Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

3-2-1973

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews

Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1973). Winona Daily News. 1211. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1211

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Cloudy and mild ¦ ¦ ¦ um sMK; I SOLD] _, * . with chance of ' THAT OLD BUGGY L >* Wilh A Wan. Ad {%]&* shower tonight' ^^

North Terrorists to No problem in fly to US. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — The Egyptian dispatch said The Middle East News Agency the guerrillas wanted Foreign said today the Sudanese gov- Minister Mansour Khaled and ernment has agreed to provide Information Minister Omar Haj a plane to ;;:;cM fly Arab guerrillas S-^Mlibfe- #i^y Nousa of Sudan to go along on and their hostages to the the flight to the 1 United States from Khartoum. but the government "totally re- By GEORGE ESPER The U.S. statement was is- would not affect the release of The Egyptian the second of 106 American ^^servicemen and agency said ^ sued shortly after in jected" this. (AP) Its dispatch from Khartoum SAIGON - The U.S. two meetings today by the four- two Thais by North . that the guerrillas, holding the Two Americans are among delegation announced tonight parly Joint Military Commis- "From the point of view of U.S. ambassador and four other the hostages: Ambassador Cleo North Vietnam has informed it sin's subcommission on prison- the Provisional Revolutionary diplomats, also demanded that A. Noel Jr. and the U.S. charge that 106 American prisoners ers. Spokesmen for both sides Government,, the release of two members of Sudan's Cabi- d'affaires, Curtis G. Moore. will be released in Hanoi on reported no progress in resolv- POWs is blocked by this issue,'* net go with tHem on the flight The reception was in Moore's Sunday, but that the Viet Cong ing the dispute. the spokesman said. He said to the United States. This was honor -because of his imminent apparently have threatened to Another meeting is scheduled this includes American and oth- refused, the agency reported. departure for home. withhold release of 30 U.S. for Saturday, the U.S. spokes- er foreign prisoners of the Viet The dispatch was filed about The others held are Adley el POWs captured in South Viet- man said. Cong as well as Vietnamese. an hour after the deadline set Nasser of , Guy Eid of nam in a dispute over exchange Of Vietnamese prisoners. Earlier, the Viet Cong delega- He added that efforts were by the guerrillas, members of , both charges to newsmen the Palestinian Black d'affaires and the Saudi am- tion had announced feeing made to resolve the dis- Septem- , A statement from the U.S. that it would release the 34 per- ber organization, for the execu- bassador. delegation to the four-party pute. iori of their sons captured in South Vietnam U.S. spokesmen were not im- hostages if their The hostages had been held Joint Military Commission said s Gia Lam demands were not met. for 20 hours at the time of the on Sunday at Hanoi' mediately available for com- the Viet Cong notified the. U.S. airport at the same time North Middle East News Agency re- side that the 30 American pris- ment. There was no Immediate ex- port. Vietnam released its 108 prison- planation why the oners previously listed would ers. " • ¦ . ' : guerrillas The French Embassy in be released also in Hanoi but . A dispute over the exchange wanted to come to the United Khartoum informed Eld's of Vietnamese prisoners de- States. refused to give the date of re- Later a communist spokes- brother, George, in Brussels lease. A spokesman said this man said an impasse had de- layed the release of the first After seizing the hostages that the terrorists had put back American POWs handed over meant ¦ the¦ Viet Cong were stall- veloped over Vietnamese pris- Thursday during a reception at their deadline -to 6 p.m., noon ing. ' " ¦/. oner exchanges and threatened by the Viet Cong on Feb. 12. the Saudi Arabian Embassy in EST, and that it expected the to block release of the 30 Amer- Then the delay lasted 12 hours, Khartoum , the guerrillas de- situation would be "cleared up" The U.S. delegation said ar- icans. and the men were delivered at manded the dusk instead of early in the . release of dozens by early evening in Khartoum. rangements for the release of _yo ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Also affected are t Ger- of colleagues held in Jordan «W _WW__»*****#*_I *******»»P»****MBI __I ny ¦*_ II *KO«.**nt*-**jt.i*Ax*w.yim.it*** *— ¦¦__¦ **—* _—______¦»>: ¦>:« >.¦:¦.*...... •.¦« stt 'Si/fs*w{//MXK/M/&2mm.<^^mm 106 Americans and two Thais morning. The Egyptian dispatch did * mans and two Filipinos on the and freedom for Sirhan B. Sir- not make clear whether . Su- HOME AT LAST . . . Major Bolstad of by the North Vietnamese over seven years held by the North Vietnamese Earlier today, Bui Tin, the han, convicted assassin of Sen. dan . "will go forward. Viet Cong list of 34 handed to 's refusal to allow its Cabi- Minneapolis heads down the ramp of the ago. Bolstad had earlier been reunited with his " the U.S. delegation to the Joint chief spokesman for the North RobeHt F. Kennedy in 1958 now net ministers to go on the plane Vietnamese delegation said the plane that brought him home into the waiting fiance, before returning to Minneapolis. (AP The Viet Cong had actually Military Commission today. , serving a life term in Califor- had canceled the deal or wheth- handed the United States a list transfer of POWs in Hanoi nia. But they were reported to er the guerrillas still would go arms of his sister, Mrs. FranThompson, Photofax) of 34 prisoners captured in The spokesman indicated the would begin Sunday at 11 a.m., have eased these demands. ahead with the plan. who had not seen him since he was captured South Vietnam, including two dispute between the Saigon gov- Saigon time, or 9 p.m. SST Filipinos arid two Germans. ernment and tie Viet Cong Saturday.

Inside former Winona Paris conference H_lllltlf II opp Jf woman has ex- pressed relief at the newB dollar nosedives that her son, who has been By LOUIS NEVTN off the run on the dollar Thurs- a prisoner of war in North ¦ ¦¦ LONDON (AP) — Foreign day. ' ':- ' Vietnam for nearly six agreement signed exchange dealings around the "It's not really a decision- years, will be released this world were halted today after weekend ¦— story, page 3a. By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH nist objections, was invited to the , North and making meeting," British the dollar took a new nose dive. PARIS (AP) - The Paris witness the signing ceremony South Vietnam, the Provisional The governments hoped a long spokesman Donald Maitland conference on Vietnam gave but not .o sign. Revolutionary Government and weekend would cool off the sell- said. s formal approval today to the abor Both sides made concessions the four members of the Inter- ing wave. But his remarks and those of Abortion sS. - peace agreement Henry Kissin- tion laws won the first at the five-day conference to national Cease-fire Commis- Government ministers and Bonn spokesman Ruediger von round in the Leg- ger and Le Due Tho negotiated economic leaders met to dis- Wechmar appeared to indicate islature as a House subcom- and established a procedure reach unanimous agreement on sion — , Indonesia, Po- cuss how to cope with the wide- Brandt and Heath were trying mittee voted in favor of a that can be followed when it is the declaration. Canada, South land aid Hungary. Vietnarii and Britain expressed spread¦¦ dumping¦ of U.S. curren- for a common assessment of resolution asking Congress violated. cy. — .- ? the situation which they could to submit a constitutional Secretary of State William P. disappointment that more effec- The declaration provides that amendment to cancel a Su- Prime Minister Ed-ward pass on to other capitals. Rogers and 11 . other foreign tive measures were not the former belligerents or tha preme Court ruling — story, adopted. members of the control com- Heath ot Britain and Chancellor Such an assessment could be page 5a. ministers or their deputies Willy Brandt of West part of multi-national efforts to signed a declaration endorsing Rogers and Soviet Foreign mission can circulate reports were meeting in Bonn, but achieve a solution to the dollar the peace settlement in the Minister Andrei Gromyko ex- on cease-fire violations to tho pressed satisfaction with the signers of the declaration and spokesmen said they would not crisis, observers said. ___ *It_. i Persons wishing same gold - and - gray - paneled decide any new monetary Von Wechmar noted that the Ddllfl I to learn about ballroom of the former Hotel declaration. North Vietnamese to Waldheim. In case of serious moves before conferring with Common Market Ministerial the Baha'i Faith are in- Majestic where the Vietnam Foreign Minister Nguyen Duy violations or the threat of ia other members of the Common Council will hold, a previously vited to attend one of the peace talks droned on for more Trinh and the Viet Cong foreign new Vietnam war, any six sig- meetings held each Wednes- minister, Mrs. Nguyen Thi natory governments can recon- Market. scheduled meeting in Brussels day at 8 p.m. at 168 E. than four years. Monday. Binh, were elated. vene the 12-power conference to Widespread belief that Heath Broadway — stories, page U.N. Secretary-General Knrt The nine-point declaration consider appropriate action. and Brandt would agree on a This indicated the meeting 9a. Waldheim, denied an active was initialed yesterday by rep- The declaration did not speci- joint float of Common Market might discuss a joint Common role in the peacekeeping ar- resentatives of the United fy what action a future confer- currencies apparently touched Market float or other steps. rangements because of commu- States, Britain, , , ence might take.

For North Viets Nixon defends aid plan . (AP) - Pres- "We'll survive it. There will dent, Harry Truman, because ident Nixon , acknowledging not be another devaluation." he felt the aid would promote that postwar aid to Hanoi faces He said the troubles of the stability ih Europe and the Far stiff opposition, said today he dollar stem from attacks by in- East. views it as essential so "North ternational speculators reaping Vietnam will have a stake in windfall profits by moving their Nixon said he Is equally con- peace." money fro m one currency into vinced now that Hanoi must ba This aid, Nixon said at his another. convinced that its future "does first news conference since Almost at the beginning of not rest in military activity. Jan. 31, would all come out of the question and answer session North Vietnam, he said, the foreign aid and defense in the White House press room, should have "a stake in budgets. filmed for television use later, peace." And he expressed con- fidence Congress would even- At a wide-ranging news con- Nixon said the question of aid- ference ing Hanoi was not part of a tually go along with his think- , Nixon also announced ing. he will confer at the Western Washington-Hanoi agreement White House iri San Clemente, leading to the cease-fire in the "Tlie costs of peace are Calif,, on April 2-3 with Presi- conflict there. great," he said , "but the costs TWO AT A TIME ... The Defense Department re- dent Nguyen Van Thieu of Nixon said there was consid- of war are much greater." On other topics: leased Thursday this photo of two SPRINT missiles, fired South Vietnam. erable opposition 25 years ago And questioned about new at- to aiding World War II • Amnesty for Vietnam war INDIANS FORTIFY CHURCH GROUNDS erect what appears to be fortifications in salvo, on February 22, 1073 at the Kwajaleln Atoll in resisters: Arguing that there the Pacific Ocean. Both missiles successfull tacks on the U.S. dollar in for- enemies, Germany and . . . . Church in Wounded Knee where AIM around the church, The AIM released the y intercepted eign money markets, Nixon He said he voted for such funds NIXON DEFENDS ) two simulated ICBM target nosecones. (AP Photofax) held hostages on Pine Ridge Indian Reser- 11 hostages last night. (AP Photofax ¦, , ¦ -i —. . i i i .. said: sought by a Democratic presi- (Continued on page 2a) — - . vation resembles a ' battle area as Indians McGovern meets Indians in historic Wounded Knee By F. RICHARD CICCONE Mrs. Glldersleevo said the who accompanied McGovern on underscores tho danger that ex- McGovern told newsmen gath- senators) they will bo es- Involved in inter-tribal poli- 100 federal marshals ringing WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. trading post contained about tho day long pence venture, ists here," ered nt the Bureau of Indian corted." tics." Wounded Knee, said the village Indians was sealed off to all incoming ( A P )-S o n . George S. $150,000 worth of goods, She said word of tho firo bombing It was reported that De- Affairs building in Pino Ridge, The senators said tho Indians Tho senator said the McGovern met several hours "stirred them up pretty much. sersns' wife wns injured in tho a small Indian settlement a did not bring up the question of persons. said the Indians, many of them " reiterated their demands for a until early todny with Indians Police officials in Pino Itidgo fire Incident. dozen miles southwest of Senate subcommittee hearing, amnesty during the discussion. Asked what steps would ba who hnvo barricaded them- members of the American In- refused comment on tho report- Wounded Knee. McGovern snld , "It is not in taken to prosecute the raiders dian Movement There wns no repetition their charges of corruption in selves in tho tiny, historic vil- , confiscated 10 ed fire bombing. to take the hos- the BIA and tihcir protest our province to deal with law; if the hostages were released, rifles ond shotguns and 10 Thursday of the sporadic gun- "We offered Erickson said, "There are lage of Wounded Knee and ho pis- tages with us, but they didn 't against Richard Wilson, .hair- enforcement," later told newsmen, "It's still tols. She quoted one of her cap- McGovern snld the Indians fire that whistled from tho vil- man of tho Oglala Sioux tribe Tho senators said thoy saw many other violations here. tors as saying, "gave every indication that want to go," McGovern snid. s homes have been oc- very tense," "You aro politi- lage Wednesday as tho Indians Ho snid tho residents mny which numbers 13,000, most of several Indiana sitting in dug- People' Tho 11 hostages taken Tues- cal prisoners..." thoy expected to face charges." tried to keep federal lawmen at are whom live on the Pine Rldgo outs beside the road leading to cupied. Wo have a volatile situ- Most of Ho snid a distance, leave thoir homes but thoy ation. day by the band of 200 Indians the 11 prisoners, in- they did not mention escorted by Indians every- Reservation, The Indians want tho village. Another was " cluding nine persons amnesty but wore interested in Newsmen wore stopped by a were freo nt noon Thursday but who aro It wns at Wounded Knee where. an investigation of whnt thoy perched on the top of a burned- refused to leave tho village. part Indian , stayed in the Gil- learning what charges would bo Creek In 1090 that 1*1<1 Sioux allege are 371 violations of U.S. out pickup truck. roadblock seven miles from tha Agnes Gildorslcove, on, who dorsleovcs' house and adjacent placed ngninst them nnd wliat men, women and children wofo "One man , Wilbur Rigcit , Indian treaties. "Several were sitting in a village. Blue-suited marshals, with her husband operates tho buildings. tho bail might be. killed by troops of the 7th U.S. told me he's free but his house hillside dugout behind the armed with automatic weapons, trading post raided Tuesday by McGovern told newsmen thnt Tho senator said tliey ndvised Cavalry. IL was the last major is being used ns n headquar- McGovern _nicl ho explained church and several were walk- cordoned off the roads. the Indians, told a newsman, tho parley "ended on a jarringb tho Indians to meet with De- incident in conflicts between In- ters," McGovern added. that a full subcommittee meet- ing in tho street," Abourezk Aides to Sen. William J. Full- "Wo never slept a wink that note." partment of Justice officials, dians and whites. Abourezk said , "There wore ing, which tho Indians wanted said. bright , D-Ark.,. and Sen. Ed- night. Wo kept our clothes on . . Ho said that occurred when who have surrounded the tiny They mot once in an open two hostages who told mo thoy scheduled todny, was not pos- ward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., tonight's tho first night I feel tho Indians learned that a hamlet since Wednesday morn- pasture and later, during dho aro free, bul. one snld ho was sible because tho Senate mem- There wero reports that food joined tho South Dakota sena- anfe." house in Pino Rldgo owned by ing, to discuss an end to the cold Great Plnins night , in stopped by nn Indian when he bers could not lie collected. Ho supplies in tlie village wore low tors iit tho peace talks. The In- Aaron Desersns was firo bomb- armed conflict. what McGovern described as a wanted to leave his house." nlso said ho wanted other In- and that sleeping spaces were dians previously demanded Her JiiiHfinml, Clivc, 73, snld ed while tho talks wore contin- McGovern said the IS Indian "hastily erected teepee. The senators quoted one of dians present to testify nt such not available. Fiillbright and Koiinbdy go to "It's getting pretty Into io the uing in n building in Wounded leaders who spoko with Iho sen- "Tho main thing was that wo the Indian leaders, Carter hearings. Ralph .Erickson, special as- Wounded Knee but McGovern trading post business for mo to Knee. ators "were very disturbed got assurances that the hos- Camp, as saying tho hostages Abourezk said of tho triba l sistant to tho U.S. attorney gen- said they were satisfied with anjoy it anymore." Sen. James Abourezk, D--S.D., about tho flrebombing.... but Jt tages were froo to leave," were freo, "but liko you (the dispute, "I was not about to got eral nnd head of the estimated tho presence of tho .aides. Winona County Court Nixon defends FRIDAY (Continued trom page 1) Civil, Criminal Division to Six persons arrested today could be "no greater insult MARCH 2, 1973 memory of those who The weather pleaded guilty to charges of The daily record the fought and died" iri American failure to display current ve- uniforms,* Nixon said, "I think J former area hicle registration and were each At Community Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths made my position abundantly fined $15 by Judge Dennis A. clear ... I do not intend to position. Challeen. Memorial Hospital Felix J. Cierzan Mrs. Melvin L. Olson change my " terrorism: The chief priest, SMC They are Ronald G. Oglesby, THURSDAY Felix J. Cierzan, 84, 1051 E. ETTRICK, Wis, (Special) — • Sudan Wafcasha St., died at 8 p.m. Mrs. Melvin L. Olson, 78, Et- executive said the United 567 Mankato Ave., cited at 1 Discharges pay blackmail" Herman Luedtke, 477 E. 4th Thursday at the home of his trick, who suffered a stroke States "will not a.m. at East 2nd and Franklin ¦ at guerrillas who St, sister, Mrs. Jennie Miller, fol- Wednesday, died Thursday to Palestinian dies streets; Carl A. Aegler, 333 lowing a heart attack. He had Tri-County Memorial Hospital, seized the new American am- instructor Mrs. Ladice Miller,.Red Top ¦ "~" diplomats Herman A. Boeck- Elmhurst St., 1:35 a.m. at West Trailer Court. retired from section mainten- Whitehall, : Wis. " '; bassador and other The Rev, ance for the Chicago & North Mabel Buchholz, at a party in Khartoum Thurs- er, 81, St. Anne Hospice, died 3rd and Main streets; Roger J. Births The former so and we Mr. and Mrs. Glen Busitzky, Western Railway. she was born Aug. 26 1894, the day. "We cannot do at 2:15 p.m. Thursday at Com- Madland, 265 Vila St., 1:08 a.m. The son of August and Mary not do so," he said. 1379 W. 4th St., a daughter. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julius will munity Memorial Hospital after at West 3rd and Main streets; Wirkus Cierzan, he was born in Buchholz. She was married to Wage controls : Asked to Mr. and Mrs John Korupp, • a short illness. ¦ David L. Grossell, 1027 E. Wa- 1008 W. 2nd St., a daughter. , Winona,, May 28, 1888, where he Melvin L. Olson at Winona Jan. clarify whether the adminis- ¦ *" a He was an instructor at St. basha St., 6:33 a.m. at East lived Ms lifetime. A veteran 31, 1917. They have farmed in tration intends to maintain to of World War I, he was a mem- Creek Valley, annual ceiling on Mary's College, from 1918 Broadway and Market Street South Beaver 5.5 per cent pastor of parishes at Al- BIRTH ELSEWHERE ber of Leon J. Wetzel American rural Ettrick. major wage increases, as ad- 1920; Anthony J. Eggerichs, Goodhue, Legion Post 9, St. Stanislaus husband; spokesmen sug- tura and Elba, WEATHER FORECAST ... . . Warmer weather is forecast LA CROSSE, Wis. - Mr. and Survivors are: her ministration 1920 to 1929; the for the eastern half of the country. Cold weather , is expected Minn., 12:50 a.m. at West Mrs. Steven Pecsenye, 418 Church, and the Winona Ath- three sons, Victor, on the home gested Monday, Nixon said that his eco- Sacred Heart for the Dakotas and Minnesota, and for the Pacific North- Broadway and Main Street, and Grand St., a daughter at St. letic Ciub. He never married. farm; Lester , Sparta, Wis., and even during Phase 2 of Survivors are: two sisters, Cataract, Wis.; 11 program "there were Parish, Adams, west. (AP Photofax ) David W. Oevering, 921% E. Francis Hospital Monday night. Leonard, nomic Minn., , 1929 to Wabasha St., 2:55 a.m. at West Maternal grandparents are Dr. Mrs. Jennie Miller and Miss grandchildren; four great- very few" labor agreements Sarnia and Grand 'streets. and Mrs. Melvin O. Wedul, 418 Mildred Cierzan, Winona. Three grandchildren, and one brother, that yielded a 5.5 per cent in- 183 2; Sabred Local observations Oevering also pleaded guilty Grand St. brothers and one sister have Lester Buchholz , Blair, Wis. crease. Looking ahead to 1973 Heart Parish, to a charge of incorrect ad- died. Funeral services will be at 2 wage negotiations, Nixon said , Heron Lake, OFFICIAL WEATHER BUREAU OBSERVATIONS for Funeral services will be at p.m. Monday at South Beaver "some will go a little higher, Minn., 1932 to at noon today : dress on his driver's license TODAY'S BIRTHDAY the 24 hours ending and was fined $5. 9:30 a.m. Saturday at Watkow- Creek Lutheran Church, the some will go a little lower." 1943; St. John's Maximum temperature 40, minimum 31, noon 39, pre- Tracy Paul Swails, 72 E. ski Funeral Home and at 10 Wegner officiating, John B. Connally: Nixon , ' Johns- Mrs. Archie Luhmann, Rush- ¦ Rev. Paul • Parish cipitation trace. Mark St., 2. ¦ ' •: ¦ - . a.m. at St. Stanislaus Church, with burial in the church ceme- reported that his former Secre- burg, Minn., A year ago today: ford, Minn., entered a not guilty plea to a charge of hit and run the Rev. Donald Grubisch offici- tery. ';• tary of the Treasury has car- 1943 to 1947; St. Fr. Boecker High 22, low 9 below, noon 16, precipitation .35. * ating. Burial will be in St. Fossum ried out some private chores Normal temperature range for this date 34 to 15. Record (property damage). Trial was FIRE CALLS Friends may call at Mary's Parish, Dundee, Minn., set for 9:30 a.m. April 12 and Mary's Cemetery. Funeral Home, Ettrick, Sunday for him while traveling here 1947 to 1952; St. Columbanus high 65 in 1923, record low 18 below in 1950. Thursday Friends may call at the fu- and abroad , especially ir. the Sun rises tomorrow at 6:41; sets at 5:57. she was released oh recogni- from. 4 to 9 p.m., then at the Parish, Blooming Prairie, Minn., 3:43 p.m. — 580 E. Front St., neral home tonight after 7 p.m., church Monday from 12:30 p.m. field of energy policy. , and at St. Joseph's ¦ 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS zance. She is charged with fail- While 1952-1967 ure to stop and identify her- Plastic Trading Co., malfunc- where the Rosary will be at until services. • Gray nomination: Parish, Trimont , Minn., from (Mississippi Valley Airways) tioning alarm system, returned saying he would not comment . Barometric pressure 30.15 and steady, wind from the self after striking a car in the 7:30. Athletic Club members 1967. until , retiring here July 31, parking lot of the Fifth Street 3:55 p.m. ? will meet at 7 p.m. Mrs. Byron Bennetr on Senate hearings on the nom- 1969. " .' east at 5 m.p.h., cloud cover*.7O0 obscured, visibility!« _ miles. Patrick Gray II HOURLY TEMPERATURES IGA, 909 W. 5th St., Jan. 17. TODAY PLAINVIEW , Minn. (Special) ination of L. Fr. Boecker was born at Ad- Timothy D. Ohlgren 11:30 a.m — 128 W. Sth St., Mrs. -John Bostrom _ (Minnie) Ben- to be permanent head of the rian. Minn ., Sept. 26, 1891, the (Provided by Winona State College ) , 18, Rose- . Funeral services for Mrs. Mrs. Byron Investiga- Thursday ville, Minn., appeared for sen- National Food Store, false nett, Plainview, died Thursday Federal Bureau of son of Henry and Christine Bu- ' tencing on a shoplifting alarm resuscitator call (appar- John Bostrom, 78, Minneapolis, Elizabeth Hospital, Wa- tion, Nixon said the FBI chief tecweg Boecker. He attended l p.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 inidnight charge at St. fig- 37 37 37 37 37 37 36 36 36 36 35 stemming from an arrest at ent victim walked , out before former Winona resident, were basha, Minn., where she had "must be a nonpartisan St. Adrian Elementary and High 37 . ¦?¦ ¦ held at the Minneapolis United -He expressed the view ". Today . .' . 12:45 a.m. Tuesday at the firemen arrived), returned 11:40 been a patient two weeks. ure." School, and attended St. Law- Piggly Wiggly Store a.m. Methodist Church Feb. 23, with that Gray made no political Mount Calvary, l a.m. 2 8 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon , 126 E: Sth burial in that city. She died The former Minnie Dittrich, fall's cam- rence College, 35 34 34 34 34: 34 34 34 34 34 34 39 St. He was fined $50, $25 of she was borri at Oak Ridge, Wi- speeches during last Wis.: and St. Paul, Minn., Se- Feb. 20. - paign and certainly never in- which was /suspended on condi- nona County, Feb. 17, 1882, the ia.e minary. He was ordained June tion that the defendant do 10 Adult business She was the former Thela daughter of Mr. and M^s. Er- tended to inject himself Aske. married politics. hours of volunteer work at the nest Dittrich. She was com- 12.. 1913 at St. Mary's College, YMCA. course slated Survivors are: one sister, Mrs. to Byron Bennett at Wabasha • Watergate: Asked to Winona, by the Most Rev. Pat- Wlbam C. Dulas, 463 W. Mark William Mayer, Winona, and June 19, 1907, who died in 1966. ment on the verdict in* the re- rick R. Heffrons Bishop of tha St., pleaded guilty to a one nephew, Russell Mayer , They farmed east of Plain- cent federal court trial of de- charge at Houston High bugging Winona Diocese. of failufe to yield right of way, Minneapolis. - view until retiring here in 1943. fendants convicted of Survivors are : two brothers, causing an accident HOUSTON, Minn. (Special)- sons Democratic National Headquar- William F., Adrian , and Hubert , and was Survivors are: two , Not- Watergate building fined $50. He was arrested fol- Ah adult business course will Mrs. Joseph Bezak Iey and Lyle, Plainview; one ters in the L., New Hope, Minn. Six bro- 1st Quarter Foil Las' Quarter New Mrs. Joseph (Celia) Bezak, last year and the effect of the March ll March 1? March 26 March < lowing an accident Feb. 8 at be offered at Houston High . daughter, Mrs.. James (Alta) thers and one sister have died. West Mark and Harriet streets. School in cooperation with the 68, Chicago, former Winona res- Montgomery, Plainview; five case on public confidence on The concelebrated funeral Mrs. Marguerite A. Langen- Winona. Area Vocational-- Tech- ident, died at a Chicago hospital grandchildren; 10 great-grand- government, Nbcon said it Mass will be at 11 a.m. Satur- . Forecasts berg, 707 Main St., nical Institute. . today following a brief illness,. and one brother A. A. would not be proper to say any- also pleaded The former Celia Ostrowski, children, , day at the Cathedral of the Guard-sponsored guilty to a failure to yield charge Robert Olson, who has been Dittrich, City, Okla. thing while appeals are pend- Sacred Heart , with the Most S.E. Minnesota involving an accident and was instructor at the Winona Insti- she was born in Winona, March ing, However, he restated his Rev. Loras J,- Walters, BtD,, Cloudy and mild tonight 25 1904, the daughter of Leon Funeral services will be at that no one Cub Scouts hold fined $50. She was arrested tute the past four years, will 2 p.m. Sunday at Plainview frequent statement Bishop of the Diocese of Wino- with a slight chance of a following a be coordinator and chief in- and Anna Kulas Ostrowski. She employed at the White .House, shower. Partly cloudy and Feb. 9 collision at United Methodist Church, the na; as principal celebrant.,.Bu?... . East 4th and Franklin structor. The course has been was married to Joseph Bezak. had knowledge of or was in- rial will be at St. Columbanus mild Saturday. Lows to- first banquet streets. and had lived in Chicago about Rev. Luther Pennington offi- Watergate affair. designed on-the programs re- ciating, with burial in Green- volved in the •Cemetery, Blooming Prairie, night ln the upper 20s and The first annual Blue and FORFEITURES: quested through the question- 45 years. • Vietnam cease-fire*. Asked low 30s. Highs Saturday In wood . Cemetery. Minn. Gold banquet of Cub Scout Pack naires returned by local¦ resi- Survivors are: her husband; about continuing violations of Friends may call at ' Burke the low 30s. Chance of pre- Marvin G. Wenz, Jlinnetonka, A . Friends may call after 3 p.m. Vietnam cease-fire agree- 3 was held at the National Minn., $41, dents. - one son, Richard Zabinski, Chi- the Funeral Home, Winona, today cipitation 20 percent tonight speeding, 78 in 60- cago ; three grandchildren ; Saturday at Johnson-Schriver ment, Nixon said, "The main Guard Armory Wednesday. mile zone, Highway Patrol The sessions, at the high Funeral Home, Plainview, and from 3. to 5 and 7'to 9 p.m., and 10 percent Saturday. school, will be from 7 to 10 three brothers, Edward Ostrow- point is it is going' down now," The Pack is sponsored by. the arrest at 12:55 p.m. Feb. 15 until noon Sunday, then at the and at the church Saturday on Highway 61 north p.m., with the following sched- ski, Minneapolis, Minn.; Joseph and said the United States irom lo a.m. until services. Minnesota Winona National Guard, with bf Minne- Wis., church from 1 p.m. until ser- A sota City. ule: March 8, psychology of mo- Ostrowski, Trempealeau, vices. would use its good offices with wake service will-be at the fu- Mostly cloudy and mild Richard Averill as Cubmaster. tivation and human relations; and Zigmund Litarski Joliet, all concerned to promote an ef- Maribeth A. Latterell, Foley, Pallbearers will be Hugh, Ho- neral home tonight at 8 p.m. through Saturday but with Don Whaley, Scout executive, Minn., $39, speeding, March 15, community involve- 111,; tliree sisters, Miss Florence fective cease-fire. partial clearing in the cen- 77 in 60- Ostrowski and Mrs. Sig (Sally) ward, Orville and Marcus Dit- Laos: He said he thought presented the following awards: mile zone, Highway Patrol ar- ment and public relations; trich, Lloyd and Howard Ben- • tral and south tonight or Tom Gunderson, Wolf ; Tom rest at 5:55 p.m. Feb. 20 on March 20, advertising and dis- Jeresek, Winona, and Mrs. Har- chances for peace . there would City accident Saturday. Temperatures a land (Loretta) Ross, St. Paul, nett. be greatly enhanced by the Hagmann, Bobcat and Bear; Highway 61 north of Whitman play for profit March 22, little lower tonight. A Dam. business organization and man- Minn. withdrawal of North Vietnam- TODAY chance of a few showers or : Jeff Schueler, Bear and gold Jack Anderson ese troops—part of the Wash- 12:05 a.m.—Lake Park Drive, arrow; Scott Blackwell, Wolf Ralph L. Belter, Lewiston, agement; March 27, credits and Watkowski Funeral Home, _ snow tonight. Lows tonight Winona, is in charge of local ar- HOUSTON, Minn, (Special) h.'gton-Hanoi Indochina agree- 0.2 mile south of East Sarnia and gold arrow; Dan Gernes, Minn., $35, speeding, 70 in 55- collections; March 29, modern Jack In the 20s and low 30s. mile zone, Highway Patrol rangements. Burial will be in Anderson, 67, Houston, ment. St., hit and run: Deborah K. Wolf and gold and silver arrows;- ar- sales techniques; April 3, Book- died Thursday evening at a La Brandt, Highs Saturday in the 30s Bill Whaley, Wolf, gold and two rest 12:lo a.m. Feb. 17 on High- keeping, inventory control, pur- Sacred Heart Cemetery, Pine • : Peace prospects 4620 7th St., Goodview, north and the mid 30s ti- way 14. Creek, Wis. Crosse, Wis. hospital following in Cambodia are not quite as 1966 mod'el sedan, $200, right silver arrows; Greg Gernes, chasing, business correspond- a long illness. rear. mid 40s central and south. gold and silver arrows, and Eolus Sawczuk, Mosinee, Wis., ence; April 5, management encouraging, he said, because Mike Nelson, Bear and gold $35, speeding, 60 in 45-mile zone, ' ¦¦ ¦ A former employe of the of the complexity of the situ- Wisconsin problem solving. ., Winona Funerals Houston Signal Printing arrow. Highway Patrol arrest 10:35 A fee will be charged. En- office , ation there", but again he said Cloudy northwest tonight rain Certificates of thanks went a.m. Feb. 15 on Highway 14 rollees should bring note-taking Lester E. Henderson he was born here Sept. 19, 1905 he thought withdrawal of North or drizzle likely southeast. Lows to Den Mothers : Mmes. Grace west of Highway 61 junction . materials. Funeral services for Lester E. to Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Vietnamese forces would great- ln the 30s. Saturday mostly Averill, Dianne Gernes, Diane John A. Campbell, 514 Wilsie St. Henderson, 852 E. Sth St., were Anderson. He was educated in ly improve prospects for a cloudy and warmer, chance of Schueler and Donna Whaley. $37, speeding; 71 in SS^nile zone, held today at Central Lutheran the Houston Public Schools and meaningful cease-fire. "Showers southeast sections. Highway Patrol arrest 2:50 p.m. Church the Rev. G. H. Huggen- University of Minnesota and Feb. 18 on , Nixon said that until there ls Highs Saturday 37 to 45 north Highway 61, Good- Peterson native vik officiating. Burial was in married Lulu Green in 1928. He a firm Cambodia agreement, and 45 to 53 south. Houston Co. Cancer view. was a retired fireman on the Sofaner E. Woodlawn Cemetery. the United States will continue Crooks, La Crosse, involved in Pallbearers were Lloyd and Houston volunteer fire depart- Society elects Wis., $31, speeding, 73 in to support the government of 5-day forecast 60- Floyd Koehler, Wayne, Julius ment, served as clerk on the Premier Lon Nol. MINNESOTA (Special} mile zone, Highway Patrol fugitive capture -CALEDONIA , Minn. arrest 12:35 and Melvin Henderson , and village council for several years, • Blacks: Nixon said he felt Sunday through Tuesday: Dr. Neil Fredrickson, Spring p.m. Feb. 10 on — Highway 61 north of Whitman PETERSON, Minn. (Special) Ralph Monahan. and also on the school board . no president should kick any occasional cloudiness and Grove, was elected president of Dam. He was a lifelong area resi- group around , especially one mild with possible snow — A native of Peterson who is the Houston County Unit, Amer- Roger A. Fisher, Black River an officer with the Detroit William E. Goetzman dent, retiring in 1971. that had borne the special dis- flurries northeast Sunday. ican Cancer Association, at the Falls, Wis., $25, (Mich.) Funeral services for William Survivors are: his wife ; two advantages that had been the Lows 12-24 except 6-12 disregarding Police. Department, was DARREL recent reorganizational meet- traffic signal, 2:59 a.m. today recently involved in the cap- E. Groetzman, Rochester, form- daughters, Mrs. Robert (Maril- plight of blacks for decades. PAGE northeast Monday. Highs ing. er Winona resident, will be at at East 3rd and Lafayette ture of Hayward Brown, who Iyn) Hunn . Stillwater, Minn., "The issue is doing what is "You can't beat Pinto , Mav- 30s except low 40s south- Other officers elected are: streets. 11 a.m. Saturday at Martin and Mrs, Duane (Dianne) Co- right," he said , and pictured west. , was wanted by the department Mrs. Paul Solum , Spring Grove Leo N. Minor , Galesburg, and the Federal Bureau of In- Funeral Chapel, Winona , the vey, Hokah , Minn. ; 10 grand- his administraton as doing a erick or Comet. Economy WISCONSIN vice president; Mrs. Donald 111., $25, disregarding traffic vestigation Rev. A. U. Deye, St. Martin's children and one brother , Conde greal deal for black Apiercans. parts, service and Partly cloudy with little or Whitesitt, Brownsville, secre- for the shooting of and tiie Rev. resale." signal, Highway Patrol arrest six Detroit police officers. Lutheran Church , Anderson, San Francisco, Calif. • Welfare reform : Questioned no precipitation Sunday through tary, and Mrs. Caryl Ryan, 12:35 a.m. Feb. 17 on Highway Raymond Krueger, Grace Luth- about his decision Tuesday. Temperature He is Officer Donald Gud- Two sisters and one brother , announced s about Caledonia, treasurer. 61-14 in Winona. mundson, son of Mr. and Mrs. eran Church, Rochester, offi- have died. Thursday, to abandon his fami- seasonable. Highs mostly in the The unit will meet in the Irvin Baer Jr., Utica , Minn., Siebert Gudmundson ciating. Burial will be in Wood- ly assistance welfare TOUSLEY FORD 30s. Lows in the 20s Sunday $25, disregarding traffic , Peterson. Funeral services will be at reform McPihail Room , Spraguc Na- signal , During the apprehension , lawn Cemetery. program , Nixon argued there and 12 to 22 Monday and Tues- tional Bank , Caledonia, March 1:05 a.m. Thursday at West Pallbearers will be Warren 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Hill Funer- LINCOLN-MERCURY Broadway and Huff many allots were exchanged be- al Home here, the Rev. Eugene was no chance of winning Sen- day. 12 at 8 p.m. Street. tween the officers and Shaw, Bernard Gerson, John "your Country Style Dealer Dennus W. Lentz, Anoka, Brown , Jaszewski Terry Zimmerman Kinney, First Presbyterian ate passage of the program. " who was later apprehended , , "We have to find a different Minn., $25, disregarding stop Pat Duval and Arnold Goetz- Church , officiating. Burial will MIRACLE MALL - sign , 2:45 a.m, Feb. 21 on High- without any injuries. be in Money Creek Cemetery. way," he said and expressed A graduate of man. way 61 at 44th Avenue, Good- Peterson High Friends may call at the fu- Friends may call at the fun- confidence that some type of Phone 454-5170 l view. School and Concordia College, eral home Saturday afternoon solution would be reached. years gone by Moorhead , Minn., Gudmundson neral home Saturday from 10 Iri ! Robert L, Hanes, Rochester , a.m. until services. and evening. Minn., $10, pa-rking in street has been a policeman in De- cleaning zone troit's inner city for two A memorial to the Heart Fund .) , 4:18 a.m. Thurs- years. is being arranged. . • (Extracts irom tha -/lies 0/ this newspaper day on West 3rd Street between ¦ Two-State Funerals ** Winona and Johnson streets. During the Klondike gold Henry Ten years ago . . . 1963 rush , more than $100 million in Moscow, the capital of the Jesse Handshaw Blockhas John S. Streater , 275 Wilson LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) St., $10, parking ln street clean- gold was recovered from the U.S.S.R., doubled its population Blue for spring 1903 comes in every shade from navy to — Funeral services for Jesse powder blue and in every style from casual wear to suits ing zone, 4:55 n.m. Thursday on crcekbeds in a soven-yen r peri- between the First and Second 17 reasons why you West 4th Street between od. World Wars. Handshaw, Lake City, who died j and coats. Blue was tho predominant, color in a stylo at tlie Main Tuesday nt Lake City Municipal mother-daughter luncheon at Central Methodist Church Gulld- and Center streets. James W. Wegman , 151 John- Hospital, were held this after- should come to us halk noon nt, Potei'son-Slieehan Fu- Winonn High's sophomore basketball team captured son St., $10, parking in street the denning zone, 4:21 n.m. Thurs- neral Home hero, the Rev, Big Nine soph championship and compiled an overall fti-l day on West 3rd Charles Biirnhnm , Lake City for income tax help. record for tlie season, one of the best in WHS history. Street between Three appear on Winona and Johnson streets. United Methodist Church , offi- Reason 4. If the IRS should call you in for Peter Grulkowski , Lewiston , ciating. Burial was in Lake- Twenty-five years ago . . . 1948 Minn., $5, parking on wrong side wood Cemetery. an audit, H & R Block wffl go with you, at of street , The 1948 Winona County Red Cross fund campai lewiston ticket lliHO Pallbearers were Gerald and no additional cost Not as a legal gn got Sent . Ifi. rustling charges Charles Maxwell , Harold and under way today ns local volunteer workers began canvas- Richard Brist , representative...but we sing business nnd industrial places to raise 01)2. St. Charles . Darwin Meyers and Quinlo n can answer oil $13, Minn., $5, blocking private DURAND , Wis . - Three area Holt Doughty, Aug. 20, and four and Clinton Butler. It's up to the public and henefitting organizations (o give men , charged wilh questions about how your tax return drive , St. Charles ticket ni.io entile theft , bond from Krnlewskl , Aug. 21. was tho Winona municipal band new uniforms. Tlio hand , as p.m. Feb. 23. appeared in Pepin County Court Rene 0. boss prepared. All three will appear for pre- presently outfitted , is n "disgrace," in tlio opinion of lis Failure lo display current here this morning before Judge COCHRANE , Wis. (Special) - director, Harold Edstrom . vehicle registration , $15: Joseph II. Riedner, liminary hearings on March 14 Funeral services for Reno O , Theodore M. Comenii , Whn- Sherman Hifinel) , 19, Pepin at 9 n.m, Snss, a drowning victim who Fifty years ago . . . 1923 Inn , Minn., 2:26 n.m; todny nt lit. 1 , hns been charged with Bifinell and David Brnntnor was owner of nursing home? EnKt. 4th nnd Lnfayeltc streets. stealing three bond belonging received Mrs. Donna Muzn , Me- hero nnd in Pepin, Wis., will be Winona's street sprinkling equipment will be Augmented Thomns J, Swcot , Houston , to John Ryan , in May 1 972 this summer by tho addition , nomonie, Wis., as their court- Saturday at 2 p.m. nt tho Hope of two trucks to supplement a Minn., 12:!;o a.m. today nt Gil- nnd seven bend from Tom Biles, appointed attorney, and Randall number of horse drawn tanks. more Avcmifl nnd Junction United Church of Christ hero , June 22, 1.072. Bolh live in rural Binnlner hns Rynn Lane, Dur- the Rov, Wilfred Burger St reel. Arknnsnw. offi- nnd , ns hi.s court-appointed ciating, assisted by the Rov , Seventy-five years ago . . . 1898 Michael J. Mueller , Minnesoln counsel. Cily, J2:..5 n.m. today nt West I>AVI1> HRANTNI.K . 21, ru- Jnmes Magoliisen, Pepin. Burial Charles Panzer, now with Gunderson photograph gallery, Sa **nin and Harriet streets. ral Arkansaw , hns been accused A FOURTH man, involved In Will bo in the Buffalo City Ceme- is going to open his own establishment in Arcndla . Ralph J , Innfolln , Snyvllle , of three counts of cattle theft: the cattle thefts , is serving a tery. Among the GAR men who attended Um conveiilion nl St . N.Y , 1:15 a.m. today nt West three head from Ryan on May sentence nt Waupun State Pris- Pallbearers will bo Allen Paul are A. B. Clark , B, A, Man , C. 0. While and John 41 li nnd Johnson streets. 31; five bend from James Brun- on. Dennis Walker , 20, Arknn- Farnor, Patrick Leahy, Noil Young. Rocco G, Haddad , 1724 W. ner, July 2fi unci Sutherland , Vincent Samuclson GCK&HLOCK four head snw , received two yours each , THE Broadway, 2: Oil a.m. today nt from Ixiroy Kralewski , Aug. 21. on three counts of cattle thoft. Jnmes Skorllnski nnd Richard INCOME TAX PEOPLE One-hundred years ago . . . 1873 East Broadway and Lafayette Randall Brantner , lfl , rural Sheriff Roger Britton said Gracttlngor. si reets. Arknnsnw , who wa.s 17 at the Friends may call Chief | ¦ that charges will bo brought nt Voigt 225 E. SRD ST. Engineer Whipple of tho fire department s at St. time of the theft , lias been trans- later against tihrco moro per- Fui\oral Home hero todny after Pnul and therefore missed tihe firo nt the Winkle Furniture Opon ? ,, m..9 p.m. W«,ofcdfly,_9-5 The flag of Nova Scntin was ferred into ndult court. Ho.hns sons involved in the .sumo 2 p.m. and Saturday until lfl Sat. * Sun,-Phone 45-1-3097 store this morning. This is tho fifth time Mr. Winkle 1ms hnd tlio first flag of nil Britain )een charged OPEN TONIGHT 's with two counts thefts: ono is « juvqiilo and n.m. and at tho church after 11 - NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY his business endangered by fire since lie came to Winonn . colonics. of cuttlo tlicft: five he/id from two aro currently out of atuto. n.m. Ex-Wihonaris mother Prisoner release is great relief By VI BENICKE "The news of my son's release is especially of a message sent by one of the men who was Daily News Area Editor welcome after the North Vietnamese had stalled among the first group of prisoners released. LA CROSSE, Wis. — "It's a great relief; the about freeing another group of prisoners. I was Col. Larson had asked the POW to contact his best news I've heard in a long time." afraid that the stalemate might continue." wife and tell her that he was well and that That's how a former Winona resident ex- She reiterated her feeling of great re- he thought his name would be on the next list of pressed her reaction to hearing that her son is lief, adding that "it will be much more of a relief prisoners to be released. Mrs. Larson in turn re- among the next group of prisoners of war to be when Lsee him and know that his health is good." layed the* good news to her mother-in-law. released by Hanoi. Although Mrs. Hess is experiencing happiness, Mrs. Hess stated that she is deeply concerned Mrs. Frank (Hazel) Hess, La Crosse, said she she also feels very sad, she said, thinking about the about her son's health, .since he spent a long per- was notified that her son, Air Force Lt. Col. Gor- Americans buried in graves "over there." Her heart iod of time in solitary confinement don ? Albert "Swede" Larson, 45, is among the 106 also goes out, she added, to those who have hus- Nothing Special is being planned for his home- American POWs to be freed by the North Viet- bands and sons listed as missing in action. coming, she added, "because I know he would namese during the weekend. Over the past tear-filled and trying years, Mrs. like to come home quietly." Col. Larson's wife, Mary, and three children Hess has been an active member of the National Mrs. Hess said she plans on joining her son — Michael, 19, Robert, 17, and Pamela, 11 — live League of Families of POWs and MIA's. as soon as she finds out where he will be hospi- in San Antonio, Tex. "One. just has to have faith and patience," talized. After he leaves the hospital, she plans to He has been a prisoner of war in Hanoi since asserted Mrs. Hess, adding that "I have learned return to her La Crosse home. . May s, 1967. patience over these past years." ' "He will have many adjustments to make," LEGAL AFFAIRS SlEMINAR . . .. The Agent; Richard H; Darby, Winona attorney; His U.S. Air Force F105 Thunderchief was one The last communication Mrs. Hess received she pointed out, "aid one more person around will first in a series Pappenfuss Cochrane; Leo F. of three planes shot down by North Vietnamese from her son was a Christmas letter, received the create that many more adjustments. of three sessions of a legal Mrs. Victor , early part of January. He told his mother that he family in San Antonio when attorney, and Victor ground fire during raids close to Hanoi. "I will visit the affairs seminar, held at the Winona Area Murphy Jr., Winona Larson was paraded through the streets of was well and that he was hopeful the war would things are settled, or perhaps he may come here at Vocational-Technical Institute Thursday, had Pappenfuss, Cochrane, The second seminar Hanoi after his capture before what were described end this year. a later date," she concluded. 830 persons attending. Dr. and Mrs. H. F. will be held at the Institute Thursday, with as angry crowds. "I'm sure he based that remark on news he Mrs. Hess was married to Albert Larson, Wi- Bunnell, 517 Eonald Ave., register, with, from the final session of the series on March 15. "I almost died when I saw him," his mother heard from men who were shot down during the nona, who died several years ago. She taught left, Maurice F. Schuh, Certified Life Under- (Daily News Photo) said. "I went wild. He looked in shock and I didn't heavy bombing in December," she stated. school and owned the Mode-0-Day dress shop in writer; Mervin L. Freeman, Area Extension think he'd make it. Those Hanoi films were aired Mrs. Hess admitted that word of her son's Winona. She moved to La Crosse when she was on CBS News," she said. release was not really a complete surprise because married to Hess in 1955. Lynch defeated Irish change leaders McCauley fo By COLIN FROST cede formally until the last suffered from the absence of DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - vote was counted, admitted front-bench talent to support Prime Minister Jack Lynch that his forces had no hope of a his own personal appeal as a speak at GOP prepared today to band over majority in the lower house of He fired Ireland's government td Liam parliament. former sports hero. with more than 30 key men in his administration Cosgrave, 52-year-old leader of Cosgrave, , and a left-of-center coalition. years in the Dail, is a former who were accused in 1970 s own later acquitted , of diverting county meet With 10 seats in the Dail still foreign minister. Lynch' arms undecided, Cosgrave's Fine foreign minister, Brian Leni- government money to buy State Rep. M. J. McCauley, casu- for the guerrillas of the Irish Winona Conservative, and Sen. Gael—Irish Party—and the al- han, was one of the chief .in Northern lied Labor Party had won 68 alties of Fianna Fail's decline. Republican Army Robert Brown, Stillwater Con- seats to 64 for Lynch's Fianna Lynch blamed the loss of key Ireland. servative, will be featured speak- Fail—Soldiers of Destiny. Two seats on "bad luck—a matter of Without them, Lynch's gov- ers at the Winona County Re- independents also had been a few votes here and there." ernment lacked able and ex- publican Convention Saturday elected. But it was clear his party perienced men in the key 45-55 at Wmona Senior High School. Cosgrave's coalition looked age bracket. Another factor The convention agenda in- certain to take at least 72 seats, was the poor television showing cludes election of officers for or half the Dail membership: of some ministers against in- two-year terms and constitution- Ireland is used to governments tellectuals from " the coalition's al amendments providing for re- with only a slender hold on Literature for gionalization of the county par- front bench. : power, since its system of pro- The first big issue for the ty. portional representation makes coalition will be Britain's com- Sister Raphael Tilton, chair- large majorities rare. But ing blueprint for the future po- man of the resolutions com- many commentators doubted children io be litical shape of Northern Ire- mittee, will offer resolutions the new government would sur- la'nd. for consideration, and Dr. Leo vive long. Some " politicians Cograve has been in the van- Ochrymowyee, constitut e on were already preparing for an- chairman, will ask for amend- guard of those in the republic RELIEVED MOTHER ... Mrs. Frank (Hazel ) Hess, La leased this weekend, Her son, Air Force Lt. Col. Gordon other election. course topic denouncing the IRA and de- ments, to expand the slate of officers for breaking the county Crosse, Wis., a former Winona resident, expressed relief Albert (S*wede) Larson, 45, has been a PtfW in Hanoi since A course exploring the his- manding curbs on its activities ) Cosgrave was expected to tory of literature for children on this side of the border. into regions. when hearing that her son (portrait , wiho has been a prisoner May 5, 1967. (Daily News photo) name Brendan Corish , leader oi and its significance to a child's According to county chair- of war In North Vietnam for nearly six years, will be re- tho Laborites, bis deputy pre- development will be offered by woman Mrs. Frank Allen Jr., mier. the Winoffa State College Eng- lans at the convention will open to the The voting Thursday ended 16 lish department during the Water p public at 1:15 p.m. Nominations years In office for Fianna Fail. spring quarter. for officers will be accepted Bracelet wearers Lynch, while declining to con- Open to the public, the course Galesville get from the floor, she said. is designed specifically for adults who wish to become in- state approval formed about what literature Thefts from cars overjoyed at news children enjoy, why they enjoy GALESVILLE, Wis. - The A woman from Kearny, The bracelets have been Fountain City it and how one can discern application to construct a stor- parked in city N.J., telephoned the Daily distributed over the past quality within the range of years, available children's books. age reservoir and necessary News this morning express- by the - The course will be offered on water mains, filed by the city noted by police ing happiness over the re- based VIVA, Voices in a a tuition basis Tuesday even- with the Public Service Com- lease of Lt. Col. Gordon A. Vital America. Man fined in Several more thefts from Larson. Mrs. Frank Hess, La ings from 7 to 9:50. mission of Wisconsin, has been It can be taken for four hours parked cars were reported to Mrs. Bertha Sallustro said Crosse, mother of Col. Lar- of graduate or undergraduate approved. police Thursday, assistant chief that for two years she has son," said that she has re- The construction will include John Scherer said today. Larson's POW ceived from 25 to 30 letters credit on a regular or pass/no had Col. ^ fire incident pass basis. . a 500,000 gallon storage reser- Virgil Smith, 1484 Heights bracelet, with his name, a day from people all over Blvd., said that items valued at A Fountain City, Wis., la- Registration may be made voir and water main extensions rank and date that he was the country who have been borer was today fined $100 in during the regular Winona $25 were taken from his locked taken prisoner inscribed on wearing POW bracelets with Winona County Court after State registration period from to eliminate undersized and car between midnight and 1:30 it. her son's name on them. pleading guilty to violating March 20 to 21 or at the first dead-ended mains. Estimated a.m. Thursday. Smith's daughter She and her son, Leon- Many persons, whom sho three counts of the fire preven- or second class meetings March cost is $200,771. reportedly returned to the car ard, 17, have taken turns has never met, have called tion ordinance. 27 or April 3. on Winona Street between West wearing it in the hopes that long distance asking her to Additional Information may The commission approval was Ronald J. Schutz, 24, said made on condition the construc- Sanborn and West King Streets "somewhere along the lino call them collect as soon as he was operating a cutting torch be obtained from the English and found the left vent window they would hear good she hears about her son's which sparked a fire nt the 51 department at the college. tion begins by Feb. 26, 1974. broken. The car had been ran- news." condition. Johnson St. building occupied sacked. Missing were a micro- Mrs. Sallustro wore the "This shows that people by Lake Center Industries Fefo. phone extension and a pair of bracelet for more than a really care," said Mrs. 21. He was charged with op- cloth gloves. year and her son has worn Hess. "It also gives the erating a torch within 35 feet Another $25 theft was noted by it since that time, never tak- men a good feeling know- of combustible material without Weekend to he Linda Stevens, 914 Parks Ave. ing it off. When he left for ing that the American peo- a noncombustible shield, with A pair of oval prescription eye- school this morning he ple are concerned about failure to employ fire watchers, glasses was taken from her un- said to his mother : "Be them." and with failure to have fire locked car between noon and sure to check tho list of The POW bracelet worn extinguishers. 1 p.m. Thursday while it was prisoners today to see if his by Mrs. Hess has a white The resultant firo kept fire- soggy/ dreary parked behind tiie Levee Bar, name is on it." star on a blue background, r very happy," denoting that her son is a fighters busy for 2Vz hours and Winona area residents today The mercury Thursday reach- 115 Main St. "We are caused an estimated $4,000 dam- A pneumatic muffler gun was said Mrs. Sallustro, "and prisoner of war. A sticker looked ahead to a damp week- ed a high of 40 and slipped just him on with a blue star on a white age to a loading dock and roof. below freezing to a low of 31 taken from the garage of Gerald can't wait to see- This was the first time in recent end of unseasonably mild tem- Johnson , 475 Olrnstead St., be- television. Both of us prayed background stands for Miss- peratures. early today. ing iri Action. years that fire ordinance vio- It was 39 under a heavy over- tween Sunday ar«„ Wednesday. that he would come home." lators have been prosecuted, ac- Fog which has prevailed for cast this noon and a low in the No value was placed on the cording to city Fire Marshall the past two days was accom- upper 20s or lower 30s is fore- loss. Bruce Johnstone, who filed the panied by intermittent drizzle cast for tonight, with a high in complaint agninst Schutz. TREMPEALEAU CHEST TO BE RELEASED . . . Lt. Col. Gordon A. Larson, 45, and! mist that produced a trace the low 40s seen for Saturday. TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- Harmony teachers, Johnstone noted tbat stricter of precipitation by 7 a.m. today. a native of Winona, wiho has been a prisoner of war in Hanoi enforcement can be expected in THE chance of precipitation cial) — A goal of $1,400 has been set for the 1973 Trempea- since May 5, 1967, is among a group of POW's to be released tho future, consistent with pol- THE chance of occasional was listed at 20 percent to- this weekend. He Is the son of Mrs. Frank (Hazel ) Hess, La light showers remain in leau Community Chest cam- icies established by the 1971 tho night and 10 percent Saturday. paign now in progress. Solici- board ink contract Crosse, Wis. His U.S. Air Force F10G Thunderchief was ono Occupational Safety and Health weather forecast into Saturday, The normal temperature resolved through mediation. with temperatures ranging tations for chest funding will HARMONY, Minn. - A two- of three planes shot down by communist ground firo during Act enacted by Congress. well range for this date is from a continue through March 15. session with Ro- above seasonal norms. high of 34 to a low of 15. year salary dispute between the A two-hour raids close to Hanoi . The above photos were taken May 17, Harmony School Board and pub- bert Kenney, St , Paul, a media- 1967, from a television showing of a communist-approved lic school teachers has been tor with tiie state Bureau of film from Hanoi. Col. Larson was paraded through tho streets Mediation Services, resulted in of Hanoi after his capture before what wcro described as accord on a package proposal angry crowds. that provides teachers with a Bids taken for $100 across-the-board salary in- crease for the 1972-73 and 1873- power plant 74 work years. Notice to at Preston RAISES for this school jjpar are retroactive to tho beginning PRESTON, Minn. - A Ro- of tho school year and tench- chester, Minn,, construction crs also received increased hos- apparent low pitalization benefits. Winona and Goodview company was the Tlio new salary schedule lias bidder for construction of a a range for the current school 2,000-square-foot addition to yenr nt tlio bachelors degree Sunday N EWS Subscribers tho Preston Municipal Power level of $7,050 to $9,000 over 11 Plant. steps. " The masters degree The contract is expected to schedule runs from $7,550 to O Our city circulation deportment will accept tola- be awarded to tho Floyd Lar- $11,150 this year and $100 in- son Construction Co., for its bid creases will bo applied to both phone calls from 7:30 a.m. to 9iOO a.m. Sunday of $110,000, at a Wednesday schedules next yenr. meeting of the municipal utility for tho delivery of missing papers In Winona and commission, KENNEY RAH> thnt to make Goodview. Tho construction project is a up for raises lost during tho part of a $500,000 expansion 1971-72 contract year, teacher., Uint would double tho generat- who wore on tJio faculty nt ng capacity here by tho end that time will advance two The Telephone Number of the summer. steps on tho schedule. Scheduled for completion on Kenney begun mediation with to Call Is July 31, tho now addition will tho two sides last Soptemhcr, house a now 3,000-horsepowor called a stalemate Feb. 13 and ¦¦rn—m. .,,. ... ' ' • — ¦*^VMr* _**>*M* ^PMM>1--'MS__p^^_MH I_ sns>]N* _Mpr aM^ generator already purchased by recommended the matter bo tho commission ' at a cost of put to Arbitration, SHROUDED STEAMER . . . The Steamer Wllkid , tlio surrounded by tho heavy fog that prevailed over much of County Historical Society s museum $250,000. Wednesday's mediation ses- Winonn ' of Upper Mis- tho area, (Daily Nows photo) -* Seven other contractors bid sion was culled as n final ef- 454-2961 sissippi Rlvor lore nt tho Winona Levoo, this morning was on tho addition. fort to reach settlemsat. Television highli ghts Tonight, weekend TV Spread of backgammon Today f> year-old mansion once own- , wwAY*vrvsw^/?^^*f*rpYt™!*»%•y-yy-^w^y^^^F'y^a^^^ -j^w*^^*^*^*™ ^ - -™ NSP says nuclear LOCAL NEWS 5:00, Cable TV-3. PALM BEACH — Down ed by silent star Rod La- RELIGION IN THE '70s, 5:15, Cable TV-3. * here where Marjorie Merri- . . The classic mov- &,.xi - <-; /Tm ^hV ' *< jy 1 Roque . lant will be CITY HALL REPOBT, 5:30, Cable TV-3. [l^£*-*_ *L W J N«m 11 or women . Rita M 0 lBh aV"ni den American excitement dancing with / each stage in the "De- erating plant Will be shut down he buys a saloon besieged by the local temperance society. " w ill'hJm. ? MM... \ T « 2 , " 10:00 Newi S-M0-1M. from the B'way ¦¦ ' ¦ Nashville Musle 3 7:30 Eye to Eye 2 Perry Mason 11 over backgammon. "WE," .. . Pretty Jackie revival . . . beginning today for about two 7:00, Ch. 11. . • , - Parent Game A Partridge ,0i2o News 3-4-8 other? tective Story " Circuj Family «*M» „ some of them will tell you her husband and be well- months. IN CONCERT. Rock music by The Guess Who B. B. * 10 30 «r»n Cain and Burt Reynolds'll , Green Acres i 8:00 Vout World * *?• ''"/li a bit stiffly, "have played -Krai open- Who The company said it will be King and Melanie, taped at the Santa Monica (Calif.) Civic Jearmla » rnis Week 3 '¦? <, n«*"» •¦" accompanist . Roy covered in "The Man Truth or Const* . Movio 3-4*8 , ' „„. it for AGES!" impressively at the. Dancing"; he the first major inspection and Auditorium. 10:30, Chs. 6-19. . - ¦ 10:58 Movie .....W-l-11 ing Loved Cat quenees •- Room 521 W M "Even cab drivers and Grill, probably didn't even even wears a beard . . . overhaul for the 545,000-kilowatt Saturday Mouse Factory 10 Merv GrIHIn 11 12:00 Midnight are plant since it went into service That Girl 11 8:30 Thirty Minutes Special 1-10-18 gas station attendants know about the incident. Dennis Weaver is consider- NBC CHILDREN'S THEATRE. "Jennifer and Me" tells Salarl 13 With i 2 Christophers 1» up, they will add their dtrs. in March 1971. Refueling and the story of two lonely girls who become friends; one is the taking it " They introduced ing a stage role in the mu- in some dismay. Kiki, 20 and Dana, 16 . . . sical version of "Mr. Smith plant maintenance will be done only black girl in her class and the other is .new in the to sit * turbine-generator which , ' 1 have sworn never It was Carnevale time at Goes to Washington," on the , neighborhood. 10:00, Chs. 5-10-13. [jv , Satttrday , ," .- j backgammon very fes- represents about 16 per cent of OUTDOORS WITH JULIUS BOROS. Ireland is the scene ^ down at a Mama Leone's and EiARL'S PEARLS: Har- ^ (-8 table. I am going to let this (Gene) Leone the company's total generating for the following sports; golf , salmon fishing and duck wwrnmgMnrninn . ABA Basketball 4 Lawrence Welk tive. Papa lene Winsten remembers , .„ . Movla 5 Rai Patrol » fad pass me by. It takes too during the week capability. hunting. 11:30, Ch. 11. JUD CBrtoons Pholo Fun Club i Mod Squad 1» will visit that her home town was much time. A certain mem- country estate . Other NSP plants and pur- WOMEN'S GOLF. First-round play of the Cinderella m.rn taS fti NHt- Ac,i0 1(> iM Survivals .4 from his dull: "If you owned 8:00 Sesame Street 2 Gone Williams** 13 Mouse Factory S family has been Im- kind of chases from other utilities will Tournament featuring Ahern-Burfeindt vs. Englehorn-Pren- Osmonds H*» ber of my Kaye Ballard, Vincent , you were , . Today's Woman 19 Young Dr. Klldare » play for seven a painted turtle make up for the lost produc- ¦ „ 1:30 Animal World t Parent Game 10 known to . pellitcri and ; Pat Cooper tice. 12:00, Ch. 11. !?fnli J" Obo- considered an art lover.'' tion. During the outage, the COLLEGE BASKETBALL. Gamecocks ¦.11. ..J. 1 ,JJL_O ?I college Basketball 10 7:00 Movie i hours straight. Alexis were in the Carnevale crowd ° «^i" n-J '"??¦ Movie IJ All In The been help- A travel agent glowingly company will try to tie in a vs. Notre Dame, 12:30, Ch. 9; Indiana Hoosiers vs. . .i l'?™ ""!? . 1:00 Sew Smart t Family 3-4-8 lensky. who has at De Medici. t:00 Eleclric. . Company 2 Ahierican Emergency S-10-13 the Seagrams- star . described the lovely girls of new radioactive off-gas treat- Hawkeyes, 1:00, Chs. 3-8-11; Oklahoma State Cowboys vs. B » ¦ ing stage . Show Biz Quiz: What ... .!,. o.-A- . Bandstand 1» Here We Go world champion playing Tahiti, and a customer ask- ment system that is expected to Tigers, 1:30, Ch 10;. MINNESOTA GOPHERS vs. f:30 Mister Rogers , 2 2:30 Pr0 Bmlert . Again «-M. 10ft Pipers mn two Oscars . Cartoons J-4-8 best time to go reduce by 99 per cent the Purdue Boilermakers, 3:00, Chs. 4-11; Cornhuskers Tour <*?-19 Golddlggsrs 11 tournaments, considers the characters named Henry? ed the ',. .. , i9,n . 'I 1:45 Movie 5 7:30 Bridget Lo\es addictive." s: Thom- there. "Any time," sighed amount of radioactive exposure vs. State Wildcats, 3:30, Ch. 10; MarqUdte Warriors IOS0O Sesame° °Street 2 . 3:0D Golf .Classic 3*8 Bernle 1-4-8 game " Ans. to yesterday' 1 A Touch « got so oc- the agent, "between 21 and to the public at the site bound- vs. Long Beach State , 10:45, Ch. 3. TL^-I «,«.*,, College A businessman as J. Woodward is Tom Theatre 3J0-" Basketball 4-11 Grace «•»-!• he neg- ' is 45." That's earl, brother. ary- ABA BASKETBALL. : Memphis Tarns take on the Caro- Bewitched i-9-19 Roller Derby 13 Wrestling 11 cupied with it that Jones; Arnold G. Dorsey 8:30 College 8:00 Mary Tyler lected his work. His wifo Humperdinck. lina Cougars at Greensboro, N.C, 1:00, Ch. 4, 10:38m « Cartoons,i.J! \" i. M-W.i. . a Eneelbert Baske,ba„ ,0 Mooro * .H4 got him to go to a psychia- star of NHL ACTION. Highlights of the Montreal-Chicago game Patty Duke 11 4ioo Changing Time. 3 World Hattie Winston, Did she call Feb. 21 and Buffalo-Minnesota Feb. 24, also a feature on 11:00 Eloclrlc Man From Premiere 5-10-13 trist. He lost $12,000 to the "Two Gentlemen of Ve- Ranger star Vic Hadfield. 1:00 Ch, 10. company I U.N.C.L.E. s Julie Andrews 4-9-19 psychiatrist playing back- divorced Mark Linn, , Cartoons 5*10-13 Skating Champ- NHL Hockey 11 rona," the car Silver? PRO BOWLERS TOUR. Finalists compete for a $12,000 Land of Giants 11 ionships . 9-19 8:30 Bob Newharl 3-4*8 gammon. her husband of two years POTATO »:00 David Sussklnd 2 first prize in the Miller High Life Open at Milwaukee. 2:30, 11:30 Sesame Slreet 2 Wally's Workshop 8 ¦ "Palm Beach was the cen- ¦• ' Marlon Brando must Julius Boros 11 Bill Anderson 13 Grammy . ¦ * . .?• . BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. Chs. 6-9-19, «(,„.„„ 4:30 Perspective 8 Awards 3-4-8 ter of backgammon 30 and have taken to heart his (Special) —Somewhere in Mel- CSS GOLF CLASSIC. Quarter-final match: Jerry Heard Atternoon Fishing IS Movie «-8 40 years ago," Cbolensky , co-star Maria 12:00 Children's Film S:00 Gospel ' Fellowship 3 ' * Safari 11 "Tango" rpse "Wis., there and Lanny Wadkins vs. Sam Snead and J. C. Snead. 3:00 Festival Jigsaw 19 sitting here in the PANCAKES ,? 's a? good Sa- , ¦ ¦ ¦ 3*8 This Is Your Life 4 said, Schneider's cracks about his News • • ¦ 4 9:30 News 11 ' ¦ maritan, but no one's quite sure Chs. 3-8. • . . . NashvlJIe Music 5 lobby of The Breakers. "It friends say at ¦ . Wally's Workshop 5 . Music Carousel 8 10:00 News 5-10-13 flabby middle; who she is. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS. "Wide Monkees «*9 Takes a Thlel 11 was called the game of lbs. recently Movie 11 '* he¦'s lost 10 Jackson County Register of World," in a 90-minute special, covers skating's showcase Film Festival 8 Campus Comment 13 10:15 Movio 10 kings and the king of . . . ' . A show business cou- event at , . America s Janet Lynn Roller Derby 10 5:15 Great Outdoors 13 10:30 News J-4-8 Deeds Lyle Larson Monday ' Women's Gotf 11 5:30 360 Degrees 2 J. Carson 5 games?" ple talked reconciliation, STEAK SHOP took his son, John, to take his and Canada's Karen Magnussen are co-favorites in the wo- Dick Rodgers 13 News 34-8-13 Movie II No, I'm not going to play but the husband — less fa- men s finale, the featured event. , Agriculture 19 * wild Kingdom * 5 10:45 College 125 Main Sf. behind-the-wheel drivers license ' Defending world champion 12:30 Hobby Show ,. 4 Death Valley Days 6 Basketball . 3 it, no matter how often they mous' than his wife — re- test, but a last-minute malfunc- Ondrej Nepela is the one to beat iii men's competition. 4:00, Audubon 5 Reasoner Report 9-19 11:00 Gene Williams 4 tell me it was played on jected the idea; he's happy Cbs. 6-9-19. American Tracks & Trails 10 Movie 8-11 tion in the Larson family car Bandstand 6 - . 11:20 Movie 4 Noah's Ark, that there used dating the local belles. WORLD PREMIERE. "A Time for Love, with John College Baskelball 9 evening . prevented the youth from tak- " Prisoner 10 to be a "strip backgam- bought the ing the examination. Davidson as a straight-laced executive and Bonnie Bedelia 12:45 Changing Tlmos 4 <:00 Civilisation 2 11:30 Western 4 that Bill Harrah 1:09 College Heo Haw 3-13 11:45 Tracks & Trails 19 mon" like strip poker, first hundred shares when It appeared Larson had wast- as a quiet teachej, tells two stories about opposites meeting Baskelball 2*8-11 : News 4-5-10 11:55 Movie 5 that it has replaced Sex, his gambling casino on love s common ground. 8:00 A ' , Chs. 5-10-13. , v. r -XT." ed an afternoon away from F?-*ZZ~r, "*~ "* - . 1*- * ^w^jw. * > v , they play for $10,000 a point, ?*>X* * + Stock Ex- DANCE GRAMMY AWARDS. The 15th annual awards ceremony, «*, « * went on the NY work and his son had lost an w that it's a quiet game in The Yankees' opportunity to take the test hosted by singer Andy Williams, honors achievement in the < - " Sunday change . . . SAT., MARCH 3 t . * the U.S. but that in the Mid- Mike Burke invited Joe Kip- when a stranger who said her musical world and features Gilbert O'Sullivan, Helen Reddy dle East they yell a lot! — Musfc by — and Don McLean. 9:00, Chs. 3-4-8. Mornina YounB l ue% » LMSI» 4 ness of Joe's Pier 52 to name was Mrs. Olson from Mel- 1H45 World ot" News 10-13 You see, they have these DAVE KIRAL ' ¦'¦ . Sunday 8:00>.nn ReligionBIZ!PL " 8*1-.„3 the team's training camp, rose offered the Larson youth oral Rooerrs o Aviation 4 Snowmobiles 19 dice, and you roll them, and One-Man Band TIME FOR RECONCILIATION. Catholic spokesmen dis- Gospel Hour t Afternoon- >. but Joe shrugged, "No — I the use of her car. Evenirq you have to be lucky, and ' ¦ ¦ ; cuss the Vietnam cease-fire, ways to end political dissension Billy James 12:00 This Is The Life 3 . .... ,„„„ " , do? my training at the bar." . . — at '— , John took the test and pass- Hargiss 19 News 4 **00 J™™ the law of probabilities and plans" for reordering national priorities. 10:09 ' J bought a ed, but no one ever learned her , Ch. 5. 8:30 Cartoons 4-8 Henry Wolf 5 JJ™-. J comes into it, and you can Jack Carter WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS. Finals of Day of Discovery J Living Word 6 first name. the Kemper ; S,l?.\.. ¦ . opponent H'wood showplace, a 50- Billy James Dick Rogers «*l» «?? „,, ¦»»»,. »¦ "double" your , RED'S D0GPATGH International Tournament with a first prize of $10,000. En- Hsr9,s Changing Tlmts * 9 PSwffSl f and kill him .. .but OH, NO, - ¦ —————»—^—~~—^—^ Troy, Minn. trants include Arthur Ashe (U.S.) Believe in Tennis 10-13 *.Ti *"" , Tom Okker () ¦ ' , S ii ™ i» and Marty Diessen (U.S.). 12:00 - ¦ n,,i ; * . - not me, I'm remaining a SPECIAL MATINEE , Chs. 10-13: .- ffl r. , 1 N - . j- A H_S3Sr i? w9 „ssr°' * * W » non-combatant, I'm hot TASTE TEMPTING SATURDAY NBA BASKETBALL. Knicks vs. Baltimore Bul- . , Revival Fire, 13-1 12!30 ?o Tel. the Truth I «"«™* "» tiOO Oral Roberts 3 Songs of Faith 4 .. ".'! " even watching! AND lets at College Park, Md., 1:00, Chs. 6-9-19. Film Festival 4 .. Portlandp nd Issues/Answers «-» Symphony t "We can teach it in six FOOD FOR LESS! NHL ACTION (details in Saturday's schedule), 1:30, Ch. 5. Faith for Today 5 camera Throe ¦ SUNDAY Curiosity ShooVl? ¦ lessons," Obolensky says. NHL HOCKEY. Chicago Black Hawks vs. Boston Bruins, ,1:„ fpSS. ' wJSdT *** ¦ AT 1 AND 3 P.M. U Un,0 MY ' Holiday 4 ' 2:00, Chs. 5-10-13. ^ , . o snev 5-10-13 Not to me, he won't. Mad- CALL THEATRE !0 ! ir ™ DANCE CBS SPORTS SPECTACULAR. Featured events; U.S.A. CiS serylc. 1 ' t y J*^"^ ame La Zonga could teach RED'S POLKA BAND . Rex Humbard 13 ^MaXrrv S 7!M MASH ^ FOR INFORMATION Indoor Track and Field Championships, headed by Russian fli30 Day ol Discovery J FBI 4-9-19 the conga or rhumba in six ^SATURDATV ' «IA French Ctief 2 452-2982 entrants; 'American Grand Prix at Wintenhaven, Fla., Fair Religious Town ' n»b.ih_ it ' «,,« '-30 lessons, too, but I couldn't ' ¦ ¦¦ Ha" I p?h„« p?L Mannl *¦*¦* SPECIALS V ., or ' ' Grounds, equestrian competition. 2:30 E Colombo* 5-10-13 learn and I'm sure I / Winona Athletic , Chs. 3-4-8 Look Up & Live 8 fa,v,X ,T« 8:00 Masterpiece 452-4171 YOU ARE THERE. "The Siege of the Alamo, 1836 Insight 10 n,,„ ^ couldn't learn backgam- 8 ROAST BEEF I " , fea- capitol Approach 11 a. The8,re » ,.,„:30 Tr«ksT„TI, ? «, Trails-Tr,n. 41 , either ! Bye, bye, king tures a small band of volunteers in battle against a 10:00 Camera rhre. 3 ' ^ Movie 4-9-19 mon Club Inc. Laurel, Hardy 4 8:30 Barnaby Jones 3-4-8 won't miss I LIVER & Mexican army of 4,000. 4iO0, Chs. 3-4-8. »," pD1>.„™ . ¦¦ of games. You J Reconciliation f g'9 '''" ™ „, ' . " Heo Haw 11 m sure. I ONIONS HOWARD COSELL SPORTS MAGAZINE, 4:15, Chs. 6-19. -Rex Humbard o Here Coma thi _ 9:00 Firing Lire r me. I' Jf SATURDAY _ B de5 Night Gallery 5-10-13 ! JOHN GLENN STORY, biography, 4:30, Ch. 19 Day of Discovery. 8 ,„- I r ¦ '] Maureen O'Sullivan got BAR-B-Q Cartoon? »•!» 2:00 Fishing ¦ .,, * f:30 To Tell the Truth J \ M 60 MINUTES. Scheduled. 1. Mike Wallace visits NHL Hockey 5-10-13 so angry at Jimmy's for an- Prof. This Is TheJtfe 10 . „ Moore on Sundny 4 RIBS MARCH 3 Paul Pietsch, pioneer researcher, at his University of In- Wrestling 11 2:15 Changing Times 8 Police Surgeon 5 nouncing that "Frank Sina- \ y_ W Insight 13 2:30 Sports ... Country Place 8 diana lab where he is performing memory transplants on 10:3O Lamp Unto Spectacular 3*4-8 I've Got A Secret 10 tra's mother-in-law" would salamanders, 2. Morley Safer talks with convicted forger My Feet j 3:15 American News 11 be a guest bartender that David Stein as he discusses his Face the Nation 8 Sportsman 419 Protectors 13 career. 5:00, Chs. 3-4-8. Make A Wish 9*19 , 3:30 Westerners 9 10:00 Soul's Harbor 2 she telegraohed Dick Aure- PARAMEDICS. Special documentary about the University Mormon Choir 10 4:00 You Are Then 3*4-8 News j-4-5-8-10 .3 lio. "How dare you ?nut out of Wisconsin Hospital, Madison, featuring a segment on Blackwood Family 13 Movie 9-11 Perry Mason 11 publicity like that? I shall 11:00 Look Up 8. Live 3 4:15 Howard Cosell 4*19 10:30 Sportsarana 3 W SUHDAY \ DAHCE open heart surgery. Face the Nation 4 4:30 Sports Illustrated 3-4 Charlie McCarty 5 never set font in your place" NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC. "America's Wonderlands — High School Bowl 5 UFO S Jigsaw 6 . . . Tonv Bennett snld out # SPECIALS! 1 EAGLES CLUB This Is The Life 4-8 Death Valley Days 4 Moments ol Truth 8 Hew Clubrooms, 4lh & Franklin The National Parks" explores our wilderness heritage: Ha- Directions 9 Flshln Hole 8 Movie 10 both shows at the London waiian volcanoes, elk herds in Yellowstone, the Grand Can- David & Goliath 10 Echoes From 10:35 Sports Illustrated 8 Palladium so they turned I ROAST | yon, fossils, sequoias, a Navajo reservation Wonderama 11 Calvary 13 10:45 Movio 4-13 Sat., Mar. 3 and the Ever- Gospel Hour 13 John Glenn 19 11:00 Suspense 3 on the P.A. system and he 1 CHICKEN Jf glades. 5:30, Oh. 5. 0 Roller Derby 19 5:00 60 Minutes 3*4-8 In Concert 9 was heard in the streets "JILL AT THE CORDOVOX" HIGH QUIZ BOWL. BLAJR vs. New Lisbon, 6:00, Ch. 8 11:15 Tho Answer Focal Point 6 Movio 11 MEMBERS Is Love 10 Echoes From . 11:05 Western 8 .. . "Star Soansted Banner" V STUFFED j& ~~ NHL HOCKEY. MINNESOTA NORTH STARS vs. Pitts- 11:30 Face the Nation 3 Calvary 10 It's Your Life 19 gal Ethel Ennis, who has a PORK CHOPS SAT. — STEAK FRY burgh Penguins, 6:00, Ch. 11. Stockmarket 4 Tax Preparation 13 11:10 Issues 8, Answers 19 \ JM Meet the Press 3*10 Paramedics 19 11:30 Boris Kartell 4 hit album of Gladys Shelley PORTLAND JUNIOR SYMPHONY, 6:30, Ch. 2. 11:40 Movie 19 SCHAFSKOPF TUESDAY Consultation t 5:30 National tunes, goes into tbe Plaza Come One — Como All WORLD OF DISNEY. "Chester, Yesterday's Horse" tells Insight 8 Geographic 8 13:00 Henry Wolf 9 Persian Room April 5. the story of a logging horse vs, modern technology, filmed Calling all lawyers and O in southwst . 6:30, Chs, 5-10-13. music. (1950). 7:00, Ch. 2. legal brains. Help, help! PEN vMASTERPIECE THEATRE. "Point Counter Point," part "THE QUILLER MEMORANDUM," Alec Guinness. Grill was HwA, *"~ _ __ S, is replete with casualties of love. 8:00 agent sent to Berlin to search for The Rainbow 24 HOURS * j ^MgmSwKB , Ch, 2. Drama about an American about to ask two men danc- FIRING LINE. William F, Buckley Jr. and his guest, murderous neo-Nazis. (1966). 9:00, Ch. 6. (CLOSED MONDAYS) LIVE MUSIC Ends Tues. 0 $5. . $1.25-$ 1.75 Frank Shakespeare ing together to leave the j , discuss America's image abroad. 9:00, "WAR AND PEACE," Audrey Hepburn. Tolstoy's drama one Ch. 2. about Czarist attacked by Napoleonic armies. (1956). floor when it turned out FRIDAY | 7:15-9:20 |PO '! CEfl| " LLOYD BRIDGES WATER WORLD. The 1972 Long 9:00, Ch. 9. I "Tho Sod Busters" from Beach Hennessey Cup offshore powerboat race, with 19 en- "MAIN STREET TO BROADWAY ," Tom Morton. A young Winona Daily News Rochester j trants. 9:30, Ch. 3. man strives for success as a playwright. (1953). 10:00, Ch. 19. FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1973 BUTti'S MOORE ON SUNDAY. "The Forgotten Veterans GUNS," Laurel and Hardy comedy about the SATURDAY HELD OVER ," a "GREAT VOLUME 117, NO. 88 esfaurairt I "The \ half-hour news show, focuses on veterans who have returned zanies' enlistment in the Cavalry. (1941). 10:15, Ch. 10. Varletle*" ENDS TUESDAY as physical cripples Published dally except Saturday and cer- , drug addicts and victims of psychologi- "PSYCHO," Anthony Perkins. An eerie, run-dopm motel tain holidays by Republican ond Horatd 126 East Third St. { cal disabilities 9:30, Ch. 4. (1960). Publlshlnn Company, 601 Franklin St., I CLY-MAR . is the scene of murder and madness. 10:30, Ch. 13. 55987 . IN CONCERT. Santa Monica, Calif., is the setting for this "THE SECOND TIME AROUND," Debbie Reynolds. Winona, Minn. Conveniently Located , ZODIAC LOUNGE | rock concert performed by Tho Guess Who, B. B. King and Comedy about a female sheriff in a wild Western town. SUBSCRIPTION RATES r Lewiston Slngls copy 15c dolly. 30c Sunday. in Downtown Winona Melanie. 11:00, Cli. 9. (1961). 11:00, Ch. 8. Delivered by carrier per week 60 cents* "55 DAYS AT PEKING, Charlton Heston. Rousing dra- 26 weeks *15.30* 52 weeks 830.60. •*_**MI_fc__M_aJIM'IMIII*__MW1__H«W«MMW *^ " By mall strictly In ndvancoi paper ma about the 1900 Boxer Rebellion. (1963). 11:00, Ch. 11. •topped on expiration dele: Television movies "ROBIN AND THE 7 HOODS," Franfy Sinatra, Musical Local Area — Rates btlow apply only Stir U spoof of Chicago in the Twenties. (1964). 11:20 , Ch. 4. In Winona, Houston, Wobnsha, Fillmore p Compliments ) Wltoka Softball Team ] and Olmsted counties In Minnesota) With Our Today "THE STKANGLERS OF BOMBAY," Guy Rolfe. Butlalo, Trempealeau, Pepin, Jackson Fino "MacKENNA'S and La Crosso counties In Wisconsin , and ) -BENEFIT- GOLD," Gregory Peck. The Southwest Is the scene as ,a religious cult threatens destruction of the armed forces personnel with military of 1874 is the scene of violence and adventure . . on a large British East India Company. (1960). 12:00, Ch. 5. addresses In the continental United Stales ) scale, (wm. 0:00, Chs. 3-4-8. or overseas with APO or FPO addresses: DANCE Sunday I year . . $25.00 9 months . . . $20.75 MCQUEEN "TH E FLIM-FLAM MAN ," George C. Scott. Comedy "VILLA RIDES," Yul Brynncr. Violent biography of 6 months , . . $15.00 3 monlhs ... $ 9.00 ) Sat., Mar, 3 ' I / I nbout an elderly con man and his young assistant. (3967) Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa. (1968). 8:00, Chs, 6-9-19. Elsewhere In United Stales end Connda: 10:30, Ch, 9. I year . . . $-10.00 9 months . . . $30.50 Music By \ MacGRAW "THE ADDING MACHINE ," Milo O'Shea. Murder-mys- 6 months . . . $20.75 3 monthi . . . $11.00 WAYNE'S ACCORDION , "HOUSE OF USHER ." Vincent Price, Edgar Allan Poe's tery involving a much-maligned bookkeeper. (1969), 10:30, Ch. Sunday Nows only, I year . . . $15,00 supernatural Slnolo dally copies mulled 25 cents each. LggMLf BAND { classic. (1960). 10:50, THE GETAWAY Chs. 3-0 10. Single* Sunday copies mailed 75 cents "THE SECRET WAYS,of an" Richard Widmnrk . A noted "THE FIGHTING SEABEES," John Wayne. When the each. WITOKA ( 5S("-$1.25-$1.75 | IU MEMBERS m EVERY FRI DAY • TO TELL THE TRUTH 5:30 TO 10:00 P.M. ^BBBDBB||aj Bir Featured In — SALAD BAR ... 12 VARIETIES The Imperial Dining Room of tho I f A PLAYBOY INTERVIEW, irn/oy TIME MAGAZINE MENU • SAUERBRATEN . . . ACII GOOTI PARK PLAZA I • LASAGNA • FRUITED HAM DANC9MG BATTER-FRIED FISH DeliveranceA JOHN DOORMAN FILM • Will Be Closed Sundays | AT THE Slartlna JON VOIGHT • BURT fll-VNOLDS PANAWSION»'T£CHNIC0I.0n*» VINER'S LABOR DANCE TO THE HAPPY BEATS . .. 9 TO 1 For Remodeling I TEMPLE From Vtaw Bio*. IBtl UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE I ORCHESTRA '*& COMPLETE BAR NO PASSES t Every Sat. Night R . . . $2.00 PUB c Miss Susaimo Hninoi, • You Must Be 18 Jhn YYlonaqswi$wL This Week San Bcrnnrdlno, Calif. Rt. 3 — Onalnska WU. CADY'S HED BARN E LnVom Blsok , LEWISTON Orchestra *»*» PfflTCTCfl MEMBERS mAA^m*mmmmmmammmmAm ^mmmAAm^^a^tmmAMmmmm ^^mmmmmmmmmmmAAmm *imAmmm ______-_-—~^.. .. Wisconsin's new cbnsumer law Km (Third in a series.) credit sale includes, first of all, money security interest, other have usually been confined to default must le taken care of. beds and bedding, couch and ings. must , refuse to enforce the chairs, cooking utensils and In the case of a person with transaction, or else modify it. the property sold. personal property excepting es- the individual contract. If that ; By TIMOTHY CURRAN contract included a clause al- The creditor can't: seek a kltchenware belonging to the five dependents, the greater of In addition, -a penalty may be Associated Press sential personal and household judgment in addition Writer If the obligation is $500 or items, and real property if the lowing the creditor to acceler- deficiency customer and his dependents. $139 or 75 per cent will be ex- levied. An honest face may open a more, the coUateral can include ate the maturity of the transac- to the collateral unless the un- In addition, the homestead empt. The Wisconsin Consumer Act obligation is $1,000 or more. time of the few doors for you in life. But if goods upon which the property tion, he could declare a default paid balance at the exemption is increased from The current dollar amount is won't keep the bill collector you want to make a loan or buy is installed or on which a serv- If you consolidate your cred- default exceeds $1,000. $10,000 to $15,000. based on a formula using the from your door, but it strictly and repossess immediately. de- something oh credit after you ice is performed. it, the act says payments must He won't be able to do that A deficiency judgment is minimum wage, so it could regulates the tactics he can get inside, you need something When the obligation is $1,000 be applied first to the amount termined by deducting the fair The amount of wages exempt change. use. anymore, because terms of from garnishment is increased more. It's called collateral. or more, real estate to which owed on the original transac- default are now spelled out in market value from the unpaid The law now prohibits dis- A number of actions, and The merchant or lender you the property is affixed, or tion. That way, if you bought a balance, not the amount the under terms of the Wisconsin charge of an employe because threats of actions, are banned. the act. Consumer Act. deal with has an under- which is maintained, repaired television set, came back later Basically, default occurs in a creditor gets if he sells the colla- of garnishment action against There can be no harassment, standable need to protect his or improved as a result of the for a stereo and defaulted after teral. In the past, creditors could bim. The old law banned dis- telephone calls at unusual closed-end transaction when the not touch the first 75 per cent Investment. So he wants a se- transaction is allowed as colla- paying off the TV, the seller consumer misses two scheduled If the creditor wins a money missal for any one garnish- hours or obscenity. curity interest in something of teral. can recover only the stereo, not judgment from a consumer, he of disposable earnings, or $48 a ment. Violations of the debt collec- installments that remain un- week, whichever was greater. value, in case you don't live up Agricultural products or the TV as well. paid at least 10 days after the can satisfy it by levying execu- The law protects a consumer tion provisions can result in to your agreement, equipment are included. So are The act bans assignment of tion on the consumer's proper- The new law takes the size of from unconscionable conduct monetary penalties for dam- due date. " . a wage earner's family into In the past, this could include goods bought* previously from earnings as security, unless the On an open-end, or revolving ty- '^ ,? by a creditor, and the con- ages, and these damages can almost anything you own. But the same merchant in a credit consumer can revoke that as- Again, certain essential goods consideration. sumer can use this as a defense include those caused by emo- account, the customer defaults amount the Wisconsin Consumer Act, sale consolidated with the debt signment at will. However, the on are exempt. These ,would in- For one person, the in an action against him. tional stress or mental anguish. if he fails to pay when due clothing^tftning table exempt from garnishment will which goes into effect today, on something you buy later. maximum term of wage assign- any two occasions in a 12- clude the limits items in which a creditor When you get a consumer ments is increased, from two and chairs, refrigerator, cook- be the greater of $64 a week or If the court finds that a cred- (Next: Who's In Charge month period. radio 75 per cent of after-tax earn- itor acted unconscionably, it Here?) can take a security interest. loan, the collateral allowed by months to six, In addition, interference with ing and heating stoves, , Collateral in a consumer the act includes a purchase- In the past, terms of default a creditor's security interest or endangering its value con- stitutes default. Would repeal 1964 law What happens next? ? First, Industries question need the creditor must give notice of the default to the customer. The customer then has 35 days in which to "cure" the default, New beef import push seen obligation. or make good on his that it could be dropped by Nix- supermarket demands appear tuated this week by an Agricul- for customer protection If the consumer defaults and By DON KENDALL 't do anything WASHINGTON (AP) - Sky- on any time he sees fit. to be snowballing, despite Rose- ture Department report show- MADISON, Wis. (AP) - The Board which could lower the as meat and cheese which is can't or won particular- about it, the creditor can then rocketing food costs, "I don't trust the President nthal's contention that con- ing that retail beef cost an av- need for a comprehensive con- cost of generic prescriptions not packaged in specifically de- ly for meat, may cause a new without comparison price ad- signed and weighted containers. move to recover his security in- on anything, and certainly not sumers may be rebelling over erage of more than $1.22 per sumer protection package was terest. consumer push in Congress for prices. vertising notices. repeal of a 1964 import-quota on this," Rosenthal told a re- pound, up almost 10 per cent in questioned Thursday by the in- Ferrall complained that the The measure was opposed by The Wisconsin Consumer Act The 1964 quota law sets up a a year. Cattle prices set record dustries it would law which critics say threatens porter. "Beyond that, we don't regulate in other proposals would not facil- retail grocery spokesmen./ in- places restrictions on a credit- keep laws that we don't need formula limiting imports ac- peaks last month, indicating testimony before the Assembly cluding the Kohl's food chain', 's remedies in collecting a American hamburger-eaters. cording to U.S. domestic beef itate comparison shopping be- or President Nixon suspended on the books." that the; meat-price spiral may Commerce and Consumer Af- tween drug stores. which contended it would con- had debt after a default. production. In recent years, fairs Committee. meat-import quotas in 1972 and Rosenthal has introduced a be around for some time. Meat "It will be good for the econ- fuse the shopper. Some critics, such as state •bill to repeal the 1964 meat-ihi- those imports have been run- prices led the way in January's The multi-faceted bill, as Rep. Kenyon Giese, R-Sauk again this year so that Austral- ning at an equivalent level of omy," he said in support of his William Boyd of the Wiscon- ia and other countries could port-quota law and says rising 2.5-per-cent food-price increase, amended by author Rep. Mi- bill, "to have a well informed sin Association of Food Dealers City, said the restrictions are about 6 or 7 per cent of what the largest on record. chael Ferrall, D-Racine, would ship more low-grade beef into public discontent over meat shopper." told the committee "lower in- going to "hamstring the busi- prices may help bring it to at- American cattle-producers, turn correct "some of the most cru- ness community. . U.S. markets. It is used mostly But the cattle industry, vigor- Also debated was a second come families buy solely on the " and car- tention of Congress. out cial and fundamental problems bill, sponsored by Sanasarian, basis of advertising." he asked "It makes-it impossible for a by meat processors Rosenthal contends that U.S. ously opposing any move to re- facing the consumer oday-," ryout-food chains. . "There is a move today, a to require unit pricing on ran- for voluntary unit pricing legitimate , businessman to col- consumer revolution, for a boy- consumer demand for beef is so peal the 1964 law, says ranch- Ferrall said. : Rep. ers are enlarging breeding domly packaged dry food such standards. lect a just obligation," Although heef imports rose 20 cott of meat," Rosenthal said. large—and will remain that Its main provision would re- John Shabaz, R-New Berlin, per cent'in 1972 and are ex- "Those who want to hold the way—that American cattlemen herds and that more beef is quire perishables to have shelf said. pected to . climb an additional line on quotas are making the cannot keep up with the super- coming to market. The growth must be gradual so that prices dates on the package; extend "He's not going to be able to 7l5 per cent this year, Rep. biggest mistake of their lives." market orders, at least not at mandatory unit pricing to large Highway lobbyists recover a just debt, and it is Benjamin Rosenthal, D-N.Y., prices average families should cattle producers get—an in- food stores; require evidence to gong to make it very easy for says the law hangs as a stand- Beef consumption has dou- pay. centive for expansion—will not support product advertising irresponsible customers to ex- by sword ever consumers and bled in the past generation and The price situation was punc- break down, spokesmen say. claims; require gas stations to tract merchandise from mer- utilize visible price signs; regu- chants without paying for it,'' win initial round Shabaz added. late sale of flammable mer- By JOHN LENGEL day were Sens. Howard Baker, chandise; regulate service deal- "We've lost some of our rem- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen- R-Tenn., and Edmund Muskie, and some of them have ers and require drug retailers D-MaineHBut they look ahead edies, Panel probing to post prices on the 100 most ate highway trust-busters bave been weakened ," John Abortion opponents win to full Senate consideration of popular items. lost a preliminary fight, but McKenzie of Appleton, presi- the bill. dent of the \ Wisconsin Con- But Arnie Van Thullenar of look with confidence toward the "It will pass before the full the Wisconsin Dairy Products next try at beating the highway Senate sumers Finance Association syphiljs study ," said Baker of ¦the said. Association said the proposal lobby out of some money for wider-use amendment. ..; - . - ¦ ¦ was too "vague and has too mass transit. .. . "This will probably mean first round house fight The interstate system was some increased losses in our in- many loopholes." The Senate Public Works the original aim of the fund in By GERRY NELSON laws, accused his opponents of pastor of Calvary Baptist "Almost 90 per cent of the Committee voted 8 to 6 Thurs- dustry, at least initially," he raps officios money collected from users ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — seeking to "defy the fetus." Church, Minneapolis, said that grade A dairy products are day against diverting $850 mil- said. WASHINGTON (AP) - Mem- pursuit of a constitutional fees and gas taxes to ease ur- Backers of stricter abortion McCoy said tough abortion laws dated voluntarily now," he lion from the trust fund each ban congestion. If the consumer doesn't bers of a citizens panel in- would not reduce the number of amendment would lead to said. year for urban areas to , use as "cure" the default, the creditor vestigating a controversial fed- laws won their first round in abortions but would move them "heated fanaticism" in the po- Gary Williams, representing they see fit. Such diversion, however, has has two options. He can go eral syphilis experiment have the Minnesota Legislature out of hospitals and into the litical affairs of the nation. ' state automobile dealers, asked been opposed steadfastly t>y after a money judgment, or he angrily protested that govern- hands of "butcher criminal deletion of automobile service The committee then voted to such groups as the American can go to a small-claims court Thursday night after two hours Such an amendment, Forsline ment authorities are not mov- of testimony that repeated most abortionists." dealers from the bill, arid urged report the entire $5.8 billion an- Asphalt Institute, the American with what is known as an ac- ing fast enough to comply wih said, amounts to sectarian passage of a substitute meas- nual federal road-aid package Road Builders Association the tion in replevin, which would of the arguments used over the "The court did not order any- groups "trying to enshrine their , panel recommendations made one to have an abortion, a false ure which he said was designed for full Senate floor action. Associated General Con- establish his right to posses- last October. past five years. dogma in the constitution." exclusively for that industry. In each of the next three tractors, and some oil com- sion, A •* conception that seems central "The Supreme Court decision An attempt years, the bulk of the money, . In a statement sent on Thurs- A House subcommittee cn to many attacks on its deci- by the Wisconsin panies. If the court rules in his favor, day to Caspar Weinberger, sec- makes it possible for all of us Pharmacy Examining Board, a some $3.25 billion, is ear- Spokesmen he can have a sheriff repossess health voted 5-4 in favor of a sion," McCoy said. to practice our religions for these groups retary of . the Department of state agency regulating phar- marked for interstate highway and some senators say they do the security, or he can repos- resolution asking Congress to He said the court had put the freely," he said. macists and the drug industry, construction, the original intent Health, Education and Welfare, not oppose mass transit, but sess it himself. the panel complained of "un- submit a constitutional amend- health and safety of women in to speak against the bill was in creating the fund. feel it should be aided some In the latter case, the credit- ment cancelling the Supreme that the , supportable dereliction" be- ^higher position rights stopped short by committee Making the losing move for other way, perhaps with 'its or is not allowed to commit a Court's Jan. 11 ruling. of?an unborn fetus, calling it a chairman Harout Sanasarian. wider use of the money cause no action has yet been Thurs- own trust fund. breach of the peace. The cus- taken to treat medically the The resolution, if passed by "sensible distinction." The Milwaukee Democrat tomer doesn't have to let him the full legislature, would quoted the state statute which survivors of the 40-year syphilis McCoy said the court had es- enter his residence. experiment, known as the Tus- amount to a legislative declara- tablished a "sane national pol- forbids state agencies from in- Of course, the customer has tion io favor of limiting abor- fluencing the course of legisla- kegee Study. icy" on abortion. the right to voluntarily surren- tions to those needed to save The Jan. 22 ruling said, in ef- RUBLEl-N tion. White House party "The panel is dismayed, frus- the life of the mother. der the collateral at any time. fect, that it is the private right After r repossession, the con- trated and angered that the Examining Board member rapid action which this govern- The subcommittee vote sends of women to seek abortions up TAX Karl Marquardt apparently sumer has 15 days to redeem. to the sixth month of preg- This requires payment of all ment is able to implement in the resolution to the House wanted to speak against price honors Golda Meir other emergency situations has Health and Welfare Committee. nancy. WASHINGTON (AP) amounts due the creditor, plus comparison of drugs. — Pres- United Jewish Appeal, Paul " not been parallelled in this hu- Voting for the resolution were Maynard Pirsig, former dean SERVICE Speaking for pharmacists, ident Nbcon provided a gala costs and a performance depos- of the University of Minnesota Zuckerman of Livonia , Mich., it. man crisis," the statement Reps. Lyndon Carlson, DFL- 166 WALNUT ST. James Deroin of Eau Claire, evening at the White House for to John Connally of Texas, who said. Brooklyn Center ; Gary Flakne, Law School, forecast legal said legislation already visiting Israeli Prime Minister Further, any non-monetary chaos if a fetus is determined pro- jokingly sidestepped reporters' The Tuskegee Study began in R-Minmeapolis; Mary Forsythe, NEXT TO BUS DEPOT posed, including Gov. Patrick Golda Meir, with lavish praise queries about his future politi- 1932 and ended last year after R-Edina; Ernee McArthur, R- to be a "person" under the law. Lucey's budget bill, would set for the Jewish leader who "had cal plans. public disclosure of the project. Brooklyn Center, and Joel Ja- If a pregnant woman is in- 454-5674 up a Drug Quality Review her roots in our country." Republican county In it, more than 430 black men cobs, DFL-Coon Rapids. jured in an accident and mis- Nixon predicted that Mil- Even 89-year-old Alice Long- from Macon County, Ala., were Voting against were Reps. carries, the person negligent in MRS. BETTY BERGLER waukee-raised Mrs. Meir would worth, daughter of President conventions open denied treatment for their Linda Berglin, DFL-Min- the accident would be prosecut- Twin Cities crashes "play a great role" in building Theodore Roosevelt, turned out, MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) syphilis so U.S. Public Health neapolis; Lon Heinitz, R- ed for manslaughter, Prisig said. — OFFICE MANAGER — rais e state road toll peace in the Middle East. Ho along with Nixon's newly — Sixteen Republican county Service doctors could study Plymouth; Helen McMillan, The Rev. Wesley Forsline, said achieving that peace would named woman ambassador to conventions are scheduled this through eventual autopsy what DFL-Austin, and William Ojala , By THE ASSOCLVTED PRESS not bo "easy ... soon or in- Luxembourg, Mrs. George Far- weekend around Minnesota. damage untreated syphilis does DFL-Aurora. Two women, from Edina and stant." kas of New York City. GOP National Committeeman to the human body. The resolution would have no Minneapolis , were killed Thurs- National-security adviser Rudy Boschwitz and State Rep. At least 28, and possibly as effect other than urging Con- day in separate But ho suggested that tlje Henry A. Kissinger Ernest Lindstrom Richfield, traffic acci- enlightened was seated , many as 107, of the study 's par- gress to submit a constitutional INVESTING M dents as Minnesota's 1973 traf- " , courageous and between two women—Inter- both mentioned as potential strong" leadership that built an ticipants died as a direct result amendment. fic fatality toll increased to 97 national lawyer and Nbcon candidates for governor, will of the untreated syphilis. The language suggested by compared with 89 one year ago. independent Israel and has de- campaigner Rita Hauser of speak at several events. fended it "has the genius" to After disclosure of the ex- the resolution would declare Marjorie A. Wickersham , 57, New York and dark-haired Tlie series opens tonight with periment , HEW set up the citi- that: SILVER COINS Edina was killed provide real peace and security singer Lainie Kazan of Beverly conventions in Aitkin , Crow , ns the car in that area. zens panel to investigate the "No person shall be deprived A seminar conducted by she was driving collided with a Hills. He told them "some Wing and Morrison counties. project. In October , the panel of life, liberty, or property, vehicle driven by Leonard J. In a champaign toast, the people seem to forget that I'm Lindstrom will speak at the President said the 120 guests at recommended that the study be from conception until natural Nagengast, 21 , Edina , at a Jewish." Wadena County convention Sat- ended and that survivors be death witlimout due process of Dr. A. H. Davisson Bloomington Intersection. Thursday night's steak dinner Pianist Van Cliburn enter- urday night. Boschwitz is was made up of Mrs. Meir's treated. HEW said it would law, nor denied the equal pro- LaVerne Marie Kollodje, 51, tained tho dinner guests and scheduled to appear at five dif- comply. tection of the laws; provided consultant to Continental Coin Exchange, Inc. Minneapolis died as the car friends and admirers. 100 others invited for the East ferent conventions. ¦ , The gathering included mem- that this, article shall not pre- and sho was driving collided with Room concert. He played Cho- State GOP Chairman David In the Orient, crickets aro vent medical operations neces- one driven bers of the Cabinet , congress- pin and Debussy for 45 minutes Krogseng and Secretary of kept in cages, like songbirds , by Ray Allen Wach- men, big Nixon sary to save the life of a moth- ter, 22, Cannon Falls, at an In- campaign con- and took two encores for 10 State .Arlen Erdahl also will ap- and tlie males are pitted Mr, GeraSd C. Olson tributors. Tho guests ranged er." tersection in Slialcopee. minutes. pear at several conventions. against each other in fights. Metals Advisor, Continental from the chairman of tho The "pro-life" testimony wns — mr spearheaded by Marjory Meck- Coin Exchange, Inc. WE FORGET OFTENEST lenburg, president of Minnesota TO CHECK BATTERY Citizens Concerned for Life This free seminar will explore an Investment program TOYS & FINDLAY, (AP ) - A Eastland not concerned (MCCL). that offers both safety and gain potential. The subjects national survey of car owners Mrs. Mecklenburg and other covered include: GIFTS shows that tho preventive speakers raised the question of I I FOR ALL OCCASIONS maintenance service they most whether euthanasia also might O the effects of devaluation on your own assets often overlook is the check of about Gray nomination be permitted under the abortion and income; BROTHERS I I RffcRR their battery's cables and post language used by the Supreme precious metal as a hedgo I I IIUDD STORE, Inc. By JOHN CIIADWICK turn for further testimony was "Gray has got to be a whole lot • tho recent history of connections, says V.. E. Mac- Court. against Inflation, devaluation, and other econ- Donald , technical services man- WASHINGTON (AP) - not announced. moro careful about his speech- "Tho sentiment in our state making. ~\—-~ omic swings; (jhuflfaStfy ager for Marathon Oil Co. This Chairman James O. Eastland Outside witnesses, most of " is clearly In favor of laws that ^¦s mnpw*n_ Tills wns in reference tn con- the risk of depending on federal monetary policy ^^ neglect ho says is responsible protect the unborn ," sho said. • , , of the Senate Judiciary Com- whom indicate they oppose cern expressed by somovDemo- STB fl. 4Ht St * Phw * m-4W for n largo sharo of winter The pn. life witnesses con- to control the dollar and inflation enough that mittee says nothing In tho pan- Gray's nomination , may bo crots thnt speeches ho made eroded or devalued; starting problems. heard. tended thnt life begins at con- savings and assets are not el's hearings has caused him around the country last yenr, ception nnd that a fetus is a any concern about L. Patrick Near tho conclusion of Thurs- after becoming tho acting FBI • tho advantages and methods of investing in sil- "person" at that point. ver coins; Gray's nomination to bo FBI day's session, two of the com- chief , supported Nixon's re- Robert W. McCoy, longtime director. mittee's liberal Democrats election bid , thus violating tho supporter of liberal abortion NOTICE! "I'm 100 per cent for him ," commended tlio 56-yonr-old nonpartisan nature of tlie FBI. Admission Is free and no reservations aro required. Eastland said Thursday. "He's Gray, a former Navy subma- Gray said they wcro only in The seminar will begin promptly at 8:00 P.M, so BIG BEAR WILL BE CLOSED FOR fl big man, hri honest man, nnd rine commander, for his testi- connection with department plan to arrlvo a few minutes early. Dr. Davisson INVENTORY SUNDAY, MARCH 4TH. a man who Is not politically ori- mony. business, DR. E. A. HOOGE and Mr. Olson will answer questions after tho seminar. ented, " WE WILL RESUME REGULAR BUSINESS "I hnvo no reason to doubt Most of tho questioning at tlio Tuesday March 6, 8:00 p.m. Eimtlnnd HU M ho hn» no your integrity," snid Son. John hearing*, centered mound tlio OPTOMETRIST HOURS MONDAY, MARCH STH. doubt that Gray, who has boon V. Tunnoy, D-Cnlif. "You have FBI's investigation ot the Holiday Inn, La Crosse acting director of the FBI since handled yourself as someone break-in nnd bugging of tho Eyes Examined, J. Edgar Hoover 's death last speaking the truth ." Democratic nalionnl headquar- Contact Lenses Sponsored by Mny, will bo confirmed easily And Son. Birch Bayh , D-Ind., ters at tho Watergate complex by tho Senate. told Gray: "I'm convinced last June. CONTINENTAL COIN EXCHANGE, INC. Gray underwent about 10 you've given us n straight story But at one point Thursday ho WESTGAT E 109 South Sovontli Stroot hours of questioning Wednesday ns you see It. " snid , "Don 't think a lot of SHOPPING CENTER (Minnoapolls, Minnesota 55*102 mid Thursday before the hear- Gray said thnl , if nothing people In tho FBI aro not frus- Phono (612) 330*6761 ¦ Ph. .54-4W2, Winonn * , 4540 Service Drlvo •— Goodview ings wcro recessed until next else, lio had learned from Iho trated thnt wo couldn't find out Tuesday. Whether ho will re- hearings that in Iho future , nil wo Imped to." -imagm A time for all DUMAGIM'S PEOPLE by of us to learn Telling It not Begun a few years ago, Earth week — the week-long observance of concern for our rapidly- deteriorating environment — has not vanished like the fad it was originally called when the first Earth Day appeared in 1970. quite like it is Instead it has flowered, bringing words like NEW YORK — President Nixon and local surplus could be moro ecology Into common usage arid bringing envirun- Js on reasonably firm ground in con- than $23 billion. mcntal concern to the forefront of the news: a tending that many . of the antipov- Tom Wicker So it may be that Nixon's revenue- Harris Poll last fall showed 83 percent of the erty and other social programs cre- sharing program will turn out to ba American people cite air and water quality as a ated by Democratic administrations they created a brief impression of "throwing dollars" at a surplus. in the 1960s failed in practice. But concern and may even have gener- Governmental action on a large major priority of the federal government . over the ' next four years. the way Nixon made the case was ated some hope among the intend- scale T- such as revenue-sharing— so partisan and self-serving that he ed beneficiaries, at a time when can take so long in the American system that it is not unusual for a Earth Week this year will be April 9-15 and, probably was not too persuasive to Lope was vital. the considerable number of people program to be delayed until the as we see it, Winona's unique educational environ- ' NIXON'S PRIME substitute, rev- conditions that called for it have Earth Week who still need convincing, ment places it in a position to make enue-sharing, is at least as much a been considerably changed. here a priceless learning experience for the en- It was almost incredible to hear him refer in the same radio speech gamble — as far as net results are community. NIXON made much of tire of the most unselfish mis- concerned — as anything the John- FINALLY, to "One. security sions ever undertaken by one nation son Administration did. Much reve- a big increase in Social Ways are constantly being sought to bring the — the ?Presi- nue-sharing money, as was the case benefits as a major way in which his in defense of another" "helping to pro- colleges and the community closer together, and dent's view of the war in Vietnam with Great Society grants, will go administration was better life for the American In Earth Week we see an opportunity for the col- — and then to paternalism, social not to the poor but to middle-class vide a " " Aside from his administra- leges to open their doors to the rest of the city exploitation and waste" — his view workers — to firemen's and po- people. and teach us all something about the world in of Democratic social legislation of licemen's salaries, for instance. tion's opposition to the benefit in- which we live and how we might better treat the same period. Those who saw Capital projects and local tax reduc- crease, which was fiscally defensi- it. - S.P.J. the war absorbing funds vitally need- tion will absorb more of it. ble, the fact Is that social security does not derive from general reve- local ¦ ¦ ¦ ed in many areas of American life, And while Nixon is extolling ¦ - . . . . . and who know that its deceptive fi- responsibility, he might consider ex- nues but from aft employe tax, . ______^— which must be matched by employ- y nancing was the main engine of the panding local resources. At a time " I OF THOSe STEAKS OH LAMMtf inflation with which Nixon still must when the federal budget is under* ers. This is one of the most regres- CDUU? PUT 0NB Recognition and Americans have to wrestle, can only wonder at his maximum strain, Rep. John Ander- sive taxes that y in- sense of priorities. son of , one (of the most pay, and it had to be steepl thoughtful Republica'n legislators, creased to finance the latest round promise to keep NIXON REPEATED, moreover, has pointed out that by the last of benefits. The wage base on which his familiar formulation that the the tax is levied also was expand- quarter of 1971, state and local gov- ¦ We salute the Winonans responsible for landing Johnson Administration believed it ed. ' ' . ¦ ' : . President s billion surplus the area a . plum for this year's fishing opener. ernments had a $6 could solve a social problem "by cf revenues over expenditures, and Whether most Americans are bet- is con- throwing dollars at it." Thus, he that this excess* was running at a ter or worse* off , as a result, For years, we in Winona have known that the took disapproving note of what he billion annual rate in mid-1972. siderably less certain than Nixon trout streams of Southeastern Minnesota and the seemingly inexhaus- $15 said was the " By 1975, the American Enterprise would have us believe. Mississippi itself have produced some of the finest tible flood" of money leaving Wash- hard decision Institute has estimated, this state New York Times News service fishing action in the state. ington in ? those years, only to be WASHINGTON - Sometimes the reduced to "a mere trickle" by the : But it also was customary that the governor time It reached the supposed recip- WINOM DAILY ]>ffiWS so-called little picture on public is- would take the outdoor writing troupe to the north- ients. sues gets bigger in practical;and hu- Wlliam S^hite land lakes country to inaugurate the season. It may well be that had there A page of opinions and ideas an political terms than the big pic- been any such "inexhaustible flood" ture itself. This is what is happen- the short run may be defined thus- the Johnson programs still would But at long last we've received some recogni- ing now in the matter of the na- ly: It is costing most people too tion. Gov. Wendell Anderson and some 150 outdoor have failed. The fact is, however, rhe- tional economy. Events and powerful much to live relative to their earn- Writers from throughout the state will be here . for that for all the Great Society 6, toric few if any of these programs gsassroots pressure alike are push- ings, and something has got to give. the opener May 4, 5 and ing President Nixon ever closer to ever¦ were properly or fully fund- Mr. Nixon is, of course, inherent- ed — not least because of the cost a most-welcome decision. ly resistant to rigid controls, for The group that swayed the governor is appeal- of the unselfish mission of the To be sure, every present surface that they do indeed run right aathwart ing for help — the support of the community American people to save our Viet- Indication is against it. To be sure, the classic conservative concept of extended was promised when the invitation was namese from other Vietnamese. one can canvass the entire Adminis- a free-marketplace economy. Yet arid a factor in its acceptance. If there is a general indictment of tration today without finding a sin- Mr. Nixon can be notably flexible the Johnson programs to. be made gle real advocate for it. All the same when doctrinal considerations col- We can't afford not to help, for the publicity — any such judgment has to be this columnist predicts that before lide head-on with hard reality. Look such an¦ event produces can be of far-ranging bene- hedged — it probably is that they the summer is out the President at the historic turnabout which en- fit. . . were designed around the basic idea Will be forced to apply tough, man- abled him to open an era of negotia- of providing services, rather than datory controls on the basic neces- tion with Communist China. City residents have proved In the past that money, to the poor. Community ac- sities such as fool, rent and medi- And the hard "Snd central reality they can be counted on. We're certain there will tion programs also generated bother- cal costs. now is that the "new majority" he be no letdown this time. some political divisions when the THE "BIG" SIDE of the total marshaled for the 1972 presidential "maximum feasible participation" election, a majority made up of mid- cf the poor became more than lo- economic problem is how to increase Now If someone can find a way to get . th- this country's export trade, how to dle-class and lower-middle-class peo- rash to cooperate. . .—G.VV.E. cal political and social structures ¦ stiffen the integrity of the dollar in ple along with the labor leaders-, ¦ : ¦¦¦¦ " ' ' ' '¦ ¦' " could tolerate. 4¦. " J World money markets, and how? to must have relief — soon — in the But while it is true that not much marketplace. Generalized assur- success can be claimed — obvious- sustain what is actually something of a boom in heavy industry while ances from Administration spokes* ly — in eliminating poverty and ra- men that food prices, for one ex- Exhausting the cial disadvantage, these programs still containing inflation. In the long run, of course, suc- ample, will begin to "level off" may well have had more cumula- later in the year will not do. tive importance than Nixon allows. cess in these high-level designs would be good for all of us and in In Ihe first place, people want His former urban affairs counsellor, lower prices, not merely leveled- alternatives Daniel P. Moynihan, makes the case time would even ease the pain of While low-lead and- lead-free gasolines and au- the ordinary shopper and tenant in off .prices. In the second place, vol- against the Great Society strategy unteersim in the anti-inflation tomobile emission control devices are nice gestures Politics of a American life. It is, however, the pro- in the effort to make our air breatheable again, In his new book, "The gram is actually more nearly re- ," but adds that short run that is bothering most peo- re afraid they're futile attempts to save the Guaranteed Income spected among the Industrial giants we' the sixties ple — including most politicians of internal combustion engine from its inevitable in\the troubled years of of steel , autos and so on than among excitement and limit- whatever party or ideology — and demise, and we are encouraged in the search for the publicity, the comparatively petty capitalists ed impact of these programs may a replacement by two items ln the news recently. who rent out apartments and well have been vital in maintaining ¦¦_HB___ BB_^_ __au_ni houses. such stability as there was. At least, The most heartening sign was the American _ IN SUCH A situation ^ »*<5tfR APFfflT(tl 107.. Mr>;_i_Kt^uTuilaitBTwiffl. tho sensible Motors Corporation's recent announcement that It observer will wish to inquire Into will soon begin to market some AMC models con- the mood of the sources of ultimate taining Warkel rotary engines, which are cheap, political power over economic ques- effi cient and very clean to operate. simple, The great forgetting tions — the politicians and the labor organizations. The politicians want pended for all sides, or there will The other good news was that the University WASHINGTON - What the coun- mandatory controls now on the be no justice, and -certainly no quiet of Minnesota has received an experimental elec- try needs now at the end of the basics as Congress will shortly un- tric car and a pair of research grants for elec- Vietnam War is not amnesty but for forgetting to grow in. Russell Baker ¦\ derllne when it renews the Pres- tric vehicle research. amnesia. I The doves will also have to grant ident's statutory authority s points about the to apply It ls time to put the whole thing old-fashioned — that straw boater, the government' them. "The existing law expires morality of the war and the excel- at The UW's car is a conventional automobile up in the attic, to store it away those sleeve garters, that model T the end of April.) Hank-and-file la- that has had the engine replaced by a five-horse- up there with tlie snapshot of grand- — but we didn't want to throw it lence of its conduct. Until they do, bor, too, wants controls give us over tha power motor and 20 lead-acid batteries. The car daddy as a young man, foot up on out. Later, we sensed — being too the government will never basics, even though the top quiet. lead- has a top speed of 35 m.p.h. and a range of about the running board of his model T young to know it then — we might ers ^are presently talking mostly 40 miles. That isn't exactly efficient , but maybe Ford . Up there where we keep the want to come back to it when we Let all doves who look to the fu- about raising pay scales. the UM's electrical engineering department can old blue-eagle (N.R.A., kiddies) win- ourselves wero twice as old as ture shout out loud , therefore, the The root fact here is following declarations*, to wit, that that It is Improve on that. — S.P.J, dow decal, the 1945 newspaper with granddaddy was when the snapshot now not only liberal and there was good and just reason ' for moderately the headline about Roosevelt's was taken, come back to it and libera l members of Congress in both death, the stamp collections we try to grasp something about time, the war, that the government fought parties who are pro controls. lt honorably, that President Nix- Many btarted that year we had the mumps change, youth and the grave. conservatives are of the same mind. nnd couldn 't leave the house. The on was always right about how to The old view of conservatives Building from This Is why we now need a great end the war while almost everybody that Vietnam War ought to go up there national forgetting. Nobody knows controls were unthinkabl e ls dying very first thing in the morning, so else was consistently wrong, and out among them. The what to make of Vietnam right now, , unthinkable we can start forgetting nbout it that this is really peace with honor legionnaires, IGO? has become easily thinkable and it is in our way. We try to get of it which he has for the right away. The sooner the belter. and plenty , simple reason that actual our knowledge back inlo the old American habit brought us. A hard dose for doves, An editorial In condi- tions are vanquishing theories. we discover, Isn't necessarily limited What a protest that's going to pro- of liking ourselves again , and we Christian Science Monitor Recycling, assuredly, but worth the swallowing In short, to keep his to shipping something off to some big company duce, what an ovcrpoweringly keep stumbling over Vietnam. government and other govern- new friend- If tills , Historians might call it an ly relationshi p with labor with the facilities to turn waste products buck into reasoned lecture of right thought , Politicians keep shoving it into our , quiet down about ex- and to re- ments to come ample of cultural lag, tain the friendship of something usable: at California 's Wagner Ranch summoning Freud , history, founding shins. People with axes to grind lh(> war for simple lack of some but we doff the new ma- our overseas cap to the American jority the President a group of students used old test papers fathers, the Star-Spangled Banner, keep using it to win this argument and let us hava will have only School, one to argue with, Legion for getting ln one way to go before to build n house. Joseph Pulitzer and tho memory of or clinch that. There ls always evi- forgetfulness. step with tlie autumn sets sweet growing international friendship . In. Helnrlch Himmlcr, among others, to dence that office seekers intend to Will governments want to lighten bri- gade. The legion's resolute a n t i- United Features prove that forgetting is bad for you, use it for the next generation , as our wallets to give that famous tired Syndicate Thirty-five youngsters from grades S through 8 communist stance is not weakened particularl y if you arc a heavily politicians after tbe Civil War used old foreign aid to the old enemy? collected paper, shredded it, pulped it and formed by Its invitation to the Soviet War muscled superpower half-mesmer- to " wave the bloody shirt," when- So bo lt, provided these govern- It Into bricks with a small hand machine originally |zee between Cotton Mather nnd Veterans Association to send a del- designed for the production of ndobo bricks. — ever it is in a politcian 's Interests to ments refrain from haranguing and Kraft-Ebing. bring out the absolute worst in us. prodding us Into loud passions about egation to its Washington conference S.P.J. this month. Surely the proposed plan THE GREAT forgetting wouldn't it. If money will buy forgetting, let WE NEED TIME to forget, to lot , but let It for "friendly dialogue" between be forever, though. The attic isn 't it yellow in tho attic the government take it , to get on with also have the grace to take it quiet- ideological foes will be approved at WINONA DAILY NEWS for things wo want to forget for- tomorrow's things. And how will wo tho legion's executive commitleo ly* An Independent Newspaper — Establish ed 1855 ever. Things get put up there he- win this time? lt will cost everyone meeting ln May nnd by the member- cause we don't know what else to something to shut up tho people who AND WHAT OP tho doad and the ship at next summer's con- MEM DUIt OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS do with them this yenr, or because will not let us get on with tlie for- wounded? Shall they be forgotten vention. tliey arc in the way right now, or •Setting. wilh the rest? Tho question can only The speed of postwar reconcilia- tER^CES^ ^ ' WILUAM fr. WHITE . , p ublisher because wo want to get them out of It will cost both the hawks mul be answered with another. Aro thoy tion between tlie United States and C. E. LINDEN ...... Bus. Mar., Aflo. Director our lives for a while without throw- tlie doves a concession on amnesty, honored in this endless ugly North Vietnam lends new hope to LESTER HENDERSON Funeral Anoi.ru BRKMEII Editor .n-CMc/ lug them away. Do let it bo. Let there lie ainnusty ¦snarling about whether or not they Iho remark by the legion's national Held Today GAIIY W. EVANS Netos Editor Later, when we have changed and for the draft runners , deserters nnd , STEVEN P. J OHNSON died to no purpose, or arc they commander, Joseph L. Matthews WM. E, .... Assistant News Editor become diffe rent peop le we will go refusers who stayed and went to QOETZMAM C. GoitDON HOLTE Sunday Kdifor simply forgotten in the gratifying that "different ideologies enn exist 11:00 a.m. up (hern and examine this or that jail , if that will bring us the quiet le Saturday WILLIAM H. ENGLISH Controller emotional binges Americans experi- in tho world without war if peop Martin Funeral Chapel on the chance that it will tell us which helps forgetting. ence ln the uproar? can got to know each other bet- A. J. KiEK-fluscu ...... circulation Mgr. ¦ r L. S. BRONK ...... Composing Supt . something about who wo were once, There must be amnesty too for Later we shall bo able to como ter." mflivrinT— N L. V. ALSTO N ...... Engraving Supt. what sort of times we lived through , Lieutenant Calley, and nn end of back to them nnd moke more sense As the Soviet and American vets FunEfcAL. HOTHE. ROIIKIIT VOGKI.SANQ PtCSS 'Supt. what kind of people we hnvo. be- Accusations against war criminals. of thoir deaths and mutilations , but discuss mutual concerns liko pen- Formerly BroillowMnlln Funoril Tho Associated Press Is entitled exclusively io come. (Irnnddaddy 's snapshot Is up Fair is fair. If justice Is to be sus- we must age before we can do that sions and rehabilitation , wo trust ||om, tlio uso for republication ot ull tlio local news printed there for thnt reason. Years ago, it pended In tho higher need for amne- and become different people, there'll also bo an exchange of chess •WU £•»» Sirr-ln • \ytMn, ln this newspaper as well aa all A.P. nows dlapatchea than* D«y «r Nlfll,t A»-\m . just looked dully and dcprcsslngly sia, lt must bo justice equally sus- Now York Times Hows Service boards nnd snooker tables. ^ PACKAGE OHOWS POOLE, England (AP) — Funny things happened when postman Fred Hallum threw a To the editor Thi Avar cm parcel into his van. The parcel ' WASHINGTON, D.C. -The money used to fight the War on "Yes, he will," the spokes- hissed and began to grow. Fi- Nurses ape United • States government an- Poverty is now needed to pur- man said. "The President be- nally tbe paper covering burst nounced today'that the War on Buchwald chase military hardware which lieves a man who refused to and out popped a self-inflating Art : ¦ ' • Poverty is over and the United * . .; _ • . . - y has been sadly neglected dur- fight Poverty because of per- life jacket — fully inflated. De- States, has won, In a historic will there be a peace ing the last seven years." ' spite amusement among Devon ty is over, sonal convictions should not the over degrees ceremony at the White House, dividend for the American peo- "Will the President grant carry this scar around with him post office workers, to the President signed the peace recipient, Anthony Poole, didn't iime refused No amnesty to those who ple?" for the rest of his life." treaty which find it so funny. He's a life-sav- "No," the White House to fight in the War on Pover- ' ¦ ' ¦ had been nego- spokesman said "because* the ty?" a reporter queried. Los Angeles Times Syndicate ing instructor. . ' for supervision tiated ove r a , be silent MADISON, Wis. (AP) - period of sev- Practical nurses and registered eral months. when the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: nurses { disagreed Thursday on The terms of but when the wicked beawth rule, this people mourn — Pro- the treaty were verbs 29:2. ]_et whether licensed practical nurs- every soul be subject unto the Higher powers, es in tein- outlined for re- Por there is ao power but of God—Romans 18:1. are qualified to be / : porters: v Had pbrary chargei of nursing home ¦ you been a citizen in when the command :; ¦ , "The United came.from the King of Egypt to destroy the Hebrew slaves' care. vCNew They testified at the sixth States w\ i 11 baby boys as they were born, would you have remained withdraw all ^ silent? Would you be warning those in command as some and final Department of Health and Social Services hearing on troops f r o m Egyptians did later in Eaodus 10:7? Mia W a r on . Bnchwald Had you been a Roman citizen when the command was a rule change which would re- quire riursing homes with 100 or Poverty within 30 days and will given by King Herod, the Roman ruler In Judea, to destroy no longer supply financial aid Appliance? more skilled care patients to New all boys two years old and under (for there were those to war-strewn poverty areas. seeking the King of been born) havja a registered nurse on duty tiie Jews who had recently around the clock, "Poor people will be allowed would yoii have remained silent? to choose their own destinies Our leaders have a tremendous responsibility. It's an The Wisconsin Association of without interference from out- almost impossible task for them^to search every medical, Licensed Practical Nurses sub- side sources. spiritual, moral, emotional, physical and legal point of view, mitted a paper claiming the "All advisers to the War on Unexpected Expense? to put through just laws. Our leaders want to do right. Have rule would make licensed prac- Poverty will be brought home. we failed to become informed and share With them rather tical nurses "glorified nursing ¦"Attacks on health problems, than criticize? Have we failed to pray for those in authority assistants and -Hn-tit their use- unemployment, housing and ed- as commanded in I Timothy 2:1-2. fulness to the nursing home in- ' ucation will, cease as of mid- Tho St. Paul DispafccJi, Thursday, January 25, 1973 page dustry." i night, March 5. A team of Ad- 2A reported Justice Harry A. Blackmun's remarks on abor- Elaine Ellibee, a registered ministration - officials will be tion in Cedar Rapids, Iow?a. "Blackmun told the Cedar Rapids nurse from the state Board of sent Into the field to see that Chamber of Commerce Wednesday night that the high court Nursing, said substituting . prac- there are no violations of the didn't have sufficient time to deeply probe such matters." tical nurses for registered nurs- agreement. If they find anyone Contact those whose names appeared in M. J. McCauley's es in the homes "threatens continuing the War on Poverty, letter to the Editor, Sunday, Feb; 25, If you feel you need patient safety." they shall report tfiem to the more information about abortion contact the Winona MCCL, Licensed practical nurses are Department in Washing- Inc., Box 949. Justide licensed by tne state after one ton. MRS. RAY LINDSTROM . year of training. They work at "Legal aid for poor people nursing homos under a regis- will be withdrawn* from combat tered nurse's direction, but now are frequently left in charge at areas. the homes during some shifts. "Poverty victims will remain Retiring judge in their own homes and will be . Beloit nursing home adminis- forbidden to move into other trator Martha Ami Weber, a territory while the treaty is in registered nurse, told the de- force. partment only registered nurs- "All weapons used to fight says thank you es "have the background to de- Poverty will be removed, crat- cide when patients with medi- ed and shipped out of the fight- I wish at this time to try in a very sincere manner to cally unstable conditions need a ing areas. thank all of the people of Wabasha County and surrounding doctor." "Those who were wounded in territory on behalf of myself and my wife for the tremen- Richard Landgraf , vice presi- the War on Poverty will be dous night afforded us at the Anchor Inn, Lake City, Feb. dent of the Wisconsin Council of compensated with daily food 26.; Skilled, Limited and Personal stamps worth 50 cents. We know full well tb_ . it would be impossible to contact Care Nursing Homes , said the "Prisoners ¦ of Poverty will not each and every person, in a personal manner, who made cost increases required by the be exchanged. They must re- this event possible, so we'are taking this means of convey- rule change would "put 8,000 main where they are until they ing our feelings in said matter. patients in rural nursing homes are able to figure a way to es- In the 2% hours that we spent with sp many friends and in jeopardy for care." received so many gifts, and so many kind words, it made cape their ghetto. my 24 years of service look small in comparison. "As soon as the peace treaty goes into effect, all references We truly appreciate working for Wabasha County over stricken this period of time, and just the fact of making so many Tot finds bomb, to Poverty will be friends would have in itself been sufficient. from U.S. publications and the We once again tiank you kindly aid hope that this will defuses it, and word will not be used by any in some way convey to you the feelings of myself and my Administration official." wife. takes it home A White House spokesman told reporters, "The President Jin>GB & MBS. KEN KALBRENNEB BELFAST, Northern Ireland Wabasha, Minn. believes this is the greatest (AP ) —Ivan Graham, 7, found peace treaty iri the history of a guerrilla bomb while playing, mankind. . defused it purely by accident "This was a war he did not and took it home to show his start, but one which he vowed folks, a British Army spokes- to end. Poverty has been de- County planners: man disclosed. feated, and the President "This young boy had a mira- achieved the defeat with hon- culous escape," Uie spokesman or, something his critics pre- said. Ivan found the bomb un- dicted he could riot do." a step forward der the stage of the War Me- A reporter asked, "But sup- morial Hall in Cloughmore, pose the forces of Poverty con- Iii answer to Steve Johnson's editorial on the state's rola County Fermanagh. When he tinue their aggression?" - picked it up he disturbed the "YES MEN" at the in zoning, I agree Winona County's topography is unlqua The spokesman said, "The See the Fi^t! delicate wiring and rendered requiring extensive and comprehensive zoning laws if wa ¦ United States hhs done all it are going to utilize our natural resources in such a manner the device harmless. . - .* . ' can to fight Poverty. No mat- that man as well as wildlife (both aquatic and land) will be The boy then took the bomb ter what . happens now, we're THEY'RE READY WITH A HELPING HAND home and showed it to his 14- ... able to exist and enjoy residential and farm lands, clean getting out of the war. The poor water and forested lands. year-old sister, Roberta. She people are going to have to However, the Winona County Planning Commission on gave it to her mother, who im- solve their own problems. This money., . our "Yes Feb. 26th took a step forward to accomplish this by adopt- mediately hurled it out to the is the foundation of the Nixon A new car , . . new appliance . . . vacation ing the State Department of Natural Resources' Shoreline roadway. Doctrine. The . time has come with the funds for Management Act protecting streams by permitting only low when poor people have to stand Men" make it happen! We're ready to supply you density housing with strict structural and sewer setbacks. on their own 'two feet and pull They are also to be commended on their retainment of the Farmers become themselves up by their boot- any worthwhile purpose. five-acre lot size In an A-l district, thereby practicing con- straps." trolled growth in tho woodlands and bluffside areas. supermarket fans Another reporter asked, This recommendation by the Planning Commission will "Now that the War on Pover- in seeing that you get the kind of be forwarded to the Winona County Commissioners for action WASHINGTON (AP) - Each Our "Yes Men" are experienced and if passed by them, and enforced by the proper authori- year, farmers become bigger loan suited to your individual needs. One which will do the job you ties, is a commendable accomplishment in,the relatively short supermarket shoppers and con - Evolution will time that Winona Couvty has had a zoning Jaw.- - -I*" -<- ' sumers like ihelr city cousins, it to do now without upsetting your plans for the future. JAN LARSON says the Agriculture Depart- be lecture topic want ment. Choose a conventional loan or choose our 'Time Out" Loan ... both Twenty years ago, farm fam- Dr. Melvin Doner, Winona ilies used about $2.3 billion State College Biology Depart- designed with your wants and needs in mind! Stop in soon and talk f worth of home-grown products. ment, will speak on the evolu- House appro vies By 1971, the latest year exam- tion of man Tuesday at 7:30 it over with the folks at the Friendly First. We will help! ined, home use of farm prod- p.m. at Kryzsko Commons, ucts was only $731 million. WSC. More than 70 per cent of the The program ls sponsored by tax relief plan items produced and consumed tho "Union Program Council. on farms were livestock re- Dr, Doner will speak on the ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Tho bill Increases the state lated, including meat and dairy Greek's philosophy of evolution, products. Farmers also con- The Minnesota House approved homestead tax credit from $250 and the Christian and religious hlS^ sumed almost $271 million of aspects ; the concept of change a $58 million tax relief proposal to , for homeowners on a 119-13 $350. This is the maximum their crops in 1971, tho favorite and biologist's attitudes on evo- See the "YES MEN" ^^ « M^K voto Thursday. It was passed amount paid by the state on being strawberries valued at lution. on the 19th legislative day of property taxes levied against $21 million. Tho public may attend. tha -session, one of the earliest farms and homes by local gov- moves in history toward shap- ernments. ing a major tax proposal. The tax credit for the first Despite tho early move, how- time would cover bonded debt, ever, tho final tax package meaning state funds would go RON ROG may well emerge from a con- to pay off a portion of bonds for I OFFICIAL NOTICE AL ference committee late ln the local achools and other proj- JERTSON STOSKOPP PRZYBYLSK1 session. ects. OF ANNUAL MEETING The tax bill goes to an uncer- tain fate in the Senate. Senate OF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE DFL leaders have indicated fc Diamond Loans thoy will consider an alterna- TR I-COUNTY COOPERATIVE j ^Jj Lawful Rntat Kepi In Dank Vault tive approach to property tax relief by having the state as- OIL ASSOCIATION Write or Call sume a portion of local welfare costs. Notice Is hereby given that the Annual Meeting HULL LOAN of tha Stockholders of the Tri-County Cooperative The tax measure, which Is n SYSTEM major plank in Gov. Wendell Oil Atiociation, Rushford, Minnesota, v/fTf b» held Anderson's 1973 tnx program , al the Rushford School Auditorium, in Ruihford, 315 Foslmy Tower would aid homeowners but Minnesota, at ten o'clock A.M. March 17, 1973, Mlnnenpollt, Minn. 55*102 would not provide property tax The FIRST National for tht followino purposes: 335-6726 relief for owners of other kinds If of property. 1. To receive the Report of the Officers of the Association. You have options! 2. To oloct throe members to tho Board of Di- _ 3 Bank of Winona What are they? rector.. f|f^V MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT JH Thfrs^SjsaB 3. To transact such othor business as may properly INSURANCE CORPORATION Grow! Find Yourself! come before the Annual Mooting. ^MfltKl l llIlM ]IH_ ll JUffllffl g OPEN 9:30-3:00 MON.-THURS. — DRIVE-I N 8-5 Talk to us about it! Respectful!/, mWjBw OUR FREE BROCHURE WRITE FOR Warron Swonson, Secretary JMroB -pSaa^B FRIDAYS 9:30-8:00 — DRIVE-IN B-B MINDPOWERJNC. Dated af Rushford, Minnesota, this 27th day of PH. 452-2810 • FREE PARKING # 177 MAIN 1500 east 79th ' bloomington minn. 55430 _^__?^r>sJ!fl_**M J , February, 1973. "Your only obligation Is to yourself." __ - ' ——*—*¦* ¦¦**—¦— ¦ ___ _ i ' * ' " I ITS OPEN HOUSE ot^carffftwefi -* OF GOD CHURCH OF THE NAZARENB ASSEMBLIES (Orrin Street and Highway «» ^° (Center and Broadway) Lutheran services Rev. Steven Oliver Sherman 'Buschow, pastor »:45 a.m.—Sunday school. . REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN i,m. -AII-Famlly Sunday school. strvlet. ».*4I 10:55 a.m.--Mornlnfl worihlp (Missouri Synod) Usion Youth Fel- .;/ ? ^^^^^HiMHHHlBB KB nBl HBB BiVnn Lesson, "Aniwerlno Ood'a Call." 6 p ni?-Junlor Fellowship, (1717 w. Broadway study. text: Joshua 1:1-11. lowship, Adult Bible service 7 p.m.—Evening service. . •: "J0 a.m.—Worihlp service. 10:45 •.m.-Mornltig worship _ ¦ -MId-wiek servlet. Sun-Jay. Thursday, 7:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m.—Sunday school. Missionary and Communion . -Assembly Time over KAG8 -Adult Blbla study. \ p.m. ¦ 10:30 B.m. . ¦; Wednesday, 3:30 lo 5 p.m.—Confirms Radio. *. . -Youth ssrvlce. GRAClB PRESBYTERIAN Hon class. ,«:30 p.tri. 7:15 p.m.—Orchestra practice. CHURCH 7:30 p.m.-Evenlng Rally. . . (Franklin and Broadway) CENTRAL LUTHERAN speaklnj el Pastor Buschow will be Rev. Lynn R. Davis, Pastor (The American Lutheran •II the services. . (Wabasha end Hull streets) Tuesday, 9 p.m.—Colleja and career Pros pecting MI 10 a.m. - Worship service. Seritioni pastor 1 " Seeraments." ___ pff______—Mid-week Prayer of thi 1 3 1J-____ ** Thursday, 7:30 p.m. "practical Use The Rev. G. H. Huggenvilc, H ...has been part of the American Romance — always frontiers servlca. LWson: "Learning from thi Scripture: John • 13:1-30. Anthem by Sr. 11|| ^B ____lf ^ Apostles — A Holy and Pura Life." The Rev. Robert C. Johnson, Choir under ¦direction of Carl's Anderson H that beckon-— the pot of gold at the foot of the rainbow. Forever the Anthem by assistant pastor ______t_l "Even Me", J. C. Warren; mW®m\m \ Choir under direction of Dar en* Jeff Franko, Youth Director SALVATION ARMY Jr. ¦ H call of the wild; the mountain to climb; the vision for change, for Hamberg "Sons of God'', Pwluds: ' Bj. m_Wk^_ ^_. \ l (112 W. 3rd St.) Jesus", Duro; Offer- 8 a.m.—Worship with Communion. Ser- j ^r neath . the Cross of . Lt and Mrs. Richard Forney torv: "Come Unto Him", Handel; Post- mon: "Double Trouble", Matt. Jl :33-44. fl movement, for progress... a stake in copper, silver, gold, oil and v , Sheppard. Mrs. Robert Tremaln, organist, "Fugue _____lil9_____E ___ lude: "Thanks Be to God" Kifl -3unday ichool at Thurley Turllla. Coffee and , Beauvarlet-Charpenller, and »:30 a.m. Organist: Mrs. Caryl In G Minor" ¦ community room. . -following tha "Fanfare In C", Purcell. mf uranium. We owe those prospectors much. y ^mf jj^Hl' Homes, fellowship In dining room flBfJl 7 p.m.-Evenlng service, 11J W. Srd it. morning service. Nursery provided. 9, 10:10 and 11:15 a.m.-Worshlp with Club Monday, 1-3 p.m.-Foraver Fifty 11 a.m.-Sunday school classes for pre- Communion. Sermon same as above. H They blazed the paths, those harbingers of wealth, civilization and W' § Homes. Lindner, organist, "Lord : J$_i_ l^B . ¦K^-M at Schaffner school through Adult Blbla study. Airs. Richard Tuesday, 9 a.m.-Homa League il at Jesus Christ Be Present Now", Bach, Tuesdsy, 7 a.m.—Men's Breakfast culture. We are their successors but our vision differs. We must m Thurley Homes. Chef. and "Praise God From Whom. All Bless- Hf _^B" fflH WKKf- JtW down town. the Happy I 7 p.m.—Home League, Wednesday, 3:30 p.m.-Jr. Choir rehear- Inss Flow", Plef Post. Anthem by the Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. - Blbla study, senior choir at 9 and 10:10. Vocal solo W prospect for even greater good...for a new mountain pass ' ¦ sal. fl «R I M_§i» down town. " __. ., _'„ 7:30 p.m.—Ash Wednesday Communion by Mrs. Merlin Untlet at 10:10 and 11:15. fflfii 3:30 p.m.-Sunbeams at Thurley Homsi. Nursery provided. ¦ ' ¦ services at Immanuel Methodist Church. 9 and 10:10 a.m.—Adult Bible study from one country, one people, to another, We seek the gold 1 | mm, • WUBm 'JBRI M Thursday, 7 p.m.—Sr. Choir rehearsal. In the parish house. Friday, 12:05-12:30 p.m.—Lenten serv- ,9 and 11:15 a.m.—Sunday school — 1 ¦ of ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL ice at St. Paul's Episcopal Church. > mutual understanding. We look for land where the 1 ^H 119__r Lafayette) year nursery through «th tirade. \ SHI9 (East Broadway and 7 p.m.—Presbytery meeting at Austin, 10:10 a.m.—Sunday school — 7th orada The Rev. Albert S. Lawrence . ¦ ' .- ' ¦ - I new order of the ages may grow. Our Kingdom of the future 1 |^^B 1 and up. I __!______-_^_BW^BM-_B-_B $ - J______H_-^I_____mmmwm Jr., rector 4:30 p.m.-Sr. HI Choir. K ! * £ \ FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST Wednesday, 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. — Ash must be the Kingdom of Cod, where love, joy and peace, I * | ?1^H| IS_____[ iHSH B a.m.—Communion. (Instrumental) Wednesday communion service. Sermon , 10:30 a.m.—Communion and Sermon, (West Broadway and South Baker) fheme: "He Has: Done Marve lous Things .^^^ will be the precious values. The Book |JW^H| Church school. Nursery provided. For Us." Choir anthems: Choristers at S^p^.ti M ^__B flUB Tuesday, 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.—Bible stu- 9:45 a.m.—Christian education for all 5:30 and Senior Choir at 7:30 p.m. ages. "^ informationof Books and vour church offer ' dy-groups. 2-<:3a p.m. — Senior members opm- mmmmmm£mmWmWi$!mliiil* ^fflBlf HflR' ^H_ 9_ Wednesday, 7:30 a.m.—Communion. 10:30 a.m.-Worshlp. home In the parish house. 9:30 a.m.—Communion — E.C;W melt- 6:30 p.m.-Evenlng services. ¦ ¦ '¦ Thursday, 7 a.m.—Men's Breakfast In ^^^^___ Wm^^^^^ML ahd inspiration M, m___w ll^nR MMBBBI ing follows. . fellowship hall. - ' v H?| _f l_____3i 5:30 p.m.—Communion. , 3:30-5:30 p.m.—Jr. & Sr. confirmation ' ' ^4i____J____ ^tAmW^^^. lH^HS wBBBmima 1 for this new challenge. B| Thursday, 7:15 p.m.—Senior choir pr«c* Catholic services supper. All eonflrmands era required to PPi 4 wmmm$m&mmF,-4^*b^ iiSB f^H __S_§fffl tice. attend. ' . ' 'M HMM-L- ____HJMI .Friday, 12 p.m.—Noondiy Lenten serv- 6 p.m.—Chorister choir. 4 '^44WmmmW^^t^S'- '4 4yy ^^»m^ lsH ice. CATHEDRAL 7 p.m.—Senior choir. ; 3:15 p.m;—Junior Choir practice. OF SACRED HEART Saturday—Confirmation classes will not Ay. _____ ¦ ¦ ______F Saturday, 10 a.m.-Conflrmatlon Instruc- meet. . #i J Hp '^^^?ift? . TMI *' (Main and West Wabasha) , , i?y,&/\ /{ ^MW__8_____g &'?; -/?yy,, ¦ ¦/ Bi_____Hi H iHBI¥______^__n_H9 ^HB orade. /,S^^^^,. ¦¦;'v.?*<¦ ¦' ' ' J HH^'*£ 'A<: ?'yi-.' . ....,y: ^*iv^^_.?-f S^\ A' ''A'¦¦rJ^^^fcw ___B: &______HB__H___B_§__B tion Bth y/. yJ^' ^i^HHnflB* \ • 4yyft yyyyy iyy •:y,*;.'v^_i^______¦ : li___H_ ^^___B______BBH_H______i____lKS___H ¦ The Rev. Msgr. Joseph R. GOODVIEW TRINITY m^^^^^K.£B&W$mmPlm>;\yy>'m^ - Py''Py4yyy yy:yy^am^^¦ ^A^^^ ' ___¦: §¦_____« T___H_____Mn _BH McGlnnls, rector 'S*/ ^ 'y, " '-yyy,y yy-- €.:;. -4f;?>!»«______' :i9_____ - ______LUTHERAN CHURCH *&aPL -*_ jmm&JKm^mm&rik » 5 H f i The Rev. Peter Brandenhoff, (Wisconsin Synod) Methodist services A ' Engene T. Bohn, (620 37th Ave.) . . The Rev. The Rev. Norman C. Kuske CENTRAL associates UNITED METHODIST Pastor (West Broadway ' and Main) Sunday Mhsses—(5:15 p.*ra. Saturday)! The Rev. Harlyi) Hagmann, 5:45, 7, 8:15, 9:30 (broadcast, KWNO), 9 a.m.—Worship with the Lord's Sup- 11 a.m., 12:15 and 5:15 p.m. Nursery par celebrated. Sermon.* "The Greatest senior pastor provided at 9:30- and 11 Masses. Love of All", John 4:7-14. Sacrement of Penance: Dally: 4:41 10 a.m.—Sunday school. The Rey. Roger A. Parks ^ to 5:10 p.m.; Saturday: 3-1 and 7:30-9 Tuesday, 4 p.m.—Instruction class at associate pastor First Lutheran. p.m. Dally Masses: 7, I a.m. and 5:11 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m. — Ash Wednesday * a.m.—Communion, Norton Chapel. Lenten service, sermon: "Did You For- 9-.1S a.m.—Church school daises for all ce) Peter?". age groups. ST. STANISLAUS 10:13 a.m.—Coffee and fellowship. (East 4th and Carimona) FAITH LUTHERAN 10:45 a.m.—Worship. Sermon, "To Be The Rev. Donald W. Grubisch, Alive" by the Rev. Roger A. Parks. Or- (The Lutheran Church gan selections: "Prayer (Suite Goth- pastor in America) Igue) ", L, Boellman and "In Thee Is The Rev. Peter S. Fafinskl, The Rev. William P. Kallestad Gladness", J. S. Bach. Tha choir will , sing "Open the Doorl" by C. Alexander The Rev. Douglas Gits, Pastor Peloquln, with Walter Hinds and Richard The Rev. James Lennon 1717 >V. Service Dr. Harrington, baritone soloists. The Youth Singers villi sing "Feelln."' Creative associates 9:30 a.m.—Sunday church school. Arts Class. Nursery provided. 10:45 a.m.—Communion. 11:45 a.m.—Sr. HI donuf sale. Sunday Eucharistic celebrations—(7:30 6:30 p.m.—Luther League; Blbla study. 11:55 a.m.—Handbell Choir. p.m- Saturday): 5:30, 7:15,., 1:30, 9:41 Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Communion. 7:30 p.m.—Prayer and Bible study. and 11:15 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Choir rehearsal. 8:30 p.m.-'-Vclley Kolnonla Group. Weekday Eucharistic celebrations—4:31 Saturday, 10 a.m.—Confirmation. Monday, 3 pain.—Jr. HI Kolnonla Group. ¦nd 8 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. 7 p.m.—Boy Scout Troop. Saturday Eucharistic celebrations—4:30 ST. MATTHEW'S LUTHERAN 7:30 p.m;—Outreach Work Aree. and 8 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. . Tuesday, 4:30 p.m.—Sr. Girl Scout First Fridays—5:30 and I a.m. snd 1:11 (Wisconsin Synod) Troop. p.m. (West Wabasha and High) 5:30 p.m.—Confirmation class. Holy Day Eucharistic celebrations — Tbe Rev. A. L. Mennlcie, pastor 7 p.m.—Explorer Post. 5:30, <:30, 8, 9:30 a.m. end 5:15 p.m. Vicar Thomas Frey 7:30 p.m.—Handbell Choir. (7:30 p.m. when announced.): 7:30 p.m.—Finance Work Area. Sacrament of Penance: Dally—7 and Wednesday, a a.m.-** p.m.—Ash Wed- 7:30 a.m.; Saturdays—3*5 p.m. end 7 to • a.m.—Worship. Sermon, "Bouoht With nesday silent Communion. A Price." Mrs. Gerald Mueller, organist. 7:30 p.m. end after the 7:30 p.m. Eu- 4 p.m.—Handbell Choir. charistic celebration; Thursday before 9:15 a.m.—Sunday school and Bible 5:30 p.m.—Senior Girl Scout Troop. classes. tlrst Friday—3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to • 7:30 p.m.—Ecumenical Lenten Service, p.m. 10:30 a.m.—Worship. Sermon and organ Immanuel United Methodist Church. aome as earlier. Kindergarten through Thursday, U a.m.—Communion, Norton ¦ third grade will sing, "Jesus, Tender Sav- Chapel. . ' ST. MARY'S ior ", Mrs. D. E. Klekbusch directing. 3 p.m.-Cedet Scout Troop. (1303 W. Broadway) 4 p.m.—Married couples family potluck 7 p.m.—Choir; Open Gym. The Rev. Joseph Mountain, •upper meeting. Friday, 7 p.m.—Jr. HI Overnight . 6:311 p.m.—Adult membership class. Saturday, 7 p.m.—Drop In Center open, pastor. Monday, «:30 p.m.—Lutheran Pioneers. 7:30 p.m.—New member orientation. 4:30 p.m.—Lutheran Girl Pioneers. The Rev. Daniel Demek, t p.m.—Lutheran Girl Pioneers council. associate t p.m.—Men's club. IMMANUEL UNITED Tuesday, 7 p.m—Sunday school teach- METHODIST Sunday Masses-«:45 p.m. Ssiurdey); •rs. (West King and South Baker) 7:30, 9, 10:30 a.m., noon. 8 p.m.—Choir. • The Rev. James W. Hann Jr. Holy Day Masses—(6:41 p.m. on avt Wednesday, 3:20 p.m.-Junlor eholr. of holy day): 5:30, 8 a.m.; 12:15, *:1J, !:30 p.m. —Lenten service. Sermon, "A - 7:30 p.m. . . Kiss, JudasT" The Junior choir, directed 8 a.m.-Stockton morning worship. • a.m.—Stockton Sunday school. Dally Masses—7:30 e.rn.t 5:15 p.m. by Mrs. Gerald Kastena will sing. Mrs. 9:30 a.m.—Immanuel morning worship. Sacrament of Penanc*»-4-5 and 7:3t). Gerald Mueller, organist. 8:30 p.m. on Saturdays. o:30 p.m.—Supper. Sermon, "Ethics of the Neighborhood, Part 2" by the Rev. James W. Haun 7:30 p.m.—Lenten service. Sermon sama Jr. Organist, Mrs. Frances Rand. Nurs- ST. JOHN as earlier. The senior choir, directed S ery provided. (East by Miss Patricia Brodbeck, will sing. Broadway end Hamilton) 10:30 a.m.—Immanuel Thursday, 8:40 a.m.—School service. Sunday school. The Rt. Rev. Tuesday, 7 p.m. Msgr. 7:30 p.m.—Church council; Lutheran —Immanuel eholr prac- Collegians. tice. James D. Habiger, pastor 8 p.m. — Immanuel Administrative Fridays 5 to 7 p.m.—Conllrmatlon class. The Rev. Robert P. Stamschror, 9 a.m—Junior class. Board. 10:15 a.m.—Confirmation class. Wednesday, t p.m.—Confirmation class associate meets at Immanuel, 7:30 p.m.—Ecumenical Ash Wednesday Sunday Masses-6 and 11 a.m. (5:30 ST. MARTIN'S LUTHERAN service of Communion. p.m. Saturdays.) fast at Country Kitchen. Green will show slides, All of the fam- CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH GRACE BRETHREN CHURCH FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Thursday. 7:30 p.m.—Stockton Admin- Weekday Masses—8 a.m. (Missouri Synod ) ily Is Invited. The men will serve lunch (Broadway 9:45 a.m.—School service. (676 W. Sarnia St.) (West Wabasha and Ewlng) (American Baptist Convention) istrative Board. Confessions—4 and 7 p.m. en Saturdays, and Liberty) and bring the devotions, —Lutheran Women s Missionary (West Broadway and Wilson) vigils ol feast days and Tho Rev. Armin U. Deye, 3 p.m. ' The Rev. Joseph Scbeny The Rev. John Hartman, pastor Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Midweek service, Thursdays be- League Prayer Service In church sanc- The Rev. E. L. Christopherson McKINLEY * fore tlrst Fridays. pastor Adults meet In the Chapel. Baptist Youth First Friday Massev-8 tuary, lunch following service. 9:45 a.m.—Sunday school hour with (Member ot the National Fellowship ol a.m. meet In the Fellowship Hall. UNITED METHODIST Holy Day Masses-? Tho Rev. Kcnneti Krueger, 5:30 and 7:30 p.m.—Ash Wednesday classes for ell ages. Including a nurs- Brethren Churches). t:45 a.m.—Sunday school. a.m. and 1:30 end 8:30 p.m.—Chancel Choir reheersal. (S01 West Broadway 7:30 p.pi. (5:30 p.m, on avt assistant pastor services with Communion. ery; Dick Averill, superintendent. Adult 10 a.m.—Sunday school. Classes for 10:45 a.m.—Morning worship, Paslor ¦ ot Holy 8:30 p.m.-Board of Education. study topic: "The Temporary and Per- The Rev. Glenn L. Quam, Day). adults, children and teens. Lee Christopherson will apeak on Ihe The Rev. Louis Bittner. Thursday, 8 p.m.—Valparaiso Univer- manent Gifts of the Holy Spirit." 11 a.m.—Mornnlg worship service. VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH topic: "Christ, Precious To Believers." pastor assisting pastor sity Choir Concert. Everyone welcome — 10:45 a.m.—Morning worship service i p.m.—Omega teens. ST. CASIMIR'S free-will offering received. Assisting In worship will be Mrs. Joseph Tho Rev. Bill Williamson, with Pastor Sebeny bringing tho message 7:30 p.m.—Evenlno worship service. Orlowske, organist, and the Chancel sac 9:45 a.m.—Worship service. Sermon: (West Broadway near Ewlng) 8 and 10:30 a.m.-Worshlp service. Ser- Friday—No school — Rental III Teach- entitled: "Christ's Last Miracle." Choir Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Power Hour. (365 Main St.) "The Greatest of These." Music Minis- mon: er's Conference at Rochester. Choir. The Lord's Supper will ba observ- The Rt. Rev. MsRr. "Love — The Creates!", I Cor. )J. special. Nursery and Junior Church pro. ¦ ed, try : Organist: Mra. Harvey Gordon. Sen- 9:15 a.m.—Sunday school. Saturday, 9-11:30 a.m. — Confirmation Emmctt F. vlded. Communion. t p.m.—College Aga Dialogue. A meal 9:30 a.m.-Sunday school with graded Ufr Choir Director: Mrs. Lerry Moore. Tlglie. pastor 9:15 a.m.—Adult and High School Blbla classes. 6:15 p.m.—Youlh groups for teens anti Bible classes for all ages. Acolyte: Horry John Burcalow. Nursery classes. ¦ will be served. > The Rt. Rev. Msgr. college age wilh Dr. and Mrs. Archie SEVENTH DAY 7 p.m.—Annual School ol Missions. 10:45 a.m.—Worship servlca with Pas- provided, Coffee hour. 3:30 p.m.—Sauer Memorial Home serv* Bolghley, directors. Jr. High Group, The tor Williamson bringing Ihe message. Tuesdsy, 3:30 p.m.—Junior Choir and Julius W. Haun , pastor emeritus Ice. ADVENTIST(East Sanborn and CHURCH Chestnut) There will be a colored film titled: "Let CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Young Ambassadors : Devotional topic All Be Done In Love." The college ago Conorenallonal singing led by Charles eonllrmellon. Massos-(5:l5 p.m. Saturday), Sun- 5 p.m.—Valley View Towers eervlce. (Wait Sanborn and Main) enlilled "Contcndlnn for the Follh." Pastor Gerald II. Greene Sackett. Special music by Shorrlo and Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—MId-wiek Lenten days, a and 10 a.m. Monday—Pastoral Conference young people will be In charge of the et Elgin, 7:30 p.m.—Evening service, Sermon: adult group. Refreshment! served at the Tlm Wlcko. Communion will be observed. service at Immanuel United Malhodlst Weekdays—7:15 a.m. 6:30 p.m.—Handbell Choir, 9*30 a.m.-Suntlay school. "Practical Exhor tations. " 1:45 p.m.—Sabbath school. Lesson stu- closo of the session. Nursery provided. Church. . Holy days—5:30 p.m. on eve of holy Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. —Bible Brunch at 11 a.m.—Service. Sub|ccl*. Christ Jesus. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Sunday school fac* dy: "Barriers to Effective Communica- Monday, a p.m. Thursday, 7 p.m.—Care and Share Bible Thursday, 7:15 p.m.—Pastoral Relations day and 7 a.m. and 1 p.m, on the holy William s Hotal. —Volleyball vs. Pleasant ' Wednesday, a p.m. — Testimony moot- ully meeting nl church. tion." Lesson text: 1st). 59:1, 3; Isa, Valley Froo Church. Study at the Noll Ellingson home, Blufl Committee meets, day. 7 p.m.—Bible class In church base- ing. Thursday, 7 p.m. -Choir practice. 14:12-14) I. Thess. I:5< II Thoss. 2:9-12/ Siding, Wis. 8 p.m.—Quarterly conference, First Fridays—4:15 and 7:15 a.m. ment. Wednesday, 9:30 a.m.—Blbla study at Reading Room open Tunsdays nnd 8 p.m.-Prayer meeting and Bible stu- Matt, 13:20-22; Heb, 3:12-15; Rev. 3:20, tha parsonage , Transportation Is provided for all serv- Saturday, 10 a.m.—Conflrmanls screw- Confessions—Saturdays eves ond 8 p.m.—Board of Stewardihlp. holy Fridays from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., except dy. Theme fnr discussion: "Attitudes that 22. 7:30 p.m.—Women ices at Valley Baptist, Please call 452- driver sale. Meet at Central Unlled Meth- day*. Thursday before tlrst Fridays Wednesday, 7 a.m.-W\en 's Mission Society will — 'a Bible Break- holidays. Defeat our Etlorts for Christ." 2:45 p.m,—Worship. meet In the Fellowship Hell. Dr. William MiS7. odist Church. 3 to 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.

Sponsors Of This Page Invite Its Readers to Worship tn the Church of Their Choosing Every Week. Let Your Life Count For God. J. C. Penney Co. Altura State Bank Montgomery Ward & Co. Thern, Inc. Boland Manufacturing Co. Culllgan Soft Water Service Paul Miller and Staff Member F.D.I.C, Management and Employes Frank Allen and Employes Mr. and Mrs. Royal Thern Stan Boland and Employes Northern Slates Power Co. American Cciblevision Co. State Farm Insurance The Management and Personnel Tom Pills ond Staff Smith's Winona Furniture Jerome "Jerry" Fnkler end Stall Winona Ready Mixed Concrete Dunn Blacktop Co. Pally 8. Al Smith and Staff Henry Scharmer and Employes Even II. Davies and Staff Ruth's Restaurant Turner's Market Ken Rica and Staff Gerald Turner and Employes Gibson Discount Center and All Employes Winona Delivery & Transfer Walz Buick-OIds-GMC Goltz Pharmacy A. W. "Art" Salisbury and Stall Kulak Bros. Transfer, Inc. Mr. Va Restaurant Jack and Don Wall and Staff Nell R, Gold and Staff Vlubort, Emil «. Merlin Mr. end Mrs. Sever! Tlndal Country Kitchen Restaurant Ron Lynn and Employes Sean Roebuck & Co. Happy Chef Restaurant Lund Office Supply Co. Bob Nelson and Employes Winona Agency Rollingstone Lumber Yard Mel Boone and Employes Jamei Schain and Staff Rolllngifnne, Minnesota Gene Karasch, Realtor Merlin Lund and Jerome Rozek end Sales Staff Karsten Construction Co, Oiorge Karsten and Stall 5th St. IGA & Van's IGA Watkins Products, Inc. Lake Center Switch Co. Polachek Electric Arnte Albrecht 8. Richard VanNorman Management end Employes Management and Employes Brom Machine & Foundry Will Polachek Family Cone's Ace Hardware Holiday Inn Alf Photography, Inc. Paul Brom and Employes and All Employes Featuring Linahan's Restaurant Richard All and Stall Fawcett Funeral Home Hauser Art Glass Co. Park Plaza Hotel Management and Employes Management and Employes Jones & Kroeger Office Products Taggart Tire Service * Spoltz Philli ps "66" Service Management and Stall Clsrenca Duellman and Staff Ray Taggart and Employes Joseph end Jamei Spells Quality Sheet Metal Works 1st Fidelity Sav. & Loan Ass'n. P. Earl Schwab Co. Tha Management and Employes Fred schilling and Staff Sandy's Restaurant Hossfold Manufacturing Co. Warnor & Swasey Co. P. Eerl Schwab and Stall Cava Jenkins and Staff Management and Employes Dndger Division nnd Employes Madison Silos Joswiclc Fuel & Oil Co. Hi-Way Shell Div, Martln-Marlttla Co. It, P. Joswlck and Employes Merchants National Bank Bloodow Bake Shop Bauer Electric, Inc. Roy Taylor and Employes Olllcers-DlrectorsStalf Julius Gernes end Employes Russell (leuor and Staff Burmeister Oil Co. Badger Foundry Co. Haddad't Cleaners & Laundry H. Choate & Co. Quality Chevrolet Co. Randall's Super Valu Rocky Hoddad and Employes Fred Burmeliler and Staff and Employes and Employes James Mausolf and Staff James lloouo and Employes Williams Hotel & Restaurant Bunko's APCO Service Maplofoaf Lanes Siebrecht Floral Co. Winona Boiler & Steal Co. Downtown Shell Service Mrs. Charles Siebrecht and Slafl Ray Meyer and Jtotl Ed Bunke and Employes Management and Employes Gonny and Peta Grooloni Del Donrd anil Employes

Kondell Corporation Poorloss Chain Co. H. S. Dresser & Son, Contrs. Tompo Department Store Morgan's Jewelry W. T. Grant Dept. Storo R. D. Cornwall ind employes Management ind Employes Harry and Jim Dresser a. Staff .Management and Employes Sieve Morgan and Staff Mrs. Msurlne Strom and Stall ¦ ¦^yy '' 4p :\P ? ¦ ' " ¦ ? ? . JJwjuqJiiA.ofc £L dsAgqirum. Growing religion New Pharisees Area church Bahai Faith: spreading world peace By THE REV. ROGER A. PARKS, Associate Pastor services By KATHY KNUDTSON form could be have been fut BAUER HAS been a member , -Central UMted Methodist Churcli ALMA . Dally News Church Editor Klled, not only through the writ- rt the faith about three years. The people from the religious comrauhity that constantly St. John's Lutheran Church, . Sunday ings, but in the actual practice 'What attracted me most was worship service 8:15 ahd 10:45 a.m.; Sun- Five of the Winona Baha'i werfl at odds with Jesus over His understanding of the faith day school, 9 a.m. by members. traveled lie blending of concrete and were the Pharisees. The real issue between Jesus and the ALTURA Faith members have to other parts of the world TO CARLSON, Baha'ism Is workable philosophy . that pet* Pharisees was the understanding of the law and its effec- Hebron Moravian Church, mornlns wor- to the world's tiveness in maHng men righteous. ship, 9:15 a.m.; Sunday school, 10:15 spreading Baha'ism. "the best solution tains to iny life as I see it. The a.m. Wednesday—Joint Berea-Hebron Ash problems I've found. When we The Pharisees believed that righteousness Berea, 8 Steve Thompson, 168 E. members were very accepting consisted in Wednesday Lenten service at went to ," he said, tne literal tumiiment of the law — the law p.m. ' Friday — Released tlmt religious Broadway ; Nick Baufer , 870 E. of me and what I was. I never as they interpreted it. The Pharisees classes In a.m. Saturday—Confirmation 5th St., and PhiJ Carl_ori, 552 "vue knew we were going to ex- took classes, 9:30 a.m. perience a great deal. We felt I had to be a Baha'i to great pride in their adherence to the law, so Jehovah Lutheran Church, Wisconsin W. Wabasha St., were in Gua- Synod, Sunday school, 9(15 a.m.; , wor- thought we -were going to teach satisfy them," he added. much so that they used their own adherence temala , last summer, where w.M-*w:..v.-..y.^::...^^.v^,..| ^ W l n i |—H M S ship, .10:30 a,m. Monday—Sunday school the Guatemalans. It ended up "My life pattern has changed to the law as an excuse for passing judgment teachers' meeting, 7:30 p.fri. ' Tuesday — Carlson and Bauer . will return Carlson Bauer Thompson Yaklsh considerably, the greatest on other men and for separating themselves PTL at SI. John's, 8:30 p.m. , Wednesday «g$in. next week for three that we were taught by people — Ash Wednesday vespers at Jehovah, who have known for centuries Yakish, who invesigated the change being my attitude to- from other "sinners". 8 p.m. Thursday—Church council meet- months; Wayne Yakish, 178% signed to acquaint members ward life and things that are Jesus by contrast saw righteousness based ing, 8:15 p.m. Friday — Released time E. Howard St., spent 2% with other areas and to stimu- what it means to be close to faith . about one year before classes, *J:30 a.m. Saturday — Confirma- the earth. We have lost a great not connected with my life. 1 solely and completely upon the perfection of tion classes, 9 a.m. months last summer and one late and invigorate other com- saw the proph- ? deal of this in technical socie- joining, says ''I am much more positive, it is God and not upon man's faithful adherence to . BETHANY month this winter in British munities with different view- ecies of Jesus, told in the Bi- much easier . for me to give the law. According to Matthew, Jesus said: Bethany Moravian Church, .Sunday Honduras, and Richard McClu- points. ty./? school and morning Worship with special 'is are concentrating on "As a result of this, our basic ble, had been fulfilled by what little I have to other peo- "Unless your righteousness exceeds that of olferlng lor Moravian Unity, 10:45 a.m.; er, 328 Main St., spent a por- "Baha ple. Parables of Jesus discussion, 8 p.m. Wed- citizens. The hope for the future is not in Baha'u'llah, in that he was the tfffe scribes and Pharisees, you will never tion of the summer in Europe. being world "I have no contact with drugs enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 5:20) Rev. Parks nesday—Joint midweek Lenten , service world's idea of peace is just condemning anyone but in ac- promised one Jesus Christ had " . at United Church of Christ, Lewiston, 8 and alcohol and do my best to Jesus was concerned with the motives and desires of p.m. Saturday — Confirmation Instruction THE FUNDS for tlie trips an absence of war, whereby cepting good point j in every told of. Logically I thought to men and less with the precepts of human conduct. Jesus class, 10 a.m. abroad were earned by paint- world unity creates much aspect of family life. The spirit observe other moral sugges- CEDAR VALLEY myself if this is the world of made it perfectly clear in His teachings and by His actions ing houses, sponsoring bake broader aspects of harmony, of the Guatamalian Indian is tions of the Baha'i Faith. I get Cedar Valley Lutheran Church, Sun- " way I along much better with people. that our life was not to be lived in relationship to laws, but day school, TO a.m.; worship,. 11 a.m.; sales, and personal savings, says Yakish. vital as is the ingenuity of tech- God, then it is the best our |jfe is lived in relationship to the living God, a person, potluck dinner, noon; Church Council and plus an amount of money from Thompson, who has been a nical society. We must keep a can serve Him by becoming a "I am at peace with myself ALCW, . 1:30 p.m.; Lulher League, 8 p.m. member and following the and that is what it is all about," and to one's fellowmen. Tuesday—Communion, 8 p.m. the Rochester, Minn., Baha'i member 18 months, says his good balance," Carlson ex- A new Pharisaism is developing within the religious com- ELEVA Community. The project is de- ideas on what progressive re- plains. teachings." Bauer concluded. Eleva Lutheran Church, worship serv- munity. The modern day Pharisees are 'attempting once ices with Communion, 9 and 10:30 a.m.; again to rewrite the old law codes to fit their lifestyle and church school, 9 and 10:30 a.m.; nurs- ery, 10:50 a.m. Monday—Norwegian class are declaring righteous or unrighteous people that live by at Central, 7:30 p.m. Tuesd ay—Guitar re- their lifestyle or deny living by their lifestyle. The modern hearsal, 7:45 p.m. Wednesday — Senior day Pharisees become very narrow in their acceptance of BeHrJngers, 5 p.m.; chape) prayers, 7:30 Faith p.m. Thursday—Bethel Bible class, 10:30 Baha i the Will of God and are quick to declare Uie Will of God as a.m.; Cherub Choir, 3:45 p.m.; cate- : "Teach ye the Cause of God , 0 people of BahS, for. God it corresponds to their pattern of religious life. chism for 7th and 8th fltade, 7 p.m.; catechism for 9th grade, 6 p.m.; Senior hath prescribed unto every one the duty of proclaiming At one point in Jesus' response to the attacks of the Choir, 7 p.m.; Nordic Bellrlngers, 4 p.m. His Message , and regardeth it as the most meritorious Pharises, He say: "Alas for you , lawyers and Pharisees, Friday—Guitar learner class, 8 p.m.; , adult Inquiry class, 8 p.m. ____ -

SAVE SAV 33* /f/mutly DEODORANT 1 J4^y4^q I «. 1a tmmiAwwmK feW LI3I ICTCDIKIE I Elf¦¦¦ » INC ¦¦ " ¦¦ ^ / M^rnKW 1 I\ wMm&jvlYmmUlmfB9&Mw 1 r/ *__ > ____» J •?*"" . iWi.y^^ 1 ; " ¦¦¦ * I / *_?jtmPMimWv | Klf _f______F/i/i _..ath 1 ! > ^'L ' ""^ H fKSfl r-v mii " I // H' Slz« / uJt*i» ' " n \ * *P&**'** miit. ^* XJ ____kM**^ . t ft 1 am I I 0^. I i«4® _ __ _il^s^\______} 'C^\ I IferI --.£5^;—fl /^^\ \ I / /S\ /{ *£^0^0^iA\ 1 r _iWi___flP^_k\\VBC8 f A I P^____k______P^_ll^ ^ #______A \ 1 l l£_z__!_!_JI \ il OC 1 MV/ J ||b 1 I W\lm\wlEm& Ai l/.^M ^l ll ll G 1 Kg 'JM V iL^mf J § wk / v .in J I [MfSfmW&AW J I ^5i^H11Aim ^*^/ \WU l^lgP^ N. # J NVUy* ARCHIE GIIBERTSON IHn xT 4/ I /' S^^ PENNZCHL W ' tmniij/ LIMIT 2 i WitorncQTl 1 OCaUlYRumitv DalR_if Hi umit « "I hav» 1973 Lincoln Conti- XE^3_sa=SB^5* 1 Limits I MnTnD nil nentals and a Mark IV for ^ I MOTOR OIL Q^. 9 TnnTHPAQTF I REGULAR 23* 1 | | • Kills germs* on conlnct I ¦ | . 10W*30 Wight for ftH-TMB. PTOtCCtltm Immediate delivery or lease." m • RegularD i or mint•?« flavor. Wtth«f« fluorrstano -*-. I 1 t' , n_iii_ . . Law iun. toiiy .he 92-soM UM,T 3 •m F«nemt qualityn motormnVAr oilnil atut aft bigw« saving.«i.,i»«i | | . Long-lasting 7-ouncc tube nmm 1 I TOUSLEY FORD LINCOLN-MERCURY "Your Country Style Dealer" T MIRACLE MALL ITS TEMPO FOR TOTAL SAVINGS aS.e on ourFam ,y Purchaso P,a„ Pjhon* 454-117(1 ^ List released of 106 American servicemen to be freed by Reds WASHINGTON (AP) - Here Air Force, Deckersville, Mich. Temple, Tex., captured Sep- tured July 31, 1966. Air Force, Grenloch, N.J. 65. Moore, .Capt. Ernest M. and Cordell, Okla. Austin, Tex. Is a list of the 106 American 2. Abbott, Maj. Wilfred K., tember 1966. 19. Carpenter, Ii. Cmdr. Al- 27. Duart, Lt. CoV David H, Jr., Navy, MHlbrae, Calit, and 75. Rollins, Lt. Cmdr. David 87. Stratton, Cmdr. Richard servicemen to be freed by Air Force, Lancaster, Calif., 10. Bomar, Lt. Col. Jack W., lan R., Navy, Springvale, Air Force, Canton, Pa., wife Scottsdale, Ariz. J., Navy, Pioche, Nev., and San A., Navy, Quincy, Mass., and North Vietnam over the week- parents live in Afton, Wyo., Air Force, Fort Madison, Iowa, , wife lives in Sanford, lives at Grissom Air Force 66. Mullen, Cmdr. Richard Diego, Calif. Palo Alto, Calif. end. captured Sept. 5, 1966. wife lives in Mesa, Ariz.; shot Maine, shot down over Hai- Base, Ind.; mother lives in D., Navy, Chicago, and La- 76. Russell, Cmdr. Kay, 88. Stutz, Capt. Leroy W., Air Sixty-nine are Air Force serv- 3. Anderson, Lt. Cmdr. 6a- down Feb. 4, 196.. phong harbor in 1966. Granville Summitt, Pa., shot Jdlla, Calif. Navy, Corsicana, Tex,, and San Force, Effingham, Kan., wife i 36 are lives in Cummings, Kan., pris- cemen, Navy men, and reth L., Navy, Kane, Pa., wife 11. Brady, Capt. Allen C„ 20. Chauncey, Cmdr. Arvin down Feb. 18, 1967. 67. Naughton Lt. Cmdr. Rob- Diego, Calif., captured May one is a Marine. , ' ' ¦ ' ' ' oner since Dec. 2, 1966. lives in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Navy, Norfolk, Va., wife lives R., Navy, Glendale, Calif. 28. Everson, Lt. Col. David, ert Navy, wife lives ia Shel- 1967. .: ; . - .., . ? The Pentagon , 89. Swindle, Capt. Orson G., released the shot down May 19, 1967. in Beach," Va., shot 21. Christian, Lt, Cmdr. Mi- Air Force, AitMo, Minn., and Iowa, parents in Cedar 77. Sandvick, Lt. Col. Robert names Thursday don, Marine Corps Camilla Ga., afternoon 4. Ballard , Lt. Col. Arthur T. down Jan. 19, 1967. chael : D., Navy, Huntsville, Coon Rapids, Mich. shot down May J., Air Force, Frazer, Mont., , , after notifying Rapids, Iowa, captured November 1966. relatives. The Jr., Air Force, Spartanburg, 12. Brazelton, Capt. Michael Ala., wife lives in Virginia 29. FeUowes, Cmdr. John H., 18, 1967, and Farwell, Tex. Pentagon provided the man's S.C., and Lake Lure N.C cap- L., Air Force Inglewood, Calif. Beach, Va., shot down April 24, wife lives 90. Talley, Maj. Bernard L., , , , Navy, Tucson, Ariz., 68 Neuens, Capt. Martin J., 78. Sigler, Capt. Gary R., Air name, rank, service and home- tured 1967, 13. Bridger, Capt. Barry B., 1967. in Virginia Beach, Va., shot . Air Force, Baltimore, Md. town of record. Air Force, Iron Mountain, Force, Table Grove, HI. 91. Tanner, Cmdr. Charles Other informa- 5. Barbay, Maj. Lawrence, Air Force, Bladenboro, N.C. 22. Cofcer, Lt. George T., down Aug. 17, 1966. Lt. CoL Dewey L., tion comes from Mich., and Aurora, Wis., cap- 79. Smith, N., Navy, Covington, Tenn., files, POTS Air Force, Baton Rouge, La. 14. Brodak, Maj. John W., Air Navy, Houston, Tex., and Lind- 30. Fer Capt. John Air Louisville families and other , , tured August 1966. Air Force, , Ky. captured October 1966. sources. 6. Baugh, Maj. William J., Force, St. Louis, Mo. en, N.J. : Force Hemet Calif. In some cases , , 69. Nix, Maj. Cowan G., Air 80. Southwick, Cmdr. Charles 92. Terry, Cmdr. Ross R., the hometown Air Force, Amarilb, Tex, and 15. Buchanan, Capt. Hubert 23. Cordier, Maj. Kenneth W., 31. Flom Capt. Fredric R., of record differs , Force, Tampa, Fla., and War- E., Navy, Seattle, Wash., and Navy, parents live in Lake from the cur- Piqua, Ohio. E., Air Force, Austin, Ind. Air Force, Akron, Ohio, wife Air Force Menasha Wis., shot rent residence , , rensville Heights, Ohio, cap- Cupertino, Calif. Jackson, Tex., wife lives in San of his wife oi 7. Biss, Maj, Robert L, Air 16. Burns, Col. Donald R., lives in Tampa, Fla., shot down down August 1966. 81. Spoon Capt. Donald R., parents, tured 1966. , Diego, Calif., shot down Oct. 9, from his birthplace, or Force, Cherry Tree, Pa., wife Air Force, Mineral Wells, Tex. Dec; 2, 1966. 32. Fuller, Capt. Robert By- Air Force Pleasant Hill Mo. from his last 70. North, Lt. Col. Kenneth , , 1966. duty station. Ln lives Id Bangor, Maine, prison- 17. Burns, Cmdr. John D., 24. Cronin, Lt. Cmdr. Michael ron Navy, wife lives in Jack- Lt. Cmdr. these instances , W., Air Force, Chappaqua, 82. Stackhouse, 93. Thornton, Lt. Gary L., , other commu- er sinca 1966. Navy, Pensacola, Fla., ahd P., Navy, Pittsburgh, Pa., and sonville Fla., shot down July Ohio , , N.Y., and Wellfleet, Mass. Charles, Navy, Norwood, , Navy, Porterville, Calif. nities where the mail has ties 8. Blevihs, Maj. John C, Air Paoli, Pa. Berkeley, Calif. 14 1967. , 71. Peterson, Maj. Douglas and Lemoore, Calif., captured 94. Thorsness, Lt. Col. Leo are listed after the hometown Force, San Antonio, Tex. 18. Burroughs, Col. William 25. Crow, Col, Frederick A., 33. Gaddis Col. Norman C , , B., Air Force, Mineola, Iowa., April 1967. K Air Force, Stordeo Minn,, of record. 9. Bliss, Capt. Rpnald G., Air D., Air Force, Indian Head, Air Force, Hampton, Va. Air Force Knoxville Tenn., , , , , and Laramie, Wyo., captured 83. Stark, Cmdr. William R., and Sioux Falls S D. I. Abbott, Capt Robert A., Force, , Calif., and Md., and Aurora. Colo., cap- 26. Dramesi, Lt. Col. John A., ¦wife Winston-Salem , . lives in , September 1966. Navy, St. Petersburg, Fla., and 95. Torkelson Capt, Loren H., 1967. , N.C, shot down May 12, 72. Pollack, Capt. Melvin, Air Coronado, Calif. Air Force another lives itt Lt. Col. Willard 34. Gideon, Force, Long Beach, N.Y. 84. Sterling, Col. Thomas J., Crosby, , N.D., prisoner since S., Air Force, Arlington Va., , 73. Pollkrd, Lt. Col. Ben M., Air Force, Austin, Tex., and April 29, 1967. and ? Mount Clemente Mich., . , Air Force, Shelbyville, Ky., and Fort Waltqn Beach, Fla. 96. Van Loan, Lt. Col. Jack captured Aug. 7 1966. , Springs, Colo,, shot 85. Stockman, Col; Hervey, L., Air Force Corvallls, Ore., 35. Glenn Lt. Cmdr. .Danny , , . down May 1967. Air ForCfe, Andover, N.J. and Tucson, Ariz., shot down Navy, parents live in Nor- E., 74. Pyle, Maj. Thomas S. H, 86, Storey, Maj. Thomas G., May 20, 1967. man, Okla., shot down Dec. 21, Force Decatur HI., and " - - ¦ Air Force, New Castle, Del., Air? , , 97. Vogel, Lt. Col. Richard 1966. At •*? ' ' ¦ ' " '¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' : ; ¦ ' ¦ ¦ D., Air Force, native Willard, 36. Gray, Capt. David Flet- ; : - : " ¦ A ¦: • :: - -•¦ V- - . - . : r ? . . A ;* * Ohio wife lives in Hampton, cher Jr., Daytona Beach Fla., , , Va., shot down May 22, 1967. Air Force wife lives -in St. Pe- , 98. Waddeli, Lt. Col. Dewey tersburg, Fla; shot down Jan. , W., Air Force, Breman, Ga., 23 1967. , and Fort Walton Beach, Fla.; Summer programs 37. Greene Maj. Charles E., Miiifary personnel , shot down July 5, 1967. Air Force N.Y., , Schenectady* 99. Waggoner, Maj. Robert and Needham Mass. , F., Air Force, Steamboat 38. Haines, Cmdr. Collins H., Springs, Colo. Navy, Mdrristown N.J., and to be freed hy Cong ' , 109. Waltman, Lt. Col. Don- CST sets min max courses San Diego, Calif. ¦WASHINGTON (AP) Here 13. McMurray, Cordirie, Sgt. i Kellogg, 39. Hall Lt. Cmdr. - Thomas ald, Air Force, , Several innovative programs workshops religion studies ' , are the names of the 27 U.S. 1. c, Detroit, Mich.; , , spe- porary Problems of Human ing and The Spanish Civil War shot down Sept. 19, 1966. R. Jr., Navy, Carrollton, Va. following a "mini-max" pattern cial Workshops, and workshops in Film and Literature. military personnel, provided by 14. Miller, Roger A., CWOII., 101. Webb Maj. Ronald J., Ecology,. Ethnic Studies, The 40. Hiteshew, Lt. Col. James , will be offered by the College" in dance, theatre and music for the Pentagon, to be released. by Hopewell Junction, N.Y. ; Air Force, native Gary, Ind., White Minorities, Introduction to Planned for the summer are E., Air Force, Weston, Va., of Saint Teresa during the 1973 senior and junior high school nine post-baccalaureate work- the Viet Cong. 15. Newell, Stanley A. Staff wife lives iri Hampton, Va., the Performing Arts, Psychology wife lives in Goldsboro, N.C. Army: Sgt,, Peakin 111.; summer session. students. shops designed for the creative , shot down June 11, 1967. Today, and An Introduction and 41. Hubbard, Capt. Edward ' ,- Vi. O'Connor Michael F., The mini-max format pro- First term offerings include teacher. From , June 18 to 29 1. Anderson, John T. Sgt. , 102. Wells,' Lt. Col. Norman Writers of the American South: , L., Air Force, Shawnee Mis- CWOII Warren Mihe.; vides undergraduate students tValden II, a study of American two workshops will be offered: Niagara Falls, N.Y.; , , L., Air Force, Unionville, Va., Faulkner, Wolfe and O'Connor, sion, Kan. 2. Astorga 6 17. Perricone Richard R., an opportunity for gaining transcendental philosophy while Current Innovations and Trends , Jose M., Spec. , , and Goldsboro, N.C bicycling and camping along 42. Hughes, Col. James L., Oakland Calif. ; Sgt,, Uniondale, N.J.; credit for a full college course THE FOLLOWING courses in Elementary School Teaching , 1«1 Wendell, Maj. John H. the Wisconsin Bicycle Trail. Air Force, Waterloo, Iowa, wife 3. Baird Bill A., Sgt. Woos- 18. Pfister, James F. Jr., Sgt. with three weeks of intensive will be offered during the sec- and American Indian Culture , Jr., Air Force, Houston, Tex. study, a minimum of time at College Without Walls Inde- lives in Santa Fe, N.M., cap- ter, Ohio; Indianapolis, Ind.; Basic Statistic? and Comput- Through Art and History. June 104. Wideman, Lt. Robert E., the college and a maximum ex- pendent Study affords the stu- tured May 5, 1967. 4. Ettmueller, Harry L., Sgt., 19. Rose, Joseph III, Sgt., er Programming, College With- 18 to July 6: Speech Pathology: Navy, Bay Village, Ohio; Lake- posure to the study matter. : dent an opportunity to develop 43. Hughey, Lt. Col. Kenneth Pleasantville, N.J. ; Morgantown, W/.Va.; out Walls Independent Study, An Introduction for Teachers wood Fla.; and Lemoore, Ca- well-articulated plans for inde- R., Air Force, Hohenwald, 5. Flora, Carroll E. Jr., Sgt. 1 2(>. Sooter, David W., CWOII, COURSE AREAS for stodents pendent study under the direc- Developmental P s y c hoi* and Faculty. July 2 to 6: You Tenn., parents live in Dyers- lif., captured May 1967. ogy, Language Development Brunswick, Maine; Vallejo, Calif.; 105. Williams, Lt. Lewis I. during the first term, June 18- tion of a qualified faculty. and Creativity — The "How-to" berg, Tenn. 6. Frank Martin 21. Thompson Dennis L., Sgt. and Disorders, New Approaches S., Sgt.; , Jr. , Navy, Jacksonville, Fla., July 6 ahd the second term, To be offered during the first in Your Classroom. July 6 and 44. Jayroe, Lt. Col. Julius S., 7. Gfouin, Donat J., Sgt., 1 C, Portland, Ore, ; July 9-27 include baccalaureate term will be Behavior Disorders in Social Work, Psychology oi 7: Value Clarification in the parents live In Tampa, Fla., pi- , , Air Force, Georgetown^ S.C, ProvidericeAR.L; 22. Ziegler, Roy E. H, CWOH, studies, post - baccalaureate Children's Literature, Contem- Adjustment, Psychology of Ag- lot off carrier Kitty Hawk, shot Classroom. July 9-13: Metrica- and Dallas, Tex. 8. Harker, David N., Sgt. Marine Corps: tion Workshop for Elementary 45. Johnson, Maj. Harold E., down April 24, 1967. Lynchberg, Va.; 1. Budd, Leonard R. Jr., Sgt. 106. Woods, Lt. Cmdr. Robert and High School Teachers. July Air Force, Blakesburg, Iowa, 9. Henry, Nathan B., Sgt., Lynn, Mass.; D... Navy, Adrian, Mo. 9-27: Trends and New Tech- and Overland Park- Kan. Franklin, N. WASHINGTON (AP)—- Tho The Religion Studies Pro- LaCrosse, Wis.; and San An- State Department today re- gram for the 1973 summer ses- tonio, Tex., shot down May 5, leased the riames of five of. the . sion will be concerned with Re- 1967. seven civilian prisoners of war newal in Prayer. Five work- 49. Lawrence, Capt. William to be released by the Viet shops are scheduled. The work- P., Navy, Nashville, Tenn., Cong. They are: shop from June 10 to July 13 where parents live, and Salina Americans: will be Internship in Pastoral Beach, Calif. 1. Clodeon Adkins, captured Ministry; June 18-July 6: Two 50. Luna, Capt. Jose D., Air in Hue in Feb. 1, 1968, em- workshops wiii be available: Force, Orange, Calif., and Roy, ployed by Pacif ic Aictiteets Workshop in Eastern Liturgy . and Engineers. 2. Lawrence James Stark and Spirituality and , "Mysti- ¦51.. Madison, Lt. Col. Thomas cal Prayer: A Study of Saint M., Air Force, Tuskegee, Ala., Department of Navy civilian, John of the Cross July 9 to 13: and Phoenix, Ariz. captured iri Hue, Feb. 1, 1968. Prayer Today: New Styles and 52. Makowski, Lt. Col. Louis 3. Michael Dennis Eenge, em- Rhythms* and July 16 to Aug. F., Air Force, Watauga, Tex. ployed by the Agency for Inter- captured 3: Anthropology of Religious 53. Martin, Cmdr. Edward national Development, Experience. H., Navy, Savannah,. Ga., and Feb. 8, 1968, in Ban Me Thuot Germans: A special National Science Coronado, Calif. Bernhard J. DieM. Foundation supported work- 54. MaSto Capt. Ronald L., 1. 2. Monika Schwinn. shop, Short Course: Special Air Force, Delmont, Wis., and A State Department spokes- Topics in Modern Chemistry, Merri^m, Kan. 55. McCuistion man said the names of the two Will be held from , Maj. Michael June 25 T., Air Force Filipinos would be released through July 20. , Lincoln, Neb., by Sister Clarus wife lives in Montgomery, the Philippine government. Strouth is director. Ala., shot down May 8, 1967. Two other special workshops ON THEIR WAY . . . David (right) and bandits last October in Afghanistan (where 56. McDaniel, Cmdr. Eugene will be held: June 25—Aug. 'Junst 3: B., Navy, native of Kinston Peter with David's wife and two child- the walk will resume). They plan to walk Dance Theatre , Cotter JCL , and Music for NC, wife lives In Virginia ren make their way to the plane that will into Pakistan and hope to walk across China. High School ¦*___Ki&iJ8_»SSla6K ^ Students and Beach Va., shot down May 19 begin to return them to their walk around JV.A Kunst is from Waseca, Minn. (AP Dance Theatre and , , raising money , Music for 1967. STILL OBSERVING ... Francis Gary Powers, who flew the world. Peter, from Santa Ana Calif., Photofax) Junior High , School Students. 57. McGrath, Lt. Cmdr. John tha ill-fated U2 flight over the Soviet Union ih i960 that Members of the Cotter High The College of Saint replaces John Kunst who was killed by Teresa and M., Navy, Denver, Colo, and broke up the Big Four summit conference, now flies a small School chapter of the Junior the Winona Community Theatre Classical League (JCL) will San Diego, Calif. airplane for a living. He is shown reporting on freeway will provide to junior high (7-9) sponsor a bake sale at J. C. 58. McNish, Capt. Thomas conditions for a Los Angeles radio station. (AP Photofax) grades) and high school stu- M., Air Force, Franklin, N.C, Penney Co. Saturday from 11 dents (10-12) grades) an oppor- shot down Sept. 4, 1966. a.m. to 2 p.m. Bill to provide benefits tunity to study In a "commu- 59. McSwain, Lt. George P., This is one of a series of fund- nity-educational" theatre, dance Navy, Montrose, Calif. raising projects being planned and music program. Through 60. Mecleary, Lt. Cmdr. Read by Cotter Latin students to help the academy of performing arts B., Navy, Old Greenwich, Powers still finance attendance at state and an understanding and apprecia- Conn., shot down May 26, 1967. national JCL conventions. to jobless nears p assage tion of the performing art 61. Mehl, Capt. James P., The state convention will bo through formal and informal ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP ) - A cited cases of retarded persons newsmen's shield bill, then sent Navy, Belle Harbor, N.Y. at Anoka, Minn., March 17. training in drama, music and bill that would provide jobless tied to chairs and left in large the measure to subcommittee. 62. Metzger, Lt. William J., an observer About 18 students plan to at- for workers laid off be- groups without supervision. danco will be developed. Navy, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., tend the state convention and benefits The Senate gave preliminary California moved Brochures covering details on captured May 19, 1967. LOS ANGELES (AP) - The the maze of Southern the chapter hopes to send a cause of strikes has approved to a bill providing a closer to passage in tho Min- Minnesota banks would be fees, credits, housing and appli- 63. Meyer, Maj. Alton B., Air U.S. pilot whose name became freeways. delegation to the national con- three-day cooling oif period on Powers a for- nesota Legislature. allowed to open branches under cation may be obtained by writ- Force, Fredericksburg, Tex. a household word after his U2 Francis-Gary , vention- at Claremont, Calif., door-to-door sales. It would ap- Central Intelligence Agen- The Senate Labor and Com- a bill introduced fcy Sen. Win- ing to tho director of the 1973 64. Monlux, Capt, Harold D., spy was shot down over mer early in August. ply to sales over $25 ,in cases now reports freeway merce Committee discussed the ston Borden, DFL-Brainerd. , summer session, All summer Air Force, Sioux City, Iowa, Russia in 1960 says he gets a cy pilot, During tho spring, tho chapter Where a salesman had initiated traffic conditions at least four bill favora bly Thursday and is The branch banking issue has programs are open to men and and Tulsa, Okla., captured No- touch of "stage fright" when he hopes to arrange car washes the sale. • . times an hour from 3,000 feet expected to approve the meas- been brought up almost every - women. vember 1966. files his Cessna Cardinal over and other fund-raising activi- for radio station KGILr- ure and send it to tho Senate session recently, with most out- ties. floor Tuesday. Tlio Jbill already state bankers opposing the Powers said in a recent inter- has passed the House. opening ot branches by fcig city view that, although talking to banks. an audience of thousands can Under the measure, nnyono Under Borden's bill, banks bo alarming, it is nothing com- laid off by a strike could collect Dow Jones changes increasing pared to a CIA mission. would bo limited to branches benefits after a two- Powers jobless within thoir own regions, The NEW YOItK (AP) - It used the basis of corporate profit ex- day period, tho widest Dow stance, up to the third week in Thirteen yenrs ago, No benefits would week wait. regions would be those used in swing of 17 points was nearly 2 was 12 nautical miles inside the persons actually on to bo that a change of a couple pectations. But now there is _o February, tho Dow Jones aver- bo paid to the state Regional Development per cent of the average while Soviet Unon when something refuse to of points ln the Dow Jones In- much news from Washington , age was off 9 per cent, tho strike, to persons who Act, tho widest Standard and Poor exploded beneath his U2. "My icket lines or to workers dustrial average was a big one. and overseas, and they don Standard arid Poor 0 per cont cross p Republican legislators An- 't swing tn that tlmo was less God, I've had it now," he re- laid off because of a jtirlsdic- But now tho changes are run- understand, that they just rush and tho slock exchange aver- members saying. nounced four public hearings on to buy or sell." than 1 per cent. ago of all issues was down 11 tlonal dispute between unions. ning 10 or As the jet went into a twist- education issues. GOP lawmak- 12 points on many Other factors are involved aa Meigs said this Indicated the per cent. Tho greater number Jobless (benefits are paid out ers will invite public testimony greater weight on tho Dow av- ing dive, ho managed to pull financed by Min- days. well in tho present period of big of stocks in tho latter two offset of a fund Saturday at Duluth and Staples erage which is exerted by a himself from the cockpit and employers. The current Ono reason , of course, is that changes. Iri addition to nervous- the wide swings of tlio Dow, al- nesota and Tuesday at Austin and single stock. Tho stock ex- parnchuto to earth, almost maximum payment is $64 a the Dow averages aro much ness, there is tho greater mar- though in all three the trend landing on a Russian farmer. Mnnkato. higher than tliey wore a few ket weight of tho big in- change index, wliicji has an was steadily downward. DON VETSCH week. A bill calling for tho Metro- oven broader bnse, showed Tho incident caused a East- y eight years ago. So this means tliat stitutions, particularly tho mu- Minnesota is ono of onl politan Council to bo elected even smaller swings. Meigs thinks tlio present era West furor and resulted in tho "Tou sley Ford welcomes Don states not allowing benefits to , tho bigger changes are not as tual funds but including pension breakup of tho 1960 Big Four rather than appointed by tlie much as they seem if you re* funds as well, Those act almost As a result of the smaller of wide dally changes in the to the area's top sales team, persons laid off in strikes. - con- summit meeting in Paris. Pow- governor, was approved 20-7 by duco them to percentages. in concert in buying or selling number of stocks in tho Dow Dow will end ns economic In other legislative action list a drastic fall in the price ditions stabilize and ho thinks ers was tried and convicted in soiling new Fords. Mercuryu, tho House Metropolitan nnd Ur- But tho principal reason is stocks which aro in the news , , Thursday: ban Affairs Committee. of a singlo issue lias a greater there- ls "a good prospect for n Soviet court on espionage Llncohis nnd top Used Cars." DFL lender Nicholas "nervousness,'! says A. J. for ono reason or another. And . Senate Tho Senate gave preliminary effect on tho average than in moro stability." charges. Ho served ?1 months Coleman and Sen. Gcorgo Pcr- Meigs, vice president nnd econ- when thoy mnko their big pur- in Sovot prisons before being approval to n bill allowing vol- tho Standard and Poor in- "For Instance," ho snld, pich DFL Chisholm, called for omist of Argus Research. chase or sole, It has a big'-cf- exchanged for master spy Ru- , unteer firemen to operate fire dicator. "Americans don't understand increased staffing nt state* in- fect on tho stock's price. dolf Abel. TOUSLEY FORD trucks on an ordinary driver's "Tlio Index in more volatile These differences are duo to what is going^on in foreign ex- stitutions for tho mentally re- 1) f Powers returned to tho IINCOLN-MERCURY license. Current law requires a because of tho times wo live This in shown ln tlio fact Ihnt tho difference, among tho change. Tho devaluation will tarded. United States r-asumed being a Dealer Class R or C license, the typo in," ho explained. "There is the Standard arid Poor industri- slocks in the list used for aver- help mo.st American com- , "Your Country Style " Tho two made an unan- test pilot and wrote a book used by truck drivers. moro uncertainty. There is JI al average, which has -125 ages. When the range between panies, so it is no reason to soil MIRACLE MALL nounced visit to Cambridge lot of confusing news: stocks compared to tho Dow tho 1973 highs and lows aro re- stocks. But a report like that nbout tho U2 incident , "Oper- Phono 454-5170 State Hospital and expressed Tlio Houao Judiciary Com- "In more stable times, people Jones 30, does not swing as duced to percentages, thoy will cause tho big swings, just ation Overflight." Ho took the concern over lack of staff. Thoy mitted heard testimony on a could plan ahead and invest on widely. During ono recent 10- como out moro evenly. For in- because pcopla aro confused,'* radio job in 1970. Canadian gardens featured Your horoscope—Jeane Dixbh H. Winona Dally Newi 'M f*¦H_ f Winona, Minnesota Wm For SATURDAY, March 3 ; - ' * ' . '. MMj' ¦ _ ¦ at flower and garden club ' Relations take on an J S *w ^^ Your birthday today: ^«nfe_ quality, v/ith deep experience to be shared o- An illustrated talk on Can- First District . meeting of the tentative ork in getting sound S^tlvS inVest much hard w a per- ada's Butchart Gardens by Minnesota Horicultural So- ?¦ ¦ ¦ ' Mrs. Lester Stevens, featured sonal festablishment. . * - . ' . . . ..; ' ' „;_ „i,. «» city, at which the club will be Aries (March il-Aprll 19): Keeping things sun^g* " % tie program of the. Winona heavy physical exertions &$i **• ^^ MM Flower and Garden' Cluh, host April 14 at Kryzsko Com- emotional matters Is essential. Skip ill %M^^^ill FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1973 ¦ ¦ i* |1 mons, Winona State College. in favor of intellectual pursuits. - .. - .. * . v ,, • ? ' ¦" ¦ Thursday evening, at Lake turn, out quite well; . . . . . l l Park Lodge. ¦Club members are asked to Taurus (April 29-May 20) s Routines . P cheerful conversation, breezy stories, practical - -;- ¦ Mrs. Stevens showed slides of save articles for the white ele- enlivened by ¦ :¦¦ ¦ :-A'.-??' :- ??;?A-?? ?? ¦?'??: ???-., jokes to be endured in good humor. •? '• . . . j? pictures, taken at the Victoria, phant sale and to start seed- (May 21Juno 20): Sudden arrivals, turn of cir- B JC.± gardens on a visit to the Gemini lings now for the plant sale to cumstance upset plans, but shouldn't disturb your serenity. Noruiwest last summer. One - ' ¦' ' ¦ A be held by the club at the First Listen for intuitive guidance. . ;' . . ; ,r: , . . . hundred Japanese gardeners (June - 21-July 22): Reach out to had altera, of are regularly employed for District meeting. Mrs. Brom Cancer Single woman hurt similar interests. Bring your mate with you if you have one, maintenance of the garden. ? stated that those who .want to " '¦ '¦ ' . A Mrs. Stevens also included efrplore new scenes: : . attend the noon luncheon should Leo (Jnly 23-Aug. 22): Abruptly your wagon is agata scenes in Banff and Jasper Na- star and you can go higher in morale and ad- tional Parks of Canada, and of make reservations by April 1 hitched to a Ma r r i e d Iove r u n tr u e venturous ideas. . _ , Vancouver, Seattle and the In- with Mrs. P. Earl Schwab. Ar- ' the most of a rather plea- DEAJt ABBY: My heart is breaking, and although I thur (Jerry) Olson, Minneapo- Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Make side Passage. settle matters as they come up, first, things first, think I know the answer, maybe if I saw it in print I could Mrs. Leo Brom, club presi- lis, will . speak at 1 p.m. bn sant day, ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ enjoy filling in details.. "- . ' ' • ¦; . .' .. '• . * .- ; accept it more easily. • " . ¦ dent outlined plan's for the "Roses, Yesterday, Today and Personal projects move forward Tomorrow. -Libra -(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I and an unmarried woman who has been absolutely " wife the energy you invest. Social contacts are pro- The club will not hold its reg- in accord ¦ faithful to a married man ever since we fell in love four vocativeor inspiring. . A - ular monthly meeting in April, 21): Possessions are favored; yoii years ago. His excuse for not leaving his wife and marrying due to the First District meet- Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. can make a trade or sell off a white elephant. Your favorite me was his children. I accepted this. I know that hundreds School ing. " ' ' ¦ ' ' - , ' ' Mrs. Brom also announced charity waits for contributions...... - - ,, . . . _,, of husbands and wives live under the same roof after they Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Today sparkles with startl- ¦t o-vyjccvCv'-;.; ¦i *iiw *r,'iYis//V/s.'fSjOiJ. 'SQKtmi *im Minn, - The Wednesday — Italian spa- It was noted that - the club Arcadia High School stu- By Margaret Dana children's sake, but must he SLEEP with his wife for the ghetti casserole, green beans will again place a group order Four Pickwick Area Fire Depart- dents will participate in the an- ment is sponsoring a series of children's sake? Or is it just because he wants to? HURT. nattered, peanut butter sand- for chrysanthemums. C 1. u b Dorian Instrumental Fes- save money in our bud- *wich, milk, frosted gelatine members may place their in- nual "SOO" card parties each Satur- get by tival at Luther College, Decor- doing more and DEAR HURT: I hate to hurt you further, but unless cubes. dividual orders with Mrs. day evening during March. Tha Why is ham more repairs around the? ¦ ' ah, Iowa, Sunday and Monday. a man "wants to," he's a pretty ineffective bed part- Thursday ' — • . Salami and James Walz not later than first party will be held Satur- house ourselves, when ¦ cheese on a buttered bun, pickle March 15. > ¦ ? Bill Gamoke, trumpet; Mark we can. Is there such a . .. •ner. Forsythe, tuba, and Mike Pav- day at 8 p.m. at the fire sta- slices, vegetable soup and Mrs. Gordon Ballard, worthy Meistad, trom- tion. The public ls Invited to so salty? thing anywhere as a crackers, lettuce salad, milk, matron-elect of Winona Chap- licin and Jean kind of "do-it-yourself" . A DEAR ABBY: When a wife complained because her bones, will attend the festival, attend. . : ic cream on a stick. ter, Order of Eastern Star, in- A few (jays ago I textbook to help us with , husband was turned on by the sight of beautiful women in Friday — Fish steak and tar- vited club members to an open living on campus and attend- bought an 11-pound ham plumbing repairs we. pictures, movies, in person, etc., you said those feelings tar sauce, mashed potatoes and installation of chapter officers ing rehearsals for the two-day for which I paid over could properly do? were natural for a man and he should not be made to feel light gravy, carrot coins, pea- at the Masonic Temple March event. Climx of the festival will , guilty. ¦ concert Monday $8.00. The first taste told A., Apparently a good nut butter sandwich, milk, choc- 31. ' - - ¦ be the grand me that it was exces- many families are planning Vfell, it's natural for a woman to feel jealous when she olate marble pudding. Mrs. Brom announced that at 7:30 p.m. in the Luther . sively salty. Not only sees her husband enjoying tihe beauty of other women, Fieldhouse. to do. just .what you are ' Junior and senior high school the club's executive board will was it unpalatable, and ask for the same kind especially when the wife herself is not so generously en- only - hamburger arid French meet at the home of Mrs. W. making it a waste of of, manual. In response, dowed. So she shouldn't feel guilty about her feelings either. fries, 10 cents extra. W. Lowe March 21. money, but I believe Agricultural Research Ser- If, a man is smart he will forego the pleasure of looking Hornemaker this sort of meat eaten vice Specialists have put to- at other women when he's with his wife. It will pay off, frequently could be in- gether a step-by-step set of belieye me. Just last night ray husband took me out for THE LOCKHORNS named at jurious to health be- directions with clear illus- dinner, and at a nearby table was a beautiful girl, provoca- cause of the excess salt. trations of how you can tively dressed. Her tight-fitting, low-cut gown showed off her Spring Grove Why can't the salt con- • handle simple plumbing re- best features, and as if that wasn't enough she had a slit in , Minn. (Spe- tent of hams be regu- her skirt which revealed SPRING GROVE pairs. These cover such a lovely leg right up to her thigh! cial) Miss Beth Dvergsten lated during the cur- problems as a dripping Every other husband In the place couldn't take his eyes — JIM BUSWELL ing process? Wlat can has hasn nnrnprl Mio Home- water faucet, danger of off this girl. My husband gave her one glance, and pretend- me price out a Ford the consumer do to pro- ed she wasn't even there for the rest of the evening. When maker of To- "Let water pipes freezing, clog- morrow at Wagon at a bargain price 1 I ^ teet himself against ged drains, and toilets that we got home, believe me, I gave him a night to remember! this sort of thing? I'll bet all the other husbands got the cold shoulder. Spring Grove have Compact, Medium and won't stop flushing. The High School. A. Hams are cured in dif- booklet is called "Simple LUCKY . Regular Size Wagons in ferent ways, by different She is the stock." Plumbing Re pa 1 r s" ind daughter ot Mr. processes. A true Virginia costs 10 cents. To- order a DEAR LUCKY: How do you know? lam, for instance, depends and Mrs. Mer- copy, send your request vin Dvergsten, cn a "dry " cure, slow with the lo cents to: Con- CONF©ENWAL TO B. J. IN SIOUX CITY: She's TOUSLEY FORD smoking and a long drying no bargain. If shell!¦ cheat WITH¦ you, she'll cheat ON. Spring Grove. sumer Product Information, - : . . - ¦ ' ' ¦ tlNCOLN-MiRCURY process. yOU. . : . - . She plans to v Washington, D.C. 20.07. attend Other types may speed low* "Your Country St-yZi Dealer** Problems? IW_Ufi%30nT _____Mi Q. You'll feel better if you get it oif your " LOR ETTA MAPE ME WHAT I AM TOPAY...... State Univer- Tip the process by using I would like to ask chest. For a personal reply, sity, Ames to MIRACLE MALL more salt and less smoking, your opinion of a pur- write to ABBY: Box No. eoMBPAy im SOIWG TO GET EVEN W ITH HErT. , B. Dvergsten 69700, L.A., Calif. 90069. Enclose stamped, self-ad- " major in home Phono 454-5170 or no smoking at all. Vari- chase I made recently dressed envelope, please. tBmAmmAAmmmamoamAAi^maaAmmmmmAmAmmAAAmmmAmmm^mmt^mtmmmmmmmM ations on materials used to at a city super-market. economics. ''cure" the ham result in •In tha fresh produce de- •different degrees . of salti- partment I bought a ness. . package of what I L.C. woman Consumers can protect thought were fresh to observe ENDS themselves by trying out shelled black-eyed peas. different types of hams and When I washed the pean birthday M EAIAIlim settling on the type they at home, the water prefer. The "trial and er- turned green. This waa LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) MARCH 5 : ror" method ia slow and unusual because black- -Mrs. Mattie Hedeman, for- FACTORY-SPONSORED Jg l lUMII _B____iA I __¦____¦» expensive, but is the only eyed peas are not green. merly of Lake Citv. observed J H» ¦M?BM M way to match one con- Then I found a note on hen 96th birth* aumer's taste with a kind the bottom of the pack- day at Hlllcresl of food. age that said, "Black- Nursing Home, eyed peas, dried on tiie River Falls , Q. We recently saw vine) artificial color ." Wis., Thursday, In a super-market a leg This may not be illegal, She has three of Iamb which was la- but it certainly was imp- daughters, Mrs, beled "American Leg leading for those wl© A r t (Bertha) of Lamb." But . it also would not expect to find Oelkers, Red had a label , saying it dried peas in the fresh Wing, Minn.; was imported from produce section on ice. Mrs. Anna Mar- , . Can you ex- A, I agreo that it Is mis- tens, Lake City,p ¦ plain this contradiction? leading, but whether It was and Mrs. Ru ?- Mrs. Hedeman A. The term, "American intentionally so, or just a dolph (Marie) Leg of Lamb" does not mistake on the part of the Hoeft, Oronoco, Minn. She also WP TO ^^^-Af «_«IBiliBpS refer to its place of origin, clerk handling tho various has 10 grandchildren; 21 great- Bii_& f I_r______C JBkI_f WK_____ $fll_ ilftlAA 1—ry wm but rather to the . special types of foods is not clear. grandchildren and two gfeat- _-_-H flvH iww y preparation it has had. Did you talk to tho man- great-grandchildren. ¦Hl V* WW$i ^" ¦ _F _T ^ ' When tho shank bono is re- ager about this? ¦ HBK p ... on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and Component APm _¦ _ _ __ ' , on ^ H| T • -•** ' llt lSS moved, but tho meat is not, It is always best to try HffiP lIf^ Systems, Also enjoy groat savings Radios, Tope Recorders, Portable diagonal Till ' ' r; ^j I O ' ^ifHfl It Is called an "American first to find out tho reason Nelson seniors ¦H^ffl j ( Phonographs nnd Monochrome TV. Shown below are just some of B%l '" ' 1' m 'M aH_r ' nilf nfinny l*Jla nn»n **c Cnlnr TV Annnnl finli*- VHIIIM . „ Leg of Lamb." for nn apparently mislead- note birthdays PMBa i , n ¦ __.. _¦ A litfi 111 fl 'fr||* i jj . ing statement, because mis- ffiBfi Q. We aro trying to takes can happen. NELSON, Wis. (Special)-Tho If it proves to Iravo senior citizens of Nelson hon- been Intentionally mislead- ored members with February ing, that's a different mat- birthdays at this week's meet- 'REMOVAL tor, Write a letter of com- ing at tho Community Hall. Hon- plaint to the management. ored pleats were: Mra. Eva Ott, S-A-L-E And send another to your Mrs. Rose Ruben, Mrs. Olga ONE WEEK ONLY locnl department of markets Strand , Albert Vogt, Ellery Su- nnd Inspections. kopp nnd Mrs. Frank Iladle. Prizes In cards were awarded to Mrs.* Ann Schmldlln, Mrs. 259b Card party Karl Owen, Mrs. Agnes Chris- DISCOUNT topherson and Mrs. Rose Rue- ON AU MERCHANDISE ARCADIA , Wis. (Special) - ben. SOME ITEMS '/a PRICEl The annual card party spon- Tho next meeting will bo hold STOCK UP AND SAVE I sored by Knights of Columbus , March «, The tax clinic for se- Arcadia Council 105*1, will bo nior citizens ls set for March held Sunday at (1 p.m, at tho Sara s Gift Shop , 13 from 9 a.m. to noon nnd from ' Arcadia Country Club Euchre, 1 to 4 p.m. nt the Community 106 W. 3rd St. sheepshond and 500 will bo play- ed. Hall. 'Die public is Invited. Information that should be **''M-«-'--'-'__MN___-M-_-___MM brought to the clinic Includes ___ W^^^ ______¦ _¦¦ ______social security number, Infor- iHH ^ K *^<$l_i ==* _fl_%___ £» '. 4& IBB mation on income including so- : ^r 4P0^ ?3QO : cial security payments and in- ¦ ¦ K Modol 6426-Modltorranoan styling Contemporary |\ lfl _ |JI|_¦__¦ < -9i' terest nnd real estate tax bill am iilTi ¦ H vi ^_ F %_"IIP 1* MSarJ_f /SByjf ^fflfl HWip^l . l A . ... . ';'_^_H_J__ or rent bill. ^

(^LESSONSpl MVEWUIKS BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - Tho • PAT SHORTRIDGE Llvewlres Women's Club will |j § | tj | meet Monday nt 7:30 p.m. nt EXCLUSI VE DIRECT FACTORY DEALER & Doug Gebhait y§p rej tho home of Mrs. Alden Elland. AA Tho annual summer trip will bo DORN BUILDING iyiiiiPii j || UM \k UM discussed. ' Huff & Sarnia * ra For Appointment Call . . . Indians aro thought to have ^^^^ Jived In whnt now Is western 452-3535 or 452-4002 as long as 15,000 ' 116 HARDT'Slcvee P|{uq Ea9t MUSIC years ago. W STOREPhone 452-2712 'Hof Peterson rips Wolves 72-59 Harmony batters Caledonia 55-37 By BRUCE CLOSWAY In quarter-final action tonight, had 15 points and had accum- edge in rebounding with Jan- more scored with equal effec- Daily News Sports Writer Preston will face LeRoy-Os- mulated just 23 by the end of ski and Stevens pulling down 11 tiveness from the outside and ROCHESTER, Minn. — Har- strander at 7:15 and Lewiston the third period. But Todd apiece and Don Bellingham by driving down either side of mony may be the favored team will take on Chatfield at 9. Huff, a 5-7 sophomore who is another eighth Harmony con- the lane iri heavy traffic. The in its bracket of the District HARMONY 55, the son of Coach Huff, finally nected on 22 of its 48 field cousin of Peterson's dependable One Basketball Tournament, CALEDONIA 37 found a solution to Harmony's goal attempts for 46 percent senior, Steve Olson, he wound but the Cardinals witnessed Harmony made it three in miserly defense. while the Warriors made only up with 12 field goals to win a something .here Thursday night a row over Caldonia this sea- Eluding his man in traffic 23 of 61 shots for 38 percent. personal shootout with Spring that is certain to be a burden son, and each time the War- around the top of the key, Huff Elston was admittedly upset Valley's junior gun, Bob Soren- on their minds. riors have been held to less drilled in six long-range shots over the fact that his team, son. After disposing of Caledonia than 40 points. The Cards won in the closing minutes and wheih happens to be the de-* But it was consistent hot In' the first game at Rochester the two regular season meet- prompted Elston to have his fending district champions, shooting by everyone in Coach State Junior College in relative- ings 50-33 and 48-32. team switch to a zone defense. committed 21 turnovers, includ- Dave Gisvold's starting lineup ly easy fashion, 55-37, Harmony But Coach Ward Huff's squad The hustling little guard wound ing 12 traveling violations. that kept the Wolves from mak- was treated to a torrid field can take some consolation in up with 17 points to lead all "We won't be able to keep ing up the 12-point deficit that goal shopting performance by the fact that Harmony allowed scorers. making mistakes like that if was established in the first Peterson in Ihe final game of an average of only 42.3 points But Huff was Caledonia's only we expect to win this thing quarter. the opening round. per game for the" entire sea- player in double figures and again," he concluded. "But With Steve Berland, Steve Ol- The surprising Tigers, look- son. Thursday night's game after the Warriors went score- we're just looking ahead to our son and Scott Gudmundson do- ing like they have no inten- marked the eighth time this less for the first 4:26 of the next game and no further. Who- ing most of their scoring in tions of letting Harmony win season that the Cardinals have second half, Harmony had all ever wins out here tonight (Pet- close, the winners were 12 for their bracket,* shot a remark- limited an opponent to less than but sewed up its 18th victory erson), that's who we'll be con- 20 from the floor iri the first able 56 percent from the floor 40 points. in 21 games this season. centrating on. quarter, seven for 14 in the sec- en route to a 72-59 conquest of "Defense is something we've The winners compiled a 42-21 "After what LeRoy did to ond, nine for 18 in the third and Spring Valley. really learned to take pride Rushford Monday night, we seven for 11 in the final eight With sophomore Jeff Olson in," explained Harmony coach know anything can happen in a minutes. leading the way, Peterson erupt- Del Elston. "We play predomi- tournament _ke this." . "I guess you would have ta ed for 24 poipts in the first pe- nantly a man-to-man defense PETERSON 72, consider us hot tonight," mused riod and was in control all the and concentrate on keepin#s§&r SPRING VALLEY 59 a humble Coach Gisvold after- way. '- - man from getting off a good If Jeff Olson didn't convince wards,. "But Spring Valley Harmony, a team that gener- close-range shot." any area coaches on hand irt gave us a lot of good shots, ally relies on its strong de- Rockenbach Hall of his true and after scouting them , we "Our rebounding has been a potential Thursday night he ?w^M.-s<&^^tv&*i^.s;- *^mi^mWmmm fense, will have to hope the factor too," he added. "With , realized they, really don't har- Tigers cool off a bit when the (Paul) (Mike) probably never will. ass you that much on de- , CHOICE POSITION.. . Harmony's Mike with Gary Birkeland (nearest camera) and Stevens and Jan- Displaying an incredible abil- JansM (85) waited two teams meet in a quarter- ski controlling the defensive fense." nonchalantly with open Dick McManimon of Caledonia. Janski wound , ity to shoot under pressure and ' arms for a rebound final contest Saturday night at boards the way they did to- The younger Olson, who re- as it was deflected in up with 11 rebounds, the same number as 9 in Rockenbach Hall. Their night, there weren't many excellent ball control — with ei- portedly still has a tender an- his direction by the collision of bodies under teammate Paul Stevens, and the Cardinals game will be preceded by a times when Caledonia got a ther hand — he was key to the kle from a minor sprain suf- the basket. Vainly clutching for the ball were Tigers' impressive 13-poihfc vic- posted a S&-37 triumph. clash between Spring Grove second shot at the bucket." (Continued on next page) John Bellingham (15) of Harmony along and Grand Meadow at 7:15. By halftime the Warriors only tory. The self-assured 5-8 sopho- HARMONY But don't discount JM, Mayo Hawks Big Nine swim favorites By BRUCE CLOSWAY more than a darkhorse, as defeated Austin. 59-36 and 61- swimming and diving finals former has been clocked in Djaily News Sports Writer will John Marshall and Aus- 34 in dual meet competition set to start at 2 p.m. There 55.4 this season, the fastest For the past two years tin. this past season, the Pack- will he timed heats in each time in the state. an underrated Rochester ers' B squad handed Wino- swimming event. The top- Luke will go with Gonia, Mayo swimming team has WHY IS THAT? Primar- na its only two setbacks. seeded entrants have heen Paul Miller, Sheehan and ily because, on paper, host succeeded in "stealing" the The diving' preliminaries placed in tbe same heats. Todd Duffy in the medley Big Nine Conference title Winona appears to be the relay, an event the Win- odds-on favorite. are scheduled to ibegin at 10 WINONA WILL have sev- away from such heavily- a.m. Saturday with the hawks won in last year's favored foes as Rochester "I wouldn't be so sura eral favored individuals in- meet with a 1:43.3, clock- John Marshall and Winona. about that," cautioned tho cluding Roger Berndt in ing. The best time by a Wi- At* least that's the term ever - apprehensive Luke. two events, Joe Sheehaa nona foursome this season Winona Coach Lloyd Luke "We might have more top- and Bob Gonia as well as was a 1:45.7. chose to describe the re- seeded swimmers, but when the top - seeded 200-yard medley relay team. Gonia, who turned in 6 markable team effort put there's going to be points pool rec&fd 57.5 in thei 100- given out for six places, you Sheehan one of only two out by the Spartans which ^ yard backstroke in a dual forced John Marshall to re- have to start worrying individual champions back meet against Hopkins Lind- linquish the loop crown. about a team like Austin from last year's meet will bergh Feb. 17, is favored in When this year's confer- that has so much depth." be out to defend his title in the event but could be ence meet gets under way There is some validity to the 100-yard butterfly. The pushed by Ross Evjen of Saturday morning in the Luke's typically skeptical strong-armed senior and Winhawks' own pool, Mayo statement considering that teammate John Magin are (Continued on next page) will again fee considered no even though the Winhawks Gonia Sheehaa seeded 1-2 in the event. The BIG NINE Hoesley, link WSC, D(j/irfh pull off upsets win Ist-round matches easily as MWIAA tourney opens Unheralded Winona State Col- ment high 23 points. WSC, BOOSTING its record Beckjr McLeod led Moorhead MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Rod lege and tha Hoesley of Winona and Bob University of Min- FOUR TEAMS were eliminat- to 9-5, took a slim 11-8 lead aft- with nine points. nesota - Duluth pulled first- ed Thursday : Anoka-Ramsey er the first quarter and a 17- Link of Caledonia were the only IN OTHER FIRST-round re- area wrestlers to survive the round upsets in the Minnesota Junior College, Bethel College, 15 halftime lead before icing Women's Intercollegiate Athle- Gustavus Adolphus and Augs- the victory by outscoring the sults, Minnesota-Morris tripped first round of the Minnesota tic Association Bethel 35-23, St. Cloud stopped State High School League ftate 's state basket- burg. Dragons 33-15 in the second ball tournament Thursday. half. Gustavus Adolphus as Sue wrestling tournament at the Three of the tourney's top Lambert tallied 16 points, and WSC, hosting the 15-team, seeds, however, including de- Karen Feye, a *5-5 freshman University of Minnesota here double Dr. Martin Luther whipped Thursday night. elimination tournament fending champion Mankato from Wells who returned to the in its new Memorial Hall addi- WSC lineup Wednesday after Augsburg 59-21 as Barb Leopold Hoesley, a 98 pounder, whip- State, advanced into today's pumped in 13 points • tion, upset fourth-ranked Moor- second round. ^missing four games becausfe of . ' ped Don Ostlie of Montevideo In Thursday s loser s bracket head State 50-30. Mankato, riding the 15 points an ankle injury, led all scor- ' ' , 13-0 in his first-round match. ers with 13 points. Karen Ries, Minneapolis shellacked Anoka- He was to meet Dan Zilverberg Duluth avenged two defeats of Linda Fredrickson, defeated in regular season play, includ- the team's leading scorer most Ramsey 81-19 as Kathy Andry- of Hopkins Lindbergh in the Anoka-Ramsey 68-25; No. 2 Be- chowicz scored 19 points, Moor- ing one by more than' 20 points, midji getting a dozen of the regular season, chipped second round today. , coun- in eight. head got by Bethel 54-43 as Thursday, Zilverberg pinned when the Bulldogs nipped the ters from Carol Stomberg, University of Minnesota -Sheryl _ Schrage and Miss Miss McLeod had 15 points, and Mark Lorentz of Moorhead, - Min- whipped St. Olaf 48-29 and No. Concordia ousted Augsburg 45- LINK, A 180 pounder, defeat- neapolis 53-51 as Rita Fair- 3 Southwest, \vith 14 points from Ries were WSC's leading re- banks, a 5-1 freshman from bounders with nine apiece. 29 as Miss Nielson and Unken- ed Joe Mogensen of Brainerd Beth Kruger, whipped Concord- holz had lo points each. Brainerd, pumped in a tourna- ia-Moorhead 52-37. 6-2 and was to meet Joel Saturd ay's action will start at Blanchfield of St, James today. 9 a.m. The championship game Blanchfield decisioned Steve is scheduled for 3 p.m. and an Norman of Montevideo Thurs- if-necessary game at 6 p.m. day. Warriors top MoorlioeiJ St. (30) Winona St. (50) The other four area wrestlers, FO FTTP FG FTTP 112-pound John Schwanbeck of Bakko 1 1-1 3 Foyg 5 3-6 11 Back 0 0-0 0 Oandtck 3 0-0 6 La Crescent, 126-pound Earl Morris in the Fafrowlci 0 o-o 0 Schrago 2 1-1 5 Beeson of La Crescent, 132- Fowler 0 00 0 Rio! 2 4*11 1 Gohdci 0 0-1 0 Schult J 1-1 7 pound Dean Wohlers of Caledo- Jacobson 1 0*0 2 Carlson 3 o-o i nia and heavyweight Steve McLeod J 3-4 9 Band* O 0*1 0 Nelson 1 2-5 4 Jack 0 1-2 1 PERFECT FORM . -. Mark Koenig (52), out to be one of the few and far between Scliellsmidt of Caledonia , lost second round Skogstad 0 0-0 0 Reynold! 1 2*2 4 their first-round matches. slandoter 2 0-2 4 Rascob 0 00 o Caledonia's 6-0 junior center, made a quick open shots Caledonia managed to get off Winona State advanced to tho Wobor l oo 6 Schwanbeck was whitewashed 50 pivot and went high in the air over Paul against the Cards' tight defense. Harmony quarter-finals of the Minnesota Dcacrnoll 1 0-0 2 Totali 1*12-13 by Davo Maharas of Moor- Stevens of Harmony for a short-range jump won the game 55-37 for its IBth win in 21 head 12-0; Beeson was pinned Women's Intercollegiate Ath- Totals T2 6-15 30 letic Association's state basket- MOORHEAD « 7 6 »—30 shot in tho second half of the Warriors' Dis- games this season. (Daily News Sports by Mark Roforth of Frazce in WINONA 11 « 15 18-50 Thursday night Photos by Jim Galewski) 1:27; Wohlers was pinned by ball tournament this morning Fouled out—Nona. trict Ono Tournament game with a 39-27 victory over Total fouls—Moorhont! 19, Wlnono 11. State Junior College. It turned Walt Haedt of Mankato in 5:45 Minn- Technical foul—Moorhoid. ct Rochester and Schollsmidt was tripped by esota-Morris. Ron Dahl of Mahnomen 2-1. Karen Feye led WSC with Overall, the 24 qualifiers from 13 points. tho Region One tournament held In other early second-round j yr^P^V in Winona last week fared poor- results from this morning, No. ly, including region champion 1 seed Mankato State beat back Canadian wins figure Albert Len. MInncsota-Dululh 60-41 as Cheryl REGION ONE CHAMPION Engel pumped in a tournament Gone Shaw, a Ofl-pound tltlist high 31 points; St. Cloud State * from Faribault, lost a 4-1 de- upset No. 2 seed Bomidji State I i yi i vt. cision to Rod McNcnl of Minn- 42-39 as Mary LoVassuer tall- skating championship led 14 points, nnd Southwest eapolis Central; Janesville's BRATISLAVA , Czech- sho took golds for winning the They chanted "Janet, Janet" Tom Burke (105) lost a 12-1 Minnesota State stopped Dr. Martin Luther 47-39 as Mary oslovakia (AP) — Canada 's Ka- compulsory figures ond the nnd throw carnations pinched decision to Dennis Bnllccom of from tho arena's decorations Frldloy ; Albert Lea's Dennis Both Kruger netted 13 points. ren Magnusson skated off with frco-skatlng. tho women's world figure skat- onto tho ico when Miss Lynn Cochlln (105) wns beaten by Mankato was to mc-ct WSC was presented her silver med- "WINDY" SENN Bailey of Battle Lake and St. Cloud wns to tnko on ing crown, but tlio runnerup, Miss Lynn, who knocked her- Kurt Janet Lynn of Rockford , 111., al. The U.S. championi nlso won 17-7; Kevin Gunhus of Kenyon Southwest in 2 p.m. games to- self out of contention by fulling finishing "Test drlvo my Torino . . . day, with tho two winners ad- conquered Czechoslovak hearts a silver medal for (112) was decisioned by Doug twice in her short program runnerup in tho compulsory an Intermediate that rides of Canby, D-3; vancing to Saturday 's 9 a.m. with a sensational free skating Wednesday, ska ted Morritt finale, section and a bronze for third nnd drive* liko a full-sizo Rochester John Marshall's somi-finals. triumphantly in the concluding in tho free skating. Sieve Muller (119) won a 5-2 Rita Fairbanks led Duluth Clinching the title with a fotir-minuto free figures for Tho pink-costumed American car." with 14 points, Connlo Krucgnr masterful performance in hor which sho received tho best decision over Ron CnmpJ)# ot . .-- -«¦ •mmmmmaaammmammm.;, ' champion indicated sho was Rapids; Jnnesvlllo's /. . ' ,1 led Bemidji with 14 and Barb concluding routine Thursday point score, including two per- Grand GET THAT REBOUND . . . Mary not completely satisfied with Jack Eustico (119) defeated Nelson (52) of Moor- Leopold led Martin Luther with night Miss Magnusson won the fect six-points ratings from the her showing. "I was happy with TOUSLEY F0RB hoad State and Barb Schutt (21) of Winona Stato 16. title hold for the past two years East"* Gorman and Austrian Kevin Mlnkol of Olivia 9*0; JM's along with tho way I skated. I skated woll, UNCOLN-JVIERCURY (126) lost n 15-tJ three other girls battle for a rebound in their first-round Should' WSC loso this after- by 's Trixlo Sliuba. judges. Jeff Roehrick but I skated bettor at tho U.S. Dealer verdict to .Too Howard of Edi- game of tho Minnesota Women's Intercollegiate Athletic noon , the Warriors would fall The 5-foot-s Wondo from Tho capacity crowd of 11,000 national championship." "Vour Country Stale " into tho loser's bracket and North Vancouver B.C. won in Bratislava 's Winter Stadium son; LeRoy-Oslrnndor'.s Bill El- Association's state basketball tournament nt Memorial Hall , MIRACLE MALL Thursday afternoon. would play at 7 tonight. three gold medals in tho com- reacted with rapture nt tho bal- Ml«n Lynn won tlie U.S. title (Continued on page 51>) WSC won 50-30 ns Karen Feyo dumped All games aro ployed in WSC'a petition. In addition to a gold let-liko freo skating of the for tho fifth consecutive year at Phono 454-5170 MWIAA In 13 points. (Daily News Sports Photo by Jim Galewski) now Memorial Ilnll addition. medal for being first over-all, Roclcford co-ed. Minneapolis in January, s^^^^mWHS, MankatoJ ^fefm^&ffite Bau- iSRIIIS^Si By BUTCH HORN . "WE WANT THAT third for tournament play. lar spots while Gary Ahrens Scott Wolner. Wolner and Big Nine ^wlWffi nW™ Dally News Sports Writer spot," McGee said. "For more "'Mark is out for this week's will again see starting action, man share the scoring lead with page 3b) 3K___PP»Slxi_2___I_3.^^MfiS-^SB »MaFj _!Jils9 With one game to play, the reasons than one. First, we want game, but we hope he'll be but the fifth position is still un- 11 point averages. (Contlnned from Winona High cagers are in third ready for at least some limited decided; to finish third in the conference "Shaw and Kelley will have Mayo and Scott Branstad of place in the Big Nine Confer- action by our first tourney "Our fifth man will be either harder," added ence race, and that's where just for that satisfaction, but game," McGee explained. "He to work a little Austin. ., - second, a three-way tie would John Mueller, Steve Holan or McGee. "It will be up to them coach Dan McGee's charges been , working over at Winona Steve Rompa, the Hawk coach chore. A JUNIOR who intend to stay-. foul up the draw for tournament State to get the ankle back in " to carry the rebounding BERNDT, play and we don't want to get said. "I still don't know for The loss of two starters can t Luke feels is capable of Mankato's Scarlets have other shape, but it takes awhile." sure which one." good, hut the however and will be mixed up in" that." do a team any breaking 23 seconds in the ideas, , In their previous meeting, the pulling togeth- trying to impose their solution The selection of pairings for THE OTHER WINHAWK Haws have been freestyle providing starter sidelined is Dan Has- Hawks enjoyed a 63-50 win and er this week and working even 50-yard on Winona tonight at 8 on their the Class AA Region A tour- strong turn, nament will be made in Ro- kett. The 6-3 senior is still out a 63-31) advantage in rebound- harder than McGee expected. ho gets in a The Wankels are coming own court. make up pacesetter in The Hawks hold a 7-4 loop chester Saturday morning. with a broken bone in his hand, ing, but the overwhelming "We'll just have to should be the THE ROTARY combustion engine — the Wankel — is The Winhawk's sick bay Is but McGee also hopes to have height advantage that was once for our losses with more hustle both the 50 and 100. He's mark, 9-6 overall, are just one he said. taking the sporting world by storm. Several snowmobile game ahead of the Scarlets, still full of walking, or in the him back by tournament time, there has been trimmed. and determination," done 23.1 and 51.0, respec- Wankel engines during this McGee has experimenting have going now manufacturers have been testing 6-5 and 7-9 overall, and a loss case of Mark Richardson, hob- The Scarlets will go with 6-5 "The kids we He'll be threatened season and now word comes that two outboard motor firms in- this week with a new lineup to are very capable and can do tively, could throw the third place bling wounded. Richardson, Bruce Bauman and 6-5 Al Thorn Rob Whit- •— two of the leaders, Johnson and Evinrude — are putting jured in last week's loss to fill in the gaps left by his miss- in the front line, along with 6-1 the job, but there's no getting by the likes of spot into a three-way tie — as- guy of John Wankel-powered outboards Into their 1973 racing lineup. suming Rochester Mayo beats Mayo, is still on crutches as his ing starters. Scott Krueger, while the back- around when you lose a taker and Ed Mazur , but Mc- Glenn Kelley, Tim Shaw and court duties will be handled by who's been getting better than - The rotary combustion engines look much Owatonna tonight to earn a sprained ankle mends Marshall. Gee hopes to have him ready Bob Bestul will return to regu- 6-1 Norris Anderson and 5-8 18 points a game, it hurts." defending like the usual outboard on the outside, but in- share. The other Dave Hepper of side they're all new. champion , John Marshall, has been The Wankels are still In the "experimental clocked at 1:53.3 itt the stages but, no doubt, there will be a production 3 leagues share 200-yard freestyle, which he model in the near future if all goes well. won last year, and at 4:07.3 The Wankels use modern lightweight metals to give in the 400. His closest rival v the engine plenty of power without too much weight — Is expected to be sopho- a boon to anyone who trailers a boat or has to wrestle a s pin highs more Jeff Shugart of Austin good-sized outboard. night with Winona's Mike Murphy From the racing circuit to? the country's lakes will no The Westgate Classic League Fred Hoff also had a 236 in close pursuit. doubt take time; but it's on the horizon. and the Mapleleaf Eagle's game, while Bob Skeels netted Pat Nelson of Austin has League¦ shared the men's bowl- 226—614, Bob Kosidowskl an er- done a 2:10.7 ln the 20O-yard Stooping pretty low ing ¦ honors Thursday night, rorless 210—602 and Duane Kos- Individual medley, which while the Mapleleaf Powder idowski an errorless 563. makes him a slim favorite A TRIO OF AREA fishermen have done their bit to Puff League swept all of the The night's best team game over Magln, and John Speltz degrade sportsmen everywhere and right here especially. women's laurels. was recorded by People's X- of Albert Lea is the project- Two Winonans and a man from Fountain City were re- Greg Bambenek put together Charige in the Eagle's League ed Miiraer in the 100-yard cently disqualified from a fishing derby in Menomonie, back-to-back 234 games to fin- with a 1.074. Bob Ferris had breaststroke on the basis of Wis., because they brought three fish to the contest with them. ish with a night's high 666 er- 244, Bob Winestorfer 614 and his 1:07.5 clocking during The trio were approached by Wisconsin officials and the rorless series to pace Ronnal- West End Greenhouse 2,944. the regular season. evidence was enough to get them disqualified — a couple ly's Restaurant to a 1,016—2,952 In the Powder puff loop, sub- John Marshall's 400-yard of buckets in the back of their truck and three good sized in the Classic League. Team: stitute Dee Walby turned in a fish with Jhe scars of traveling in those buckets. freestyle relay unit has mate Dewey Grossell had a 236 235—562 and teammate Ruth been timed at 3:28.5 and —635 as Ronnally's also turned McManus a 203—564 to pace Winona's less than one sec- The men weren't charged with any legal ln an errorless 1,002 game. Wincraft to 982-2,716. Alayne ond slower. action, but they didn't waste any time getting Lewis had 517,* Barb Gile .512, out of there nor did they deny the charge. Pat Tomashek 504 and Lois THE DIVING competition Eagles Club pin Schacht 504. ls expected to be very close With the prizes awarded at some of the WESTGATE: Pin Drop —Do- •with Glen Howard of John local fishing contests people are tempted, but it tourney to start lores Vaughn had 226, Elaine Marshall, Lee McCaniel and is certainly stooping pretty low to sneak your Smith 524 and Oasis Bar 918— Tom Madura of Austin, and The Minnesota State Eagles fish In beforehand. 2,600. . Carl Taswefl. of Mayo battl- Club Bowling Tournament will Keglerette Ladies — Renee ing it out for the honors. These three would have taken the three get under way at Mapleleaf Streuber's 201—540 pa ced Winona which lost only to top prizes In Menomonie if a sharp official Lanes Saturday at 9 a.m. Hardt's to 954, Elaine Thode defending state champion The tournament — with all hadn't spotted them. had 516, Jan Marquardt 508 and Golden Valley in 11 dual games being rolled on Satur- Winona Truck Leasing 2,626. meets this season, •wound days and Sundays, will continue Action — Bob Larson's 242 up third in las't year's Big The three men are actually lucky. With two of them from through the month of March. paced Bay State Blacks ? 997 72% points. Minnesota, they could have been charged with illegally to Nine meet with Thus far some 120 teams are and Ray Bambenek's 563 pac- Mayo won it with 81% points transporting fish into Wisconsin —• which would put them in entered. "^ violation of both state and federal laws, ^ ed Bay State Boxers to 2,721. and the Rockets were sec- The tournament is open only i, , ¦ ¦ . , ATHLETIC CLUB: Ladies — I . K :**¦:-:¦;-;¦;¦*>¦Y LV:-;-.^ _P I uuwwjuyj 1 M mmvmmissmmmaaI_-WJ * torn n. 11; w i 1 w»*a,t**vww;*:**:v;. m i__»t««!v,c-w((wwsw»i«»«,*. .sv.w*^™™? .»*«». -.«^ M ond with 78. While fishing contests aren't so common from here on to Eagles Club members iii Linda Brokaw's 190, which in- in, there still might be one or two left. And even if there Minnesota. cluded a 6-7-10 split,- led Lan- aren't, you should be thinking about providing for a fair SMOOTH TAKKOFF .. . Randy House of teammates couldn't keep pace with the hot- This weekend, most of the tern Cafe to 872—2,483 and Pat Spring Valley glides up between Steve test next year. teams in action -r- rolling team, Bor- shooting Tigers, who hit 56 percent frcm the Repinski had 455. land (30) and Jeff Olson of Peterson for field, and Spring Valley wound up on the Menomonie Area Warden Joe Pelikan has some advice doubles and singles events — Knights of Columbus — Rev. for those runrdng fishing contests—advice which can prevent will be from Winona, St. Cloud, Robert Stamschror had 203— • an attempted layup in the first half of the short end of a 72-59 score. (Daily News Sports Harmony these things from happening. Faribault Rochester Albert Wolves' District One Tournament game Photo by Jim Galewski) , , 522, Merchants National Bank ¦ One, have the parking area well away from the fishing, • ' A ' 3b) Lea and Alexandria. 905 and Home Furniture 2,578. Thursday night in Rochester. House and his . .. . ** (Continued from page don't allow fishermen to take their vehicles onto the ice. Two, check on what anglers take on the ice. Have a fered in the Tigers' last regular check point in one spot and inspect minnow buckets and other season game, ..finished with 25 gear. The honest anglers won't have anything to hide and Saints suffer 44 defepf points to lead all scorers. Steve you might save yourself a valuable prize for a deserving Sf. Matthew's Olson was next for the win- winner. . '.A - ., ners -with IS, Gudmundson add- ed 14 and Berland netted 12. The Wolves managed to cut record: 15-3 the margin to as few as ten Flying sticks fail io stop Sharks points on two occasions in the After winding up their suc- closing minutes, but that was cessM season, the cagers of Wi- ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Al- ting hit over my back and get- really don't know what hap- hind. the best they could do against Area scoreboard ton White, streaking alone nona s St. Matthew . ting a stick iri my face because pened." the well-composed Tigers, now ' 's Lutheran down the ice toward a World I was at least lo strides ahead Neale said the foulup then oc- 12-9 for the season. p.m. School are savoring their 15-3 Hockey Association hat trick, of everybody else, Neale was still trying to fig- curred when three penalties BASKETBALL Harmony vs. Peterson, 9 p.m. " said White. Sorenson, who proved to be a THURSDAY'S RESULTS DISTRICT THREE overall record. overcame sticks flying out of "I couldn't figure out where ure out how the Saints ended against the Sharks ticked off constant threat to shoot almost MSHSL TOURNAMENTS AT MAYO CIVIC— the Minnesota Fighting Saints' up short handed earlier in the the clock at the same time. DISTRICT ONE- Byron vi. stewartville, 7iJ0 p.m. Under the direction of coach they came from." as soon as he crossed the time Hatmony 55, Caledonia 17. bench. period after a Md brawl that "Both teams were to be short St. charlei vs. Dodge Center/ 9 p.ni Gerald Kastens line, led Spring Valley with 20 Pattrion 72, Spring Vallay if, WIAA TOURNAMENTS , St. Matthew's White was struck over the White's shot would have resulted in referee Brent Cas- two men for five minutes," points, while Randy House waa TODAY'S OAMBS CLASS A finished in the runner-up counted even if he had missed selman issuing 45 minutes in LOCAL SCHOOL— AT MENOMONIE- . spot shoulder and iri the face before Neale said. "Then we would his only teammate in double fig- Winona Hloh af Mankato/ | p.m. Championship game, 7:30 p.m. in the La Crosse Area Lutheran he backhanded the puck into an because of the bench inter- penalties : after both benches have a man advantage for two ures with 14. BIO N1NB- AT LA CROSSE CENTRAL— ference. cleared. minutes. But they let the three Farlbault at Albert Lea. Championship game, 7O0 p.m. School Athletic Conference with empty net to complete a 4-1 Both teams had 35 rebounds, Owatonna at Roth. Mayo. CLASS B victory by the Los Angeles "A stick must have jumped Fights erupted after Min- penalties be served at the same but the Wolves connected on Rid Wing at Rochttter JM. AT OSSEO-FAIRCHILD— a 9-1 mark, just a game behind WIAA RBOIONALS Sharks. out of the racks,' said Harry nesota defenseman Blaine Ryd- time. LA ended up with a man only 28 of Championship game, 7*30 p.m. Bangor. 71 shots from the CLASS A AT CASHTON— "I couldn't believe I was get- Neale, Saints' interim coach. "I man was pulled down from be- advantage for five minutes. floor for 40 percent. AT MBNOMONIE- Championship game, 7*39 p.m. The LALSAC includes II Ntw Richmond vs. Hudson, 7 p.m. AT GLENWOOD CITY— "Casselman is a senior offi- Spring Valley concluded Its River Falli vt, Durand, ttio pxn. Championship game, 7:30 p.m. teams with representatives cial and one of the better ones, season with a 6-13 mark. AT LA CROSSE CENTRAL- <£-, Caledonia (37) Holmen vi, O-E-T, 7 p.m. from Bangor, West Salem, Tom- but he turned us off tonight. He Harmony (55) Central vi. Login, 8:30 p.m. wouldn't check with the time- FO FTTP PO FTTF* CLASS D ah, Sparta and three contin- Birkeland A 0-0 6 Pa.siivam 3 l-l ' t AT OJSEO PAIRCHILD- Sam Houston is keeper or the scorer. We asked Ocninur O 0*0 0 Janskl I 1-4 11 Arkaniaw v». independent*, 7 p.m. gents from La Crosse making Jacksonville; Marquette him four or five times to check. Koenig i o-O 4 Hulchor o 2-1 2 Alma va. Fall Cratk, tlio p.m. Hull a 1-2 17 Erkkior-1 t 0-1 la AT CASHT0N- still No. 1 in AP up the Wisconsin bracket and His conscience must be both- McMnlmm 3 o-O t j.Belnghm 3 M t Hlllibors vt. W»if Salem, 7 p.m. squads from Lewiston Winona ering him-he should have given Ballard o o-o 0 slkklnk 9 1-1 11 Blair vi. New Lisbon, Siso p.m. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , , Johnson 0 oo o D.Belnghm J 2-2 t AT QLBNWOOD CITY- Tha Top Ten College Division basket* Caledonia and Nodine repre- me five misconducts the way I Burg 0 00 0 Schrooder O O-O 0 collax vi, Proscott, 7 p.m. boll looms, with flrat-placa voloi In par* senting Minnesota. talked to him." Scblobtr o 0-0 0 Ph.Slavons O 0-0 0 Elmwood vi. Alloona, eijo p.m. . enthosos, soaion records and total polnli. After finishing bids The Sharks, after goals by Dihnlng O 0-0 0 Scheevel 1 0-0 2 MSHSL TOURNAMENTS playoff Sullivan o o-o o . Polnli tabulated on -basis ot JO-18-16-14- the regular gef NCAA DISTRICT ONE 11*10 otc.i season schedule, St. Matthew's By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS and only Southwestern Loui- cruiting violations. USL ls cur- White and Fred Speck, took a Schmllz o o-o o Totals 13 M5JJ AT ROCHESTER JC- 1. Sam Houtfon SI. (10) 24-0 7U 2-1 edge into the third period. Klein l o-o l Preiton vi. LeRoy-Ostrander, 70S p.m 2. Augustana, III n*t ire also finished second in the con- "Sure we'd love to play siana is a member of a confer- rently embroiled in a court Dlbloy o 00 o Lawljlon vi. Chatfield, 9 p.m. White 9. Philadelphia Textile 33*1 134 ference tournament — again to UCLA, said Jacksonville Coach ence—the Southland, which 's power play goal made DISTRICT THREB 4. Stephen F. Austin 34*3 lie " fight over answering charges it 3-1 and he completed the Totals 18 1-2 37 AT MAYO CIVIC- 5. Assumption, Mass 10*2 114 Bangor. Tom Wasdin, echoing the senti- doesn't automatically get a bid hat CALEDONIA 7 a a 14-37 Kaiion-Manlorvllla vi. Pint Wand,, 6. Roanoke 20*4 ti Mike Klebig led the Winonans ments of all nine coaches to the playoffs, known as the that it offered to pay players trick with his 21st goal of the HARMONY 12 17 17 9-51 7i30 p.m. 7. Wls.-Enu Clalra 203 114 recruiting season in the final minute. Fouled out—Nono. Dover-Eyola vs. Plainview, 9 p.m. ». Kentucky SI. 19-4 31 in scoring with 137 points in tho whose teams got at-Iarge (bids UCLA Invitational' in some cir- and committed other Total fouls—Caledonia 1!, Harmony 5. SATURDAY'S OAMBS ». Akron 1B*4 3] 10 league games while Tim for the National Collegiate Ath- cles. violations. "We were still In the MINN. INTBRCOLLEOIATE- io. La. Tech l«-7 24 For veteran Coach Frank game Pitorson (72) Spring Vallay <5») Concordla at St. John's. Others rocolvlnrj votes, listed alpha* Beckendorf also posted a better letic Association basketball when tho score was 2-1 whether FO FTTP FOFTTP Hamllno al Ouslavus Adolphui. bollcallyi Btoomsburg The UCLA Bruins have won it norland i State; C. W. Post) than 10-point per game average playoffs. "It would mean we'd McGuire of South Carolina , we deserved to be or no," said o-o 11 Sorenson 10 0*0 20 Macalester al Mlnn.-Duluth, Capital, Ohio) Coo Collogo) Fairmont the tournament six straight "was like getting a bowl In- Oudmndsn 7 0014 Ku.Welis 4 0 0 I NONCONFERENCE— State; Oulllord; Hastings, Nob.; Ken- in loop competition. be in the/NCAA final." - Neale, •'We didn't, but we were Johnson l 0-0 4 House 7 0-1 14 Harding at Austin. times, and seven out of tho last tucky Wosloyon; Lonolr Rhyno; Mary, St. Matthew's led the confer- Major college basketball's vitation in college football." and if we miss the playoffs by S.Olson 7 1-1 IS Ko.Welse 1 1-1 4 Owatonna at Columbia Holghla. mount, Kan.; Norlhwostori), Iowa; St. ence in both offense and de- eight years, and aro heavily fa- The National Invitation Tour- J.OIson 12 1-7 2S Vlkso o O-o o MSHSL TOURNAMENTS Mary's, Tox.» St. Thomas, Minn.) Soulh playoffs began to take shape vored again this year. UCLA, a point wo can look back at this Oenson ooo o Oelt|en 4 0-0 I DISTRICT ONE Dakota; South Dakota Stale; southeast- fense, scoring an average cf Thursday as Jacksonville and nament, held at Madison game and wonder what would Crimes o o-O o Anderson J 1*2 3 AT ROCHESTER JC- ern Louisiana; Southern Colorado State; however, hasn't wrapped up the Square Garden in New York, O.Agrlmsn 1 0-0 i Ness o 0-0 o Sprlng Orov* vs, Orand Meadow, 7ilS UC-Rlversldei Xavlcr, La. 46.5 points a game while giv- eight other schools were tapped have happened if we would Pacific-8 championship but Dame Virginia Morsi l 0*0 2 ing up an average 22,5 a game. by the NCAA. tabbed Notre , have scored iri the time we Totals 35 2-8 72 Baker 0 0-1 0 that's considered a mere for- Tech and American University missed. Eight of the teams are in The mality. " Totals H 3*7 5» Associated Press Top Twenty on Thursday. Tho remainder of The game was played under PETERSON 14 14 IS H-7J Tho other ranked teams join- the 16-team field will ho an- SPRING VALLEY 12 14 14 17-51 ing No. 10 Jacksonville and No. protest by Minnesota, pulled Fouled out—None. nounced next week. tho Sharks into a tie for third Total louts—Peterson I, Spring Valley 11 Southwestern Louisiana were In the WHA-West with the 10. ' ' No. 5 Marquette , No. 8 Hous- Saints with 65 points each. Wabasha s Metz ton , No. 6 Providence, No. 17 Hawk girls fall The Saints entertain New St. John's of New York, No. 19 England Sunday nifiht while South Carolina and No. 14 Syr- RED WING, Minn. — Red Los Angeles left to play Winni- fo All-Centennial acuse. Wing topped Winona High 30-30 peg tonight. Wabasha 's Dave Metz, a 6-0 Unranked Oklahoma City in the final regular season girls' Bob MacMlllan scored Min- senior, was named to tho All- rounded out tho aUarge teams. basketball game here Thursday. nesota's only goal In tho first Centennial Conference basket- Syracuse, St. John's and Winona , 0-5, was led by Deb- period. ball team this week. Providence wcro assigned to bie Sporlcder with 22 points. Los Angeles goalie George the Eastern Regionals opening Centennial *. champion Adams Red Wing's B squad also won, Gardner was struck in the fore- placed four 'on the team, includ- round. Marquette and Jackson- 38-20, head by a puck and taken to a ing Most Valuable Player Kevin ville went to tho Mideast with Winona will enter the Big hospital to close a gash and re- Volght. Others were Lowell Lar- South Carolina selected for the Nine tournament at Austin ceive treatment for a possible son, Mark Arvold and Bofo May. Midwest with Southwestern Tuesday. concussion. Tho rest of Ihe all-conference Louisiana nnd Houston. Okla- ta First Period-), Mlnneiota, MacMlllan homa City will play in the 11 (Morrison, Ball) tits, Penalties—Nia- AL MORKEN squad included Rose Creek's kamp, LA, «i02; Arbour, Min, Diss *. Ball, Tom Felton and Rick Stroup, West. Engle to NFL Hall Min, ViV, Second Parlod-7, Los Asigetei, White "I have a terrific selection of Elgln-Mlllvillc'B Rnndy Meyers, NEW YORK (AP) - Charles 19 (Venorimo) Me. 3, loi Angeles, Couch Al McGiiIro of Mar- Speck is Morcurys in stock nnd ready Clnromont's Len Schmoll and quette said it didn 't matter to "Rip" Englo, tho former head (Hyndmon, NIotKorrm) 11,20. Penalties—None. for delivery. Compare to any- Doug Stangl, Randolph's Leo him which team tho Warriors football coadh at Brown and Third Perlod-4, Loi Anrjoloj, Vlhlla 20 Volkert nnd Lylo s Kevin Wild- Penn (OdrovuW) 4*07, i, Lo» Anoales* Whila 21 thin , on tho rond , nt nny ' faced. "Onco tho tournament State who novcr suffered (Vennruiio) 19*25. Panamas* — Ollmoro, er, the loop's lending scorer comes, the only thing to worry a single losing season in his 16 LA, minor-major, «0|IJ/ Siura, LA, mai- price I" with n 19.3 average. years with Penn , waa named to or, 00*12/ sailor, A, douhlo minor, ml** about is Injuries. You just shoot conducl, ooilJ) Gardner, LA, OOill* Rvd-.- Honorable mention Included the works." tho National Football Hall of man, Min, major, 00i12* Arbour, MJn, JUST A GAME A WAY . . . These Claremont's John Gillard Wab- Fame. ma|or, ooillj Mccartan, Min, mlnor-mal- cafiers Kim Troko, Greg Ambuhl and Keith Buswell. , Marquette has never gotten or, OOiU; MacSwoyn. LA, ISiOJ, TOUSLEY FORK from St. Matthew's Lutheran School were just Standing: Coach Gerald Kastens, Ronald asha's Jeff Hnnson , Lyle's Jeff out of the Mideast Regionals. Shots on anal byi IINCOLN-MERCURY a game away from a championship In the Nelson, Rose Creek's Tim Cress, Officials nt Southwestern Ponn Stale's record - setting L05 ANOBLES -fa 10 »-J« Smith, Pat Moline, Jim Moline, Tim Becken- MINNESOTA 0 7 IJ_3O "Your Country Style Randolph's Ed Gergen, Elgin- Louisiana snld tho ooallnt** LOI Denier" La Crosse Area Lutheran School Athletic dorf , Miko Klebig, Bob Matzke and Joel invitation footiball placeklckcr tho last — Annol-is, Gardner and oil- Millvlllo 's Roger Gusa , Fari- wns especially meaningful in three low- Minnesota. McCnrtan. MIRACLE MALL Conference, finishing with a fl-1 record. Kneel- Dorn. (Daily News Sports photo) years was Alberto Vitlello Store hy periods. bault Deaf's Mike Cashman and view of pressures caused by 125 of East Meadow. N.Y., a na- LOS ANODLGS 0 J 1-4 from left aro: Jay Dado Wally Nelson MINNESOTA Phono 454-5170 ing, , , , ¦fazoppa'a Dan Tollman. alleged charges of NCAA re- tive of Naples, . 1 0 0—1 A-5.ni. *-—_-______Livestock Stock market SOUTH ST PAUL, Minn. {AP) — (USDA) — cattle and calves 4.h)0; small Scoreboard supply slaughter steers and heifers stea- dy to weak Friday; cows most IK 50 Wflh- ar; bulls and vealers steady. Milwaukee 114, New York 110. Choice 1000-1275 Ib slaughter steers COLLEGE BASKETBALL TODAY'S OAMES THURSDAY'S RESULTS 43.00--U.j0; load mostly average choice Seattlo at Buffalo. still uncertain EAST— 1275 lbs 44.50; choice 850-1050 lb slaugh- Want Atlanta at Philadelphia. Ads Manhattan 77, W. Virginia M. NEW YORK (AP) The ter betters 42.25-43.50; utility and com- Kansas City-Omaha at Ooldin Stile, — mercial slaughter cows 31,00-34.50; few Colgate 73, Fatrlolgh Dickinson 14. Chicago at Los Angelei. SOUTH— stock market continued to re- 35.00; cutter i9.50-32.50) canner 34.50- Cleveland at Portland. 29.50| ullllty and commercial slaughter Marshall 77, Samford 15. Boslon at Detroit. Oeorgitown, D.c. 64/ St. Mary Mr) spond uncertainly today to the bulls 35,00-41.00; few commercial 42.00- Start Here ' s, SATURDAY'S OAMES 43.00) cutter 33.00-35.00; choke vealers 43. . Baltimore at New York, dollar crisis abroad NOTICB Louisiana SI. 54, Mississippi tt. Jt as prices 59.00-68.CO; prime up to 74.00; good 51.00- Houston at Atlanta. 50.00. Louisville (9, Tulsa (2. Seattle at Detroit. fluctuated for the second This newspaper will be responsible for - Okla. city 17, St. 71. Chicago at Golden Stat*, Hogs. 6,500; barrows and olltt 25 to only one Incorrect Insertion of any MIDWEST- SUNDAY'S OAMES straight session. mostly 50 higher; trading active; 1-2 190- classified advertisement published in SI. Louis 85/ Bradley 71. New York vs. Baltimore at College Thft noon Dow Jones average 250 Ibs 39.50-39.75; 1-3 190*250 lbs 39.00-* the Want Ads section. Check your ad Northern Michigan 70, WIsconsln-MI! Park, Md., afternoon. 39.50) 2*4 250-2S0 Ibs 38.25-39.25) sows and call 453-3331 If • correction mutt waukee 61. Philadelphia at Atlanta, afternoon. fully steady; 1-3 300-400 Ibs 34.50-35.50; be made. NAIA District 14 Quarterfinals of 30 industrials was up .15 to Milwaukee at Houston/ afternoon. . few under 300 lbs 35.00; 1-3 400-400 Ibs Wls.-Groen Bay 75, Racine 20. Buffalo at Boston. 949.80 after plummeting more 32.50*34.75; boars fully steady. Lakeland 62, WIs.-Parkslde 55. Chicago at Phoenix. Sheep 700; trading moderately active, SOUTHWEST— Cleveland at Los Angoles. than io points an hour earlier. steady; choice and prime 90-110 lb wooled BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR*** Sam Houston

¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ . ' ¦ . • . - ; ; — - . : _- ''_. . • •¦ ; _ II 11

PEANUTS By Charles Schult

Walktr BEETLE BAILEY By iVtert BLONDIB By Chick Young

Capp LI'L ABNER By Al REDEYE By Gordon Bess

STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Laswell

- ' " ¦ ¦ ' I ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦! ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦•¦ ¦¦ -¦ *.!¦ l ¦ ' . ' I M I ¦¦' —IBi-li™—1 I I ' l 1 ' " *¦ * 'I' M. I J - ' ''* *¦-**¦•_ 1 " J> ' " — — 1- i ' .,. ' "T |

B Bud Blake APARTMENT S By Alex Kohky TIGER y

_. ' • ' - ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ^ _ ._ ' i ? .

REX MORGAN, M.D. By Dal Curtis THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart

MARY WORTH „ By Saunders and Ernst

DENNIS THE MENACE GRIN AND BEAR IT

mm—¦———___——.«,-—_ —,— ¦

NANCY ' By Ernie Bushmlller

'I "Ai you can soe> Roscoo believes in being his own GUESS WINTER MUST # ALMOSTOVER, /MLSQN sturit manf., .. . " ASKH) ME WHEN WE WERE G0W* ON WR MCMOM! *