- , and clerk S. Peter posed a package of two bills the employmnt market, corpo- mack's official status lent "the Getman were fined $100 each nal sales price. he left any personal belongings , 1 firm. "Now there's a little re- anticipate a 5 percent increase at his former place of resi- one dealing with sale of pistols, rate recruiters report. color of state law" to his ac- on each of 41 counts growing In a third case, the court turn to a sense of humility.'' in hiring in 1972 over last year. out of a police raid July 2, 1969. ruled that Minnesota law is ap- dence, whether he registered to the other with concealed weap- "There's a decided differ- Clark Hine who recruits at But even with the rise, the ons. He has proposed ence, says Albert H. Barlow, , The Supreme Court limited plicable in an auto accident vote elsewhere, and what ad- no con- " Columbia's Graduate School of number of job openings would CARNEGIE REUNION ' case involving three states. dresses he gave on his last tax trols on sale or ownership of a recruiter for Chase Manhat- NEW YORK (AP) Two of the fines to a total of $100 Business for the Ogilvy & be only 57,550 compared with — against each man the The case involved Glen Stich returns, on his drivers license rifles or shotguns. tan Bank. "I saw the beginning agency, 70,000 in 1970, it says. 's most famed singetrs, so- , same of it last year Students are try- Mather advertising penalty set in an earlier appeal of Moorhead who drove to Far- or auto registration, to his . says interviewers no longer prano Licia Albanese and tenor go, N.D., to pick up his date, school, and to his Selective Under Spannaus* plan, all ing much harder to make a So competitive is the job situ- will sing growing out of the same arrest. eales of pistols would be have to be on the defensive Giuseppe Di Stefano, Diane Bolgrean, then had an Service Board, if any. good impression on us than ation that students on some at Carnegie Hall March 12, cel- The first case dealt with ob- recorded and the purchaser ever before. They're dong a lot with student applicants. campuses are lining tip' at the scene movie film, the second accident in South Dakota. The defendants in the case, would ned a permit. Among "Two or three years ago stu- ebrating the centennial of St. Miss Bolgrean won a $12,000 and their hometowns, are: more research on companies college placement office at 5:30 Peter's College in Jersey City, with obscene photographs. requirements to gt a permit dents would ask what the agen- a.m. to sign up for interviews judgment for injuries suffered Margie Sebesiyen, 20, Gren- before the recruiters arrive. cy was doing about the war in N.J. 77 Carlson also owns bookstores in the accident. The amount dale; Ted C. Kline, 19, Apple- would be- fingerprinting of the with recruiters, the council appeared together applicant. "The style of dress has Vietnam or the environment or They last in St. Paul and Rochester and was restored by the high court ton ; Mary R. Waters, 21, Alma There could be no They show says. at the Metropolitan Opera on sales to persons under 18, to changed too. used to consumerism," he says, "Now has had numerous encounters in overruling a Clay County Center; Beth A. Brown, 19, up for interviews in jeans and they give 20 reasons why they "About two years ago stu- the closing niglit of the 1951-52 with police. District Court decision. Harfland; Kenneth Carmody, convicted felons or to persons dents were protesting our visits season in "La. Traviata." This who are narcotics users, alchol- sloppy sandals or shoes that could do a good job for the In the Duluth case, the court The Supreme Court said the 19, Sturgeon Bay ; David A. hadn't been shined since they on the campus and now they're will be their first joint concert. ruled the photographs were Ob- Kasten, 18, Muskego, Jay Mu- ics, or mentally ill. No registra- agency." trying to beat our doors down Miss Albanese made her op- "center of gravity" of the tion would be required on pis- were freshmeri. Now the sho& scene and said no further evi- three-state trip rested in Min- sil, 20, Manitowoc; Francis S. are shined and there are a lot The change in the attitude to get jobs," says a spokesman era debut in 1935 in Parma and dence or testimony was needed Davidson tols presently owned by Min- debut in nesota, hence Minnesota laws , 18, Niles, 111.; Julie more coats and ties. We still and appearance of college job for General Motors' college re- Di Stefano made his to weigh them against commu- applied. Both North and South Jorgenson 18, St. Paul, Milin.; nesotans. primarily to the cruiting department. 7 1946 in Reggio Emilia, Italy. , "We're the only free country see long hair but it's much bet- hunters is due nity standards. Dakota have so-called "guest and Ann Sailor, 20, Wilmette. In the world without some kind In another case, the court laws" which would have pre- HI. of reasonable regulations," he ruled in favor of the state Tax cluded the injured party from The suit was brought with co- Department in a dispute with collecting damages. operation of the Wisconsin Civil the Tyler Lumber Co., a coop- Minnesota has no such law. Liberties Foundation. Tiny kangaroo has Britishupset withPompidou a new home after mother ' s rejection YOU ARE PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Market referen dum lfl fe t Joey, for a 4-month-old call female elec- Pompidou will be free to follow kangaroo, has a new home. By PAUL TREUTHARDT Denmark and Ireland, all prelude to parliamentary and , scheduled to join at the end of tions this year. He would not his own European policies with Joey's mother rejected her call the vote if there was any last week after the youngster RODNEY PINDER the year. a direct mandate from the Associated Press Writers Observers in Paris saw tlese danger of defeat. fell from her pouch, so zoo offi- the ground from people. IB WELCOME main objectives for Pompidou's It will cut cials fashioned a sling from a Some French commentators It will sow dissension in the view President Georges Pom- decision : under Pompidou's opponents in pillowcase, fastened it to the the right wing of the Gaullist already fragmented left wing of roof of an incubator and put pidou's call for a referendum ln the tradition established ^ ur the by De Gaulle in five referenda , party, the hardline sharers of Fr ench politics. Specifically it "^° ^e O Guest kangaroo on a four-hour feed- on expansion of the Common s distrust of will hit attempts to form an r w^m ing Market as the prelude to a final it will be a personal plebescite the late president' schedule. s achievements any European integration that electoral alliance between the Kangaroos normall break with Charles de Gaulle's op the president' y do not and policies and probably the diminishes 's position. communists, who oppose the leave their mothers' pouches uHranationalist, anti-British , Common Market as the crea- until they are at least 6 months anti-American foreign policy. ture of "cartels, trusts and in- old, officials said! But the British government is ternational pressure groups," upset because it gives new am- and the Socialists who advocate munition to British opponents European unity. ¦: Man sentenced of their island's move into Eu- Italian Maoists ^ PREVIEW MEETING far rope. A direct mandate will also al- ^ > swindling priest What has happened to the en- low Pompidou to go to the fall tente cordiale De Gaulle's suc- accuse police summit meeting of the ex- ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - A cessor was supposed to have panded Common Market ln a West St. Paul man has been renewed, the British were ask- strong position to push the pol- sentenced to one year in prison ing. But French observers an- icies of political and monetary for bilking a priest of $5,300 by ticipate a strong "yes" vote in integration , he advocates. promising him some Spanish the referendum April 30 or May of assassination But Pompidou made a major treasure buried in the Ameri- 7 and said this would seal the MILAN, Italy (AP ) - Italian and the U.S. Central In- diplomatic blunder. Ho did mot revjval of close alliance be- f DALE CARNEGIE COURSE can Southwest. Maoists accused the police and telligence Agency were behind inform. British Prime Minister ; William E. Elvidge, 46, plead- tween France and London. the assassination. Edward Heath in advance, and the U.S. Central Intelligence I f % i t « d How to remember names ed guilty to one count of wire Pompidou In his surprise an- Feltrinelli inherited several some of Heath's senior cabinet fraud and wns sentenced Agency today of assassinating million dollars at the age of 9 ministers termed the announce- ¦ nouncement at the end of a ment a "diplomatic bomb- %, , \ • How to quickly develop more Wednesday by U.S. District news conference Thursday did Giangiacomo Fcltrinelli, the from his father, a timber mag- 1 v ' % polso and self-confidence Court Judge Phillip Neville. not spell out in detail the ques- radical publisher of "Doctor nate. He joined tho Communist shell. ' \ The British government re- Elvidge admitted taking the tion to be asked tho French vot- Zhivago." party in the late 1940s nnd How lo 8et a onE even better money from Uie Rev. Harold E. Police said they had identi- founded his publishing house in treated to the official position i ^^r™«> * ' ers. But he will seek their ap- F-^M ¦¦ . HAK ^ith people Whittet, pastor of St , Rose of proval of the expansion of the fied the body found after an ex- 1954 to specialize in the works that the referendum was entire- K ly a French HEAR Limn Church in suburban Rose- Europea n Economic Commu- plosion at tho base of a power of leftists. . domestic matter. Wmth How communicate moro ville. lity to include Britain , Norway, pylon as that of Feltrinelli, a In 1957, Feltrinelli won world- But somd officials pointed out V f P^m. \ * effectively^° when speaking to that Pompidou s failure to warn >w 45-year-old millionaire. They wide fame when lio gave Boris ' \ Vff WTLA . "" ^T^ " Individuals, groups, using the said he apparently blew himslf s novel "Doctor Zhi- Heath what was coming ap- %A?t telephone or writing letters, Pasternak' peared ^s^JT, up Wednesday while trying to vago" its first publication. Tho to contradict the view knock out tho power supply to Soviets tried unsuccessfully to Heath has .often expressed— Milan's streetcars and street stop the publication , and as a that the essence of friendship nnd alliance within a Greater Both Men and LOTS FOR SALE lights. result he broke with the Italian Europe Women party in 195B. Is mutual frankness, V^k Cholco lots for iale overlooking tho Golf One Maoist organization . consultation nnd coordination. Course now available. Prices range from Workers Avuntgnrde , claimed Fcltrinelli later became Iden- (p^ Invited ...... that Feltrinelli "was assassi- tified more and more with the fo $2,700 to $4,500. Sewer, water, ga$, elec- nated by agitators , possibly by extreme left, and in recent tricity and telephbne services are In to lot police, and purposely carried to years had been ono of tho chief (Scotts) lines and paid for. Contact . . . tho site of tho alleged attempt financial supports of tho pro- No Cost or Obligation that was fabricated." It said Chinese extremists, who nre PRE-SPRING Feltrinelli's assassination was particularly active In Milan. meant to break the "growing He disappeared In December SALE DATE Tues., March 21 CADY GOLF and influence of extremists among 19G9 after a bomb explosion set of • TIME 7:30 p.m. • workers." by terrorists killed 17 persons • Turf Builder RECREATION CENTER .Another Maoist group, the In a Milan bank. • Super Turf Builder • PLACE Holiday Inn, Winona Lewiston, Minn. Manifesto, also said Feltrinelli In 1970, his publishing house • Halt* Plui state issued a book on methods of PADD BROTHERS Telephone 6383 Lewiston had been murdered in n " ItU DB frametip." And a third ex- ?uerrilla warfare including how STORE, INC. Presented by: Gordlt Driscoll and M. Norman or 452-2877 Winona TRUE VALUE HARDWARE tremist organization , Workers' :o prepare explosive devices, 576 E. 4»h Sf. Phona 452-40O7 ¦ ^ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ i Power, said the Italian police riio police seized tho book. President offers WINONA DAILY NEWS Democrats chance page of opinions and ideas to escape Wallace A

Richard Nixon last night offered the lnfluencs Page.ia', ' Winona DaHy Nawi, Wlncrra, Minnesota, Friday, March 17, 1972 of the presidency to save the Democratic party from suicidal fragmentation.

The offer came on the heels of the Florida primary, where a diverse population clearly twice Lobbyists always brag demonstrated its opposition to busing, first by en- will be endlessly dorsing an advisory referendum opposing its use WASHINGTON - Before 7 the their names drop- or that lobbyist at to achieve integration and by nearly giving a country runs away with the idea ped by this any party in Washington and in majority to a maverick Democrat who cart-led that the government is utterly con- William S. White cocktail any corporate boaird room in New every single county in the state, among them the trolled by powerful lobbyists, in over-reaction to the case of Mrs. York. The fact of the matter is lone county where there's a black majority, and And it is very human Dita Beard of the International for an em- that any man in public life is con- his opposition in that/county included black Shirley ploye, Telephone and telegraph Co., some lobbyist or otherwise, to sug- tinually open to this form of ego- Chisholm. . gest his total indispensability separation of fact from fiction is in to his building by lobbyists and there is . boss and his wide-ranging order. "connec- simply nothing he * ately order a halt to any further court orders WHAT IS already plain, however, Js that underlying the melodrama the highest levels— hut this col- far more complex — a blend , often, for busing to achieve integration, he is generous- umnist never knew a lobbyist who of mere justice plus a desire in ly offering the Democratic party the marvelous op- are some realities of Washington life that are well known to every suggested anything else. Thus, the Congress or in government to ac- portunity to extricate itself from a dangerously fiction of all-powerful influence ped- commodate the views of -truly pow- vulnerable position. open-eyed observer here but not to A phenomenal the people at large. First and fore- dling. The fact is that while lobby- erful forces for whom the lobby- most among these realities . is that ists do get around this town, not ist is only a small symbol. By passing the legislation he proposes the the lobbyists themselves — and even those far outranking Mrs. These forces may be business, or Congress can cut the heart out of the gover- there are indeed hundreds of them Beard in the hierarchy of the trade labor, or agriculture; or women's stock organizations, or what not Growth nor's appeal and drastically reduce his opportuni- — habitually arid universally far are really able to walk into the , for From the magazine of 4 shares held '.. • ties to accumulate additional delegates to the Dem- White .- . House — any president's which lobbyists serve as mere im- overstate, to their employers direct- National Association 1922 10 for 1 stock split 378.3 ocratic convention and prevent the chaos that ly arid indirectly to the public, their White House — and direct any of- plements — hammers in the hands 1929 Rights issued to pur- would occur there. supposed influence . over public af- the affairs of state7 of interest groups which are "good" of Investment Clubs chase 1 for each 10 fairs, in Congress and in the gov- The truth is the same as to the or "bad," depending on every in- A member of NA.IC who has own- held * ' # Passage would reduce the significance Of the ernment departments. Senate and House, all of whose vet- dividual man s point of view. ed Eastman Kodak for many of the 1939 Warrants y issued to highly emotional busing issue to . manageable pro- They are, after all, human beings. eran members know very well that United Features Syndicate nearly 85 years used in the table be- purchase 1 for each portions, and such middle-of-the-road, rational and low has traced the company from 10 held * responsible candidates as Humphrey, Muskie and its first public offering of stock in 1947 5 for 1 stock split 1891.5 Jackson could conduct their primary campaigns 1884 aiid given us a beautiful ex- 1948 5 percent stock divi- on a broader issue base than is presently possi- ample of the value of compounding dend declared (1 ble. to protect secrets and long-term investment. for 20) • 1986.078 How The one share bought at in $100 1949-5 percent stock divi- WASHINGTON - Datelines: failed to resist Xeroxing because 1884 would today have grown to 24,- dend declared (1 A President, even a candidate for re-election, March 8, 1972 — The Pentagon synthetic horsehair would hot bond 536.84 shares, and at a recent price for 20) 2085.38 has a vested interest in a viable two-party system, said today it is looking far a new properly. . .with plutonlum - reactor and just as the Vietnam issue once threatened to Russell Baker of $105 would be worth considerably 1950 10 percent stock type ; of paper that cannot be shavings. To make the product more than $2.5 million. dividend declared fragment the Democratic party into bits and Xeroxed or otherwise duplicated. work the company said ' futile attempts to shave a plutonium , , would re- GROWTH OF KODAK (1 for 10) 2293.92 pieces, so now is the busing issue poised to ex- Tlie point is to stop government se- quire genuine organic horsehair. plode It at least until last night reactor with a straight razor. Penta- COMMON STOCK 1951 10 percent stock , crets from leaking to newspapers. gon officials revealed, however, that 'Aug. -14, 1975 — The Army . ' will Number dividend declared Present paper stocks can all be eas- ' (1 for 10 2523.21 the problem has since been solved ask ior a $6-billjon budget increase Year Changes in stock of Shares A favorable issue can defuse the issue for % Xeroxed by government people 1952 5 percent stock divi- — an electric razor, did the job for next year to reactivate the U.S. Cav- 1884 Eastman Dry Plate the April 4 Wisconsin primary, an event that with a stake in publicizing them and dend declared (1 $39.95 — and that Botchko can start alry.' . 7 . ' . , ; . and Film Company must have been a factor in causing the Presi- printed before yoii can say Jack for 20) 2649.48 work on a prototype of Leakpruf if — First public offer- dent to rush to the microphones. Anderson. Oct. 9, ,1977 — The Secretary of ' ' ¦: Congress votes $1.5 billion needed ing of stock — at $100 1 1954 5 percent stock divi- Defense, it was learned today, was May 5, 1972 — The Pentagon ask- to rescue the company from bank- 1889 The Eastman Com- dend declared (1 among 42 high government officials THE ALTERNATIVE that the President pro- ed Congress today for $983,000 to ruptcy. pany — shares split for 20) 2781.95 poses is an expensive one. He Suggested $2& bil- start a feasibility study of Leakpruf who suffered radiation sickness aft- 3 for 1 3 1956 5 percent stock divi- lion the first year to improve education in the a new paper made of plulonium-re- Nov. 3, 1974 — The Pentagon an- er participating in the recent press- 1892 Eastman Kodak Com- dend declared (1 conference demonstration of the central cities and rural areas. The amount itself actor shavings and Jiorsehair. nounced today that it was launch- pany (New York) — for 20) 2921.05 is formidable, but still more expensive is the fur- Spokesmen said early tests indicat- ing a crash program to produce Pentagon's new miracle paper, shares split 4 for 1 12 1959 1 for 1 stock dis- ther drift toward complete federal control of edu- ed that Leakpruf was Xeiox-proof, horsehair, an element needed in the Leakpruf. A /Xerox machine 1898 Kodak Limited (Eng- tribution 5842:10 cation. but that much, research was need- manufacture of the controversial on which the demonstration was con- land) — shares ex- 1963 5 percent stock divi- new Leakpruf paper. Spokesmen in- ducted has melted. The historic pa- changed .26 for 1 312 dend declared (1 7 We are not certain that spending another $2& sisted that Botchko, Leakpruf's de- per sample that could not be Xerox- 1901 Eastman Kodak Com- for 20) 6134.21 billion dollars in schools, where perhaps greater Oct. 16, 1972 — The Pentagon ask- veloper, had not forgotten about the ed has turned into a glowing mass pany (New Jersey) — 1965 2 for 1 stock split 12,268.42 of horsehair with a half life of amounts already are being spent, will result in ed Congress today for $18.3 million horsehair when the project began, $100 par value shares 1968 2 for 1 stock split 24,536,84 000 years. better educated children, but it is in the tradi- to develop a method for shaving a but had counted on finding a ready 8, exchanged for pound * Assumes warrants and rights plutonlum reactor. Plutonium-reac- supply in the U.S. Cavalry. The tion of America — give us enough money and we Feb. 11, 1978-The President de- sterling shares at ap- not exercised. If all warrants and tor shavings and horsehair are the Pentagon said that rather than re- will buy a solution. — A.B. nied today that B-52's are dropping proximately 1 for each rights had been exercised through ingredients of Leakpruf, an experi- create the U.S. Cavalry for this one Leakpruf on Vietnam, but said he 8.25 shares held 37.88 Investment of additional capital, mental paper required for national project, it had contracted, for $795 could not discuss what was being 1902 Warrants issued to present number of shares would be security. million, "with Gasso da Morte, the dropped on Laos. purchase 1 for each 37.113.96. international chemical cartel, to de- Jan. 28, 1973 — Controversy has velop a new synthetic horsehair. June 9, 1978 — The Pentagon un- arisen between the Pentagon and the about veiled today a new device for What to talk Atomic Energy Commission over July 24, 1975 — Botchko told stop- ping Xerox machines from copy who has the right to shave a plu- prototype ream of Leakpruf had ing Even Jaycees reluctant secret documents. It is milk. All tonium reactor. The Botchko Corp., se- cret documents from now on will be An editorial In Someone queried whether ad- in Wisconsin which holds the contract lo develop written in milk, which does not show Mankato Free-Press mitting women would be bad be- Leakpruf , wants to try a new shav- on a Xerox copy, Are age and gender discrimina- When the Democratic presidential contenders ing technique on an AEC reactor. but can be read cause wives would want in, and I'Mfi^^y-y . »i»7j McN«»«tiiTiUK««ln<. .. by holding a match under the origi- tory in a service organization? are campaigning in Wisconsin — outside of Milwau- The AEC contends that Botchko's ^y^i^ ssz^m they are forbidden by the charter. -^ The discovery, This question forms the basis of kee, that is — they may need to approach that major security clearance does not entitle hwf^iim^i4kmmm AM4 nal paper. made by Their place is in the Jaycettes, a , a law suit in federal court in New- foreign policy issue gingerly. The Wisconsin Agri- it to engage in reactor shaving. mmmtSmBm Costplusco a subs idiary of General kind of women's auxiliary. There culturist Poll reveals that 56 percent of Wisconsin Messes, cost $2.5-hillion. ark, N.J., charging the state and was no opportunity for debate. The farm people approve of President Nixon's action in March 17, 1973 - Embattled liiH^^H national Jaycees with discrimina- suit followed , with the help of the ; S July 4, 1978 — Xerox reported to- Vietnam — either strong or mild approval. In con- Botchko Corp. executives want an S«. yVT-Jl RT-J " ,M . ;ifA»P<:,ul.Wfti ¦¦ tion because of age and sex. *'¦. -W. v] .^ i 'iJ '-^ !"'* \ day development of a milk-copier Civil Liberties Union. trast only 26 percent either mildly or strongly op- additional $42 million to get enough ' ^f^'J' The object is to break open the mW$Wi unit which, fitted in a copying ma- Miss Andrea Contaldi, a senior at pose, Neither age, education nor income seemed to plutonium-reactor shavings to pro- r^M^WM gates to all interested persons who PPJBgrW^pSi chine at an added cost of $13.87, Rutgers University, one of the nine make much difference. duce a prototype of Leakpruf, the have a desire to render full commu- r makes it possible to reproduce words distaff members, said "You have to controversial new paper. The AEC l f-\^tyy!lliPPPM,.tgn^| 7jtyy|Vi{lS nity service through membership in t written invisibly in milk. A Xerox be married to a Jaycee to get into Is suing Botchko for $1.72 million the organization. Even among those who voted for Humphrey in executive said his son had invented the Jaycettes, and all they do is to for pain and suffering sustaiped by ltiW' Wi. iiBai'if* S* aiali^k. WM Newark's Branch Brook chapter of 106!) the margin was favorable to Nixon's program: « the device while playing with his serve coffee and cake and perform one of its plutonlum reactors which m $» Wi mt fPI mm the Junior Chamber of Commerce 45 percent approved , 35 percent disapproved. The toy chemistry set and an old light other "go for" services; you don't was severely nicked during an ex- ¦Ammmm^m admitted nine wo men last year as independent voters' response was still more favorable switch. really participate." perimental shaving by Botchko lost full-fledged members in a daring to the President: 53 to 30 percent. The Republicans challenge to the restrictions — of Attempts by women to penetrata month. $m W Nov. 18, 1978 - The Pentagon came in at 74 to 13 percent. 1 Ut ml W vm ask- age, from 21 to 35 ln the state what ostensibl y are all-male organ- ed Congress today for $983 000 to April 11, 1974 — Senate inves- , group ; and also of sex, men only, in izations are not new to the Amer- K^mMWMm develop a new milk product that Will the candidates dare raise the question "? Or tigators of the Pentagon 's Leakpruf the national group — limitations ican scene. could not be Xeroxed or otherwise will they confine themselves to busing? Of course, contract with Botchko were told to- which apply to all chapters. The What is somewhat surprising ls duplicated. that's not an easy one either. — A,B. day that $900 million was wasted in state assembly voted it down 211 to why It has taken so long for tho House investigators today its first New York Times News Sonic * 28 after four questions. movement to confront the nation's . more youth-centered service groups . . . in an era when activist young That the word ol God bo not blasphemed.— people in general have been so in- Titus 2:5. strumental in taking the lead to Japan: one big gap in summitry overturn relics of a tunnel-vision past. HONOLULU — Tlie one gap in -- — - ' i | „ -¦ Therefore the Japanese place partic- tendance at tho Kennedy obsequies WINONA DAILY NEWS summitry that must be filled by ular stock in such a trip now. For had changed the situation and John- President Nixon, most itinerant of them it would confirm Japan MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRKSfl C, L. Sulzberger 's rank son must first visit Paris. American Presidents, is the Japa- among new Big Five groupings and Whether there will be difficulties WII.MAM F. Wiintt ..' ... Publis her nese gap. world. They see n more complex would nlso be seen as reassurance about protocol on Hirohito and Nix- Nixon met Emperor Hirohito at that Washington isn't demoting Ja- C. E. LiNims ...... Bus, Mgr.. Adv. Director arrangement in which the major ele- on is impossible to sny. Anchorage, Alaska in 1971 when Ja- pan In favor of . ' ments are the United States, Rus- A U.S. VISIT by Hirohito must ba Aooi.ru BHKMEB . . . . » Editor-in-Chief pan s sovereign stopped off on a Protocol and political problems flight to Europe. And ho conferred sia , China , Western Europe and Ja- most carefully arranged. Many Jap- arc, however, difficult. Hirohito told G ADY W. EVANS , , . Newt Editor with Prime Minister Sato in San pan. anese were hurt when their emperor mo he would like a state visit by Clemente, Calif., Inst January. Hut As one of broke precedence and flew to Eur- C. (JoitnoN HOI-TB .»,...t . Sunday Editor the five principals, al- Nixon. Sato echoes this sentiment io complete the process in a sense ready wooed ope last year and was booed by Moscow nnd expect- but says Japanese decorum wants in FUANK It. U III .IO Editorial Writer (hot compares to presidential talks ing a new Britain and The Netherlands. SERVICES FOR relationship with Peking, it to be preceded by nn imperial with chiefs of other principal Toyko W IU.IAM II. E NCJUSII ...... Controller pow- is anxious to reaffirm Its journey to the U.S.A. Apnrt from They were also disturbed by his NORMAN HALVORSON er areas, he must visit Tokyo. American ties unprepossessing television im age. by a presidential vis- the Anchorage airport stopover no Funaral Held Today A. J. KiExnuscH ....,,,Circulation Mgr. It. These , tics were strained by Japanese emperor hns ever gone to He has bad eyesight and seemed to THE PRESIDENT hat colled af Washington 's failure fumble when screened nt Anchor- FRANK ONKEL h. S. BUONK Composing Supt. capitals iii Western Europe nnd to adviso Ja- America. T pan of Nixon's age. His small stature was dwarfed 10:3O a.m. Saturday China nnd he is going to Moscow Impending China L. V. ALSTON Engraving Sup t. trip and of an Impending Di plomatic experts sometimes in Copenhagen by that of the enor- Martin Fuitaral Chapel soon. The fact thnt ho has never dollar de- valuation plus erection get lost In protocol. Do Gaulle flew mous late King Frederick o£ Den- Ronr.nT VOGELSANG Prcn* Supt. visited Japan as chief executive — of U .S. trade * rnApLTin barriers. to Washington ln 19C3 to attend Pres- mark. ^ although ho went there six times ident Kennedy s funeral. He had PUTlEft AL Home. Tho Associated Press ia entitled exclusively to ' llie sooner diplomats solve pro- Ttrmetl earlier — is remarked upon by the NO AMERICAN y tho uso for republication of nil tho local newa printed chief of stato been planning un American Jour- tocol nnd political questions con- Rrdllaw-Marlln Funoril Homt Japanese. ban ln this newspaper ns well ns nil A.P. news dispatches. come to Tokyo while in office ney for 1064 but, when President founding tho project , the better. They arc getting used to the idea and the one Johnson revived the idea, French 174 tut StrnU • Winona visit planned (by Els- «nm« Day or Night 434-1940 An Independent Newspaper — Established tSSi ¦ that this is no longer a bipolnrized enhower) came to grief in 10 CO. officials contended the general's at- Nmw York Times News Service ^** " ., l l . i IH^ -. MI ; —•_—-_^__ To fhe editor Thomson bill Vietnam may sf/// fee issue U.S. drops 60 would penalize There is reason to believe that the Vietnam War re- mmmamm .a»i ¦ i I I ia ¦¦ M ¦ i~mmm *mmmm **0**mmmM~~~yW~mmmm *>*ymam *m-^mml—mmM0Mmw ****a*m—m**ipercent mains a very live issue which could be a pivotal factor in de- of aid termining who is elected President of the United States in Kennedy dynasty - November. The theory that the war issue has been "de- Harris Survey absenteeism fused" does not square with many of the facts of American public opinion. to Bangladesh WASHINGTON, D. C. - At Total public WASHINGTON (AP) - lh« must we have it? A plurality of 46 to 20 percent of the American people ' least 30 congressmen and eight feel that "if there is no negotiated Vietnam 7% . . United States has canceled Are the citizens of the peace agree- Positive .v...... 4 3 U.S.A. going to bring about a U.S. senators would have had ment ," then President Nixon "will not have kept his 1S68 more than 60 per cent of tbe "Kennedy dynasty, a succession of hangs (presidents) Ii6gaily6 •...... •..**...... i. ««...... Q3 $158 million President Niaon " " , of their $42,500 annual salaries cut promise to end U.S. involvement in Vietnam." By an almost the same family"—Webster g definition—by electing Ted Not sure 4 has said was committed for hu- off last year if a bill introduced identical 46 to 22 percent, the public also feels that Mr. This is the same cross section recently reported as Kennedy? Heaven forbid. With the horde of Kennedy males 1968 pledges manitarian relief In Bangla- females we could have Thursday by Rep. Vernon Nixon will not have kept his "if there is no giving Mr. Nixon a 55 percent positive rating on his overall and .presidents of both sexes for the negotiated cease-fire with the communists." desh, State Department offi- next 100 years—not impossible, or is it? Thomson had been enacted for performance in office, and an even higher 60 percent positive cials say. Haven't we had enough of this "clan with propensity the first session of tlhe 92nd Con- A MAJORITY OF 56 to 26 percent would favor a U.S. score on "working for peace m the world." " its gress. Although department spokes- for having their every move brought to public attention via 7 policy which "just announced one day that all U.S. partici- Obviously, there are matters in foreign policy other These lawmakers than Vietnam man Charles W. Bray stated TV, press and radio, no matter how trivial? were ab- pation and help in the war was over." At the same time. 70 , such as his new China policy and his upcoming earlier this week that the $158- sent for more than 30 percent believe that all U.S. trip to Russia, on which people are making their ultimate JOSEPH P. Kennedy, percent of the public does not " involve- million figure is an "accurate with the connivance of Franklin of the recorded votes in the ment In Vietnam will be ended by election time." judgment these days about Mr. Nixon, And, despite the re- p. Roosevelt, gained control of Scotch whiskey interests House and Senate during the servations about the statement of the commitment," ship- This is the rather bleak state of public opinion facing Nixon performance on Vietnam, likely other officials now indicate ping whiskey into the U.S.A. and made so many millions that entire session. Under terms of President Nixon on Vietnam as the 1972 election campaign voters still back him 44-40 percent at -this time over his none of his sons eVer had to work for a dime. He is supposed Thomson's bill, members fall- strongest potential Democratic opponent Sen. Muskie $97.8 million has been cut off goes into full swing. , . "because it is no longer to have said "every one of my sons is going to be president." ing below a 70 percent attend- The irony of the situation, however, is that nearly every However, one son died before entering politics. ance record for any three-month SO IT MIGHT be tempting to conclude that despite Amer- needed." point put forth by the President in his January 25th speech ican impatience and even exasperation with continued Ameri- John F. Kennedy, after questionable election situations period would automatically be to the The disclosure seems sure to on our terms for negotiating an end war meet with can involvement in Vietnam, the war issue has faded to a in various cities, became president. He was subsequently as- penalized by losing their $10,625 public approval. In mid- rekindle the quarrel between sizable and even overwhelming point where it will not be pivotal in the outcome next No- the department and sassinated under circumstances shrouded in mystery and salary for the following three- February, a cross section of 1,557 households was asked : Sen. 7 Ed- still unresolved vember. Certainly there is evidence that the Nixon policy to ward M. Kennedy, who has ac- doubt by tbe Warren fieport and the sealing month period, The proposal "Here are the main points ""of President Nixon's plan up of all evidence for 75 years. All efforts at further investiga- Would grant excused absences date has not crippled his chances for re-election. cused the administration of for negotiating an end to the Vietnam war. For each, But there Is deeper evidence that so long as no decisive misleading the public over tlhe tion have been stifled. For hdw long? for hospitalized legislators, tell me if you approve or disapprove," In a recent (foreign printed) newspaper, pictures of Jac- •Congressman Thomson noted resolution of the Vietnam question is apparent to the voters, American commitment to the PUBLIC REACTION TO NIXON VIETNAM PROPOSALS there will continue to be doubts about the President's credi- queline and Ted Kennedy in mourning were shown together that at least 18 other congress- . ' Dis- Not nation formerly known as East with one purportedly of JFK in Scorpio last spring and it men with attendance under 75 bility on the war. Periodically, Harris Surveys have asked Pakistan. . Approve approve Sure cross sections of the public this question; stated that JFK died in Scorpio on April 15, 1971, and not percent for the session might . ; ' ' 7% 7 ' ' . • " . % Department sources told The 7y . . . . % • "As far as the war In Vietnam Is concerned, do you Associated Press $44.2 million eight years ago. Such can be expected whenever something have been penalized for a low- To exchange all prisoners of war .... 91 3 6 is shrouded in mystery —• as in Chappaquiddick — much attendance bhiee-month period; think President Nixon has been frank and straightforward in food and a small amount of To have a cease-fire ¦ explaining. It would be interesting to have Ted explain his "Absenteeism, undermines the ...... ,.....;.. 85 5 .- ¦ ¦• about the war, or do you think he has not told the Ameri- home-building materials were in all Indochina 10 can people the situation presence at that time and to hear his reaction to this news- efficient workings of the Con- S, troops real truth about the there?" delivered to East Pakistan be- Withdraw all U. tween November 1970 when the paper write-up. gress," Thomson said. He ex- 6 mos. after agreement ...... 80 io 10 NIXON CREDIBILITY ON VIETNAM In the Family Magazine of Jan. 16, 1972, Walter Lippman plained that his remedy was Hold new South Vietnam elections Frank, straight- Not told nation was devastated by a cy- writes, "I did not agree with almost anything that Dean more responsive to the absen- 64 12 24 forward real truth Not sure clone and December 1971 when under international control ...... ' ¦ ¦ ' Acheson said, but his recent estimate of Kennedy, as a presi- tee problem than that suggest- resign a - . - ¦%. - %¦ . A A % the Indian-Pakistani war broke Have Thieu government out dent, I think is correct. Kennedy was out of his depth. The ed by Maine Republican Sen. month before elections ...... 50 16 34 February 1972 ...... 35 53 12 . result is that we had that dangerously inflated inaugural Margaret Chase Smith who pro- Send U.S. economic aid to all November 1971 ...... 36 51 13 Since aid was resumed this speech, and then we had the "Bay of Pigs" and a lot of other posed a Constitutional Amend- Vietnam after fighting ends ...... 34 45 21 October ...36 52 12 year, the officials said, about things and the mess he made during his meeting with Khrush- August ...;.;...... ;31 57 12 $16 million has been delivered ment expelling members absent 7 * chev in Vienna. Only in the last few months of his life did he more than 40 percent of the ONLY THE OFFER of continuing economic aid after the July ...... 33 50 17 is on tihe way or is available for begin to see things more or less in their true perspective." time. .; fighting Is over meets with public approval , On all other pro- April 7.,7,7...... 7...40 48 12 shipment. Despite all the above, names of mountains/ cities, streets 7 The advantages of the Thom- visions, however, the President ebvioiisly has come up With February 7...... 33 51 16 "The rest of it has been can- were renamed Kennedy. Idlewild Airport and Cape Canaveral son plan, as he explained it, are a negotiating position which has the wide backing of the peo- August 1970 ...... 39 49 12 celed," one State Department were changed against the wishes of those in those areas and that it would be triggered soon- ple of the country. The trouble is that the public has rather July ...;...... *.,...;...... 48 38 14 official said, because the origi- illegally (according to a senator toAWhoiaI wrote in protest) er after three months instead low expectations ef the likelihood that the communists will May ...... 42 46 7 12 nal purpose of the assistance, — prevent famine in Florida, How far can people go against the wishes of of a full year; it would not dis- accept Mr. Nixon's terms. 7 to , has been ac- others? Another is the art center in Washington paid with bur Thus, when asked to rate the President on the job he has MR. NIXON'S TV account of the secret negotiaiions with complished. turb the right of aoy congres- the communists in Paris by Henry Kissinger obviously did tax dollars. sional district or state to be rep- done to negotiate an end to the war, he comes up with nega- One source was asked why, if "The Eternal Flame in Arlington Cemetery tive marks from the public. The Cross section was asked : not eliminate public feelings that they have not been receiving the $97.8 million were no longer " after the resented on any vote, which ex- the full Stor^i Although his recent purchase of over four acres of this national shrine — not "How would you rate the job President Nixon has negotiation position has necessary, President Nixon had pelling a member would en- met with widespread public approval; Mr. Nixon's credi- Kennedy's — should never have been.allowed because , even tail; and it would still provide done in negotiating an end to the war with North Vletna in asked Congress this week for commtiiiists — excellent, pretty good, only fair, bility on the war has not improved at all. $100 million more for South at that time lots were at a premium. That purchase repre- realistic deterrents to absen- ¦¦ and the sents a minimum of 43 20 by 20 square foot lots of 400 square or.poor?" :.- 7 The reason is apparent: there is a remorseless, bottom- Asia relief . The source replied teeism by a large salary cut and line insistence from the American people that either the war feet each. This deprives others of the privilege. This "Flame" consequent publicity. "If a NIXON RATING ON NEGOTIATING END OF VIETNAM WAR that the President's new re- wrongfully subordinates the "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier." J)e settled by negotiation, or U.S. involvement come to an quest will provide a margin to member's constituents want end. The prisoner-of-war issue creates much public sympathy him to represent them know- meet new conditions as they ROBEJtT KENNEDY, next in line, had ,presidential as- and even militancy. But the sober final judgment of the pub- arise in Bangladesh, while the pirations and also haters — the cause of his assassination. ing that he is often absent, that lic is more likely to depend on whether this country is still -committed is their rigJfat ,*' ^ previously aid was In the ensuing five-day "spectacular" by slow-train across the Thomson de- Reports indicate in or out of Vietnam by election day, for a problem now solved country, two curious persons were killed. Ted Kennedy then clared. "But I do not believe that the American . taxpayer stepped in and took over as master of ceremonies and made . COURT TRIALS FILM "political hay" with his eulogies of the Kennedy family, Ro- should be asked to support someone who is not doing his HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Stuart bert and of course himself. He even made a show of asking Rosenberg's first of two films for clemency for the assassin. job." near-record grain Thomson's own attendance he will produce and direct for Then came the death of Martin Luther King, another op- 2Qth Century-Fox will be "Part portunity to achieve publicity—an action out of context with record for the session was 98.2 percent. 35," which is based on an ac- usual family custom. Politics again. ' ' ¦ ¦ -A.m.. - tual New York City courtroom No, Ted Kennedy is "not running," only pulling every production in '72 involving spectacular trials. conceivable string to create a "draft" movement come elec- Whitehall forensics Production is scheduled to be- tion time. It is our duty to see that no more Kennedys By DON KENDALL That is about in line with de- gin in the summer. become president. We cannot and should not forget Chappa- winners named WASHINGTON (AP) - Two p a r t m e n t expectations for Rosenberg's second project quiddick. reports issued Thursday by the wheat, although such produc- will be "The Laughing Police- THOMAS F. MCHARDS WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) Agriculture Department raised —Whitehall High School stu- tion would not reduce surpluses man," a film on crime adapted the possibility of more biimper from a novel by two Swedish Winona Daily News "7- dents who received A's in the grain production this year, at the present rate of use. State Agriculture Winona, Minnesota ¦ « sub-district forensic contest at writers. FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1972 close on the heels of the record Another report, which helped Taylor were as follows: output of 1971. cloud the picture further, Department asked Reading of prose, Joyce Lam- intentions re- showed feed grain producers is responsible for enforcement born and Naomi Gunderson; In a planting but lacks the staff to inspect all port, based on a March 1 sur- had agreed to take 31,8 million to assist PGA reading of poetry, Natalie An- farmers indicated they acres from production of corn, stores. derson; extemporaneous speak- vey, will plant 60.5 million acres in sorghum and barley this year. ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Agriculture Department in- ing, Kim Otterson, and signifi- Gov. Wendell Anderson has who regularly check corn this year, only 5.6 million The report covered signups in spectors, cant speech, Kathleen Fischer. the USDA feed-grain program asked the state Agriculture De- retail grocery stores, were fewer than last year when they These students will go to the through Miarch 9, one day short partment to assist the Min- asked by the governor to notify ' produced a bin-bulging record district contest in La Crosse of 5.5 billion bushels. of the enrollment deadline. nesota Pollution Control Agency the PCA of cases where the March 25. (PCA) in enforcing the state's phosphate listings are not post- Whitehall also won the Dairy- Officials said If recent yield Department officials, when phosphate disclosure law. ed. land Trophy against Blair, In- trends continue and farmers they announced the 1972 feed The 1971 law requires retai- dependence and Alma. This is plant as much as they said, the program last fall, said the goal corn crop this year could be 5.1 lers to post the phosphate con- G-E-T the fourth trophy Whitehall has was for 38 million acres set tent of laundry and dish- Arcadia, won. billion bushels, second-largest aside or taken from production washing compounds. The PCA tie in forensics ¦ on record. this year. Others have said pri- The government's unofficial vately, however, that 36 million ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - Parent-teacher target is for 65 million to 66 might be enough. The Arcadia High School fo- conferences set million acres and a harvest of Another report showing more BELT0NE rensic team tied Gale-Ettrick- about 4,5 billion bushels. complete details of the signup ¦fm You Don't Heed ( | Trempealeau with 42 points at at Lewiston schools Wheat farmers said they will will be issued next week. 3 the Coulee Conference sub-dis- have 55,4 million acres planted Meantime, wheat farmers HEARING AID 'trlct contest. LEWISTON Minn. (Special) ¦ , for 1972 production- including were urged by the department rM The Luck 0' ' Team members receiving A — Parent-teacher conferences winter and spring types—which to retire an additional five mil- K CENTER ratings, which make them eligi- for the end of the third quarter could be a record output of 1.66 lion to six million acres from la 0'lthum*th»r Bob O'Clwnunt* Clyde O'Biumnn Al O'Heln* »7-7.tf7 A J| Winona, Minn. Wli»n», Minn. Cochran*, Wli, Lake Clly, Minn. ' • ourfino:1liotitw«!oht ww—only _* _t 'aPt ^tAf? t^a ^j&kdpiA' 61/2 Iba. >1 ClMa!) • AAaitarflrlp hondla ph fop forias/ T ¦ *^A % ¦ handling 7'7 ,, ¦ ' J. «1 mf • ootomotlc olllno ' ',- { •*¦ ^^ ^^

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For SATURDAY, March 18 Your birthday today: Begins a year of multi-phased ac- tivities, in which you test your skills, add to resources, and widen your horizons by travel and study. No major changes of program are indicated. Today's natives are con- DADS AND DAUGHTERS 7. . Girl table, from left, are A. F. Mullen and daugh- scious of their place in our world. Their struggles in early Scouts and their fathers from throughout the ter Carrie and Yi—Chuan Pan and his daugh- life provide them motivation and training. city, joined together Thursday evening for a ter Suzanne. The event was one of several Aries (Marcii 21-April 19): Reorganize possessions. Sell Dad 'n Daughter box supper at the National activities planned in conjunction with Nation- or give to charity everything that has lost its function. In Guard Armory. In the foreground are Dick al Girl Scout Week. (Dail News photo) the process, find missing or mislaid items. y Lilla and his daughter, Paulette. Across the HOT MEALS PROGRAM ... Mrs. 28. The meals are prepared by the Coffee TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Finish necessary tasks. Take George Griffith, left, and Mrs. Matthew House Restaurant and are delivered by volun- some time for a personal excursion, a breath of greater Schiltz deliver a hot noon meal to John teers from Caledonia churches. Mrs. Schiltz is freedom. Romance blossoms for the eligible. conductress, and Herman For- the program. (Mae Murphy Gemini (May 21-June 20): Emotional distractions keep $1,000 given Houston OES syth, trustee. Davy, Caledonia, Minn. T*he program of home the director of little point of inviting peo- you from doing your best. There is Annual reports were given delivered meals was begun in Caledonia Feb. photo) ple to interfere, so keep a quiet surface. to PEO fund elects heads and the worthy matron an- Cancer (June 21-July 22): Romantic interest crackles .all A. O. Stubstad, 509 W. Broad- VWWtfWM^WMWW*^^^**^^^^^^ \ HOUSTON, Minn. CSpecial) around you. There's a secret or two to figure out, then to keep way, presented a $1,000 check nounced that there will be ini- still about for a while. — Mrs. Margaret Flatten was tiation of three candidates at to the Chapter AP, PEO stu- elected worthy matron of Mys- Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Today is. good fof getting things Several 50- School dent loan fund at Winona State tic Circle Chapter, Order of the next meeting. done. Choose new things slowly and carefully so that the year pins will be presented. College during ' a recent meet- ' ' ' kissing won t ' ¦ No Eastern Star, Thursday at the -• ¦ ' , ¦ ¦ items will serve intended purposes. . . . ing of Chapter AP: The gift is Masonic Temple here. ; . Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Improve your public image; in memory of his wife lunch V 're at it Your personal life , Lela BEES GET BLAMED make others happier while you . Alberta Patterson Stubstad. Other officers elected were and its enrichment take priority. Billy Jo Eglinton, worthy pa- INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Po- make you pregnant menus Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Entertainment turns up in all Mrs. Stubstad was a charter tron; Mrs. Ethel Mollerstad , as- lice and fire calls column in a directions along with a novel flavor, good cooking. Indulge member of Chapter AP and sociate matron; Leonard Flat- suburban newspaper had the originator of the loan fund foHowing entry: WINONA PUBLIC SCHOOLS an urge toward emotional expression. ten, associate patron; Mrs. DEAR ABBY: I hope you won't think this is too dumb Scorpio (Oct. The need for friends reaches which was set up in 1940. She "9:50 p.m. call, DALLAS Monday — Sloppy joe on a 23-Nov. 21): S. L. Johnson, secretary; Mrs. —residence to answer. Can a girl get pregnant from kissing? a high Expect no quick or superficial reaction. The im- was a 1909 graduate of Winona Adolph Olson treasurer; Mrs 134 Bexhill Drive; smoking bees , , June peas . , . bun cheese slice , portant features of human experience are the best noticeable. State College and maintained ah Herman Forsyth, conductress; from woodpile caused fire in peanut butter sandwich, DEAR DALLAS': No. But it's a good beginning. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21): Pursue life vigorously, but interest in education throughout Mrs. Leona Moen, associate woodpile, estimated loss, $15." Tuesday — Spaghetti O's in a leave a new campaign for a different set of circumstances. her life. DEAR ABBY: Will you please help me? I am a 13-year- meat sauce, buttered green Later hours favor parties. The loan fund is available milk bread and butter, to old girl and live with my mother alone. A few years ago my beans, 7 Capricorn (Dec 22-Jan. 19): Marriage, its creation and students after one quarter of ; ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ whipped creme gelatine extra . father and . ' - . ' - '. '.- A 7 " 7 ' ' ' '/- . . " - . - ¦ - ' '' ¦ , celebration, features the day. Find the beauty of being alive study at the college and has ~ ¦ peanut butter sandwich. two broth- | ._ \ , , and willing to share your personal world. been used actively. Twenty-two Wednesday — Chili con came, Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb 18): Pursuit of sentimental 7 ven- , . students received loans during ¦y. '; y Dear Abby: crackers, kernel korn milk, tures is strong although the initiative is mostly yours. Top 1971. ^Kpurgeon^H EJSi • bread and butter, twinkie, . ex- off the day with discussions, brainstorming over future pro- Chapter AP is sponsoring an By Abigoil Von Buren tra bread and butter. ¦ St: Ste j y grams. • interior decorating style show I am the , ¦ Thursday — Roast chicken, Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): Drastic moves aren't needed, cranberres mashed potatoes and luncheon at 12:30 April 11 only one my mother has left she babies, me something awful. , even in revision of wardrobe. Somebody nearby has a good at Kryzsko Commons WSC. , and gravy, celery crescents, , She won't let me go anywhere without her use for whatever you no longer really need. Proceeds will be given to the . milk, bread and butter, ice I live only one block from school, but my another walks loan fund. Tickets are available me to school every morning. If I have to stay after school, cream pushups, extra bread and butter. from Chapter AP members or my mother comes. to school and stands outside waiting for THE LOCKHORNS Mrs. Jerry Petersen; 1902 W. Friday — Fish steaks, tartar mamaamaamaamaa^mmmmmmaaaawaammmma ^aammmimmmi ^ama^^a. me. It is so bad, Abby, that I don't have any friends left. King St. My mother doesn't even like for me to call anyone on the sauce, sweet potatoes, cabbage : phone. . 7" salad, milk, bread and butter, chocolate marble pudding, ex- If I complain about the way my mother babies me, she cries and says I don't love her. I DO love her Abby, but tra peanut butter sandwich. , Junior and senior high school I would like to have friends and be like other girls. I used , to be an A and B student. Now I dropped down to C's and only, hamburger and French CLEANERS fries , 10 cents extra. # ^ m^A*^ -°'S7 LAUNDER ERS It's gotten so that my mother wants to comb my hair /^fWffl*nfc0 in the morning. Please, be my friend, and help me. FALLING APART Portia members DEAR FALLING: Your mother has suffered a ter- tour hospita l rible loss, and the shock, plus her loneliness has apparent- ly affected her mental well being. She desperately needs The Portia Club recently tour- someone to tell her troubles to. And she may need medi- ed the laboratory and X-ray cal attention. Tell your school counselor; what you've told departments of Community Me- me. If you have no counselor, confide in your favorite morial Hospital. Herb Hunzie teacher , and Dr. ThomaiWilmot of the Free Bunny Or your minister. When your mother gets the WHILE SUPPLY LASTS help she needs, she will 7 stop babying you, which will radiology department demon- solve your problem and your mother's- too. Good luck, strated the use of the isotope Honey. scanner, which is one of the With Every $5.95 Dry Cleaning Order pieces of equipment donated to ic device possible. Mrs. James " ¦ . ' . . c DEAR ABBY: I was really disgusted with that college the hospital and to the commu- Testor was in charge of ar- Home Council Md whose roommate suggested they share an apartment nity by the Women's Hospital ranging the program, and Tom with two girls. This boob said they would be mutually bene- Auxiliary. As a diagnostic topi Fillenworth of the personnel de- slates plans fitted because the boys wouldn't have to bother with cooking the instrument provides a finer partment presented the in- or laundry, and the girls would have the "protection'' of diagnosis, many times imper- troduction. The Home Council of the men living on the premises, plus they would all save a few ceptible on an ordinary type of At the business meeting prior Winona County Homemakers bucks! X-ray, The doctor is then able to the tour at the home of Mrs. met at the home of Mrs. Frank Sommers, Lewiston, Tuesday. Is this guy for real? If the girls are students to diagnose and treat an illness Leo F. Murphy it was announc- tr v f "^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ flffWFBggSyBffHrPvj"' , they are *"'t£& *L*£ "* *t HH^^^HmHlK ^ rfif ^ i§'^""TH^BB^BBflflfjB in college to study, not to wash out some jerk's socks. Didn't or a surgical condition at a ed that the bridge marathon Plans were made for the 1972- this hoy's Mommy ever teach him to feed himself and pick much earlier, more vulnerable awards night would be held at 73 program and for the home- up his things? Where does he come off expecting a stranger time for the patient, Hunzie ex- the First Congregational Church maker tour in April. Gerry Pol- to cook for him and do his laundry? plained. at 7 p.m. April 6. All who play- son, representing the Winona I hope this idiot wakes up, and soon. And if those girls William Baechler, head medi- ed in the marathon are invited County Department of Social know what they are getting into and still want to live with cal technologist at the hospital, to attend. Teams were urged Services, discussed the func- those two guys for the sake of " and Glen Mason demonstrated tions of his department. security," and to save a to play their final matches and ¦ few bucks, they all deserve each other. the inner workings and technol- turn in the scores to their tab- DISGUSTED IN L. A. ogical advances in laboratory ulators no later than March 25. HOSTESSES GET LIFT procedure. Particularly fascinat- NEW YORK (AP)-One air- t__9_ ^_^_^_^_Wm_s&^' ¦*¦)>. *. V'tJImmmmmifil^} *•' d'wsj ' fj^ ^V^^^HHS ^KySf iBffinWl iffiB^^BfflW^^HF tbe former Cora Pederson were ing was the sequential automat- line has set up a nighttime Es- Austad golden year ic analyzer machine which is L.C. Mrs. Jaycees married March 4, 1922, at Two , cort service for its 300 steward- BUMK, Wis. (Special) — Mr. capable of running simultane- LAKE CITY (Special) esses working out of LaGuardia and Mrs. Albert Austad cele- Harbors, Minn. They have two , Minn. ously the blood samples of 12 — Mrs, Jaycees here have vot- Airport. brated their golden wedding sons, Merlin, Hopkins, Minn., different patients and coming 1 ed to sell centennial plates, The stewardesses are driven anniversary Sunday with a fam- and Burton, Goodhue, Minn. up with the results of 16 dif- by male employees from the ily dinner at Green Mea- proceeds to be used to pur- the They also have 10 grandchild- ferent tests in a matter of 60 chase sleeping bags for aircraft landing area to their dow Supper Club. Austad and ren. One son has died. ARC seconds. The number of man Camp at Winnebago. The group automobiles and the males wait hours thus saved from running also voted to build a float for for the women to drive away. all the tests manually is vir- the Centennial Parade, Mrs. The service was put into ef- tually incalculable, according to Jean Windhorst, Zumbrota , fect after one stewardess was Baechler. Modern technology talked and showed slides on attacked in the employee park- has made this intricate electron- cystic fibrosis. ing lot.

¦^P^P^P^^P^HjH y iJ^f ,^t*2JgWflV iwdrf^jjttf&jl& 'tyxB 8 'AT GRANT S Sunday Only 1:00 Get the lump on Easter . . . havo your Spring outfit beautifully P.M. to 5:00 P.M. Sanitone® dry cleaned and carefully pressed at Olson 's. Not only will your clothes be returned fresh, with minor repair! done free , but you nlso will receive a cute 14-inch, cuddly. Bluff- ed bunny . . . Ideal ns nn Easter decoration or n child's gift. Bring homo a furry rabbit from Dison'sl 10% |£ Call 452-7683 for Froo Plck-Up & Delivervl r 1V _^i^_r_ri___r «r CLEANERS OLYMPIC GAMES . . . Members of the and Cindy Schroeder. Seated in tho rear &^Jfi^JD5^l0pHAllNDERERS Jefferson School Brownie Scout Troops met is Lori Gilbertson. Gold, silver nnd bronze J Rogislet for nn afternoon of Olympic games Thursday for FREE HAMS "metals'' were presented to winners in var- TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS in observance of National Girl Scout Week. ious categories. Cadets from Troop 6.10, Cen- No Purchase Nacuisary 1405 Gilmoro Avenue From left , winners in the sack races, are: tral United Methodist Church , served ns lead- O 66 West Fourth Street ' Dcniso Munson, Janet Jned t ke, Pam TnnsiU ership assistants. (Daily News photo) FRIDAY Findings are for The weather The doily record MARCH 17, 1972 Await word Two-State Deaths Winona Deaths At Comm unity salesman in Joseph T. Pietrek Raymond N. Grulkowski Memorial Hospital ) on extradition ARCADIA, Wis, (Special — Raymond N. Grulkowski, 677 Visiting houit: Medical and surgical Joseph T. Pietrek, 71, Arcadia, E. Broadway, died today at patients.' 2 to 4 and 7 to 8:30 p.m. (No a.m. children under IJ.) commission case died Thursday at 10:30 Methodist Hospital, Rochestei Maternity patient*: 2 toys-Wind. 7 to at Tri-County Memorial Hospi- Minn. t-.CO p.m. (Adults only.) ' . ' Findings for a former sales- At issue In the case waa in kidnaping tal, Whitehall, where he had Funeral arrangements are be- Vlsllort to a patient limited to two t\ man of Canton Mills, Inc., Min- $902 in commissions Thompson been a patient five days. one lime. EAU CURE, Wis. - Eau ing made by Watkowski Fu- nesota City, Minn., who had held he bad earned while lie A retired farmer, he was Claire Chief of Police A. R. neral Home. THURSDAY brought suit to recover com- was employed by the firm from born here Sept. 18, 1900* to May, 1967, until the early fall Ziehlsdorff said this forenoon Sluga Births missions he alleged were owed Valentine and Barbara •: that he is still awaiting word Pietrek and married Emily Winona Funerals Mr. and Mrs. Robert Puetz, him by the firm, have been of 1969. from Rockford, 111:, on whether Matchey Feb. 21, 1928, at Ss. Richard Onalaska, Wis., a son. filed by Judge Glen E. Kelley PRIOR to tbe trial Canton an Independence^ Wis. couple S. Glaunert Eugene Rack- . Peter & Paul Catholic Church, Funeral , services for Mr. and Mrs. in District Court here. will waive extradition to Wis- Richard ow, 1206 W 4th St., a daughter. Mills, represented by Stephen Independence. He was a mem- S. Glaunert, 521 Sunset Drive, . The action had been brought consin to face kidnaping ber of the Arcadia Chapter of J. Delano, Winona, had ac- WEATHER were held this morning at the FORECAST 7 . . Cold air is forecast for the charges. the Knights of Columbus. BIRTHS ELSEWHERE by Arne Thompson, Ostrander, knowledged $333 was due northern half of the nation today. Fowcett Funeral Home and the Showers are forecast for Paul E. Mathews, 35, and his Survivors are : his wife; three Cathedral of Minn., represented fcy Winona Thompson. the Pacific Northwest and snow 32-year-old wife Mary, who live the Sacred Heart, RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) flurries or rain are expected brothers, Paul and Andrew, Ar- the . .•Rey; Msgr. Joseph attorney William A. Lindquist A referee appointed in the on a farm in rural Indepen- Milwau- R. Mc- - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Erick- throughout the Northeast. (AP Photofax) cadia, and Benedict, Ginnis officiating. TBurial will and trial of the case was held case Warren Weigel, a Wino- dence , were named in federal kee, and four sisters, Mrs. son, Rochester, a son March 1 , be in the spring in the Foun- at St Marys Hospital, Roches- before Judge Kelley March 6. na accountant, also had certi- charges after tlie kidnaping Sophie Gandara, Mrs. Theresa tain Cit . March y Public Cemetery, with ter. Grandparents are Mr. and fied that Thompson was en- Local observations 8 of Steven Aim, 17- Sylla and Mrs. Mary Stelmach, members of the year-old Arcadia, and Mrs. Martha Son- American Le- Mrs. Roy Kasten, Winona, and titled to an additional $661 and OFFICIAL WEATHER son of Dr. and Mrs. gion providing a burial detail. Municipal Court BUREAU OBSERVATIONS for Donald J. Aim, Eau Claire. salla, Independence. A son, Jo- Mr. and Mrs. Einar Erickson, listed $902 as "tentatively" the 24 hours ending at noon today : Pallbearers were: Glenn, Rog- Rushford. WINONA due him. The dentist paid $50,000 ran- seph Jr., was killed in a car er and Ronald Tullius Maximuih temperature 42, minimum 27, noon 42, no accident in 1970, 7 Two brothers , James CALEDONIA, Minn (Special) precipitation. son for his son's safe return. Tacke, Richard Colfack and . James R. Hanson, 1260 W. The trial centered on the lat- On Thursday morning, U.S. and a sister also have died. — At Caledonia Community Broadway, pleaded not guilty ter figure which was divided A year ago today: Kevin Ressie. and Mrs. Ed- v ' ¦ ' . .7 Magistrate Robert French drop- Funeral services will be Hospital : Mr. this morning to a charge of dis- into two items. High 38, low 2, noon 30, no precipitation. . Honorary pallbearers were: Spring Grove, a ped the federal charges against Monday at 10:30 a.m. at St. Robert Sexton ward Myrah, obeying a traffic signal. Judge One was an amount of $545 Normal temperature range for this date 41 to 23. Record Michael's Catholic Church, , Gerald Meier, son Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Den- which represented the princi- high 78 in 1894, record low 7 below in 1941. the couple when they appeared James Englerth, Lambert Pe- Dennis A. Challeen set trial for in Rockford County North Creek, the Rev. Raymond nis Rollie, a daughter Sunday. 10 :30 a.m April 13 and set bail pal airiount and interest of an Sun rises tomorrow at 6:14, sets at 6:16. Court.: He terson and Archie Gilbertson. Wis did so, he explained, because Peters and Edward Roskos of- BLACK RIVER FALLS, . at $20. Hanson was tagged at uncollected note giveni the firm 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS ficiating. Burial will be in the Members of Leon J. Wetzel (Special) Black River ) there was no transporting , - At 11:35 p.m. March 15 at West by a customer and the re- (Mississippi Valley Airlines of church cemetery. Post 9 American Legion, Con- Memorial Hospital: mainder were commissions Barometric pressure 29.69 and rising, no wind, no cloud the kidnap victim across state ducting miitary rites at the 4th and Main streets. lines. Friends may call at Killian Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Feltes, Mrs. Harry J. Rymarkiewicz, Canton Mills said were charg- cover, visibility 20 miles. Funeral Home here Saturday grave, were Fred Heyer, bugler, ed off against Thompson as un- HOURLY TEMPERATURES Mathews is wanted in Wiscon- George Acheff , Fred King, Independence, a d a u g h t e r 55, 355 Elm St., pleaded guilty si on after 7 p.m. and Sunday after March 8. collected accounts at the time (Prortded ¦by Winona State College) a kidnap charge and Mrs. George Karsten, Edward Pros* to a careless driving charge and • ' ¦ . ' ' ¦ Mathews 3 p.m. Rosaries will be recited : P Jerome Svo- he terminated his employment. . . Thursday ' is charged in a Wis- Saturday at 7:30 ahd at 8 p.m., ser, . T. Keaveny, Fred Tar- Mr. and Mrs. drew a $150 fine from Judge consin ras, Dean Hixton a son March 8. Challeen. She was tagged at l p.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 midnight warrant with being a the latter by the Knights of Varner, Frank boda, , THE COMPANY asserted dur- 38 38 38 38 39 40 39 40 38 37 37 37 part to kidnaping. Mertes, A. L. Hodson, H. M. Mr. arid Mrs. Timothy Mil- 5:14 p.m. March 7 on Winona ing the trial that the charge - A Columbus, and Sunday at 7:30 Lueck and Roman R. Lubinski. Street, just south of West 4th Today and 8, the latter by Father Pet- ler, Black River Falls, a son off was made in accordance 1 a.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon ers. ' Monday. Street with a policy of the firm in re- 36 35 35 34 33 32 31 31 33 34 38 42 Julius M. Nathe gard to uncollected accounts of Funeral services for Julius Mrs. Louise M. Ebert i 25, 871 La Percy Bailard E. Wabasha St., pleaded guilty salesmen who left the company. Crescent men LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) M. Nathe, 478 W. 4th St , were City accidents of In ordering payment of the held today at Cathedral of the to charges hit and run and — Funeral services for Percy driving without a valid license. commissions cited by Thomp- Ballard, 75, formerly of Lake Sacred Heart, the Rev. Msgr. Today son — as well as court costs Joseph R. McGinnis officiating. West 4th Street Judge Challeen gave her a 30- are bound over City, who died Thursday morn- 8:50 a.m. — day jail sentence, but suspended and fees for Weigel's services ing at the Wabasha, Minn., Burial was in St. Mary's Cem- 105 feet east of Lafayette — Judge Kelley said in his etery. collision: Wal- the sentence for one year on Nursing Home, will be held Sat- Street, sideswipe condition she not be involved in findings that, as far as the after hea urday at 11 a.m. in the Peter- Pallbearers were: Edward ter C. Woege, 706 Grand St., uncollected note was con- ring Tambornino , another accident. She had been son-Sheehan Funeral Home, , John Van Hoof van owned by Erickson Bakery, charged in connection with an cerned, there was nothing "in 1st OJnarter Full Last Quarter New Joseph A. Walter, 20, and Mi- Ben Miller, Hugo Curran Vic- chael D. Wilson Lake City, with the Rev. Arn- , La Crosse, VYis., no damage; accident at 11:30 a.m. Feb. 22 the evidence which indicates March 21 March 29 April 6 March 15 , 19 , both of La tor Pellowski and Carl Opsahl. A, Wino- Crescent, Minn., old Swanson of the First Luther- Mrs. Clarence Busch, on West 5th Street, just east of salesmen were guarantors of ac- were bound Members of Neville-Lien Post model sedan, over to district court an Church, Lake City, officiat- na Rt. 3, 1966 Sioux Street. counts they sold.'' The Mississippi today by 1287, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and right side, 9150. Forecasts Municipal Court Judge Dennis ing. Burial will be in the Mine- right rear Of the remaining commis- "4-hr. opapa Cemetery, Mankato. conducting military rites at the 1:10 p.m. — 1014 Gilmore Ave., Larry F. Peters, Kellogg, sions Thompson said were owed Flood Stage A. Challeen following prelimin- Minh,, drew a $50 fine from Stage Today Chg. ary hearings Ballard, a Lake City area resi- grave were Donald Siegler and parked car accident: James J. him, the court ruled that there S.E. Minnesota ^ Conrad Gilbertson color detail; Judge Challeen . after pleading Red Wing ,7.. '14 3.9 0 Walter and Wilson are dent for 20 years, was born Oct. , Seracki , 525 Sioux St., 1969 had been no prior agreement Partly cloudy to occasion- charg- Charles Koeth, bugler ; Carl guilty to a charge of operating laintiff and de- Lake City ...... 6.6 + .1 ed with stealing a portable color 20, 1896, in Story City, Iowa. model hardtop, right front , $500; between the p ally cloudy through Satur- He is Hargesheimer, Leo Heinz, Car- Stockton , a truck over registered gross fendant on the charge off po- Wabasha ...... 12 7.3 + .1 television set, a gold pocket survived by two broth- Darrel R. Page, weight. The Minnesota Highway day. Chance* of a little rain ers, George and Robert los Calhoun, Harold Brandt, 1963 model licy, at least until sometime in Alma Dam ...... 4.8 + .4 watch and a pocket knife from , both Minn., parked, Patrol tagged him at 7:05 a.m. or snow tonight and a slight ¦ ¦ " " of Lake Crystal, Minn. ; and a Walter Kirch, Jerold Van Pelt, sedan front left and left rear, August, 1969, when relations chance of occasional rain Whitman Dam .. . 4.0 + .3 the home of D. C. Minard, La , March 13 at the Patrol's scale Winona Dam ... .7. 5.3 7+ .5 Crescent. sister, Mrs; Vera Shepard, George Walsh, Milton Knutson, $200. between employer and employe Saturday. A little colder Downing, Barry Sharp, Ervin Rose and on Highway 61 west of Good- were strained. WINONA ...... 13 6.8 +.5 Walter's attorney James W. Calif. 12:12 p.m. — East 4th and view. tonight and Saturday. Lows '¦ Friends may call at the Peter- David Rain. Judge Kelley also noted there tonight 22 to 32. Highs Satur- Trtmpl. Pool- .'. - .. 9.5 + .2 Soderberg and Wilson's attor- Hamilton streets, intersection FORFEITURES*. son-Sheehan Funeral Home this Hutson was no evidence that succes- day 40 to 48. Chance of pre- Trempl. Dam 7. .. 6.0 -f .3 ney Steven H. Goldberg request- ETTRICK FIRE CALL collision: Gerald G. , Dakota ed that they case evening, and prior to the serv- Stockton, Minn., 1971 station William F. Mullen, 459 Huff sor salesmen ever had been cipitation 30 percent tonight ...... 8.1 + .1 be dismissed ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - paid tlie disputed commissions. Dresbach Pool .. 9.4 -f .1 because the initial arrest ices Saturday. wagon, front , $800; Ralph B. St., $25, parking by fire hy- and 20 percent Saturday. was The Ettriek volunteer fire de- drant Dresbach Dam .. 4.9 -f .6 made without a warrant. Chal- Duanne Johnson White, Maiden Rock, Wis., 1970 , 1:10 p.m. March 147 at partment was called at 7:30 and Minnesota La Crosse ...... 12 7.5 leen denied the request. DURAND, Wis. ( Special) - model hardtop, left side, $500. West Howard Huff streets. WESTWAY 4-H CLUB + .6 p.m. Wednesday to pump water Houston Partly cloudy to cloudy ' Tributary Streams Chief Deputy Sheriff Vern Duanne Johnson, 36, Durand, from a flooded basement at the Wednesday Mrs. Anna Weiraers, , ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) — Minn., , delinquent overtime through Saturday. Chance Chip, Durand .. 5.7 0 Spitzer, questioned by Winona died today at Chippewa Valley mobile home of Mrs. Betsy Between 9 and 10 a.m. — Saint $5 The Westway 4-H Club will at parking, 10:27 a.m. Oct. 6, 1971 of a little rain or snow over Zumbro at Theii. . 31.5 County Attorney Julius Gernes Area Hospital here after an ill- Bishop. Nearly four feet of wa- Mary's College library parking meet Monday at French Creek +1.2 at West Sanborn- and Washing- Speaker will the state tonight, diminish- Trempl. at Dodge .. 7.2 .6 testified that he took the con- ness of about one year. He was ter was in the basement and lot, parking lot. collision: Molly Lutheran Church. + ton streets. ' be NSU Dauphin who will talk ing Saturday. A little colder Black at Galesville 4.6 .3 fession of the two boys after manager of the Federal Sav- Mrs. Bishop's deep-freeze was A. Nelson, Oshkosh, Wis., park- + on drugs. Interested persons over state tonight and Sat- La Crosse at W. Sal. 6.9 +1.0 investigating the scene of the ings and Loan Agency here. floating. Tbe trailer is located ed 1967 model sedan owned by alleged may attend and bring questions, urday except a little warm- Root at Houston . 14,3 —1.7 crime. The son of Willis and Milda on the north side of the village, Western Union, Minneapolis, Wis., 1970 model truck, owned er southwest Saturday. Lows Challeen released hill 222 W. announces the reporter, Kandy Root at Hokah .. 50.0 — .1 the two Dahlman Johnson, he was born at the foot of a small , where Minn., rear, $317; Allen C. by Miller Scrap Iron, tonight 14 to 20. Highs Sat- . •' . ' ¦ youths on their own recogni- at River Falls, Wis., Aug. 12, water ran into the basement. Staige, Fountain City Rt. 2, 2nd St., no damage. Hoff. urday 32 to 60. zance. 1935. He graduated from Uni- ' son, Houston Rt. 2, town of State s challenge versity of Wisconsin - River , were held today Wisconsin Falls. He married Jean Morgan, Pleasant Hill Tonight, partly cloudy and GOP chairwoman at St. Matthew's Lutheran to war finally ends Aug. 3, 1957 at River Falls, Ga- colder with lows 17 to 25 north, taught in schools in Lake Mills Church, Winona, the Rev. may oppose Mondale Grace Lutheran 22 to 29 south. Saturday, partly ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - and Viroqua, Wis., then enter- len Sommer, abashaludge against Ridgeway, Minn., offici- NAr sonny and colder, highs mostly The state's challenge of the ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) — ed the insurance business. In Church, ' In the 30s. constitutionality of the Vietnam Former State Republican 1962 they moved to Durand ating. Burial was in Rushford War has come to an end. Chairwoman Nancy Brataas where be operated an insurance Cemetery. 5-day forecast The U.S. Supreme Court said Thursday she is "taking a business. He was active in com- Pallbearers were Lyle Fritz, MINNESOTA recently voted 7-2 against ac- good look" at seeking the GOP munity affairs, a member of John Meyerhoff, Delbert Frahm, court system Clar- 2-county cepting the case of Clifton Per- endorsement for U.S. Senator Merlin Doblar, Paul and Chance of rain or snow Faith Lutheran Church, Du- more than cooperative in giving Sunday and Sunday night. kins, Minnetonka, the principal this year. But she added it is ence Solum, Myron Bunke and WABASHA, Minn. — "Maybe courts by the concurrence of rand, and the Durand Masonic 1 us three probation officers." Fair to partly cloudy Mon- in a test case brought by the "unlikely" she will seek the en- Lodge. Virgil Tweten. I'm being selfish,," said Ken- the county boards of the respec- day and Tuesday. Lows 10- Minnesota attorney general. dorsement. neth Kalbrenner, Wabasha's tive counties affected. There- After July 1 the county will Survivors are: his wife; two Mrs. John H. Nordin Sr. justices and municipal 36. Highs 34-62. (Perkins has since been released Two Republican sons Blair and Eric probate and juvenile court fore, if both counties agree, pay county con- , , and one INDEPENDENCE, Wis.- Fu- judges during their unexpired WISCONSIN from the Army. ventions last weekend urged daughter, Seri, at home; his judge, "but 1 would like to have Wabasha County could act neral services for Mrs. John alone. terms. Partly cloudy and warmer The Minnesota attorney gen- her to become the GOP candi- parents, Park Rapids, Minn.; Minn., Wabasha County remain Waba- chance of show- H. Nordin Sr., Soderville, The Winona County Board has In Lake City it is expected Sunday with a eral's office says the high date to oppose Sen. Walter F. two brothers, Dale, Green Bay, Independence resident, sha County by keeping its own ers. Lows mostly in the 20s and court's action ends the case former not been told such a move is that attorney Philip A. Gartner, , Mondale, D-Miwi. Wis., and Lyle, Belmont, Calif., Wednesday morning court system." highs in the lower 40s to lower which was authorized by the and two sisters Mrs. Dean were held unde?r consideration by the Wa- current municipal judge, will , at St. Patrick's Catholic Church, At the request of the Lake 50s. Monday mostly cloudy with 1971 Legislature. (Wannie) Johnson, San Bernar- basha commissioners. The two continue to operate a court showers. Lows in Elsewhere Blaine, Minn. The Rev. Jerome City Council, Judge Kalbrenner a chance of By THE dino, Calif., and Mrs. David together to bud- there as an administrative as- the middle 20s to upper 30s. and colder. Lows in tlie middle ASSOCIATED PRESS Koenke, associate pastor of the explained the new law regard- boards acted High Low Pr. (Leila) Gerig, Naperville, 111. get for the system last October , sistant to County Judge Kal- Highs In the middle 40s to up- 20s to middle 30s. Highs in the Funeral services will be at 2 parish officiated . Burial was in ing the county court system and brenner. He also could be ap- per 50s. Tuesday partly cloudy middle 40s to lower 60s. Albany, rain 46 34 .40 Hillside Cemetery, St. Paul, abolition of municipal courts but have not met to discuss it Albu'que, clear 73 40 p.m. Monday at Faith Lutheran since. pointed county judge. .. Church, the Rev. David A. Minn. at a Tuesday evening council Amarillo, clear 72 38 .. Mrs. Nordin, 67, died Sunday meeting. "Wabasha County has a very Under the present setup, fees Anchorage cldy 23 13 Kramer officiating. Burial will derived from fines are paid to , .02 morning of cancer at Cam- Under the new statewide good working juvenile court Asheville rain 62 41 be in Forest Hill Cemetery the mut icipality, but under the , bridge Memorial Hospital. court system which goes into system between the two coun- Atlanta, clear 65 41 .88 here. , new arrangements only park- In years gone by Friends may call at Goodrich The former Eva Victoria effect July l, the Wabasha and ties of Wabasha and Goodhue. Birmingham, clear 70 41 .. Susa was born Dec, 23, 19M , There are three full time work- ing meter fines will go to the Bismarck rain 53 37 Funeral Home Sunday from Winona counties would join to- city; all other fines vill be , .43 in Independence, to Mathew G. gether for court services unless ing probatloh officers — two Boise, cldy 67 47 .. 1:30 to 4:30 and 6:30 to 9 p.m. divided, •with one-half going to (Extracts from fne filet 0/ thia netcspoperj and Monday from 10 a.m. un- and Susan Marsolek Susa. After they act to remain separate men and one women. At the Boston, rain 42 36 .20 graduation from Independence present timd Winona County is the municipality and one-half to Charleston clear 70 51 til noon. entities. the county. Ten years ago . . , 1962 , .56 Memorials to the Foundation High School, she attended Wi- working with one man and a Charlotte, rain 71 39 .43 nona Business College, Winona, KALBRENNER explained part time female employe. Since the cost of administra- Chicago cldy 42 35 for the Mentally Retarded and Winona State College has asked the state Legislative , .. Faith Indian Chapel are being accepting work as a secretary that the counties have two al- tion of the court will le paid Cincinnati rain 54 39 by thd county, it is expected Building Commission to recommend a legislative appropria- , .28 arranged. in several firms in Winona be- ternatives: Wabasha County "I FEEL THAT It would take tion of $2,850,000 for a 400-bed dormitory and food service, Cleveland, cldy 45 36 .30 fore going to Minneapolis, whele may get one judge and Winona a great deal of time' to again that this will offset the loss library wing, land acquisition, repairs and improvements Denver, clear 70 50 .. Two-State Funerals she accepted a secretarial posi- two, or three judges could work up a probation depart- of fine revenue. and planning for classroom buildings. Des Moines, cldy 52 34 .. tion in the office of the mayor serve both counties. ment tht would be comparable The Lake City Council agreed, There was no celebration at Shangri La, Emil Liers' home Detroit, cldy 44 34 Frank A. Konkel On June to what wo have at tbe present ln cooperation with the county .. MONEY CREEK Minn. of Columbia Heights. Fred Gerber, a member of overlooking the Mississippi near Homer this week when his Duluth, cldy 46 23 , - she was married to time," said Kalbrenner. "I am board , to make available" for .. Funeral services for Frank A. 25, 1948, the Wabasha County Bar Asso- third book, "A Black Bear's Story," was released by a New Fort Worth, clear 80 45 .. John H. Nordin Sr., state repre- very proud of our department; court use the present municipal another winter day in the home Green Bay cldy 30 35 ,. Konkel, town of Money Creek, ciation, appeared before the York publisher. It was just sentative for 24 years during County Board of the commissioners have been court quarters at no charge. life of Mr. and Mrs. Liers, happy in their riverside home. Helena, cldy 63 48 .. Houston County, will be at Wabasha 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Martin the period of 1933 to 1065 and Commissioners at its annual Honolulu, clear 82 70 Heights .. Funeral Chapel Winona the mayor of Columbia meeting on March 7, said Kal- Twenty-five years ago . . . 1947 Houston, clear 82 64 ,.. , , from 1945-46. The couple con- Ind'apolis, cldy 57 35 .04 Rev. A. U. Deye officiating. brenner. At that time Gerber re- for Sanford Fla., to join the San Burial will be in Woodlawn ducted a real estate and Insur- quested that the board consider Ches Wieczorek left , Jacks'ville, clear 75 51 .14 ance business in Columbia Notice to Antonio baseball team of tbe Texas league. Wieczorek, an Kansas City, cldy 60 41 .. Cemetery, Winona. the separation of the county outfielder waa sold to Texas last winter after a season Friends may call at the fu- Heights. court from Winona County. , Little Rock, cldy 69 43 .. In 1957 the Nordins relocated with Indianapolis of the American Association. Los Angeles, haze 74 57 ., neral home today after 7 p.m. Reasons given for thd request More than 1,000' Red Men, their wives and friends their business and home to East Louisville, cldy 61 41 .18 and Saturday after 9:30 a.m. Bethel. were: there would be a savings Winona and Goodview attended the 50th anniversary celebration of Wenonah Tribe Marquette, snow 37 31 .05 A memorial Is being ar- to local taxpayers by having 20 at the wigwam. Survivors are: her husband ; Memphis, clear 63 43 .16 ranged. five stepdaughters Ray- all of the county proceedings Miami cldy 70 67 .14 , Mrs. , Mrs. Lloyd Truog mond Holmstrom In chambers in Wabasha; the . 1922 Milwaukee, cldy 36 32 .03 , Cedar ; Mrs. Sunday NEWS Subscribers Fifty years ago . . INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- Chester Holmstrom, Wyoming, voters of Wabasha County would Mpls-St.P., clear 73 45 .. cial) — Funeral services for be able to el&t the man of Tlie plan for a year-round program of athletics to> be car- Minn.; Mrs. Harold Hyndman, New York, rain 51 44 .53 Mra. Lloyd Truog, 6 :: - --v / ^x ¦:¦ ' ¦ ¦ State asks court . . . - . - - . . ^mmm * OPEN 9 TO 0 MON. THRU SAT. NOON TO 6 P.M. SUNDAY ^ PRICES for quick action jBmf xm( " tmr %^ I I ^&* III /Jf S^ ^^^^^ ' on Reserve case _ /RL^MJM ^^^ SALE GOOD THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 19 OHIYI SILVER BAY, Minn, (AP ) - tion on the state's appeal of a The State of Minnesota has lower court ruling involving Re- agreed to join Reserve Mining serve s dumping Co. in asking the Minnesota Su- ' of taconite preme Court to take quick ac- tailings into Lake Superior. The agreement was an- nounced Thursday by Reserve President Edward M. Furness, Wisconsin who said the state attorney OUR BEST BELTED general's office informed him it ¦flNQB& agrees Twith the company's re- quest that the high court hear joins Reserve the case as soon as possible. GO ON ¦ At the same time, Furness ¦ TIRES SALE said, the firm has asked AT the federal district court at Duluth XL5>^ to postpone any action against Mining suit Reserve until 10 days after the DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - Wis- state court makes its ruling. consin asked U.S. District Court here Thursday to include The Silver Bay company Is it as a co-plaintiff in a suit involved in litigation on both aimed at barring the Reserve the state and federal levels in Mining Co. from dumping in- connection with its dumping of dustrial wastes into Lake Supe- 67,000 tons of the waste rock ' 7 rior. 7 . ' daily into Lake Superior. Atty. Gen. Robert Warren The state litigation involves said he took the move con- an appeal ' by the Minnesota cerning the Silver Bay, Minn., Pollution Control Agency of a m Lake County District Court de- PRICES firm at the request of Gov. Pat- IQWtST rick Lucey and the U.S. Envi- cision that the discharge "has ronmental Protection Agency. had no measureable adverse or I The federal government has deleterious effects ..." on the charged the firm with violating lake. the- U.S. 7Wat«r Pollution Con- The federal action was in- trol Act and the 1899 Refuse stituted last month by the U.S. Act by discharging untreated Justice Department in a three- industrial wastes from its taco- count suit that charges Reserve nite ore plant on the lake's with polluting the lake and asks northern shore. a federal judge to set a sched- W a r r e n said Wisconsin ule for halting the dumping. No moved to join in the suit be- trial date has been set. ' cause lake pollution from the Furness said the firm sought plant flows to Wisconsin territo- the state's support in seeking a rial waters. The ecology of the speedy .. . Minnesota Supreme Wisconsin shore is also dis- Court decision to bring about a rupted, he said, by injury to prompt resolution of the con- plant and aniittal life caused by troversy and also because the f^BA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^y ¥i///'>-/Mn^^W/ff^^m^W^^mt^^^^ I ttie pollution along the Min- federal , complaint "contains «*J^mV» ' -rfff /Jt ' *( ' rf *'* .£A±Ii".y?*y^ '?y\ffi.Wi fSK^^^^ H nesota shore. irany of the same charges al- The state action asks the ready heard and ruled on in the court to grant a permanent in- state district court trial." junction against further dump- In his written release, Fur- PlS 4 Plies of WSkwBSSm O Al f C $4il I ing of untreated wastes, and ness also noted that two sepa- asks that the firm be required rate court actions could result to pay damages. ir. conflicting decisions, "fur- Cord*%• y 1BW 7 _BJBBJI "|Bj - A ¦ ¦ v/fx. - < imm^^e^^^^BBJB^PjHB; ^B\ BlBaBaBl' BJ J The suit alleges 67,000 tons of ther confusing the already com- H^B^K nl i^^^H^0^^^d^W^^^ €FW m dMV C ¦ ¦ I M* l ' _ - « _ waste are dumped daily by the plex issues and causing more ' ^B^B^B^B^B^B^Bfli ' wJ&NKrjr )C ^'. y^jwiiS?r^^^y^^» *^^E^i 'i i* ¦ * ~ j»i2M>_aH^-i^jyffirBM ^*^ .» ^* B^B firm into the lake. delay." ^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^ NSP-l ndian dam fight Gwernmert yfe/cfmg HH^ ^ pfi|i^^^^^^^^^l^% JBiM #BPB 4a#%^%' I f o LacCourt demands Wk Extra-Deep W£ee ^mF ^:mh' "2 OlIC T| £ | I I WASHINGTON (AP) - The gon National Forest, Nelson Tread has ¦ Interior Department has yield- said. m A | | | WM ynT:E;: :UU ed to Indian demands for gov- Should the FPC agree with I ernment recapture of Chippewa recapture, the next step would ¦ ¦ ¦ Flowage in northwestern "Wis- involve obtaining congressional iiP^B^B^BJBBBJB^Bi ¦ CL^BjB^|BTHHffSB^-BWHIJIAI> r. JwM9K* J fm^^^B^^^&^ \ rf f i_+Mirr*^r^ -¦ »¦¦. &'**> '$>*'-&¦&» ON A SET OF FOUR 1__M consin, Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D- approval, for which Nelson has ______mlm A Wis., said Thursday. . ' ^ ¦p l •¦ ia^iv\?$% '¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ I filed a bill. Y, A* ? ^BM&%&$8J1 • " ' - ' . __\W ' Representatives of the Lac The reservoir serves down- Court Oreilles ¦ Reservation had accused the Nixon adminis- stream power production. tration of balking at their re- Lyons said the department quest that the reservoir be feels power purposes, flood con- trol and preservation of the flo- handed over to public own- f \& wage's forested shoreline would B B BSM __m _i_K' ^- *•" ^^^SSS ^^^B3SS ^BB ^^K ^Ht ^K ^^^^^^^^^^ EK ^KBK/l ^^t^^^^^Mfflpv ^__^y __^_____^___ in 5*f ership. be best served under govern- ^^^ Northern States Power Co., Mm 78 Series! PMlBH[^i«^WILOW ^ .. Ycu B 5 ment control, Nelson reported. I^^HBflRJ PP^ f WW* 7°" ^ owner of the dam built more Northern States has been m y Vmmttmm^KKminWtB ^BimtlmK ^^mAC HH H than 50 years ago near Winter, complimented by con- Wis., is asking the Federal servationists for having shown Power Commission to renew its operation permit restraint in commercial ex- . ploitation of the reservoir's ms- The 17,000-acre lake in- tic shore. undates a portion of the reser- The lake Is one of the state's vation, and the Indians argue favorite sources of muskellunge the power utility has not com- fishing. pensated them adequately. The Nelson said he was pleased recapture campaign includ ed a with the Interior Department's temporary take-over of the announcement, declaring Mor- EBj ^^TO SAVE BIG ON EVERY SIZE! 1 dam by Indian demonstrators ton seems to support the sena- In August. tor's proposed legislation "al- ^fap^ Nelson said he was told by most to the letter." W. W. Lyons, assistant to inte- NAMED FOR PEOPLE . ¦— — ¦ > '¦ rior secretary Rogers C. B. B^B^B^B^B^H • ntst woaf° ft * adjust' ¦B^p^BJ- Morton, SAPPORO, Japan (AP) - that the department Sapporo, scene of the 1972 supports the Indians' land Win- claim. der Olympic Games, derives its Morton also agrees with name from the Ainu, the light- Wis- skinned, round-eyed people who consin requests that portions of lived the flowage outside the reserva- on the island of Hokkaido tion be annexed to befor e the Japanese arrived. Chequame- The city's name is a con- Winona Daily traction of the Ainu phrase ¦ 10a¦ News , Ua winona, Minnesota "Sato poro petsu," meaning a FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1972 large dry river. fllH te'8 8 w ¦ ¦B^B ¦ •m«\>rr\8 ' ' _^^-^^^00B&^^^^— I *

B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^H mmmmm ^^m ^^Am ^^^^^^ y ^^^Aw ^^^^^^^^^^^^ y mm ^^*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^^^^. ^m ^ Think about this ^ before you buy your next tank of heating oil

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Zmmmmm *ammmmtammmmHaammmmmmpmmm *mmmmmmmm.^,. . . mammmmmmmmtmmmmmammma4m- t \ Language arts conference set at St. Mary's Methods of making the State Department fears teaching of English more ef- fective will be considered at a conference for junior and sen- ior high school language" arts Connally taking power teachers March 25 at St. Mary's College. WASHINGTON (AP ) — State rivalry and, in some sectors, speculation that the State De- Department officials say they innocence," the Treasury secre- partment's general power in Registration for the in-service are concerned that Treasury tary aaid. making foreign policy has fceen training; conference sponsored (Secretary John B. Connally taken away by presidential ad- by the Minnesota Council of may be making an effort to One State Department source viser Henry A. Kissinger. Teachers of English (MCTE) strip their agency of its power said he was sorry to hear Con- over conduct of U.S. foreign Although Cpnnally has not will be from 9 to 9:30 a.m. in 7 nally make such statements, AUTOMATIC FEEDING . . . Cattle at the Clarence two end bunks and a center bunk. Chains place the feed evenly economic policy. put forth any specific reorgani- Room ABC of the! College Cen- Pronschinske particularly when a govern- farm, rural Arcadia, Wis., are fed automatically. along the bunks according to predetermined tones and Connally set off the worrying zation ideas, the Democratic ter.: The tube (La former Texas governor at the rear carries the feed from an outside area to amounts. Croix Johnson photos) with a New York speech ment study is under way on the has The opening address will be Wednesday night in which he structure of trade policy. amassed considerable power in called for a reorganization of He said administration offi- his brief time as a Nixon Cabi- by Arthur Elfring, MCTE rep- the administrative structure cials are supposed to stay neu- net officer and some State De- resentative and an English St. John's covering overseas trade and tral on the situation until the partment sources see his latest teacher at Robbinsdale (Minn.) Arcadia dairy Hearing set commercial policies/ moves as a power grab. tradition- study, by the Office of Manage- High School. At 10 a.m. James ally run by the State Depart- ment and Budget Still , is completed , they say, he has a point Eng- at Lake City ment. this summer. about the need for reform in Nichols, chairman of the in death of "The conduct of foreign eco- Many foreign-service oifficers foreign economic policymaking, lish department at Winona barns are toured nomic policy today is charac- were particularly alarmed by but it should he done within the State College, will speak on terized by traits of jonderous- Connally to redecorate ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) — There are two liquid manure 's remarks because State Department and is al- "The Relevance of Irrelevant each eight feet ex-Whitehall man ness, division of responsibility. there is already considerable ready under way. LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Two barns in the Arcadia area holding pits, Literature" and at 11 a.m. a deep, which are emptied twice — The pre- — Voting members of the St. were" toured recently with the KENOSHA, Wis. panel of student teachers at John's Lutheran Church con- a year using a large tank-type liminary hearing for Edward facilities at each area explain- Pronschinske says he the College of Saint Terdsa will gregation, Lake City, have ap- spreader. Widmar, 32, Kenosha, has been discuss "The Problems of the proved a proposed plan for re- ed by Ted Brevik, University spends about 16 hours annual- Archie with manure labor. set for 9 a.m. Monday in Ken- Student Teacher." novation and redecoration of of Wisconsin specialist, ly Brovold, Buffalo County agri- The feeding system includes osha County Court, Branch 2, Nixon proposes bund le Theme of the conference will the church interior.. and Edward Aus- silage bunk in the free-stall before County Judge Earl D. be "Practical Stuff for Practi- culture agent, a The project will include reno- Trempealeau County ag- area, sealed storage and cor* cal People." derau, Morton. Widmar was charged vation of the church organ, a riculture* agent. Crete stave silos. All grain is After the noon luncheon for last Friday with first defcreo new ceiling, complete redecora- The barns were on the Clar- fed in the Double-6 herringbone all participants in the college death tion of the interior, refinishing ence Pronschinske and Roy milking parlor. murder in the shooting of business incentives cafeteria , Sister M. Carla of the altar , pulpit and baptis - of Thomas Breska, 34, Kenosha, and George Kujak farms. At the Kujak Brothers farm, By STERLING F. GREEN many tax-incentive proposals to to lend to small, high-tech- Born, English instructor at Cot- mal font, a new Communion Pronschinske, who has a a dairy operation with 90 milk former Whitehall, Wis., resi- WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres- speed research have been stud- nology firms which, Nixon said, ter High School, will speak on rail, new pews in both the dairy operation with 114 mills cows, there is a 72-by 136-foot dent. ident Nixon has proposed a ied by the White House, Nixon's have had "such a distinguished "Black Studies in the English nave and choir pioneering record. sections, wall to cows, has a free stall barn, free stall barn. The barn houses message made only one tax re- " Program." wall^carpeting and improved At the arraignment Friday, bundle of incentives to in- Experiments to test a variety 66-by 157 feet with 10-foot ceil- 90 stalls with dirt floors and dustry—including some modest quest—enactment of the small- The conference will dnd with lighting. A new air movement ing. The bam housed 14 stalls petos for calves. A small trac- Judge Urban J. Zivers set a of partnership arrangements a panel discussion in tax relief, credit aids federal business tax bill pending since teaching system for, ventilation will be and pens for small calves. tor is used for scraping the cash bond of $25,000, and ap- , between government agencies, methods in English. costsharihg, and even prizes- last ^ear. Members of installed. There are slatted floors in the alleys, and a barn cleaner is pointed Burton Lepp, Kenosha private firms and universities the panel will be teachers from fo develop new products and The message also will be set up under sponsor- The contract for redecoration stall area, and stalls are car- placed at one end ol the build- to defend Widmar, asked Con- Winona Junior High School, St. has been let to DeNardo attorney, processes. gress to increase the ratio of ship of the National Science Dec- peted. ing for removing the manure. Maury's College, Cotter High orating Studio, St. Paul , Minn., following his plea of indigency. In a special message to Con- federal financial support to Foundation and the National " THE BUILDING is ventilated gress Thursday, Nison prom- School and The New Way School. and the carpeting contract has VENTILATION IS BY soft According to Kenosha Coun- small business Investment com- Bureau of Standards, Nixon by plastic air duct ventilation ised a partnershp of govern- Open discussions will follow been awarded to Hinck Color plastic tubes running the length ty sheriff , Widmar walked into panies, to increase their ability said. intakes. There is a silage bunk ment and industry to marshal each presentation. Center, Lake City. Work is ex- of the barn. The tubers are per- the sheriff's office at 11:20 p.m. science and technology in sol- English teachers wishing to pected to begin in June and be forated on the side to discharge in the free-stall area and some March 9, and stated he had ving economic problems attend should contact Walter completed by Oct. 1. the air How. Pronschinske has grain is fed in the bimk. a man. Detectives found at There is a Double herring- shot home and reviving American Ayotte of the St. Mary's English Church services will be held a choice of using tempered air Breska's body in the Widmar competitiveness in world trade. department. in St. John's Lutheran School from the barn attic or taking bone milking parlor, with gas apartment. Only one shot had Fear dock strike heat in the parlor and milk The message disappointed gymnasium while the work is in colder air from outside. The been fired, officers said. Bres- some industry leaders who being done. barn ceilings and walls are in- room, and a bulk milk tank ka died of a bullet wound in have urged changes in the anti- sulated with foam. with built-in washer. the chest. trust laws to encourage corpo- after pay slashed The maximum sentence for rations to pool research-and-de- River Falls first-degree murder in Wiscon- velopment funds for projects By LEIF ERICKSON union agreed to new work rules sin is life in state prison. too big or risky for single SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A in 1960. Widmar is being held in the firms. shutdown of all U.S. ports Nevertheless, business and Kdnosha County jail in lieu loomed as a possibility today public members of the Pay native named of bond payment. Nixon invited the pooling of after the Pay Board trimmed a Board outvoted labor members resources and sharing of prof- wage increase won by West 8 to 5 in rejecting the new its, but did so by giving assur- Coast longshoremen in ending a ILWU-PMA contract as in- ances, in effect, that his admin- 134-day dock strike. flationary. fo V.A. Board istration will not take antitrust MADISQN Wis. (AP) There was no immediate The Pay Board said the new , - Ted Tarr orders action against combinations ILWU contract provides for -a Fetting, Gov. Patrick J. Lu- seeking 1 needed technological comment from Harry Bridges' cey's first appointee to the Vet- West Coast International Long- 16 per cent increase in wages breakthroughs as long as then- and overtime and a 4.9 per cent erans' Affairs Board, resigned actions do not foster monopoly. shoremen's and Warehouse- Thursday to accept a post with men's Union Thursday after the increase in employer-funded numbers 1-15 The message reported that pension and welfare benefits Wisconsin's Department of Vet- firms 3n two major industries Pay Board in Washington lop- erans' .Affairs ped about one-fourth of the during the first year of the new . already are pooling their re- 18-month pact. Fetting, a River Falls native sources. Electric utilities -have ILWU's negotiated increases. and Vietnam veteran, will be to be called Nor was there comment from It voted 8 to 6 pledged $25 million a year for to approve primarily responsible for co-or- WASHINGTON U»-Draft Di- the next io years to develop a Bridges' East and Gulf Coast only a 10 per cent increase in dinating the state "outreach" counterpart, President Thomas wages and to allow the rector Curtis W. Tarr Thursday liquid metal fast-breeder nucle- 4.9 per program. directed his 4 W Gleason of the AFL-CIO In- cent increase in fringe benefits ,100 draft boards ar reactor, as a demonstration . The project counsels return* to order men born in 1952 who power plant. This, said Nixon, ternational Longshoremen's Un- to stand. The 14.9 per cent total ing servicemen on problems ion. is still higher than the 8.9 per have lottery nuinber 1 through is part of a larger effort by they are likely to face after 15 to report for Army duty on electrical utilities to raise $150 But Bridges told his 13,000- cent called for in the board's being discharged and provides standard guidelines. CHECKS STATISTICS . . . A question and riculture agent, Clarence Pronschinske, own- dates from mid-April through million a year for research and member union on Feb. 24 that them with available assistance May 31. "The extra allowances answer period was part of the barn tour near er Edward Ausderau, Trempealeau County development in producing clean the ILWU and the ILA had were resources. , The action ls expected to fill made in recognition of the ne- agriculture agent Clarence and Mrs. Clar- electric power. agreed that they would join in "Unemployment funs higher Arcadia Wednesday. Pictured from left are , most, but not all, of the 15,000- a nationwide dock strike if the cessity of producing the income for the young veterans, educa- Ted Brevik, University of Wisconsin dairy ence Wolfe, Fountain City, Wis. man request for April Gas companies through the , May and , Pay Board touched wage in- and retirement security which tional assistance is substantial- specialist, Archie Brovold, Buffalo County ag- June. Tarr said he will issue American Gas Association, creases won by either union. has helped to foster efficient in- ly lower, and the public is gen- million to ac- the June call no later than ear- have raised $10 dustry production leading to erally indifferent to their war- ly May. celerate their pooled effort to The Feb. 16 contract between significantly greater output time sacrifices and their One reason for the uncertain- convert coal into gas, the mes- the ILWU and the West Coast with a continuously declining present needs," Fetting said in t sage said. employers' Pacific Maritime y of how much of the 15,000- work force," Pay Board Chair- a letter to Lucey. man call will be filled Other major goals of the Association contains language , Tarr man George H. Boldt said in He called the Vietnam veter- 'Introduction to Peace' said, is that this is the first Nixon said which permts the ILWU to technology drive, , announcing the decision. ans "a forgotten minority in time the Uniform National Call are pollution- take strike action within 30 rapid, safe and Under the pay provisions of our society," and said that ra- has been used. Under this, men free transportation ; measures days if the Pay Board refuses the pact, the West Coast dock cial minority servicemen ere are ordered into service on ¦ to reduce loss of life and prop- approval of the contract. workers were to receive a 72- "particularly hard hit." nationwide basis. erty from natural disasters; The Pay Board's staff report- cent hourly wage increase, ret- at CST is credit course Previously specific By ROSE KODET Tschumper, Winona State Col- lent Resistance" by M. K. Gand- quota* improvement of drug-abuse re- ed that West Coast stevedoring roactive to Dec. 25, to bring the were levied on individual states habilitation programs, and firms had saved some $1 billion hourly scale to $5. An addition- CCD classes Daily News Staff Writer lege student, Thursday evening hi, writing three to five short and local boards. As a result, stepped up medical research. in reduced labor costs through al 40 cents an hour was due "This course is very unor- at the College of Saint Teresa. papers on additional books read aU boards did not reach the Although it is known that increased productivity since the July 1. are scheduled thodox in structure and we The course to which he re- and meeting at least three hours same lottery-number ceilings. some want to come up with ferred, "Introduction to Peace," per week. Selective Service officials es- af thing we can use after the quar- timated between 1.1,000 and 12,- Galesville is being given for credit by The students were divided in- ter is over," commented Ken 000 will be called in April and GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) tho College of Saint Teresa and to 11 sections, each dealing May, with tho main men in- Students demonstrate over — Spring Confraternity of Chris- about 130 students — more than with a specific approach to the volved classed as IA or 1AO tian Doctrine (CCD) classes for study of peace, Including peace 100 from WSC — attended the conscientious objectors. The high school youth began Thurs- ARK and human nature, peace and later includes those willing to day in St. Mary's Church base- Mondovi opening class session. the economy, historical prece- do noncombat military duty firing of English teacher ment dents for peace and non-vio- , with Marianists from DR. ROBERT Collins, CST who were in the lottery held non-violent conflict reso- (AP) the monitoring by making an Marynook Novitiate directing. ls list- lence, last August for men turning 20 FLOODWOOD, Mdnn. - ing the principal of eavesdrop- center sets philosophy department, lution, peace and the interna- unusual amount of noise. Mo- The meeting schedule for the this year. It does not affect The firing of a young English ping. first few weeks will be*: a ed as the instructor for the tional environment, religion and those in the recent lottery, who teacher set off a demonstration Principal John Haskell said , ments later, they said, the prin- class and various Instructors in art tactics and apparently to speaker, ordained cr religious, peace, peace , were assigned numbers for cipal showed up from Winona State will serve contemporary problems in non- next year by 100 of the 250 students at however, that the major com- check on the disturbance. will develop the theme; a panel open house 's callup. Floodwood Junior-Senior High plaint against Reed was that he consisting of a lay person, a (Special) - as resource persons. Dr. Collins violent reform, peace and ecolo- Haskell said that he and the MONDOVI, Wis. first session over to School, Thursday. was teaching the same English teen-ager and a Marlanist , Central Lutheran turned the gy, education and peace, and school board think Reed should Youth of who helped set up The students marched outside course for classes in the sev- will discuss the" theme; the Church, Mondovi, will host an Tschumper, social and pyschological exper- Fraud cha rges face be teaching three different lev- "ground work" for the school to protest a decision enth, eighth and ninth grades. subject then to be thrown open open house Sunday, from 4 to much of tho imentation. The school board voted Tues- els of English instead of teach- tho class. by the Floodwood Scliool Board course, to the entire assembly. Moder- 8 p.m. for all area youth to Badger alderman not to renew the contract of day not to rehire the first-year ing tho same for three Tschumper told students the STUDENTS in .Individual gr ades. ator of tho programs will be visit their newly organized ARK groups will grade each other. Daniel Reed, 23. teacher in this northern Min- Brother Gerald Plcva, S.M., faculty did not want to be put WISCONSIN . RiAPIDS, Wis. He also said two students had center. The center Is located In in the position whore they have Tho grades will bo subject to (AP) Supporters of Reed claim he nesota community of 650 per- and Rev. Donald Cowie, S.M., parsonage' — Paul Mandry. 34, a for- complained that Reed slapped the former church . to bo "typical instructors" but review by Dr. Collins. mer Wisconsin Rapids alder- Is being dropped because of his sons. superior of Marynook. Lunch will be served at 5 p.m. mod dress and because he per- them. rather the initiative should be "This is probably the most man, was charged Thursday Reed graduated from the Courses will bo held regularly Tho youth of Central Lutheran will mitted an article to be printed on taken by tho students with the practical course nny of us with grand theft by fraud from University of Minnesota-Duluth Thursday nights at 7:30 Church wanted a place to meet take, said Tschumper, "be- io the school newspaper accus- highest academ- Kraemer Dr. Churc h p.m. teachers serving as resource " 1 a local credit union. last June with with their friends so the church cause If wo don' havo peace He majored In Eng- persons. t Miandry was accused of writ- ic honors. pastor leaves area furnished tho old parsonage don't survive." lish and history. The five credit course is wo ing out n loan to a fictitious William Goldman with activities that interest "wide open" with only some The entire group will meet person in connection, with tho Loss believed Reed told reporters Haskell , evan gelist Ex-a rea pastor is young people. at Kraemer Drive Church of "starting structure to get the" three or four times during the alleged theft of $12,000 in 1968 has told him ho used poor taste named Entertainment for fter- navy bcllbottom Christ since last June, preached to advisory th^ class going," said Tschumper. quarter to hear small group re- from the Bull's Eye Credit $500 in breakin In dressing in noon will include movies, pool, re- pants and a turtle neck shirt. his farewell sermon last Sun- group at Manitowoc Tho basic requiremnts for the ports. Each section will be Union, where he was assistant uuy. x iio uuHl- Ping-pong, chess and other class include reading "Non-Vio- sponsible for a group project. manager. at Plainview Reed aald he didn 't consider his games. appearance "far out." man family left ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) for Sok In , The Rov. E. E. Olson , former The ARK is tentatively set to He snid that as advisor to the open — The Wabasha County sher- student newspaper, ho per- Wash,, Monday, pastor of Zion Lutheran Church, be Wednesday evenngs Bishop Fitzgera ld's iff' s office is investigating a mitted a story about alleged ea- where he will Blair, and Faith Lutheran and Sunday afternoons. If condition satisfactory breakin at Ray Ohm's Garago vesdropping by the principal to serve at evan- Church, rural Ettrick, has been enough Interest is generated on tlie northeast edgo of Plain- be printed last February be- gelist at tho named chairman of the Citizens nmong the young people it may The Most Rev. Edward A. view. The burglary occurred cause ho concluded it was the Sekiu Church of Advisory Committee of the Uni- bd open more frequently. Fitzgerald1, D.D., former bishop some time between 9 p.m. Wed- truth. Christ. versity of Wisconsin Center, Pool, Ping-pong and chess of the Diocese of Winonn, Is a nesday and 6 a.m. Thursday. The story, written by a stu- • Drs. Warren Manitowoc County. tournament players may sign patient at St. Marys Hospital, Taken were assorted tools, dent, declared that school ad- W. H a o s 1 y, Rev. Olson is pastor of St. up for tournament play. Rochester, Minn. including sockets, wrenches, ministrators had listened in on Robert R a z (Paul's Lutheran Church in Man- Advisors for tho program arc, Ho had entered tho hospital pliers. ana J n c K _, ., itowoc, where ho has served for Mr. and Mrs. Gary Preston Friday after suffering in- classroom discussions vin the c oMmD Inst The loss, estimated at $500, school intercom system and Rhodes will bo ' " nine years. The Olson's son, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ander- ternal bleeding from some med- wns not covered by Insurance. called the practice unethical, lay-speakers nt the Kraemer Jonathan , is completing train son , Terry Pace, youth board ication he had taken , and wns Entry was gained hy jimmy- Teachers conferring ln one Drive Chureli, until a new min- ing under tho ROTC plan at chairman and two representa- listed in satisfactory condition ing open the front door. room reportedly made a test of ister arrives. Ripon College. tives of each high school. today by a hospital spokesman. SHIP UHlll|p TVORand Met a spiritual lift /"^ <±£ ,^^«^\ CHURCH-for the whole week WINONA GOSPEL CHURCH GRACE PRESBYTERIAN PLEASANT VALLEY (Center and Sanborn itrtttit CHURCH EVANGELICAL The Rev. Jack A. Tanner (Franklin iM Broadway) FREE CHURCH Dr. James V. Beswdriey, 1343 Homer Road f:4) a.m.-Sunday school. Patrick J. Clinton. Pastor 10:45 a.m.-Worshlp. supply pastor 4:30 p.m.—Adult choir. 7 10 a.m.-Worshlp service. Sermon: 9:30 a.m.—Sunday school. Bible classes 7 p.m.—Prayer service. "How Can I Give Thla Up Ephralm? ", for the entire family. Nvrsery provided 7:30 p.m.—Evangtf lstlc servlc*. text: Hosea ((elided verses), by Dr. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Blblt itudy. for all Sunday services. (UP J amis V. Beardsley, Prelude: "Andante Friday, 7)30 p.m. —Hobby Club. - VOUR Sott-rwto , Lulglnli offertory: "The Won- 10:43 a.m. — Congregatlom l worship. ¦ ¦ ¦ ' " drous Cross", MacDonald; postlude: Message — "Evangelism By Multiplica- "Core From Water Musle", C F. Han- tion". del, Mrs. Caryl Turllle oruanlst. Nur- t p.m.—Senior end Junior FCYF. Lutheran Services sery provided. 6 p.m.—College Supper and Dialogue. 11 a.m.—Colfee and fellowship In din- 7:15 p.m.—Preservlce meditation. ST. MATTHEW'S LUTHERAN ing room. 7:30 p.m.—"Body-Life" service. Mes- ll «.rn.—Sunday ichool for agis from sage . — "Divine Healing." (Wisconsin Synod) J yeirs. Wednesday, 6 a.m. — Men's Prayw —Ecumenical Len- (West Vebasho ano High) Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Breakfast. ten series at Central United Method ill 7 p.m.—Choir rehearsal. The Rev. A. L. Mennicke. pastor Church. Thursday, 7 p.m.—Choir rehearsal. Vicar Loren Frits Full Thursday, 7 p.m.—Choir practice. 7:30 p.m.—Bible study and prayer ier» . ¦' vice. r a.m;—Worship. Sermon: "Ona Died »:45 p.m.—Board of Christian educa- For All." Mri. Gary Steffenhagen, or- (_ Z'.'I ' AP ^. VALLEY BAPTIST CHAPEL tion. ganist. ¦} I < , The Rev. Bill Williamson. 9:15 a.m.—Sunday ichool and Bible sjt y the 23rd Psalm , David expresses his confidence in God #; . lie class. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ; (MS Milii. lt.> 10:39 a.m.—Communion. Sermon and us that God will not let us go . ..*,* «;, (Orrin Street and Highway 41) organ same as earlier. Kindergarten as a provider. He assures * ?:15 a.m.—Pre-urviea prayar. through third grade, directed by * : The Rev. James Hayes Mr*. will supply all our needs. r 9:30 a.m.—Sunday school with graded D. E. Kiekbusch, will sing, "Jesus Tender t wanting, that He "t ? ; Savior." . ' ¦ • ;. Bible lessons for ill ages. »:45 a.m.—Sunday school. Lesson: "Thi 10.-43 a.m.—Worship services with Pas- 4 p.m.—Examination of catechumens. ' Distinctive Fellowship." He assures us - tor Williamson bringing' the messagi. 4:30 p.m.—Youth League bowling. But the Psalmist .does not stop here. ft 10:55 a.m.—Worship. Sermon: "Can Pianist, Valerie Sinford; Congregational Monday, 4:30 p.m.—Lutheran Pioneer* I* ^ God Prepare A Table?" Communion. and Lutheran Girl Ploneen. than we need, in fact, so much i& ,-% singing led by Charles Ssckett. Nuriery 5:30 p.m.-rYoung Peoples groups for a % that God will give us more provided. . . 8 p.m.—Men's Club. . time of Fellowship with Mrs. Eldon - . — Business meeting at fhe Tuesday, <:30 p.m.—Junior choir. fc more that our cup will run over. He even assu res us a '** 2:30 p.m. Schramm ond Mrs. Garbld Stlnson In 7 p.m.—Sunday school teachers. church. charge. 8 p.m.—Choir. we can waste or we can 4 p.m.—Bible study for Jr. Highs. Call 4:30 p.m.—TeenS. Bible study In Ro- lus. A God-given surplus. A surplus 452-2014 for transportation. Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.—Lenten service. ft surp mans and Colosslans. Bus transportation is available for all Sermon, "INRI". . Mrs. Gerald Mueller, C' 4:30 p.m.—Juniors, Lynirla Kragt, su- ' are care less. If we share it, ' , 4:30 p.m.-Adult Bible study, Mlsi 6:30 p.m.—Fellowship supper. i t i of course, "/: Eunice Meyers, teacher. 7:30 p.m.—Lenten service. Sermon and share it would be • McKINLEY 7:30 p.m.—Evangelistic service. Ser- organ soma as earlier. |U be tp mock the provider; to ->^ UNITED METHODIST mon: "Judas, The Fallen Apostle." Thursday, 7:30 p.m. — Lutheran Col- —Christian service ISO) West Broadway) Thursday, 7:30 p.m. legians. Wk to thank Him for it. training course, "How We Got Our Saturday, t a.m.—Confirmation classes. K v. Tlie Rev. Glenn L. Qnam, Bible," (This Is the last session of this IV pastor course). . ' In an era when we hear so much about the minimum hourly wage Saturday, 7:30 p.m. — The Colonial ST. MARTIN'S LUTHERAN f%\ mission pastor Quartet from Olatha, Kansas , will pre- ^ sent a Gospil concert. separate ' and difficult to ¦ -find very J- •¦¦• ¦ guaranteed we it Larry TomteH. associate ¦ • ¦ (Missouri Synod) income - fe^ a , . (Broadway and Liberty) ; |§ that which we need from what we do not need, but think we Q 1:30 a.m. — Stockton worship service. The Rey. Armin U. Deye, J Sermon: "Who Do You Claim To Bel" pastor ||&i< do. If we could honestly discern between necessities \ Organist: Mrs. Herbert Melllnger. Catholic Services The Rev. Kenneth Krnegcr, 9:30 a.m.—Stoclrton church school. M%1 and luxuries, we could witness our cup really 9:45 a.m.—MeKinley worship service. assistant pastor Sermon: "Who Do Yoir Claim To Be?" CATHEDRAL The Rev. Louis Bittner. pf;'/; running over. The question is personal. • Organist : Mrs. William Ferguson, Choir director : Mrs. Dennis Goplen, and Aeo- OF(Main SACRED ind West HEARTWabaiha) assisting pastor What are you doing with your surplus? lyle: Dennis Reed. : " ft#)^ 10:15 a.m.—MeKinley church school. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph R. t and 10:30 a.m.—Worship services. _ what are you doing with Your Cup Full? 10:45 a.m.-Adult dlscusljcn group. McGinnis. rector Sermon: "What Shall | Do WM Just 11:15 a.m.—Mlnl-servlce I. hour). Then With j The Rev. Peter Brandenhoft Jesus?" Text : Matf. 27:22-24. , P.^.. j fi ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ '' '¦ ¦ Thursday, 3:30 p.m.—Junior choir. *' 9:15 a.m.—Sunday ichool. m&m& "' - 7 p.m.—Senior Choir. The Rev. . Donah] Walter 9:15 a.m.-Adult arid High School Blbte t p.m.—Ecumenical Lenten service classes. . with St. Mary's at MeKinley. A chancel associates 9:15 a.m.-Adult Instruction clasi. drama, "The Great One", will be pre- 2-4 p.m.—Elder* Training Session III. sented. Sunoay Manes (j: u p.m. Saturday): 5:45, l, 6:15, 9:30 (broadcast. KWNO), 3:30 p.m.—Sauer Memorial Home serv- Saturday, 9:30 a.m. — Confirmation, tce. ¦ • (Please note: This change of time Is for 11 a.m., 12:14 and 5:15 p.m. Nursery ' provided at 9:30 end ll Masses. 5 p.m.—Valley View Tower service. this Saturday only). 7:30 p.m.-Couples Club. Sacrtment ol Penance: Dai yi 4:45 Monday, 7 p.m.—Volleyball for CONGREGATIONAL to 5:10 p.m.i Saturday: 3-5 tnd 7:30-9 men FIEST "'¦ ¦ ¦ ' and women. (West Broadway and Johnson) pjn.. . • ' . Dally Massesi i. u a.m. end 1:15 p.m. Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.—Bible Brunch at The Rev. John A. Kerr William's Hotel, ¦/¦ 7 p.m.—Bible class. minister • 7 ST, STANISLAUS 7 p.m.—Auditing committee. (Bast p.m, on Saturdays, * - vigils ot least Friday, 7 p.m.—Public examination for ^ Sth and Hurt Sts. Dr. Warren W. Haesly for all ages. Dr. Archie Beighley, super- *ays and Thursdays be- 9:45 a.m.—Christian Education for all fore first Fridays conllrmants at First Lutheran. 9:45 a.m.—Sunday school. 8 a.m.—Comntonjjm. S \ Dr. Robert Itaz intendent. Saturday, 9 a.m.—Contlrmatlon Instruc- 10:45 a.m.—Morning worship. Pastor ages. 10:30 a.m.—Mornfflfl" prayer and ser- v 10 a.m.—Meeting. Speaker will be Dr. 10:45 a.m.—Morning worship nrvlce. First Friday Masses—* a.m. tions at Goodview. Menage by Pastor Sebeny. Special by Holy Day Masses—9 a.m. and 5:30 and Lee Ctirlstopherson will speak on tht 10:45 a.m.—Wonhlp. Sermon: "Our mon. Church school. Nursery provided, \llmer Schmidt. Topic: "The Burton Act Dr. Jack Rhodes ¦ 7:30 p.m.EYC meets In Youth Room. the Choir. Nuriery and Jr, Church pro- /:30 p.m (5:30 o.m on eve of Holy Spring Cleaning," art<) the Senior Cltlien. topic: "A Cure For Discouragement". Tuesday. 2 and 7:30 p.m.—Dlble study. 10 a.m.-Blble sludy for til ages. vided. Day). 6:30 p.m.—Bible study, SI FAITH LUTHERAN Assisting In worship will be Mrs. Joseph Thursday, 7:15 p.m.—Senior Choir prac- 11 a.m.-Worshlp Including Lord's Sup- <:I5 p.m.—Calvary Youlh Crutadtrs Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Woman's Council. tor teens and college age. OrlowsKe, organist, and the Chancel Thursday—Home Study groups meet. tice. per. ST. CASIMIR'S (The Lutheran Church Choir. Friday, 3:15 p.m.—Junior Choir prac- SALVATION ARMY 6 p.m.—Eva ngelistic servlci. 7:30 p.m.—Evening service with mn- (Weif B roadway near Ewlng) ¦ sage by Pastffr Sabeny. In America) 5:30 p.m.—College Age Dialogue, A tice. (112 W. 3rd St.) Wednesday, 7 p.m.—Bible sludy and The Rt. Rev. MsRr. (17)7 W "Service Dr.) meal will be served, ¦ Lt. and Mrs. Richard Forney prayer meeting. Lesson series: "Divided Tuesday, 7:15 p.m.—Bible study and 7 p.m,—Veipen. Pastor-Chrlstopherson CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Kingdom Of Israel." discussion group at Richard Averill Emm cit F. Tighe, pastor The Rev. Gordon R; Arneberg will ipeak on the topic: "What Kind ot ¦ home, 10(6 Glen Echo Lane. OF LATTER DAV SAINTS ASSEMBLIES OF GOD 9:30 a.m.—Sunday school at Thurley / The Rt. Rev. M sgr. Qiureh?" Thursday, 7 p.m.—Choir practice. 9:30 a.m.—Sunday church ichool, Adult Tuesday, 7 p.m.-Work night at thi (MORMON ) (Center and Uroedwayi Homes, community room. SEVENTH DAY 8 p.m.-Bible itudy and prayer matt- Julius W. Haun, pastor emeritus class meets at Sauer Home. church. I145J Park l oni) Pastor W. W. Shaw '7 p.m.—Evening service, 112 W. 3rd St. ADVENTIST CHURCH ing, 10:45 a.m.—Wonhlp. Sermon; "A Mat- Wedn'sday, 10 a.m.-Blble sludy al Mondey, 1-3 p.rtv-Forevar Fifty Club Masses—(ti 15 p.m. Saturday) > tun- ter Ol Death Benny D. Thompson Jr. (East Sanborn and Chestnut) and Lite". Nuriery pro- the Wot Marks reildance, 305 Winona SI. 9:45 a.m.-Sunday ichool. at Schaffner Homos. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE days, fi and 10 a.m. vided. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Family Night. branch president 10:45 a.m.-Morning worship. Children Tuesday, » a.m.—Home League at Thur- Pastor Gerald IL Greene (West Sanborn and Maim Weekdays—7:15 a.m. 4:30 p.m. -LulhOr League meets at tha Adults will meet In Chapol and will church lor ages 1-11 yeiri. ley Homes. Hnly days—5:30 p.m. on IVI ot holy church lor roller skating parly. study "Tho Commandments". Baptist 8 a.m.-Sunday servicer priesthood. 4 p.m, —Choir practice, 3:30 p.m. - Kld'i Klub at Thurley 1:45 p.m.—Sabbath ichool, Lesion itu- 9:30 a.m.-Sunday school. day and ; e.m and ? p.m. on the holy Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Spiritual Renewal Youth Will meet in Fellowship Hall. 9:45 a.m.-Sunday ichool. 7:30 p.m.—Evening service. Communion Homes. dy; "The Lord' s Supper — The Crow n- ll a.m.—Service, Sub|ecl: Matter. day Soislon. Everyone welcome. 1:30 p.m. BiJO p.m.—Chancel Choi r rehearsal. 7 p.m.—Sacrament. sorvico th» first Sunday evening ol each 7 p.m.—Homo Leaoue, down town, ing Service Of Worship." Lesson text: Wednesday, a p.m.—Testimony mailing. Hirsi Fridays—«:I5 ano /ill a.m. —Choir rehearsal, Friday, 7:30 p.m.-Cruiadors will have Tuesday. /:30 p.m.—MIA. month. Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. - Bible sludy, John 13i | John 4:9-11; John 6:53-54j I Reading Room open Tuesdays, Thuri- Confessions— Saturdays svoi and noly Saturday, io a.m. -Senior confirmation a "Fondue" at the Lon Mastenbrook Thursday, 9i30 a.m.-Rellet Society. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Bible and pray- down town. Cor. ll:2iS-2a. dayi and Saturdays, except holidays, lays, Thursday before Ural Fridays— cl.iss mcels (or roheanal for one hour. residence In Minnesota City. Saturday, 10130 a.m.—f-rlmary er hour ond C. A. service, 1:30 p.m.—Sunbeams al Thurley Home*. 2:45 p.m.-Worshlp. from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. 3 to 4 p.m, and 7:30 p.m.

// You Have a Habit Of Following The Crowd , We Suggest, The Best Crowd to Follow is the Crowd Going To Church Winona Furniture Company Haddad's Cleaners & Laundry Turner's Market Gene Karasch Realtor Hossfeld Manufacturing Co. Sandy' Restaurant Pally & * Al Smllh 8, staff Rocky Haddad and Employei Oernld Turner nnd Employei and Sales Staff Management and Bmployei Dive JenKIni and Staff

Randall's Super Valu Darg Truck Bodies & Trailers P. Earl Schwab Company Hal-Rod Lanes Taggart Tire Service Jamei Hogue and Bmployei Ray raagarf and Employei Dunn Blacktop Company Mr. and Mri. Ltiter H. Berg P Herl Schwab and Sfnff Oonny and Pitt Oroolem Evan tt. Oavln and Staff Country Kitchen Restaurant Winona Delivery & Transfer Siebrecht Floral Company Bloedow Baku Shop Bunko's APCO Service Sadie Marsh and Employei. Ed flunk! and Bmployes Ruppert' Grocery A. W. "Art" Sail-bury & Staff Mri. Charlei Siebrecht and Stalf Jullui Gernei and employei * Mmeoemint and Parionnel Winona Agency Morgan's Jewelry Tht Management and Start Fawcott Funeral Home Polachek Electric Winona Ready Mixed Concrete Steve Morgan and Staff Management and Staff Will Polachek Family Henry Scharmer and Employei Burmeister Oil Company Cone's Ace Hardware Pred Burmeliter and staff Miracle Mall Merchant* end All Bmployei Invite You to Church Brom Machine & Foundry H. Choate & Company Northern States Power Co. Paul Drom and Employei Employee Management and Parionnel Alf Photography, Inc. Fidelity Boland Manufacturing Co. Richard Alf and Stiff Savings & Loan Aisn, S Rolllngstone Stan Boland and Employei Pred Schilling and Staff peltz Phillips "66" Sarvlce lumber Yard Paint Depot—Elliott Paints Joseph and Jamei Spelti Itolllnoilone, Minnesota Tha Hubofi and Employei J. C. Penney Montgomery Ward & Company ' Company Kendell Corporation Madison Silos Ruth's Restaurant Paul Miller nnd Stalf Management and Pericnnel n. W, Cornwall and Employes Winona Boiler & Steel Co. Dlv. Martin-Marietta Co. Ken Rice end Staff Management and Employei Badger Foundry Company Joswick Fuel & Oil Co. and Employei Watkins Products, Inc. W. T. Grant Department Store Quality Sheol Metal Worki Culllgan Soft Water Service Minagimint and M, P. Joswick and Employee Bmployei Mr*. Mourlne Strom and Staff Management and Employei Frank Allen and Employei Altura State Bank Member P.D.I.C Downtown Shall Service American Cablavltlon Co. Merchants National Bank Lake Center Switch Inn Company Holiday Del Board and Employee Daniel Schmidt and Stiff Of|lcirs-Dlractor» st«ti Management and Employei Featuring Llnshen'i Reitaurent Peerless Chain Company Management and Employei Quality Chevrolet Company Winona Auto Sales H, S. Dresser & Son, Contrs. Warner & Swasey Company Karsten Construction Company JifrtM Mauiolf tnd tt tit Chryilir-Plymoutti-Oado* Harry and Jim Droaier and suit Badger Division end Employei Happy Chef Restaurant Oaoroe Kiriten and stiff Mel Boom and Employei Gibson Discount Cantar Bauer Electric, Inc. Hl-Way Shell Mr. T'a Restaurant Golte Pharmacy Thern Ruinll Oauir and Staff Roy Taylor anil Employei , Inc. Mr. and Mri. Savirt Tindal ant) All employ** N L, Colt) and tt'ff Mr and Mri. Royal Therfi North Amarlcttn Rockwall Corp. Park Plaxa Hotel Tempo Department Store Kujak Bros. Transfer, Inc. Williams Hotel & Reirauranr Chas, J. Olsen & Sons Plbg. Whlt-Cralt Houieboaf Olvlilon Management and Slolf Management and Employei Hubert, Emil. Merlin t, Frank Ku|aK Roy Meyer and Staff Clarence Oliin and Employei JJwugklL/$. CL ckAqipnajL Uncertainties of missionary trade great Appointed time By EDWARD B. FISKE fore — partly because of the 17-year-old civu war in losses of up to one-third. an explicitly Christian com- Methodists NEW YORK — Being a financial problems, partly the Sudan, Roman Catholic The United Methodist mitment in order to parti- By THE REV. MSGR. N. F. GRULKOWSKI . missionary has always been Church, for instance, had cipate in salvation. 1935-1942. There is an appointed time for everything ! because of changing priori- missionaries will now be an uncertain affair. St. ties among liberal church- 1,500 missonaries in 1968 • Past missionary activi- This is a conviction going back to the time of my ordina- permitted to return by but expects to have only " tion by the Most Paul survived a series of men and ties have produced indigen- Rev. Michael James Gallagher in the old to view shipwrecks. Before quinind partly because of Moslem authorities in Khar- about 1,000 in the near fu- ous churches are now Cathedral o£ Ss. Peter the missionary that and Paul, Detroit, the life expectancy of pio- 's new vul- toum. ture. capable of taking care of Mich. nerability to the vicissitudes is by far the After having neers in some areas of Af- The U.S. themselves. ascertained the fitness of a of politics in a post-colonial largest missionary - sending CHURCH MISSION pro- rica was measured in age. • Young people and lib- candidate to the priesthood, the bishop con- chancel drama ' country in the world. Latest grams have been hard hit fers tbe order; but God bestows the dignity months rather than years. by the general leveling off eral church executives are A Lenten chancel drama, And of course there were Last week British Pres- figures show that there" are and power. byterian in church giving as -well as increasingly sensitive to tha "The Great One,," . will be pre- all those headhunters. missionary Harry 33,000 North American fact that missionaries in- It is precisely at this moment of "the Daniel Beery, inflation and the reduced laying of hands sented at MeKinley United American missionaries to- who had liv- Protestant and 8,500 Cath- evitably export not only the " that Christ's words: "You ed in Taiwan for 21 years buying power of the Amer- have not chosen Me Methodist Church, 801 W. Broad- day have learned to handle , olic missionaries spreading Gospel but U.S. cultural val- but I have chosen you," ¦ was expelled by provincial ican dollar abroad. The de- strike the newly ordained with such impact most of the Gospel in over 10O for- ues. ; ' way, next Thursday at 8 p,m., policey apparently because countries. repre- cline in missionary zeal that he wonders: "Just who am I. eign This " as part of the ecumenical ser- N Yoric of a statement he made sents a slight fall-off in among mainline denomina- Whether zealous evangeli- TRULY — he is the choice of the most ii£?i last tions, though, clearly in- cals or wary liberals, nign uoa, vice with St. Mary's Catholic l imes December that some both faiths, but the pat- ana no man chooses lor himself d angers ^ interpreted * volved other factors, includ- though, all missionaries ara the priestly state of life. While, what a priest Grulkowski Church. of their News as suggesting tern of decline is erratic. an independent Taiwan. On Catholic missionaries, ing the following: facing new lands of situa- must know and what a priest must do varies from time to Written by W, A- Poovey, the" trade, Service tions that require brand , ¦ the more cheery side, word however, are off from a • Liberal theological time there can be no variation in what a priest must be is directed by Michael but the ¦ -J new mission .styles. ... a living Christ! drama . ' reached Rome a few days high of about 9,500, and the thinking often plays down 1942-1945. I , O'Toole. O'Toole has student uncertainties are probably before that, in the wake of mainline liberal Protestant the uniqueness df Christian- Anxious to eliminate ves- There is an appointed time for everything, greater entered the Chaplains' Corps of the U.S. Naval Reserve. To directed several plays at Wi- now than ever be- the recent settlement of churches have reported ity and the need to make tiges of their colonial past, me it is plain that patriotic service in the Armed Forces is nona State College -including many governments have "Bald Soprano ," Ienosco, and put rigorous conditions on a duty born of filial love of God and country. - War is a grim desolating business but who can count the "Ah, Wilderness." missionary activity. Burma many blessings we receive from God through our country? Members- of the cast are Area church bans foreigners of all kinds. Chaplains stress this conviction : "No man can do more for Becky Schafer, Carla Hoffe, The fruits cf centuries cf his country than offer his all," and most assuredly no one Cathy Hirsch, Dan Quam, Lee highly idealistic mission services work in China has been vir- calling himself a man can do less. There is no perfect Christ- Tomten, Carl Gora and Larry ¦ ¦ ¦ ALTURA tually wiped out the ian who is not also a perfect patriot, because war and Christ- Tomten. Jehovah Lutheran church, Wisconsin by . ianity do go together!! Synod, Sunday ichool, 9:15 a.m.; wor- communists. India will not The public may attend. ship, 10:30 a.m. YPS bowling, 7 p.m. 1968-1972. There is an appointed time for everything. Re- Wednesday—l.enten Vespers at Jehova h, admit nevr missionaries calling 1968 as the year of shattered dreams and shattered Rev. Galen Sommer guest speaker, 9 unless they are performing p.m. Friday—Released Time Classes, bodies, hope aroused and not fulfilled , of peace sought and 8:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday-No confirma- a useful secular service like not found, witness: tion class. teaching and occupying a Children s drama BETHANY The late Martin Luther King was fated to see but never Bethany Moravia n Church, Sunday post for which ho Indian is enter that "promised land" which he envisioned for his school and adult Bible study class, 9:45 available. children. Robert Kennedy, too, expected death to come— a.m.; morning worship, offerlnfl for On* Great Hour of Sharing, 10:45 a.m. Wed- WITHOUT THE protective and it did ! It was the year Jacqueline Kennedy reached for is highlight of nesday—Union Lenten service at Lewis- ton Church of umbrella of a colonial re- personal happiness only to have her marriage to Aristotle fhe Brethren, 8 p.m. Fri- day—Released Time Religious classes. gime there is little that mis- much Saturday—Confirmation Onassis run into a deadly crossfire of publicity and Instruction, 9:3* sionaries adverse criticism. Even the Pope wasn't spared Paul VI a.m. can do to fight . Lenten service CEDAR VALLEY back. They can change published Humanae Vitae and the controversy it sparked Cedar Valley Lutheran Church, Sunday hasn't subsided to this day. Likewise in 1968 it came my "We Know About You, school, ID a.m.; worship. It: a.m. Mon- their mode of operations, day-Discussion of first communion, I though s was a Jesus", a "Children's Readers p.m, . , and this is what is turn. The resignation of my pastorate at St. Stan' ^ most difficult decision. Theater" draraa, will be the " ' .ELEVA. happening. highlight of the folk worship ser- Eleva Lutheran Church, worship; 9 and 10:30 a.m.; church school, 9 and The independence move- IT WAS WITH joy and a grateful heart I thanked God vice Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Cen- 70:30 a.m.; Chapel Singers, 10 a.m.; ment in Africa and else- lor the unique privilege and rare distinction of'being pastor tral United Methodist ' Church'. nursery, 10:20 a.m. Monday — Cherub where has also produced , plus Choir, 3:45 p.m. Tuesday—Private Com- cf my hometown parish church for 22 rewarding years This is the final program in munions. Wednesday—7th and 8th grade independent churches that six equally happy years as the young assistant. the ecumenical Lenten series catechism, 7 p.m.) Senior Choir, 7 p.m.; now insist on relation to the the Cen- Mid-week Lenten service, 8 p.m.; Lenten Nonetheless, I had projected my sights to 1971, developed by the Emmanuel Fellowship, . p.m. European and North Amer- tennial Year of St. Stan's/ coinciding with my 25th year as United Methodist; Grace Pres- GALESVILLE ican churches that feeling Berean Baptist Church : Sunday school, created pastor. The very thought of leaving left me with a byterian , First Congregatonal 10 o.m.r morning wo rship, 11 a.m.; eve- them as equals. The mis- of sorrow, setback and frustration . But after so many years ning service, 7:30 p.m. All meetings are and Central Methodist churches. In Sir Isaac Clarke room, Bank of Gales- TO . . The churches, youth institutes civic clubs and sionary who lands in a it couldn't have been otherwise. PRESENT CONCERT . , The drama is directed by Miss ville. Wednesday-Bible study, 7:30 p.m. high school assemblies. The concert is spon- place like Zaire, therefore, 1972. There is an appointed time for . everything. My HOKAH Colonial Quartet , Olatha, Kan., will appear Phyllis Rosenberg, Winona Jun- United Methodist. Sunday worship, 9:30 has probably been invited conviction is that now is that appointed time "for full and at the Church of the Nazarene, 463 Orrin St., ored by youth of the Church of the Nazarene, ior High School. The commen- a.m., Rev. Mltchsll Wvllonen preaching. by a local group and will honorable retirement from all official duties" as stated li- LOONEY VALLEY March 25 at 7:30 p.m. Gospel singers, they and is open to the public. tary is from "a child' Looney Valley Lulheran Church, wor- probably find himself the bishop's letter to me. s point travel through the Midwest entertaining at work- of. view" and the drawings ship, 9:30 a.m.;. Sunday school, 10:30 ing under the supervision I retain forever however, my priesthood of Jesus Christ, and a.m. title of Father together with the rank of domestic prelate pictures used in the slide pre- MINNESOTA CITY of a native. His goal will be sentation that accompanies First Evangelical .Lutheran Church, CENTRAL to do a particular job with title of Monsignor. My place of residence will be "Winona , the Sunday school, 1 a.m.; worship, sermon: , train readings are made by children "Our Great High Priest", 10:15 a.m,; UNITED METHODIST a local to replace him and location undetermined. The vphole world is now my parish, . (West Broadway and Main) social and economic needs of all man- In the" cast are the readers: Youlh League bowling, 4:30 p.m. Mon- Quaker philosopher then move on. Another wherein the spiritual, day— Lutheran Pioneers and Lulheran The Rev.. Harlyu Hagmann, Girl Pioneers, change in kind are to be considered. There is need to proclaim and Wayne Breitenfeldt, son of Mr. «:30 p.m. Thursday—Len- senior pastor the attitudes of once a fen services, sermon: "Hour Of Denial", many missionaries today Is re-establish that live, strong and changeless faith, and Mrs. Chester Breitenfeldt, by 1hi» Rev. Harold Sturm, 7 p.m. Fri- The Rev. Roger A. Parks, treasured possession of older generations and now being 315 Elm St.; Russ Hoesley, son day—Public examination for conftrmanfs sees good, bad in a growing interest in bring- at church, 7 p.m. Saturday—Confirma- associate pastor ing about social change. shaken, if not lost, midst a changing world. of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert H. tion Instruction*, at Goodview* 9 a.m. Israel: and the Arab countries gird themselves for war. Hoesley, 377 Washington St.; St. Paul's Catholic Church Salurdav »:15 a.m.—Church school for 3-year-old This has the practical ef- with civil and religious strife. Mass, 7:30 p.m. with confession* at 7 children through adults. Nursery provid- fect of producing fewer con- Northern Ireland is rocked Kathy Van Kirk, daughter of n.m. Sunday Masses, 8 and to a.m. Jesus movement ed. Ih the church, unrest and dissension are at an all time high. Frldav—Friday Masses, 5:.">0 p.m. Holi- lO ' a.m.—Coffee and Fellowship, Parlor. verts, though mission offi- Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Van day Masses, 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dally mood of desperation I0-.4S a.m.-Worshlp, Sermon: "You cials say that * Masses, 8 a.m. except Wednesday and By GEORGE W. CORNELL "In a it is simply generation could well chant: "From Kirk, 455 Sunset Drive; Carolyn Are My Disciples", by Mr. Harlyn TRULY, THE older Friday at 8:30 nm. (AP ) -When- they have turned to Jesus as a C. another way of NEW YORK Haomarm. Orson selections: "O Sacred doing the deliver us, 0 Lord!" Rohrer, daughter of Dr. and PICKWICK all evils of this day and age ... alternative to their for- Head, How Wounded", J. tOrnberser, same thing. Pickwick Baptist Church, worship, ! ever a religious figure opens viable "There's more which the world looks and prays for, will Mrs. Curtis Rohrer, 700 Wash- J. S. B'ch ''Wondrous Love , arr. Earl Leadership, a.m.; Sunday <-*n»irmatlon class. terment. tism, can be a real factor for harm. STOCKTON fad that will die out within a most continuous hilarity. Tljey 7 p.m.—Boy Scouts. " campus ministelr, is the liturgist 9 " . . . 'Political and educational—even religious leadership—by Grao Lutheran Chech, worship, year. Others think it will re- shout and sing and call out to 8 p.m.—Administrative Board, Parlor. for the service Wednesday a.m.; Sunday schnnl, 10 a.m. Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday - Fri- y and totally Stockton United M»thodI't Church, wor- vitalize the entire Christian good and honest men who give themselves wholl evening. anyone who will listen, 'Jesus day, t-<\ p.m.—Private meditation, Chap- does ac- ship, 8:30 a.m.; «"»rw school, 9:30 a.m. cause, either outside the in- el. Cotter Lenten Mass to tht service of their country and fellowman, STPUM loves you.' " Refreshments will Tuesday, 3:15 p.m.—Handbell Choir 2. complish good and deserves praise and encouragement! be served Strum Lutheran Chuch, worship serv- stitutional churches or through He says it's obviously a posi- set for Tuesday following the program. Nursery ices, 8:31 i

DICK TRACY By Chester Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

BLONDIE By Chick Young

¦ ¦ ,^-T^TWT^ n-- ¦ m '* 11., — . - , — ¦ II - I— I ¦ I — I ¦ ¦¦ ' |TI I II ^ 1 , LI'L ABNER By Al Capp . REDEYE By Gordon Bess ¦ ¦ ¦ - ' ' " . : _ ' .— ' . : ¦ • ' i

¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ — — ¦ ¦ ¦ 7 *¦ ' _ — . *~ " "" —— . . . . . y . BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff By Fred Lasvvell

APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart

REX MORGAN, M.D. By Dal Curtis TIGER By Bud Blake

MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst GRIN AND BEAR IT DENNIS THE MENACE ...... I

NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller

"Not a bod St. Patrick' s Day, Doctor!.. . only a couple of doien Irishmen who could lick anyone in tho * ' tinotal" k llS IS MY FOLKS BEDROCK ...THATfc TrlE/M IM m>."