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Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

5-8-1972

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Silver mine I On the inside: I Crucial' meeting b^ 4 ltyicitfiitciii -McGovern delegates from Wisconsin to the If |§ filSvOnain Democratic National Convention have : % t chosen their roster amid signs of intraparty discord — story, missing now f ¦ ' ¦ p I page 2a. : s ' • . . • : | ;

d IfliniiAeAla Minnesota Republicans have selected the .If §: minnvSUia Ee.v. Philip Hansen to oppose Sen. Waiter Nixon calls top advisers § number 58 story, page 2a. (AP) 4 F- Mondale in his bid for reelection — | By GAYLORD SHAW Today's meeting comes precisely two weeks before Nixon KELLOGG, Idaho - pA' ' ¦:¦¦/- , A'A ' k Officials of the nation's richest WASHINGTON ! which have frustrated the promise of the Model Cities pro- . f| to return to the United States for the session. leader Leonid Brezhnev. Kissinger's secret Moscow journey came after "an exhaustive £* gram — story, pa^e 4a. ¦ ¦ ¦ . &. There was no official indication of whether the Presi- was followed a week later by a quick, clandestine trip to name-by-name study ef the t$ • ' • ¦ ¦ ;» II : ' . ¦ • ' . ¦& dent had already m ade his decision, or whether he was still Paris where he met with North Vietnamese negotiator I* company's personnel list." The Wabasha area school system tonight wilt p considering a set of options designed to stem the current Due Tho. -A. ^ WahackaWlaUaotta | Chase said the number of | get its report card from ftie state Department | North Vietnamese¦ offensive and begin meaningful Vietnam Two days after that of Education and indications are grades will not be high '¦ ¦' the United States and South Vietnam |* % peace talks. - for the second time suspended the public peace talks. confirmed dead from the fire enough to pass — stories, page 5a; §§ '¦ which broke out in the mine ff ' . ,• The options reportedly range from a naval blockade of HANOI BOMBED A :..". Another link between the Soviets and the Vietnam situa- last .; Tuesday remains at 35. Haiphong Harbor to renewed bombing of military targets in |i -A . new ' - book ' -by a top-level communist de- f! U.S, Navy planes from car- the Hanoi and Haiphong areas to possible dispatch of Marines tion is the steady supply of equipment that Moscow has sent One hundred and eight men es- Micellae to Hanoi. : J| IflloollcS fector quotes Anastas Mikoyan as saying ih' fl riers in the Tonkin Gulf now on Navy ships in the China Sea to protect U.S. installa- caped. | | 1S62 that the Cuban missile buildup was designed to change || Meanwhile bombed targets on the edge tions and troops in the beleaguered Hue region. When the Soviet Union said four of its ships were damaged || , a power failure || the world's balance of power — story, page 10a. % 1 ' ' ' during U.S. ' Security- Council meets irregularly and bombing ' ' —-The- National ' " ' ' ' ra ids on Haiphong Harbor ' ' ¦ ' month ago ' a ¦ " —Several , %' ¦ • ' of Hanoi today. discovery of ¦ delayed the fate of • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • . . . •¦ ¦% the missing men, who have . : • . . . . :• North Vietnamese MIGs only when major decisions are. in.tie making. Its staff is Washington replied that any such damage was regrettable, H"-'tf anM«fju Wisconsin Democrats are describing Sen. A! headed by presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger and its if it -in fact occurred. But the State Department been unheard from since the IVGniittUy President" were reported shot down, added that p Ted Kennedy as a 'Jluture m wake i members include the secretaries of State and Defense,. the ''countries which supply offensive weapons equipment to the fire started; ^and smoke arid %. of his weekend vi sit to the Dairy State — story, page 12a. „ according ; to American carbon monoxide gas filled the vice president, the chairman of the J»int Chiefs of Staff , and North Vietnamese and enable them to mount an invasion, of IA v v sources. (AP Photofax) mine; mmmmmsmmtf *&:vr . <'~ A ," the director of the Central Intelligence Agency.: South Vietnam share responsibility." ^ Chase said Sunday the power outage and an exhaustfan mal- function which allowed some Ha ndling of clash is key buildup of fumes near the shaft ended hope of progress before today. Outside the mine, families of the missing continued their vig- India, Pakistanseem Planes fly il into the sixth day, holding on to a weakening thread of hope that the men still are alive. The Steel Workers of Amer- serious about peace ica, which represents most of : the cease-fire line but con- the miners here, said it.is NEW DELHI «? — The softening of belligerent pub- ask- lic statements , and a cease- ceded ''this kind of thing is raids border clash on ing its president to use his in- handling of a ¦ ' fire 36 hours after the fight- likely to arise again . -. ' . . . fluence" to obtain a congression- in Kashmir this weekend ' ' ing began. ' -. when jou confront each oth- al investigation of the tragedy. : provided.clear evidence that er in an eyeball-Ao-eyeball Frank S. McKee, director of Field commanders in the the Indian .and" '.' Pakistani situation." the ; union's western district, . region of northern Kashmir said the company had given its governments are serious about 40 miles northeast of The r estraint on both sides miners inadequate Jnowledge about discussing peace. Srinagar were ordered to is an apparent attempt not to jeopardize the peace talks HanoiSAIGON (AP) "We agree oh the hotline settle the squabble without - U.S. war- the Hanoia arearea since April 16 of escape routes and in- 1 In- adequate self-rescue not to aggravate this one further hostilities. Both between. Prime Minister planes returned to the Hanoi were ordered by President Nix- ¦ ¦ ¦ equip- dira Gandhi and Bhutto that ment. V ' . A ' with press releases," a high- sides were believed to have area today for UIL first time in on. They were launched about ranking Indian army officer pulled back to their, previous are planned for late this midmorning, a few hours be- said Sunday. "It'i better. positions along the cease- month or early June. three weeks and bombed fuel fore Nixon was to meet with Simple economics We decided to work it out fire line established in the Kashmir has been the and supply depots and other the National Security Council in among ourselves,. : without December war. chief issue between India military targets on the edges of Washington to discuss actions ¦ Sign at an FTP florist: involving outsiders." In past years, a clash of and Pakistani since Its Hin- the North Vietnamese capital, that might slow the 40-day-old 'Give your wife flowers on A seldom-used direct tele- such magnitude would likely du ruler joined the state to reliable American sources re- North Vietnamese offensive in her birthday — you won't phone link between head- have had very serious re- India in 1947 even though ported. South Vietnam and force Hanoi have to buy her a pocket- quarters of the opposing percussions. But "it looks Moslems outnumber Hindus The U.S. Navy planes from to enter into meaningful peacs book to match it" , . . A armies was put into opera- like they're playing it down two to one in Kashmir. carriers in the Tonkin Gulf shot negotiations. lush explained why he nev- Pakistan seized control of tioii Saturday after public as a minor local skirmish," down several North Vietnamese On the" battlefronts in South er drinks ialone: "I need charges and countercharg- one Western diplomat said. 32,430 of the state's 85,000 MIG interceptors, the sources someone to tell me when square miles in 1948, but the ¦¦' ¦ Vietnam, North Vietnamese es over artillery" and infan- "That a . good sign. " said. . troops poured hundreds ef I've had enough." try clashes in the contested President Zulfilar Ali Indian army took 480 square miles of this back in the De- The U.S. Command said rt shells into bases in the cental (For more laughs see region on Friday. Bhutto of Pakistan accused * highlands, and fighting erupted Earl Wilson on Page 4a) The result was a quick India of serious violations of cember warA would have no immediate com- BEGGING VETERAN ¦;. , . Amid the bustle of S'aigon, a ment, nor was there any report anew for control of Highway 14 South Vietnamese veteran: of the war squats begging from of U.S losses between Pelidu and Konturn. passing Sunday strollers. (AP Photofax) Sources said the first raids on The northernmost defense line 20 miles north of Hue con- die tinued to hold. llPOWi . A U.S. officer said that American planes have knockdd out all 20 bridges along High- in rebellion Saigon forces feel way 1 in the 30 miles between the northern defense line and the demilitarized zone. Informants said U.S. fighter- in S. Vietnam bombers have been averaging they can repel raid about 125 strikes per day. over SAIGON (AP) — Thirteen northern bat- North Vietnam. prisoners of war were killed By PETER ARN'ETT confident they can ring the mitted to the and alarms bells when the en- tlefields. Many of them are The North Vietnamese For- and 56 wounded in a brief HORST FAAS emy makes his move. taking crippling casualties. eign Ministry said U.S. planes weekend rebellion at South While the militia forces Some of the troops always bombed six North Vietnamess Vietnam'6 largest POW camp SAIGON (AP) — An eerie seen) well geared to alert stationed around Saigon are provinces Sunday, coming with- calm prevails in the bus- in 50 on Phu Quoc Island , govern- Saigon to a massive infiltra- tied up in the stalemated miles , of Hanoi and Hai- tling villages and market tion attempt, they are siege of An Loc, 60 miles phong and causing extensive ci- ment military spokesmen said towns around Saigon. no match for regular North north of the capital. Holding vilian casualties and damage. Monday. . Extensive visits to the Vietnamsee infantry and out in An Loc is being pre- The report broadcast hy Ra- Two officers and two military half dozen provinces sur- sophisticated weaponry. The sented as a victory for the dio Hanoi , said factories, police guards also were report- rounding the South Vietnam- enthusiasm of the militia- South Vietnamese Army. schools, markets, and agricul- ese capital indicate It is not men is new, but their little But some American observ- tural copperntives were hit ini ed injured in the disturbance. an immediate target . outposts look like relics of ers fear that this grinding Ninh Binh , Thanh Hoa, Nghe They had entered ore of the But for the first time in the days long ago when the action has sidelined the divi- An , Ha Tinh , Nam Ha and dormitory buildings to make a several years the North loca l Viet Cong fought with sions that may some day Quang Binh provinces. and check and were jumped and Vietnamese Army — t h e homemade shotguns soon be needed in Saigon. Another Hanoi broadcast NVA — has almost free rein punjl stakes. One colonel who fought as claimed that five U.S. planes beaten by prisoners. The big question mark in along Other guards outside fired over the Cambodian pro- a captain 10 vears ago were shot down Saturday and vinces to the west and the case of a conventional at- the Saigon River has walked Sunday. warnings shots but could not unpopulated jungles to the tack on Saigon is whether over this same battleground stop the disturbance, so they U.S. B52 bombers continued North that have been the the government has the re- numerous times since then. hammering at enemy targets fired on the prisoners, the traditional staging areas serves available and the spokesmen said. "I just flew over a cou- across South Vietnam. Ground for attacks on Saigon . ability to commit them im- ple of bunkers that we tried troops who went into RETREATING FROM QUANG TRI . . . attacks. Troops are also loaded inside com- • Earlier in the day, there was mediately. ond B52 The enemy's intentions to blow up on New Year's target area in the Mekong directl truck. Civilian a minor confrontation between Del- South Vietnamese soldiers climb aboard a mandeered bus y behind arc just not known, All is "At the time of the Tet night 1968," he said . "When ta reported indications that 100 truck on Route 1, sixteen miles north of Hue, refugees, and a few soldiers are on foot at several prisoners and guards guess work. Since the big offensive in 1968 wc had 4!) I was back with the U.S. when the POWs refused to go enemy were killed . during retreat from Quang Tri City aban- right. (AP Photofax ) reduction in American forc- American infantry battali- 1st Division we bulldozed The South Vietnamese* to their assigned area of the ons available to rescue Sai- com- doned earlier under heavy North Vietnamese es, there has been a great the place. I just saw the mand reported a "slight camp. setback in the gathering of gon ," said an American ad- bunkers right back in tho in- I Phu Quoc, located 10 miles crease" Jn enemy activity near intelligence. viser. "Now they 're a I 1 same spot, but the trouble Hue. off the coast in the Gulf of Whatever the timetable, gone." is no friendlies ever go near Advisory groups Thailand , houses about 26,000 American advisers and At this very moment , al- them now." Sporadic clashes continued prisoners of war , almost all of South Vietnamese officials most a 11 national reserve north of Saigon on the way to them North Vietnamese. in the protective belt of pro- troops — the airborne and (Continued on page 12a, col, 2) besieged An Loc, and An Loa vinces around Saigon feel marine divisions — are com- SAIGON FORCES itself was heavily shelled. Committee reform sought What will Nixon do? Bv CARL C. CRAFT Operations Committee un- ing from 2,600 to 3,200. Small-scale WASHINGTON (AP) - covered an uncontrolled and Over-all , investigators fig- Who knows what advisory essentially unrecorded popu- ured the annual cost to the panels are in bureaucratic lation explosion of advisory taxpayers at $75 million . shadows whispering infor- committees throughout the The proposed new law violence felt Suspense in Washington thick mation in government ears? federal bureaucracy. aims to end secrecy, prolif- The public doesn't now, but The panels have spread eration , duplication and Bv LEWIS GULICK military step-up in Vietnam, so presidential determination to bombing, re-introduction of would under a proposed new so far and so deep lhat offi- wasted effort. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sus- j he wanted the Secretary of bar the invaders from taking new combat troops or major law opposed by the admin- cials could supply Congress There would be a two- in N. Ireland pense and speculation as to i State on hand. over the South by force. diplomatic moves designed for istration. with no precise tally on year self-destruct mechan- BELFAST, Northern Ireland "what will Nixon do" hung —Nixon still intends to keep Nixon has warned Hanoi and , a new peace offer in Moscow. Are costly reports simply them with estimates rang- ism to do away with un- (AP) — Scattered small-scale thick over Washington today as his Moscow visit date two in a more veiled way, the So- White House sources have re- filed and forgotten, does necded boards after their violence continued throughout the President convened the Na- weeks hence. Otherwise he viet Union, He has beefed up minded newsmen thnt Nixon anyone keep track of who work is done. bloodstained Northern Ireland tional Security Council under would have called off the re- American air power in South- has taken surprising and studies what , do old boards Man held in stabbing 0MB officials testified Sunday night , and the British extraordinary circumstances. mainder of Rogers* talks with east Asia. He briefly reopened seemingly drastic measures on hang on after their jobs are dea th in St Paul against the legislation. They government was reported be- One of the extraordinary cir- the European allies, which the Paris talks last week the international scene in the done , is thera any follow-up said that , while they agree coming reconciled to the possi- cumstances was Nixon's mid- ' were scheduled as a prelimi- and dispatched adviser Henry past , ranging from the U.S. on proposals of president- ST. PAUL, Minn, CAP) - St. with its general objective, bility of United Nations inter- stream Interruption of William nary to the U.S.-Soviet sum- A. Kissinger to see North Viet- push into Cambodia to last ial panels? Paul police were holding a man they advocate arlmmistrJi- vention If the province's Protes- P. Rogers' European journey mit. nam's Le Due Tho. summer 's emergency economic, These and other problems in connection with the stabbing tive action instead of a new tants take up arms against the so the Secretary of State could ! But this admittedly was spec- But the President has yet to steps. Involving the power and per- law. Roman Catholic minority . attend the top-level policy par- ulation. The few insiders specify lust what he would do If Whether this signal from tho formance of governmental death of a 47-year-old St. Paul A 7-year-old boy Ihrew an ley, directly privy to Nixon 's think- 0MB hu been promising the invasion continues and (he White House is Just more psy- advisory groups are ad- man. a directive for m ore than acid bomb nt an army scout Since Rogers indicated he In- ing weren't talking. peace talks broke down, us dressed in legislation due lo Authorities said Donald L. two years and has assigned car in Belfast , burning one sol- tends to hurry right back to The suspense has been build- they have. And with small mili- chology aimed at keeping reach the House floor for McLafferty was dead on arrival just one man to the mnn- dier 's face, The soldier was not Europe afterwards, this ing up with each report of fur- tary measures seemingly in- Hanoi and Moscow wary, or action Tuesday. at a St . Paul hospital Saturday nf"i"fi j °b, operations com- hurt badly. spurred speculation that: ther North Vietnamese ad- sufficient to turn the tide, the means Nixon will soon take far- During lengthy investiga- night following a fight at a tav- mittee chairman Cliet Holi- Two boys were wounded by —Nixon is shaping a new di p- [ vances into South Vietnam and Nixon watchers are guessing reaching action , is part of the tions, the House Government ern. field said. gunfiret In Belfast. lomatic move along with any I White House declarations of about big moves: stepped-up suspense and speculation. Others go as expected GOP endorses minister to mn I TOTE N TRAVEL By TBE ASSOCIATED PRESSa^did not want the endorsement. Richard Nolan, 28, Little J Minnesota Republicans have Hansen's endorsement means Falls, was named by 6th Dis- ^^ ¦elected the Rev. Philip Han- he will get party funds and rec- trict DFLers in Montevideo, : A ^ Ben, a Lutheran minister and a ognition as the preferred candi- Sunday, to run against in- novice politician, to oppose Sen. date. His actual nomination for cumbent Rep. John Zwach. No- : Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn. the November election requires lan is a state representative THIS SUMIVI ER - . Hansen's endorsement came that he win in the Sept. 12 pri- and an instructor at St, John's ^M |# ^/ : at a special GOP State Con- mary in case some other Re- University, Collegeville. vention Sunday at St. Cloud publicans also file. Allan H. Davisson, 32, was A -A ;: : W called solely to give the Re- picked by 5th District Republi- ^ Hansen, -tt, is a native of Mi- cans in Minneapolis to oppose publican candidate an early laca and lives in Roseville, start in his campaign against Rep. Donald Fraser in Novem- Married and the father of two, ber. Davisson has taught at the popular Mondale. he has headed an alcohol and Other congressional endorse- Augsburg and Macalester Col- drug treatment unit at North- leges. ments went as expected at par- western Hospital in Minneapolis across ty district conventions for the past two years. Delegates to the 2nd District the state during the weekend. convention at New Ulm chose - He told delegates he can be a rlK5T . ¦>' ' : Hansen, who said he lost 28 Charles Turnbull, an adminis- - '^. ' ' pounds while trying to gather "cohesive element" in Min- trator at the state hospital at ip |^^ support over the past weeks, nesota and blamed Mondale for St. Peter, to oppose Republican ¦ ¦ 1 : was endorsed on the seconds being a polarizing influence. He Ancher Nelsen. WmE0^^B^: also charged that Mondale is a NATIONAL ' ballot. Democrats supported in- down-the-liiie voter for organ- He gathered 923 votes to 492 cumbent Congressmen1 Joseph ized labor for James Hill, Duluth, and 7 . Karth in the 4th District, Fra- for Ronald J. Kelly, Apple Val- Hill, 38, a computer salesman ser in the 5th and John Blatnik ley. Hansen needed 890 votes, for the IBM Corp., won support in the 8th. DFLers have no can- or 60 per cent . of those attend- largely from the counties of the didate against Republican Al- ing the convention. 8th District. After - Hansen's bert Quie in the 1st. First ballot voting gave Han- vote had cleared the 60 per sen 825, Hill 557 and Key 30 cent hurdle, Hill moved to Republicans In the 3rd Dis- with 72 abstentions. make it unanimous. trict endorsed Rep. . William The Choice of Hansen came The GOP also endorsed P. Frenzel for a second term, only after an unsuccessful bid Kenneth Peterson, Minneapolis, Former Minnesota Atty. Gen. by some delegates to draft for . reelection to the Minnesota Douglas Head stepped back GOP National Committeeman Public Service Commission. He into politics when he was elect- Vl^y 'lA^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^AX^A. ¦ ¦ ' '^^flB ^^^'' *^ ^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ E - ^^^^^ B^^^^^ H^HB^B^ffWBm ^E^^^^Ky CjME-.-:^^^^^^^^ ' ' ed an alternate the national WieBm/A^mTamV^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^A^AwA^A^A^AwA^A^A^A^ZXrri^^fflra ^^^^^^^^ B^^^^ K^^^ M . " ^^kmmmmm\Wmmmmmmmmm\\m\vW \V^^0 ^^^^%^ak ^a^m' ^\*%mmy ^'g^m\m\mmmmm\.' Rudy Boschwitz for the Senate was unopposed. to £§ifll5u ^^BnB ^^^^^Hi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ tai ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HR ' " B^lBS ^^^^^ W^^^^'^J^^^ytM ^^^''- ' ' ¦ '¦\^^amm^3^Lmmmmmmm\\' race. At party district conventions, convention during the GOP 5th ^^ A popular figure in the party, a pair of college teachers were District meeting. Both GOP •>- HI I H HH 7-?^^ Boschwitz bad to make two endorsed by their respective conventions gave all their dele- ^H^^BHRraIl«S^^^B^B-^HI@Sf^r ^pv^ 4^ ,2, V ^^KHRH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B £^£-£^?^IEnri^^«£il^^H!HHniW^B9V M^^H^^H^HII ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^l^HII^^^^^^^H HV ^^ ^ ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ggs&aflaBKaaf: trips to the microphone before parties to run for the U.S. gate support to President NJx- ^S'^^^ n^l^^E^aHS ^^^^^^^^ iBRSv ^B^^^ I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ V tS^^^^^^^ B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M^^^^ B^^ff he could convince delegates he House. on.

H^^^^^^HH I Humphrey to get only ^wj ^L ^L ^—^K ^—^— ^—^— ^—^—* ^—^Lw/MM *** ^ H^^B^^^^^^^ FREE! Men's Sport Bag. Pigskin finish __^ FREE! Men's Club Bag. Rugged, cloth vinyl. Has a large clothes compart- >>ac ' By opening a Instant Interest Savings Wjj ljg -%^P^' "j U \ delegates, Humphrey two dele- Iffy IS» |^^ I • npj ^ "Nobody, just nobody, does Iluniphroy lias used tlie call- gates and one remained uncom- this kind of program as well as in television format for many ' mitted at the 5th District con- § ^ ^^ p ^ ^ l l • By adding 5150 to your present Instant lnl«r«st Humphrey," said D. J. Leary, years but not always with the vention in Minneapolis, ^y J \ national media consultant for success ' he apparently enjoys Peace Coalition forces won J the Humphrey campaign. "He with it this year. four delegates and Humphrey / !; , . . . -4f \\ • By depositing S200 in a new Savings CertMcat* is doing a one-on-one with the In the 1S60 West Virginia pri- supporters gained three at the ! I • By adding 5200 to a present Savings Certificate viewer. It is direct commu- mary, he did a questlon-and-an- 4th District convention in St. nication It works." swer show that included on-the Paul. Two of the coalition dele- ; Jk m Obtain an Installment Loan of $1,000 or more • Humphrey spent less than air complaints about tying up V ^- ^s&t^ gates are in the McGovern ~ ~ s*''"" ' m Free upon the approval of a Real Estate Loan FREE! Portable Barbecue. Perfect for $20,000 or two call-in shows party lines and blocking emer- camp and two supported Chi- \frrs£~ **- during the Ohio primary. Sen. gency calls. John P. Kennedy sholm, picnics and bocitings. Sturdy legs, as- George S. McGovern reportedl FREE! Acapulco y won the election and was on his Lawn Chair. Webbed DELUXE BAGS ALSO AVAILABLE "mbles in minutes. spent more than $100,000 in way to the presidency. Meeting In Uochest<O0 damage to its right Liberty Street; vole at CENTRAL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. (signed) Larry Conncll side and July's 1969 sedan had Reg, Meeting Tues., May 9—8 p.m. about $125 damage to its ELECTION DISTR I CT FOUR Secretary front Dinner at 7 p.m. Lon King will speak on left. # "ROLE OF CHEMICALS IN THE WORLD TODAY" Voters living in the area bounded by the city limits of the City of Winonn lying east of the The accident in still under in- J. C. Masvga, Grand Knight ronl rr line of Liberty St reel ; vol e ,il WASH JNGTON-KOSCJUSKO SCHOOL. - —r* vcstieatlon. . . . \ tony Bennett sings no blues Tonight/ tomorrow on TV 14 communities By EARL WILSON stars' troubles in later life , now: she's filming here « which opened off-B-way, days a week with David NEW YORK - Tony Ben- Selby in "Up the Sandbox 1 *:0t airman 1 College PrtMllei Anns Bincrofl M-S pollution part of the Shakespeare Fes- ' TV] »:M News 11 DNR nett, who sings, is also talk- News t-444-lt-lt-lf Ctble on Earl Wilson ( out at the Statue of Liberty Trulli at Cetv Ounsmoke ing now, gushing out words tival Public Theater pro- i-4* tus World ¦eonomy 1 gram. the other day ) then goes to itquincn * . Rowan A .. ,wM „ ,. -4. -5. JJ .., without music about being Kenya in June for some To Tell the Truth * Msrtln M9-I1 " {JJ*" -**™J "Vegas. "Did I hear right? 'A per- *:J0 consultillon 1 Who Do You Think ¦«!«¦.«• Ii new sing king of Las "And of course I'm mar- NMhvllle Music M You AreT i-*l» j,,,. 2JS ' ¦ " ¦ '? Jason Miller, safari scenes. She plays a 9 . ,1 "It's an upset... Broke ried to Sandy Grant and we fect play Lil's Make A DMI 4 Virginian IJ *""¦ T ).'! , .,. „ , son of housewife searching for her .. . abatement list everybody's record . have little Joanna . . ." formerly. John Miller ¦* vt Pollution abatement orders cooperate with the Associatet . . Streisand' a Scranton, Pa., electrician, identity and so far there's J "-** .,» «* Presley's . s "You beating Tom Jones' S- & i!4 have been issued by the De- Milk Producers, Inc., Blair Di asked in a light daze at no singing for her . .. Euro- cooswenees f • » Heirt tuey W4 10 So Movie . . . like a thousand cus- business?" M°vle l-4-MMJ-lt inoo Dovlcl Frost S Resources vision to provide a jointly own anybody Sardi's, "I want you to meet pean papers are gossiping Msybtrry 10-U partment of Natural tomers more than "Beating e v e r ybody's," about Greta Garbo and an Junnle 11 *il* Doris Pay Ml Westirn . » (DNR ) to 14 communities and ed industrial treatment systen else in town," Tony whoops my wife. She's lovely." Ontn Acres 11 Perry Meson 11 Movie 11 Tony said. Italian, Massino Gargia , 30 7iD0 Plsyhouse »i» Neutral Sweden In Olllcplrj businesses in west central Wis- by Sept. 1, 1973, or inform UK into the phone from tbe Las I'd met her when she was Owrmrt l» International. Tony's new contract , $100,- just Gleason's years younger than her 66 New York 2 World W«r II 1 consin which affect the drain- industry and the DNR of whal Vegas Hilton 0O0 a week, for 6 weeks, is small and and portion of wastes will be treat manager daughter. age basins of the Buffalo "I got a new " — not the biggest in Las Vegas, Show Biz Quiz: Who was Trempealeau rivers. ed in the existing city-ownet Derek Boulton of London — Tony modestly made clear. "We eloped to Scranton," billed as "America's Boy h "' . ^• tueaJiy - ridge and furrow system bj "a n d my whole career is Linda said- "Nine years and Friend"? (from John Bruno, The Buffalo - Trempealeau "Streisand and Elvis make VlrglnlSB IS Cable TVS May 1, 1972. changed. Lena Home gave three kids later came recog- MrrvrneonAftarnisan drainage area covers about 1,- something like $160,000 a Pen & Pencil). Ans. to Fri- 4lJB $tlim, Mftt, , virsinim it Associated Milk Producer! , mi Buiaing iJBni ¦ ' 300 square miles of Wisconsin's me some advice, she said week. I'm gonna make only nition " Both worked as ac- day's Bbrrah Minnevitch led . '*** Dick Van oykt s 7:10 Advoute . l , cooperate witl 'Get a manager that loves tors, sought no help from Thi Doctors HH1 Western I Hewsll Flvm M-l Buffalo, Eau Claire, Jackson, was directed to 'too, though I've been get- the Harmonica Rascals. Oilln«««ms «-lM» i Love tucy Junior Miss the city of Blair to provide ! you. * - I'd known Boulton as anybody. The young play- »t«o Jifret Storm M-i * Pigamt M0-1I Pepin, and Trempealeau coun- ting 75. "But," declared TODAY'S WORST Piny: • ¦ ¦¦ cilllgan'a Island ll 20 years . A." played basket- Aitsthi. .. - ...... ei« Lucille Bin l Movli «-H» , jointly owned treatment systen a friend for Tony. "I'm not complainin'." wright who From Shelby Friedman: World HO-ll ties - Scranton St. Pat- . .5a OMr . »..«„„. 1:10 Pirtn's Are for wastewaters from the dair*, Boulton got him a TV show Jackie Gleason'll be sur- ball at "The cost of living in Sa i- Jinari' Hoipltal ^'S i Responsible 1 the abatement order follows s High about 1947, gave A ? ATV* ' Cannon M operation, or provide a separatt in England, got Charlie prised that his son-in-law rick ' gon is less than in Mexico **»t-M liOO. Local. News, survey conducted in credit for the raves to pro- ItlO Bilge ol Night Jim„ a pollution treatment system for dairj Chaplin's o.k. to use 4 min- Jason Miller, 33, husband of City. Proving that Thieu Return To Peyton Csbla TV I oirner HO-11 1970-71 by the DNR's Environ- "Modern ducer Joseph Papp and his can live cheaper than Place S-10-il HOgsifs Heroes i Perry Mason 11 wastes by Sept. 1, 1973. . utes of film from his daughter Linda , is the One Lite to Live News i-9-lt mental Protection division. A cast. He didn't agree, in- • ¦¦ »: oo Privet* College The Village of Taylor mus Times." modern Shakespeare, author Juan." t-s.U Mevbtrnr . io . concert » public hearing on results of the cidentally but would like to, 1:50 Sewing 11 Petticoat Junction 11 Merciis Welby »-Mt . place sewage treatment plan "No , I never met Charlie of one of "the greatest plays EARL'S PEARLS: Bobby Sill Updsta that it's one of the greatest 1^0 Education 1 ¦ * f:]0 Black journal 1 survey was held March 15, 1972, disinfection facilities into oper Chaplin. I figured he did it ever written." Vinton mentioned an untal- Amateur's Guide - , Boating .Safety . Campaign 11 J plays ever written . Cable TV J on the UW-Eau Claire campus. , because I sold so many re- That's what they said ented actress : "She has.two To Love 3-«-l Moore on Tuesday * ation by Dec. 1, 1972. By Jan 1 ' th a t he about "That Championship Barbra Streisand's got expressions — ' joy and in- Somerset s io-l > s:3D Blectrlc compiny- l Senlord » Son > Inadequate domestic sewage 1974, it must place secondary cord of 'Smiles Love, American News W-5-*-lt-l« U country Place s treatment plants are called the wrote for the film. Season," about basketball little time for social life digestion." Style <•*•«» Star Trek it Primus 10-13 sewage treatment facilities, in II Takes A Thief ll Dick van Dyke 1» News 11 greatest source of pollution in eluding effluent disinfection, in 1:30 FOCUS 1 Cu-filnei 10:00 News 1-4-3-M0-1I Movie M-19 evening Ntw, S-M » the basin. The communities of to operation. roti - The It ' ¦ ¦ " Vlrflflla Bnham i *:W Dragnet Blair, Cochrane, Hixton, Inde- ¦ : ¦ Lucille Ball I Supervisor ' 10:30 Movie 14 pendence, , Flying Hun 1 ; Nim 1+HIH" '" j Carson S-1M1 . Pigeon Falls; Taylor Jiff's Collie 10 Trulh oi Conse- Dick Civett 4-f-H Eleva, Mondovi , Osseo and 's Coneentrsflon U qtleneei 4 Movie ll Retarded children Teievisipn hiM 1:40 spmish ,.i. To Tell the Truth ? vo:SO Movie « " Strum have been ordered to im- «ilO Great Decisions 1 . . . - .,. .¦ association to meet 4:00 Mister Uogirs l iBa ov » prove their sewage treatment fa- Birrs Clubhouse I Olm Campbell 1-4-1 ;'•" " ,. " ^rosf culties. Troth or Conse. Poctdcrosa HO-11 11:00 David J RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special quetices I Mod S«Uad 4-M » Westirn ? :¦: " ¦ ¦ - ¦ Movie U Two cheese factories, a can- Television highlights Television movies Mint » .. ' JMflnle . . . » ¦ ¦ ¦ — The regular monthly meetinj Star rrek 10 T:0» Martin Agronsky 1 Galloping . nery and a high school also con- of the Fillmore County Associa Gintte Bin . It College Profllii Oourme* 1» tribute wastes to the rivers. As- ' ¦' • ' ' -Today - " Today tion for Retarded Children wil "ARROWHEAD ," Charlton Heston . An Army scout in sociated Milk Producers, Blair; be held at Lanesboro Elemen COLLEGE PROFILES, 9:30 a.m . and 7 p.m., Cable TV-3. 1866 Texas doesn't believe the Indians when they talk of fr the Garden Valley Co-op Cream- tary School Tuesday, at 8 p.m OPERA PREVIEW "DAUGHTER OF THE REGIMENT" , peace. (1963). 3:30, Ch. 4. Montfay ThiH^h diy^^rtlngJWWlery Co., Waumandee ; Mondovi Special education feachen 4:50, Cable TV-3. "LUCKY NICK CAIN,'' George Raft . A Riviera gambler Canned Foods Division of Dur- will hold open house in then LOCAL NEWS, 5:00, Cable TVT3. A keeps busy with counterfeiting, intrigue and murder. ( 1951). - STATION USTINOV ... i. .. and Canning Co.; and the classrooms. , , Cable TV-3 (Cour- Minneapolis-Si. Paul Attslln-KAUS Ch. 4 Bau Clairi—WSAU Ch. II AIDS TO NAVIGATION-USCG 5:15 3:30. Ch. 6. / WCCO Ch. 4 WTCN Ch. II Rochister-KROC Ch. H Ll Crosil-WKBT Ch. •. Eleva - Strum High School in Officers elected at the Apri tesy U.S Coast Guard). " "THE OKLAHOMA KID," James Cagney. A man is KSTP Ch. S. KTCA ch. 1 Wlnena-WSC 1 La croiii-wxovv Ch. l» Strum are now under pollution YORK-beginning of a four-part ser- KM»P CH ' ».. Mison Clty-KOLO Ch. I Programs lubleet to change meeting were: Ben Maroushel PLAYHOUSE NEW hanged and his son seeks revenge, (1939). 3:30, Ch. 19. . abatement orders. Jr., president; Richard Berg Forties. "Particular Men" features Stacy Reach lemesler 1-4-t Nanny » Prctilior » Spill Second 4-»-|f ies on the "LOST FLIGHT," Lloyd Bridges, An airliner is forced ll Gourmil 11 The city of Blair must place who opposes nuclear research—and uinn.mt. T«X «» « J»t» LaLanne vice president; Mrs. LaVonni as a brilliant scientist to land and marooned passengers must cope with nature— S.M " sesame Street 11 ll:S3 News . S-10-11 sewage treatment plant effluent S ' ¦ Moger, secretary, and Wendei Is investigated as a security risk. 7:00, Ch. 2. and each other. (1970). 8:00, Chs. 5-10-13. " •Rillaloei ¦ • ¦ ' ¦ • II »iM Electric compiny l ,j!0o Nev/i M-I-M I disinfection facilities in opera- . f.oo *Z I+» Jj;""*;- ™*ir ***. *» «jr ; Nordby, treasurer. All are from WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE? "The Masks We "WATERHOLE NO. 3," James Coburn . Carefree comedy tferloons 4 sale ol the Children »-M»t, „ tion and construct a cover tor * w Rushford. Wear' is a personality study on roles people play, Harry Of the Old West as a pioneer handles thievery and murder A way MM „ '«">>? * * Lunch With the plant's trickling filter bed ' " . ' Cns.y 11 Board members elected foi Reasoner, producer Jules Power and Psychology Today edi- with finesse as he searches for gold. (1957). 8:00, Chs. 6-9-1$. iiM CartMnt ^« ,0i,„.,„:0 f^rroom " J by Jan. 1, 1973; or submit News , 1 f''" »'•"•'•• H0 plans two-year terms were Art Gra tor George Harris, with films, and cartoons, point out that: , Sean Connery. There s brutality inside a orLlfe W-l "'" : for an "THE .HILL " ' Comedy 11 »=». *•« ™™ . V*' alternate or supplemen- bow, ^Vood Lt Wykoff , and Mrs. Jo< one's personality changes as he reacts to varying circum- British stockade when a prisoner clashes with a commander. 1:30 Clis*.room J Squares 1-10 13 l % . ..,. tal treatment system by Sept. Movlo ,/ . 4 Bewitched Walsh, Chatfield. Roger Himlie, stances. Included are comments from a black lawyer, (1965J. 10:30, Chs. 3-8. «-* l* „?"'e „„. t, 1972. ¦: .;¦ Carioons 9 Beat the Clock 11 .,' ,l * ,«.„ ; Rushford , was elected for a one dieters at a swank glamour mill and college students. 7:00, "CAGED," Eleanor Parked An innocent young girl 1:00 Jack LaLanne ) ji:00 Where thi . Match 10-U The city also was ordered to year term. Chs. 6-9-19. . becomes an embittered woman because of her contact Lucille Ball 4 Heart Ii J-4-8 Dinah Shore 5-10-13 jeopardy 5-1C U 1:00 Love ft ¦ Miny ¦ with criminals. (1950). 10:30, Ch. 11. Woman's World I password 4-9.19 Splmded Thing 1-4-1 'Tuesday "WESTWARD THE WOMEN," 10:50, Ch. 4. Romper Room ? Woman Talk 11 Days ol Our WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS , . What's Newt 11 IliJO Search for Lives HO-11 INCLUDING COLLEGE PROFILES, 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m., Cable TV-3, "THE HELL WITH HEROES " Rod Taylor. In Algeria.a - . Sesame Street ' 19 Tomorrow 1-4-1 Newlyweo BEST PICTURE — ACTOR -- DIRECTOR ( What. . Came ¦ OPERA PREVIEW, 4:50, Cable TV-3. flier clashes with a smuggler.. 1969). 12:00, Ch. 13. »:30 My Three Sons 1-4-S Who. : ¦ •''•JJ ENDS THURS. 7:15 9:20 — 91.50 — R : ¦¦ ¦ ' Concentration 5-10 Where • l-H-ll . • Movie " LOCAL NEWS, 5 :00, Cable TV-3. : Tuesday . R OATING SAFETY—Courtesy Afloat and Safety Equip- "THE GREEN HELMET," Bill Travers . Story of an ment, 5:15, Cable TV-3, (Courtesy U.S. Coast Guard). auU racer who drives for a tycoon. (1961). 3:30, Ch. 4: HE WASTES NO TIME Drive incomplete , jj gsr^raE GLEN CAMPBELL (repeat). Robert Goulet, Lola Fa- "LOVE AND KISSES," Jack Kelly. The Nelson ; family (AP ) a* fjt£fl(g! (TV ) is featured in this domestic comedy. ( 1965); 3:30, INDIANAPOLIS, . Ind. LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special ) lana and Dom De Luise join Glen in a salute to Broadway ' musicals. 6:30, Chs. 3-4-8. chA6. — . . All government agencies —A portion of the Sister Kenny EVENING EDITION WITH MARTIN AGRONSKY. Repre- "FRISCO KID," James Cagney. Story of the lawless don't move slowly. CONNEOI1\m{ ( fund drive in southwest Waba- l!Wm Barhary Coast during the gold rush days. 1935). 3:30, sentatives of Canada's political parties analyze differences be- ¦ T. W. Marshall, ah officer in sha County has been; completed tween U.S. and Canadian politics; 7:00, Ch. 2. Ch. 19! his Veterans of Foreign Wars with money forwarded to the ^JBT^^^MMw^ JUNIOR MISS PAGEANT. Ed McMahon and Anita Bryant "WHAT'S A NICE GIRL LIKE YOU . . .?", Brenda Vac- A Soor> » CharlU Chaplin : ' "~ '~ ¦ caro. A nice girl is the target for kidnapers—for unknown post, telephoned the In- Kenny Institute. ^**1m J) ^Lt mi tia " host the 15th annual guest for America's "ideal high school Veterans Adminis- "MODERN TIMES" ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ',' senior girl" as entrants from our 50 states vie for the title reasons. (1971). 7:30, Chs. 6-9-19. dianapolis Envelopes forwarded were N* J W * W I "MISTER BUDDW1NG, Simmons A psychological tration hospital to complain of Junior Miss. 7:30, Chs. 5-10-13. " Jean . from; Chester Township, $77.25, CAMPAIGN '72. Walter Cronkite analyzes the Nebraska suspense drama filmed in New York. (1966). 10:30, Chs. 3-8. about needed benches for dis- and West Virginia primaries. 9:30, Ch. 3. "NOT WITH MY WIFE, YOU DON'T!," Tony Curtis. A abled veterans awaiting taxis. Mrs. Leonard Klindworth, chair- neglected wife ir reunited with an old flame. (1966). 10:30, Marshall said acting hospital man; Mt. Pleasant Township, Keeper of the White House' Chs. 11. director Charles R. Armon $53.50, Mrs. Vincent Heise, chair- Mm. Winona Daily News kennel is Frank Sweitzer, a 22- "THE HILL," 10:50, Ch. 4. found some unused benches and man; and the village of Mill- ^¦* Winona, Minnesota year-old National Park Service "THE NAKED DAWN," Arthur Kennedy. A bandit seeks had them in place the same Ville, $22.45, Mrs. Walter Moe- MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 electrician. help from a young farmer and his wife. (1955). 12:00, Ch. 13. day. chnig, chairman.

the war in Vietnam is felt ia ' I fj&fem^~~irf*£t V^^B^PSfilRsHHHBfl ^lHIBH ^^^^^^^ H^^^^^^^^^^ M " ' - ' ; ' " ' ' ' ¦ I . - . . . . /' - ' - - . . . : ¦ VI B^E-ffi^-Br^^yffi, ^- - TBVI^H ¦ 11 *\ nSp^H AT 12 MOON Less than expected spent Mm^S^mM^mmmTamY^^Mmmm- * * J mJ&Mmmmm^lA %. A I A J ^MV J ^mm\M Monday thru Saturday on Model Cities program By DONALD ROTHBER the planners of this major as- "HUD regulations are pitched WASHINGTON (AP ) - sault of the War on Poverty against any real control on the Eagle Pass, Texas, is the very had anticipated spending. part of citizen groups." model of a Model City. So is Robert . C. Wood , under- In Indianapolis, a citizen Alma, Georgia. secretary and then secretary of group called the Near East GREAT PROGRAMS HUD during the Johnson ad- Side Community Organization 3 But whatever happened to has filed a complaint with HUD New York, Chicago, Los Ange- ministration, recalled in an in- , terview, "What none of us against the city, charging that WHICH ARE les Philadelphia , Cleveland knew then was that in the same its Model Cities program lacks and Gary, that long list of trou- months we were struggling citizen participation, bled , smoldering American with developing Model Cities, cities where, five and one-half Duane Etienne, the organ- years ago, another group was deciding on President Lyndon B. escalation in Vietnam. We ization's staff director, said in Johnson sought to "set in mo- an interview that there has tion the forces of change thought we were dealing with a mmm\mmmmmm\I \ \^AmJmm^m\^Jmmmmmmmm\\ ... $12 billion surplus. been little citizen participation SO INFORMATIVE! that will make them the mas- " in Indianapolis, and "agencies OH^ ^ F | I terpieces of our civilization," Still the federal government that did participate tended to "Fund approvals in the Mod- has poured more than $1 billion be largely white and middle el Cities program, which start- into the program. What has it class." bought? ffl Satisfy your noon time ed in 1967, total $1,275 million But Indianapolis was one of fl^Vw appetite for news, news through Feb. 29, 1972," says the Ask Floyd H. Hyde, former 20 cities chosen on the basis of Jl^^B latest accounting mayor of Fresno, commentary, weather and from the De- Calif., who partment of Housing and Urban used to be HUD assistant secre- progress to take the next step sports information by Development. tary for Model Cities, and now in the Model Cities evolution , a listening to this line-up! Thnt's far less money than is assistant secretary for Com- c i t y w i d e program called ; No One Under 17 munity Development which in- Planned Variations that is a ia n n JJ R cludes Model Cities nnd a lot of Mil al ii "~ Unless With Adult Winona Daily Newa step even farther removed '"o^"?* - 3-HOUR MOVIE 12 NOON - PAUL HARVEY other programs, from federal control or guid- ~ • FEATURE TIMES • ADM. $2.25 /MONDAY, MAY I. 1W2 What is happening, said ance • News & Comment _...,._ , ,. No Passe* or Golden Ay* " Hyde, is development TON ITE 7:30 VOtUME 1)6, NO. 147 of "a "The goneral view here ," 485 W. 5th St. whole new relationshi p between said Etienne, "is that it's a 12:15 P.M. - WAYNE VALENTINE Published dally »xcept Saturday and cer- what I call the T tflln holidays by Republican and Herald establishment , massive and colossal failure Local News At Its Best Publlshlno Company, «oi Franklin St , local government and local de- even though touted as one of • • Winona, Minn. S5W. :;r cision-makers ... and tbe poor." the most, successful Model 7:00-10:05 C^eslINEMA 1^ L-IYIri SUBSCRIPTIO N RATES That relationshi p is making Cities programs in the coun- 12:30 P.M. -CHUCK WILLIAMS Slnola Copy )Sc Dally, 30c Sunday local governments try. Reports From the Sports Desk Delivered hy Carrler-Per Week 60 centi more re- " • 76 weekt S13.30 52 wetkt. S30.«0 sponsive to the needs of the Robert R . Hawkins , director By mall ilrlclly In advance/ pipr.r Hop- poor and the poor more under- of Model Cities projects in In- ped on explrallon datei jLM/m MmMm A^k A W standing of the problems of city dianapolis , acknowledged that ^ AUm ^^^^^^^^^^m^ ^ ¦ ^m\\ Mmm) L. „ gftvT ^^H55Sn___j ¦ . DON'T FORGET THE NOON HOUR WEATHER Local Area — Rates below apply only hnll , he said, tho program got off to a slow mb—M In Winona , Housion, .Wabasha , Fillmore start , but said an economic de- BOTH PG ,, " and Olmilead counties in Mlnntiota; and From the JawarmB&m.o ^Hi Buffalo , overview per velopment corporation MONDAY THRU SATURDAY AT 11:55 A.M. ON Trempe-nleau, Pepin, Jackson spectlve of that was PG and La Crosse counties In Wisconsin; and a Wood or Hyde , probably the least successful Double Feature — Starts 8:35 armed forces personnel wllh military working out the role of the poor ^^BHU addresses In Ihe continental Unlleet Slates program its first year, is now ENDS TUESDAY f cOLUMBIAriCTUR IS ^ nHHH or overseas wllh APO or FPO has been a fractious , but educa- Pinents addressas. "very effective. " .'-ii^ft "I ^^B I year 125,00 * months S20.7S tional , part of the progrnm 's « monlhs tlJ.oo 3 months S 9.00 growing pains. Second Feature ' lefCsSaUR Elsewhere — COMB ONEI COMH ALU g£\ ^M I In United States and Canada But to Dennis Keating, at 10:10 1 year J40 . 00 9 months tJO .MI n for- Ml P^-M- ^rfl- I A monlhs 120.75 5 months SI1.C0 mer VISTA lawyer now at the Ml Sunday News only, 1 year SIS.00 National Center for Housing SCHAFSK0PF MHES tonnerv I /S-s-S?-,.".* ..- ''-O-wSr ^v^ -^5 Slnola Dally CopUs mailed 25 cenls each Slnola Sunday Copies mailed 75 cenls nnd Economic Development in ^ earh Berkeley, Calif,, Subscriptions lor leu than one month: citizen partici- i TUESDAY SI.00 per week , Other rales on request. pation is an everyday, polticnl emWBCcrm The B struggle: . Send chano* ol address, notices, undeliv- ^ENNEDY ered copies, subscription orders and other "In San Francisco, people NIGHT ; K 1 ¦ •• ¦¦ • ¦ Vll milM mall Hems to Winona Dally New« , P.O. wanted n veto over projects be- mraTiiTwe*- AndeiSim Box 70, Wlnone, Minn. 55987. fore they got to the board of Second dais poitao* paid al Winona, supervisors . It was a question EAGLES Minn. > .,,.,_ : ,. , , „ _ Tipes, ¦ i m nM JffigM: \ \'.z:-::;r~: :z===i 1MB® of who's going to control the CLUB —— ° ^ programs , who's going to run N*w Clubrooms Starts Wed. "Summer 42" /ind "Rabbit Run" R them. ¥ m A rrinklln [ Overflow crowd^expected for meeting tonight Wabasha schools ' report car^ By JOHN LUNDQU1ST the 70-year-old building next bond proposals is Chairman good education or money?" up coffee meetings to explain will dip to 71.3 mills next year , Of Patton's resignation he i area cannot attract industry or WABASHA, Minn. (AP) — door, aind on the other side is John Doffing, a banker; Wil- "Actually, I think there's a an 11-page pamphlet on why because as a "have not" dis- ; said: the people wet need to continue 'he Wabasha area , school sys- St. Felix' gymnasium. Built in liam Hawkins, a farmer, and lot of taxpayers wondering the Wabasha should vote for a new trict it gets more state aid. j "It is appalling and out- as a community if we have a 1954, the gym serves as the Wallace Walter, director of same thing, what's the best school. Consequently, he says, 61 substandard educational sys- em gets a report card from i ragcous that a man of this cali- ' he State Department of Educa- home court for the Wabasha county social services. way to spend money, where are Martin argues that Wabasha added mills for the school and per be humiliated and in- tem," ;,: . ion tonight amid indications it High basketball team. The controlling ("hold the tax you going to cut?" responded is financially equipped to ab- seven more for the poor would i timida,ted by high-handed indi- Mrs. Martin said a general nay,, receive less tharr a pass- When the football and track tine") majority is made lip of Wilson, product of a one-room sorb a new bond issue. A chart bring the rate to J39. I viduals! dedicated to com- practitioner's wife once vetoed rig grade. and baseball teams engage a William Bruegger, implement schoolhouse many years ago. he drew shows the 176-mill lo- He has authored four letters ! placetey-abbut shabbiness and a move to Wabasha by her dealer ; Ruth WiUiams, a home- Some 25 to 30 staff members conference foe, they go about Doffing argued Wabasha cal levy for schools in 1971 was to the Wabasha County Herald j mediocrity." . family after she looked into the three-eighths of a mile from the maker; Clifford Wilson, sales doesn't have proper school fa- reduced to 128 this year and criticizing the board majority. Elsewhere, he wrote, "Onr educational facilities. f the Education Department representative for a feed com- I ate last month spent three high school to a city park. And cilities. He said it is a growing they travel the better part of a pany, and Ralph Lindgren, area, adding, "Anyone driving lays putting the local schools grain elevator manager. inder microscopic mile to a practice field. into the Sand Prairie neighbor- scrutiny. The sharp division emerged hood (on the waterfront) will The meeting tonight with the Fonr years ago, the broad at a forum before high school see people moving in by loard of Education is expected survey of Minnesota elementa- youth last Thursday. Doffing flocks." o draw an overflow crowd; ry and secondary education- and Walter spoke for the school Walter, looking to the state trobably with scores of stu- directed by Otto Domian of the bond proposal and Bruegger department's report, declared:¦ lents on hand. University of Minnesota College and Wilson, against. The au- "I would challenge the ' rest of of Education—concluded Nfla- dience peppered them with Swirling aronnd the revealing the board to objectively accept 862 b a s h a ' 8 sprawling district questions. the recommendations that com- f the 81-page document are needed a new high school. lie'se" other developments in mittee may make." The report said high school Asked what he proposed if He drew loud cheers and ap- iublic education at the Mis- students had fair to excellent the bond fails, Bruegger as- Jfr issippi River community of serted, "I' m really not against plause from , the audience, general- classrooms but special about 40 of whom may be eli- ^ovu^!3L t orne 2,700 persons: classrooms ranged from ex- doing something, if we need it. I <*£%* tfflflf J 'fo^~^' I • Randall Patton, superinten- Maybe we should build some- gible to vote in next week's ref- cellent to poor. erendum and election of two lent of schools, has resigned ef- It noted, and the criticism thing else besides a high ective June 30 over what he school. board members; holds true today, there was no " Doffing, 33, was elected to alls deep-seated philosophical office, laboratory or shop for Bruegger also voiced fears lifferences with the majority of Wabasha might overbuild for the school board two years ago agricultural education, despite its chairmanship in July he board. the rural setting. Other phases future population trends. He and •Voters on May 16 will de- said Bloomington schools have 1971* before the rift. of vocational education were What does he think of ide the fate of a $1,992,050 found wanting. 200 empty classrooms "and I iond proposal for a new high wouldn't want that to happen chances for the bond proposal? That is one of the targets of a "Some , days I'm optimistic, and chool, and a separate $215,000 local organization called "Citi- here." He said a 20-year bond roposal for a swimming pool proposal would cost $2 million some days I'm pessimistic," he zens for Quality Education." said. t the school. The group is fighting for pas- in interest. ¦ :; ¦ •State Commissioner of Edu- Superintendent Part on said v ; ^ ;:; sage of the bond issue, warning Wabasha High students have his resignation is final, al- ;:;v I ation Howard B. Casmey has that Wabasha is endangering I REGISTERED JEWELER - AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY . ailed the Wabasha board "the an above-average academic though he hasn't lined up his //. | its state aid and federal voca- record , the graying 51-year-old next position. /orst in educational leadership tional aid by not modernizing 've seen anywhere." He cited Bruegger said, noting he'd tak- 1 You are invited Morgan's this week larticularly laclc its plant. It launched the peti- en his early schooling in the "The situation that brought | of planning in , he building proposal— tion drive to get the referen- same building, and it was draf- me to that decision still exists " ¦ ¦ "they dum after the board rejected he said of his philosophical split ¦ ' ' ¦ - ' A . - to- see a ' ' ¦ ¦; '' ;¦ , iave no architect, ho site, no ty then, just as teachers and f : . . . 4 IternatiVes: the proposal. students now complain, with the board majority. " The Board of Education is "I have a great deal of re- Two years ago, a $2.2 million way; A student asked Wilson, ond issue, including a aligned this spect for the Board of Educa- PRIVATE COLLECTION OF OVER TWO THOUSAND PIECES of 1 pool, The minority favoring the 'Which is more important, tion. But I feel the superinten- I /as rejected by voters 1,189 . to 43. Overwhelmingly against dent has to be in basic agree- majority or you I RARE ANTIQUE, HEIRLOOM, CONTEMPORARY hat proposal (250-47) Were citi- ment with the cannot function well." | ens in the Kellogg area, some even mUes away, where one' The strain of the dispute was ol telling on the 40-year-old educa- I and ESTATE JEWELRY he district's ¦ two elementary Press freedorn he | tor^ who said sometimes chools is located. § Some of the unique jewelry on display was obtained from the estates of noted American families and. It is the patchwork "feels like 140" and was just & physical back at his desk after treat- lants at Wabasha "that are at $ famous personalities including Marion Davies and Jay ne Mansfield. § be heart of the controversy, ment for tension in his back. also an issue He calls the teamwork among rtiich has the board split 4-3 *"¦» ¦ ¦ ¦ ,,nv ¦ ¦»¦•»¦•>—.— »,»™-~-* ¦» - v «-. — gainst a new "building. WABASHA, Minn. (AP ) — rately and let citizens make up teachers, administration and \ pcqwtmf )^***'''*^'*" ***< * in | arish closed its high school Stallard quoted Lee as saying lation. items ranging price " clashed with a member of the & ^/MmmWT ^w*' .iM*>^fe: IAA^B i individual ? Dur years ago, it put a popu- Board of Education. the visit constituted an "eval- At the invitation of student ation and plant pinch on public uation," not an "inspection." leaders, he was in the audience chools. In the shuffle, high Stallard wrote that Ruth Wil- That prompted the editor to at the board's encounter with chool students remained in the liams had tried to dictate how quote definitions from Web- students and would have spok- BE 0N Id structure and its additions, a story on the board should be ster's Dictionary and advise the en except for objections by Wil- | j* . ,' M^HBPK'Jr' , s TI0NTHIS WEEKtLL ONLY , THE DISPLAYCOLLEC- | long with grades one through handled . Stallard replied that son and Bruegger. That pair | \ j w educator in an editorial*. ^HPHii^tf' ^ DAILY FROM 9 to 5 and TONIGHT I ix. • he would not be infringed upon "WC hope that on May 8, explained to a reporter the ses- I y J^L^kW^X$% ! | Public junior high classes in reporting the meetings. when Mr. Lee reports the ob- sion was only supposed to be ^ 7th and 8th) were moved two He" says he is not editorializ- servations of his team U the lo- for board members, and Wilson locks away, into the 18-year- ing oh the issue of a school- cal School Board, he will tell it thought it unfortunate there was s. i % J*****^" f %$ -. s&r^afSS^Sa\\^^iP^' ^HK* *^ <. •* PR F F n R A u/ r TSJ C1 X ^ r A * ld; two-story Huilding St. Felix bond proposal which will come like it is. Lay it on the line; a newsman there. i* J m-> s t v & j \ ad used for a high school. The before voters May 16. As the straight words and no quibbling ^ ^^*t^%^T-Jra^r * l r'*sw * chool board now leases it. editor reporting board meet- over which words have a bad "It's kind of suppressing free- The parochial odor and which smell like a dom of speech when the kids school—grades ings, he explained,' he prefers talk and ne to six—still operates to chronicle the sessions accu- rose. invited me up there to out of some of the board members ob- jected ," said Martin, former Bostonian and product of Yale Medical School. -\ ¦a/J Martin, the only general sur- V m\\mm\\\mm ^&a\\\wfAm JU!SLO f"; fr j v * * «g VL. ^ > < \ t i kX geon in a wide area, around Wa * HHB9 : ^ggfy'- M. s ** -s" ^ * * i Jit&X*£$J J 1 J basha , came to the community lE ^^^^ BB $u ifc-. 3 A CCC MEANS seven years ago. "He served J ^^raHfl^tt,^iff ^^^<^ wBfel^^^^^^i*TO^-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^K Jm\m\\\\\w'' ^ JimSF^^^ & Customer ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - There is much confusion In Minnesota regarding taxation of business identification signs, Cheeking according to spokesman for the Minnesota Retail Federation. Rdtailers told the state Sen- ate Tax Committee that some ttf means $10,000 accidental death Insurance for tax assessors in the state are sT depositor under age 70, reduced amount placing the signs in a category thereafter. that taxes advertising signs, which the group says violates Tmbtj means all the checks you need, personalized the legislative intent of the VT with your name and address. 1971 tax law. The federation said other tax tfto means unlimited checking activity without a assessors have placed the signs ^5^ service charge. under real estate assessment. It is "illogical" to tax as an fijfiip means travelers checks . .. without an issue advertising device a sign that *y charge. merely denotes the name of the business on a piece of property, said Stan Krinksky, board $ , ^^^^^0|M| V S' '' ^\-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^lBr9 r tffr means a special identification card, showing chairman of the federation. ^^^^ v^ you're entitled to all these services. Seniors g T&ff means bank money orders without charge. ive blood RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) k ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HK&a»*Kj^:^r ^Mar ^fcS^T?!1J r*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BBIffi8E l v — Seniors from Rushford High School donated 16 of the 123 y •rtfifc means free copy service for Individual docu- units of blood drawn in the re- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^BBBfiyf/i-^r ^^^k.^J^BP-M^^^^^^^^^^^^^BJB^BSHWBHD T ^r ments. cently completed Red Cross blood drive. rite means a safe deposit box for valuables. Two-gallon pins were award - ed to Mrs. Theodore Roberton , Marvin Manion and Donald Woxland , with one-gallon pins CCC means all these things for personal checking accounts going to Mrs. John Brand , Mrs. . . . available to our depositors for a fixed cost of $3.00 a Llewellyn Benson , Everctte month. cnd Jorde and John Magnuson, Winona Dally N«ws C_ ^ X r ** *W^-Wollr^ylVi ' '^r ^*f a ?$ElxBlmmmmmmT »2. ^^^^^^^ HMnj^P?\^Cj[ *IMB3&J^¦ - \ Winona, MimieMta *" ¦ \ l j($ffi ?$!^f } ^ %kW$$*B§mmmmW "W^fc^^*^^^^^MHF^T#f*l!l^ JtfldJF -I X MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 CountrifSTAT Advertisement • Tifffn T^^ ^^ffP ^ TTrmi i VV ¦ V 1 ^¦^.^¦•B - m mmm, * am am. m wt Am* ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ y^^mm ^ J i iW«Mt iaibka v J.A , ,. .>.f '*M#n»rt ,, , ;, ' —.--> ¦-» . . ' *- ^ft:. -u«,u-x..-iS» S> E BANK Now Many Wear ^maj iwill^ FALSE TEETH With Little Worry *>!>«» iriiiiini in —"t Do fnlno teeth embnrrnM you by WEST coming loose when ygu est, Uuih, BROADWAY & JUNCTION STREET or talk? A denturo Bilhfsivo can help. E l ^ l ^ 9 FASTEETH* fti vra dentures » loni- ! er, firmer, nteaiiicr hold. Mskca eat* MOBGAITS I "NEIGHBORHOOD BANKING FOR EVERYONE" w MaWm\m Ing more enjoyablo. Kor morn iwcurlty JEWELERS SINCE 1862 *5 and comfort uno I'ASTEKTH Den- I ture Adhenlve Powder. Ponturca Coll "Weafherphone" 454-1230 Any Hour for Weather Information that lit, nro cwtentlnl to health. Sc« 111 MAIN STREET \ your dentiut regularly, | Signs of the times WINONA DAH^ NEWS Although Winona, gratefully,1 is relatively free of people who deface public areas with their scrawl- tags, the defacement in larger cities has reached A page of opinions and ideas such major proportions that special products have been manufactured to. remove the graffiti. A New Jersey firm expects to sell 5,000 to 8,000 gallons *a Winona Dally N§ws, Winona, Minnesota, Monday/May I, 1972 of Dirty Word Remover in the first half of this year in New York City alone. It's a fluorocarbon water-soluble remover. Other new products are plastic barrier coatings to protect porous materi- als such as granite ^ , limestone ajid brick. If these What man in c/iorge products are on the material before the deface- ment it makes removal easier. — A.B. would WASHINGTON - The nightmare not the dread hypothesis of some You make me sick vision of which none dare speak ^ Dunkirk for American soldiers but aloud — the possibility of a collapse rather the probability of such a Would a mortgage of more than $10,000 on William S. W ¦ ¦ your home upset you a bit (or does it) ? How about in South Vietnam so immense as catastrophe. ; ' " ' .' trouble with your boss? . Or getting married or to imperil the withdrawal of the So, there is irony in the tireless ending it? Would you find it difficult to adjust to remaining American ground forces rear, areas become no longer dis- attempts of the doves to establish a new home or a pregnancy or if Sue or John left •— can no longer be wholly shut out tinguishable the one from the other as gospel engraved upon stone tab- home? Indeed could they make- you sick? of consciousness. arid "the fog of war" descends lets the earnest stereotype that the Ever since the massive communist in blinding chaos, President has been bombing "against invasion was opened, this ghastly All this is not to suggest For many years researchers have been study- that the will of the American people." danger has been latent, obvious to such a situation; ing the relationship between dis-ease and disease is actually at hand This cliche was based upon the all who were willing to face its im- in Vietnam. It and Thomas H. Holmes and MLrioru Masuda have is only to say that oversimplified conclusion that since ,, , of course, unuttered. it is no longer prudent concluded that, although germs may cause a dis- plications and automatically the war itself was and is frustrat- And ever since the communists to assume that so tragic an eventu- ease, something else may cause you to- succumb to ing to the people they would dis- the north this ality could in no circumstances the germ at a particular time. And that something stormed in from ever approve Mr: Nixon's decision not ghastly danger has underlain Presi- lie ahead. When a man of the re- probably is your ability to cope with life's slings to stand aside and let an ally go straint, and arrows. dent Nixon's resolute refusal to halt the knowledge and the sense down in a hurry. That these two the defensive American bombing ac- of responsibility of John Stennis, things are not the same thing, this -Li#^ HERE'S THE way they put it in Psychology tions so endlessly denounced by the chairman of ' the Armed columnist has previously attempted ' ¦ ¦ 1 Today:. • American doves as an "escalation' Services Committee, rises in the to suggest. Now, a fresh pool shows of the conflict. Senate to say that a time of "tra vail, seven out of 10 Americans support bereavement and evaluation " may be what the President has done. "Human beings do indeed get sick when they WITH AN extraordinary innocence have to cope with many of the events of normal in the offing for this nation , he is of certain iron realities of warfare TO BE SURE, this crisis is far School cheating life. When they struggle with overwhelming life not simply giving a justification for that have nothing to do with who's too somber to be used simply to crises, they tend to get more serious diseases, The an American air intervention that a Republican and who's a Democrat, criticize the critics.\ It ; does seem explanation, we suspect, is that the activity of needs no apology in the first place. who's a conservative and who's a permissible, however, to point out coping can lower resistance to disease, particularly liberal, they have concentrated : on FOR THE plain and now scarce- how dreadfully wrong their judg- now big when one's coping techniques are faulty, when they business two.* The first is that our bombing ly arguable truth is that without the ment has been. What price now all lack relevance to the type of problems to be solved must be ended forthwith . The sec- heroic — yes, heroic— assistance of the crises of "escalation" and all Cheating in school has been go- . ..- ' . When life is too hectic, and when coping . . ond is that all our infantrymen be the American air arm it is pro- the promises of dove politicians to ing on ever since old pharaoh 's ts fail, Illness is the unhappy result." attemp "taken out, lock stock and barrel." foundly likely (hat far more of dispose of the war simply by de- student scribes were vying to see Dr. Max Mferty (Just as facile as that.) South Vietnam than is presently in- claring it "immoral"' or "illegal" or which one could put the most hiero- I They report on an interesting study, the results • These people have overlooked the vested or terrorized by the commu- nonexistent? What responsible ---» glyphics on a given sheet of . papy- climb to the elusive degree on the of which tend to support their conclusion. The not-inconsiderable fact that orderly nists would now be beneath the and informed — public man would rus. shoulders of ink-stained mercenariei research pair studied patients who came to them retreat, not to mention safe retreat, enemy's heel. now really ground the bombers if In my day, it used to be done will mean the certain end of educa- with colds and nasal infections. The patients , " is no easy thing to accomplish given Moreover * in such a set of cir- the buck had to stop at this desk? through " ponies" cunningly con- tion as a national factor for good were asked to: return when they had recovered. one of those rare and direful mili- cumstances' informed men in Wash- structed of addihg-machine tapes during the years ahead. At that time they were examined — blood flow, tary situations in which forward and ington would today be pondering United Features Syndicata and rubber bands. These were used May 1 suggest to the American, breathing, swelling, nasal secretion, etc. Then the to provide the classroom delinquent private business sector that it zero doctors started talking about disagreeable events with a comfy course outline he could in on this new and unlovely wart on; that had occurred to the patients before they be- rotate clandestinely during the final its collective corporate counten- came. ill';' After this conversation about his mother- exam;which he had been too busy ance? Maybe the Better Business in-law, for example, or his new jobs, the measure- Beware of new populism playing poker and/or chasing Bureau boys can lower the boom ments were repeated and the cold symptoms had re- blondes to study for. on the TPRU hirelings. If not, then ' appeared. . .¦• • ;. ' By JEFFREY ST. JOHN the flood of immigrant intellectuals ernment. how about the several state legis- Copley News Service who fled Europe in the mid-1800s, However, in the 80 years sines TODAY WE can say truthfully te latures outlawing this paltry prosti- cheating: "You've come a long way, Other research has found correlation between NEW YORK - "For a generation bringing with them the ideas of the rise of the above dogma we have tution of American private enter- baby." I refer you to an outfit call- dis-ease and... tuberculosis, athletic injuries, preg- we have watched liberals gain Marx and his hatred for a free seen business produce,, with the prise?. ¦ ' ing itself Term Paper Research Un- nancy, cancer, heart attack, among . others, including more power and display less liberal- economic system. help of workers, a progressively ris- Much as I dislike political inter- ing standard limited, and when it says "unlimit- of course, ulcers. A Ism," observed authors Jack New- preached against of living while the pol- ference with schooling, I prefer it THE MARXISTS icies of ed" you'd better believe it. Recently field and Jeff Greenfield in "A Pop- the doctrine of business "greed" government have confiscat- to turning the whole educational ed more and it opened a branch office in Chi- WHAT SITUATIONS can cause people to be- ulist Manifesto." "But now it's time and "exploitation" which was incor- more of working Amer- ehebang in this country over to ica's wages cago, and suddenly cheating be- come sick? Well, it depends on the person but here to return again to the first question porated into the post-Civil Wai* and at the same time the chiselerj. granting special came big business in the . Windy are the top 10 life events (out of 43) on the re- of politics: who holds power and by Greenback party. The Greenback privilege to one group or City's halls of academe. Los Angeles Times Syndicate searchers' Social-Readjustment Eating Scale in or- what right?" party influenced the Populist move- another. The authors' question and work Now the new For a mere $2.25 per page, TPRU der of their potential dis-ease; the higher the num- ment, which in turn spawned the populism proposes Alabama Gov. George a variation provides you with a Xerox copy of ber, the greater the event's anticipated readjust- anticipated so-called "progressive era," setting on the same theme of Wallace's populist political rhetoric the last 8.0.years, making big busi- a term paper it has previously CiRAWTI'S-y *)^a*^ McMingMSyiKl'gjUlni. ment requirement : the tone for the New Deal; i. , successful in the ness ancF the prepared and placed ih its files. It which proved so What the Marxists, . Greenbacks, "rich" the scapegoats primary and will undoubt- for the woes matters not what exotic topic may Death of spouse ...... ' ...... MO Wisconsin Populists, Progressives and the New of the workingman — ¦ 1972 presidential woes- actually have been assigned by an unfeeling Divorce ,; .•:-..,...... ;...... ;.. : 73: edly influence the Leal all shared in common was a created by big gov- j instructor; you can order a paper Marital separation ;....,...... 65 campaign. belief that working Americans were ernment which has: fueled inflation, increased taxes and destroyed the on anything from "Assyrian Temple . Jail term :.A ..;." '...... A-.v...... 63 THE NEW Populism ii fast be- "exploited" by business and that basis for sound economic expan- Carvings" to "The Role of Dandruff Death of close family member ...... 63 hottest political proper- such a state of affairs could be cor- coming the sion and progress, in the Career of Aaron Burr," and Personal injury or illness ...... 53 Democratic presi- rected by the intervention of gov- ty around; every relax with a six-pack, secure in the Marriage ...,...... *...... 50 eager to get dential candidate is THE NEW populism is an attempt knowledge the TPRU's professional Fired at work .¦; .47 ^hat prom- aboard the bandwagon to go radically beyond the New Deal cheaters will get you an "A" with Marital reconciliation 45 taxes car- ises to lift the burden or to total socialism with the political no effort on your part. Retirement ...... 45 Americans. How- ried by working window dressing of equalitarian peo- My heart is wrung like an old latest bogus , bill Conscience debt ever, before this ple's democracy . dishrag at the memory of how much , 29; change much more ground, An editorial in A sampling of others : in-law trouble of goods gains It is no accident, moreover, that slavery I could have avoided down Christmas, understand what is Christian Science Monitor in church activities , 19;.vacation , 13, and it's important to we should see the emergence of the the years if only this fine, ethical populism. v. implied by The U.S. Treasury has just re- new populism so shortly after the industry had been in existence while Q. Wilson, chairman Prof. James ceived $20 in payment of a World new left movement in America I was in school. How I slaved over of government at The researchers have also tested this against of the department War II conscience debt. reached its peak in the I960. One one deathless effusion titled "Mytho- University, contends the other cultures, including the Japanese, and found Harvard The ex-GI from Kansas, who sent ot the authors of "A Populist Man- logical and Biblical Interpolations has "a familiar ring; a remarkable consensus. new populism the check via his local congressman, ifesto," Jack Newfield, is perhaps in Miltonic Blank Verse," for which facts and argument the supporting said be hoped it would make up for one of the most influential apolo- I had to. peruse every line of old They are to a sub- you believe in mental health?—A.B. even more so. two delinquencies of his: deliberate- gists for the radical new left. He interminable flights of fine Now do unfinished agen- John's stantial degree the ly destroying a combat boot and gave a false romantic direction to ! Then there was that of the New Deal poetic fancy Attorneys-general da of the left wing eating a can of pineapple found on the youthful New Left when, in 1966, I did in a school law 1936. dreadful one coalition , circa the beach at Bougainville in the Pa- he published "A Prophetic Minor- "The Frequency of Ultra Deal was dedicated to course on The New cific. ity." An aging new left movament Vires Contracts in Administrative- and party funds the dubious proposition that Ameri- We could moralize about this, but is now attempting to fuse blacks, the Where are you? Faculty Relationships." TPRU would From an editorial In ca's economic prroblems were the lt would sound pretty corny. Let's young, and leftist groups with work- That's not an easy question to answer, because probably have charged me $50 a Memphis Commercial A product of "economic royalists." confine ourselves to noting that the ingclass Americans under the dubi- ppeal there are a number of right answers. page for that one. It used to be that the campaign Much the same argument was ad- Treasury would make a mighty big ous political philosophy of a new managers wound up as postmasters vanced by farmer-rural groups in cash haul if all who had ever dealt populism. THIS SWINDLE syndicate is only general, an office which became Now that the Winona School Board, the Minne- 1892 which founded the shortlived with government property were as Prof. Wilson asserts that the New- a couple of years old. Born rather more honorary than real. That cus- sota Legislature (for Congress) and the Winona but highly influential Populist party conscientious as the unidenified Kan- field-Greenfield "A Populist Mani- than banned in Boston, it has pros- tom ended when President John F. County Board of Commissioners have all reappor- that was profoundly influenced by " is an example of false and that its offices are now san. festo " pered so Kennedy appointed his brother-cam- tioned, a voter may find himself in another ward misleading advertising (of the pop- cities across the land. found In 40 paign manager, Robert, to head the or district. When the City Council redistricts, which movement)," However, Wil- footnoted and blbliographed DUNAGIN'S PEOPLE ulist It sells Justice Department. The criticism it must, and when the legislature redistricts, which by Dunagin son fails to recognize that the ex- ' theses for $10 a page, and masters which resulted from that appoint- it must, there may still be more strange divisions for $25. Recent- treme ends of his own liberalism Ph.D. dissertations ment should have been warning to of the population. when a single have brought the nation to its cur- ly it hit the jackpot President ' Nixon and kept him candidate, up from rent economic and social chaos desperate doctoral naming his old law partner Splitting the geography up to get wards and , Mit- which has spawned the new pop- against an ominously looming dead- chell. districts perfectly equalized by the numbers Is a ulism. Just as the new left of the company $10,000 to line, paid the This does not mean that either noble and legal exercise, but it also results in some 1960s were the children of liberal- a masterpiece. compose him Robert Kennedy or John Mitchell strange formations. Sometimes we wonder if people Ism, the new populism is a clear , I guess TPRU Upon reflection actually was engaged in anything wouldn't be willing to compromise a little on that attempt to concretize that revolt with done me vary much wouldn't have underhanded in his operation of the ore-man, one-vote principle to avoid being shut- I was burning a political program. If successful, good at that when Justice Department. It simply tled from one ward and district to another.—A. B. that program would carry the coun- oil at UCLA dur- the old midnight means that when campaign fund ¦ try farther down the road to so- Thirties. I never ing the Hungry raisers are placed in such positions Some ol us really have the courage of our con- cialism serfdom. of money to spend on had that kind there is suspicion that justice can victions. A friend reports seeing one . of those term papers or anything else. In THE HISTORY OF American In- be colored by the political connec- "America — Love It or Leave It" signs on the fact, if Shakespeare himself had tellectual thought in the last cen- tions. It is a suspicion that should rear of a car. Ironically, the ..car was a compact shown up during a seance back in tury, which has greatly influenced be avoided. German import. ~ LoulsvlIU Courior-Journtl, those stark times and had offered politics, has been characterized by to ghostwrite a complete set ol the borrowing in piecemeal fashion new sonnets for my English lit. of radical socialist Ideas that are class the most I could have scraped WINONA European in origin . In doing so, , DAILY NEWS to gi-ve him would have been American intellectuals and politi- up The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively an Alf Landon campaign to cians have abandoned the radical $5.45 and the use for republication of all the local newa printed button. In this newspaper aa well as al] A .P. news dispatches. tradition of the American Revolution of 1776. Unlike those that swept Eur- SERIOUSLY though, this sort ot WILUAM F. Wurm Publisher ope In the 18th and 19th centuries, C. E. LINDEN approach to schooling may best be Bui, Mgr„, Adv. Director the American Revolution premised AOOLPH BREMCT ....,.;... described ns hilariously sinister , a Editor-in-Chief Its movement on GMIY W. EVANS Neu) individual free- cross between a Charlie Chaplin- » Editor dom , private SERVICES C. GORDON HOLTS „ . Sunday Editor economic enterprise, esque assembly l|ne and dollar-stud- FOR FRANK R. UIILIQ . „ Editorial Writer and limited Republican government. ded knife thrust carefully into the EMIL HORBYE WILLIAM What America needs as H. ENGLISH Controller it ap- back of scholarly research. It ig- Funeral Held Today A. J. KiExnusca Circulation Mar. proaches the 200th anniversary of nores the utimate reality, trite but L, S. BnoNK Compoetno Supt. the Declaration of Independence Is true, that you get out of school the ' niflivrin L. V. A LSTON Engraving Sunt. not a new populism that is not so exact equivalent in knowledge of FunEAAL Home.^ ROBERT VOGELSANG Formerly Presa Supt. now, but a "new radicalism " root- what you put into it in effort, and ed in the BrtlllWMirtl. Fun.nl Horn* MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS * IF \W6 GO INTO EKTPA INNING, VO revolutionary experience no more, A national educational and Ideas of 1776 which took as its climate in which well-heeled slobs 374 Cut Simla • Wlnorw An Independent Newspaper — Established JJJJ NMNM Diy MJB GET ov/ef-rriMe-. * slogan, "Don't Tread On Me." can buy "A" term papers and •« Night 4J«.1M0 Winona Dally News *Ta Winona, Minnesota " a To the editor MONDAY , MAY 8, 1972 Kennedy strong in several bides Feiten named If blacks, low-income whites, are likely to be no more than Senator. He gains another point and young people were to vote 21 percent of the actual voters here. - . '.; '. ' ;- . their full numbers at the ballot come Election Day. Kennedy The story on Sen. Kennedy Censorship of X-rated box. Sen. Edward Kennedy leads with the group with in- is that of all the Democratic as director would run the strongest race H ^ come under $5,000, by 46-40 field he certainly could gen- of any leading Democrat percent. He loses almost anoth- erate the most enthusiasm against President Nixon. er point here when his vote and low-Income whites. Where- motion pictures wrong Among the entire population just those likely to go to the a more likely 65 percent, the percentage is adjusted for de- I read the letters from several of your readers praising polls next November : big loser in tbe process of at- as Humphrey loses the vote of of city bank 18 years of age and over, Ken- creased turnout. the under-30 segment by 40-34 your refusal to advertise X-rated movies. S.J. Kryzsko, president of nedy trails Nixon by four per- TOTAL EUGB3LE VS. trition is Sen. Kennedy. Here are the reasons why: IN CONTRAST, running percent and McGovern by a I must take Issue with them and with your newspaper. Town and Country State Bank centage points — -41-to-37 per- LIKELY VOTERS "¦ Underlying the over-emotional and rather nonsensical con- . ¦• Young persons 18-29 years against Sen. Kennedy, Presi- closer 39-37 percent, Kennedy announced today the election of cent — with Gov; George Wal- Total Likely sweeps the young. cern about the public's "weUare," there Is a startling as- lace as a third- party nominee Eligible Voters of age now make up 28 percent dent Nixon picks up real ground ' ' ' ' ¦ ' ' • ¦ ¦ "% of the population eligible to ¦ because of the likelihood that Fei- ¦ Philip Feiten, president of % sumption: that the newspaper can decide what its readers at 15 percent. By contrast, Sea. : BUT Kennedy also has soma should and should not see. It is, in effect, suppression of ten Implement Co. as a direc- Hubert Humphrey runs behind Nixon-Kennedy-Wallace vote, but likely will bo no more certain key groups ready to glaring weaknesses. He runs the news in a misguided attempt to Influence public morality, tor of the bank. by six 41-35 percent, Sen. Ed- Nixon ...... 41 45 than 24 percent of the actual back him will turn out at the relatively poorly among the , , electorate In November based polls at a high rate. a kind of silent censorship which attempts to' deny the He was elected mund Muskie by eight, 42-34- -Kennedy ....,.,37 35 , college educated, losing to Nix- individual even the choice of what he will view by falsely at a special percent, and Sen. George Mc- WalTacT-rrrTA.15 14 on present registration totals • Persons earning $15,000 flound- and past turnout. Kennedy wins on 56-29 percent. He also narrowing the number of possibilities. It is also a mute st o'c k h old- Govern by 45-28 percent. Not Sure ...... 7 6 and over, although only 20 per- ers among voters 50 and over, . this segment 48-33 percent with cent of the whole population, threat to the theater owner, telling him that there are er s* meeting Nixon-Htrmphrey-Wallace losing by 50-28 percent, more "certain movies" which he may not show if he wishes to preceding t h e EVEN with Sen. Kennedy as Nixon ...... 41 42 Wallace at 12 percent. Slippage are expected to make up 23 than offsetting his gains among have the " privilege" of advertising them. The ultimate the nominee, however, it is ex- among the young who do not percent of the actual voters regular month- ' ' Humphrey A..35 36 the young. He is also relatively effect is again to narrow the public's range of choices, if the ly meeting of tremely . - . unlikely, judging on Wallace ...... 17 16 turn out to vote on Election next November. Mr. Nbton wins weak among Jewish voters, giv- owner succumbs to the intimidation. past performances, that blacks Not sure ...... 7 A 6 Day could cost Kennedy 1.5 this group against SeflA Ken- ing away 35 percent of this the board held points of his support. nedy by a wide 57-29 percent at the bank low-income whites, and young Nlxo*»Miukie-WaUace group to the opposition, as GRANTED THE highly improbable assumption that the people would vote their full po- • Blacks make up 11 percent margin. Among the most af- movies really do seriously influence public morality (cf. this afternoon. Nixon ;..,.....41 44 against 21 percent who would tential next November. When Muskie ...... 33 33 of the population, out at best fluent, the President thus adds vote Republican if Humphrey the report of the President's Commission on Pornography) T h e imple- 5 points to his lead those least likely to vote are Wallace ...... 16 15 will be 9 percent of the actual more than 1. were the candidate. and that sexual candor in a movie will somehow increase ment company eliminated, Sen. Kennedy slips electorate, based on past turn- over Kennedy because of high licentiousness among our (no doubt) innocent youths and Feiten with which Mr. Not sure ...... 10 8 These might be troubles behind Mr. Nixon by a- full Nlx(m-Nc€rOveni-Wallaee out and voting restrictions still turnout. adults, could your paper not apply the same policy of Feiten became associated in 10 points: 45-to-35 percent, with in effect. Kennedy holds a wide, • Suburban voters are 26 per- enough for the last remaining suppression of advertisement for movies which are rife 1948 is the franchised local deal- Nixon ...... 45 . 47 brother in a bid for Wallace at 14 percent. McGovern .....28 29 79-14 percent lead among cent of the total population 18 Kennedy with scenes of violence? (But then, most of them are rated er ol John Deere farm equip- Here are the results of trial | blacks. The failure of blacks years of age and older, hut will the White House in 1972. But PG. so that would start cutting into advertising revenue.) ment. He acquired ownership Wallace ...... 17 16 his single biggest handicap as heats in early April among a Not sure ...... 10 d. i to vote their full numbers in comprise an estimated 28 per- Or how about movies which take a political stance which of the firm in 1959. sample of 2,973 households re- j November could cost Kennedy cent of the electorate next fall. a candidate will be that it is the editor finds repugnant? Don't they constitute a danger Active in civic and church af- presentative of the entire popu- AS THE vote Is winnowed another 2.5 points. President Nixon holds a 51-33 precisely among those groups to our impressionable children (and adults) as well? fairs; Mr. Feiten is a former of- lation 18 years of age and over down from a potential 10O per- • Low-income voters are 25 percent edge among suburban- where his appeal is greatest— But these mconsistencies of policy are, I suppose, to. ficer and director of the Wino- and the parallel results among cent of those 18 and oyer to percent of the potential but ites over the Massachusetts blacks, low-income whites, and be expected. After all, when a paper which is ever zealous na Jaycees, a director of Wi- the young -- where : the turnout in keeping the public informed Bbout who has been charged nona Area Chamber of Com- is likely to be lowest. And . with statutory rape, who was drunk and disorderly when merce and member of the Wi- among the groups where his and where, who was accused of shoplifting, a paper whose nona Area Ambassadors. He is Upon retirement > appeal Is weakest—the suburbs; , evident concern for printing all the news that's fit to print a past chairman of the cham- the affluent, the college edu- (oops, wrong paper) extends even to supplying names and ber's Agricultural Committee cated — the turnout on elec- addresses of these alleged offenders to a public which they and is how chairman of the Ag- tion day is likely to be high, must assume eager to be so informed — when that paper ricultural Advisory Committee est. - . . . ' Elgin--AAillville schoolman feted takes the inconsistent stance of refusing to tell the public of the Winona Public Schools; (at Advertisement about a fictional rendering of what goes on least, pre- He is a member of the Ca- ELGIN, Minn (Special) — 1945, Weisbrod was high school road, Minn., from 1937 to 1945. school in Mille Lacs County ) then other . sumably , in other communities among people, thedral of the Sacred Heart par- Eight hundred honored Char- principal at Williams, Minn., He also taught grades seven inconsistencies are not surprising. from .1928-30. ish and is vice president of its les J, Weisbrod, 64, superin- for one year, from 1936-37, and and eight at Warroad, from His educational background: Want To finance committee. He is also tendent of the Elgin-Milville high school principal at War- 1931-34 and taught in a rural PLEASE, isn't there enough censorship already?. Aren't University of North Dakota, there . enough self-appointed moral guardians deciding what president of the Cathedral Community School, Independ- we and bur children may and should see? isn't the School Board. ent District 806, the past 27 earning a master of arts de- Hear rating system sufficient to warn off children and adults who Other activities include mem- years, oh "his night" Sunday gree in 1947: National Training object to sexual frankness? The majority of X-rated films berships in the St. Anne Hos- at the school here. School, New York, bachelor of are so palpably exploitative and shoddy that no reasonably pice Goodwill Ambassadors, An educator for 41 years, Science and arts degree, 1943; intelligent adult would waste his money on them; but why YMCA, Winona . Country Club, Weisbrod has submitted his res- State Teachers College, St. Better? punish the occasional good one (e.g., "Midnight Cowboy" Winona County Historical Socie- ignation, effective July 1. Bis Cloud, bachelor of education de- on its first release or, more recently, "A Clockwork ty and the Minnesota Imple- replacement will be Roger M. gree, 1936; teacher training de- CHICAGO, III. - Most hearing Orange") which is brave enough to limit its probable ment Dealers Association. Norsted, 32, New Brighton, partment, Princeton , 1928, and problems can be helped. An ac- appeal In the interest of candor and a fuller vision of life. Feiten is a native of Winona. Minn. Princeton High School, four tual-size non-working model of If people choose not to attend, well and good; but they He graduated from Cotter High When introducing a "This ; Is years, graduating in 1927. the tiniest hearing aid ever made must be allowed to choose. School, attended St; Mary's Col- Your Life" program, Dr. E. W. He is a member of the Min- by Beltone is offered free to. DAVID E. ROBINSON lege and is married to the for- Ellis, master of ceremonies, nesota Education Association, everyone who would like to try Association, mer Therese Jaszewski. The said that the guest of honor was National Education privacy of his own home. Minnesota Association of School it in the Feitens have four children and being recognized for his contri- This non-working model will reside at 302 W. Wabasha St. Administrators and American bution to the educational de- give you an idea of how tiny velopment of the community of Association of School adminis- Agriculture Dept. modern hearing help can be for ; Elgin. trators- . He served in the various Dis- those who suffer mild nerve Ex-Wihonan RECOGNITION was given the trict III and Region I commit- deafness. It will also show you book shows both educator by persons from Thai- tee offices of the Minnesota how a hearing aid can fit en- land, Southeast Asia; Sioux Stat© High School League and tirely in the ear with no wires Falls , -S.D. Kankakee, 111.; Pi- was nominee for the board of or tubes to call attention to 1*.. - retiring as geon Falls and Bloomer Wis.;. State . , control of the Minnesota There is ho charge for, the Redwood Falls, St. Peter, High School League. In 1936 sides of problems actual-size model. Request* * Princeton, Franklin, Mora, New- he viBB the recipient of the By DON KENDALL livestock manure each year longtime teacher port, Morris, Bloomington, St Eastman Scholarship at St. should be directed to Dept. 5945, WASHINGTON (AP) - The equal to the waste from a hu- Wis. - Miss Louis Park, Minneapolis, Mar- Cloud State College. Beltone Electronics Co,rp., 4201 man population, of 1.9 billion LA CROSSE, Agriculture Department, often Emma Erickson, a native of shall, Pipestone, The retiring superintendent W. Victoria St., Chicago, HI. persons. ' ' ' '¦ ¦ ¦ ' derided by critics for allegedly Winona and a graduate* of Wi- St. James, Warroad, ; Austin, and his wife have two children. 60646. • V - AA : ¦ - '¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦• ' turning a deaf ear toward envi- Pesticides, always a touchy nona Senior High School and Wi- Pine Island, Mankato, Lake subject for the department, ronmental problems, published nona State College, this sum- City, Red Wing, Clarkfield, DEVOTED SERVICE . . C. J, Weisbrod, right, a today a SO-page* booklet thai come in for some hard scrutiny. FOR . mer will retire after 44 years Long Lake, Kasson, Dresbach, 41-year educator, and superintendent of the Elgin-Millville shows the warts as well as the "The public has a right to be" as an educator, 29 of them as Owatpnna, St Paul Hopkins . , , Community School, Elgin, Minn., the past 27 years, is handsome side of man and na- concerned over possible poison- principal of Franklin School in Byron, Winona, Stewarrville, Vi- ¦ Dr. E. W. Ellis, chairman of the hoard ture. .;;. ing of the environment," the La Crosse. ola, Cambridge, Milhrille, Wab- presented a gift by of open house. Mrs. Weisbrod The report is a series of arti- ARS says. "For example, DDT Miss Erickson, who is 65, re- asha, Kellogg, St. Charles, education during a Sunday cles prepared hy the Agricul- can cause thinning of eggshells ceived her bachelor's degree Plainview, Elgin, Racine, Eyota is looking on. (Evelyn Schumacher photo) tural Research Service. lAu- in ducks and falcons ... from Winona State in 1928 and and Potsdam. : thors cite some of the major "Pesticides from the* air, wa- a master's degree from North- Twenty - seven years ago, ¦ ¦ " ' ; : :? : challenges facing scientists and ter and soil may be absorbed western University, Evanston, when Weisbord . v- -^- ->-¦ , " came to Elgin, . ) /?\.?S^JY - ' regulatory agencies involved and concentrated in the bodies 111., in 1941. She has done grad- Community School had about ¦ ¦ ¦ with agriculture as well as of organisms ... (and) uate work at the University of 150 pupils and 10 teachers. ' /v ** ylvk some of the things being done frequently increased as one Wisconsin, Columbia University Members of the board of to improve the environment. species feeds on another and in New York and at American education of School District 57, passes the pesticide from one University, Washington, D.C. when Weisbrod accepted his "Certainly not all of these link to another one higher in tools will work Last November she was nam- first superintendency job here ," the ARS says the food chain." ed Wisconsin Educator of the in a foreword. "There is no In 1945, were: Rollie Bolton , panacea, Control of insects by "In. Year by the Professional Book- Jesse Sawyer, Herb Richard- no quick solution. It men Association. In will require a national effort b tegrated" techni 1968 she re- son, George Baker, Mrs. Har- y ques Including ceived the" Distinguished Serv- millions of people working to- parasite's, induced diseases, re- old Mullin and Mrs. Harold gether. ice Award ol the Wisconsin Ele- Houghton. Members of his first ¦ " sistant plant varieties, traps mentary School / / n*sfc "^fv* JET i I v baited with sex lures Principals Asso- faculty were Mrs. LeJRoy Citing the limitations on natu- , genetic ciation, of which she was state ral resources, the report said : and hormone manipulation and Prescher, Mrs. Art Bradbury, president and had served as Mrs. Margaret Wallerich. "We cannot manufacture these other methods may be the solu- treasurer for three years and tion. "Weisbrod came at a time basic requirements of life. "Un- state convention chairman three fortunately, we—including agri- "Expensive? Yes. But com- times. when it was necessary to put culture—are still exploiting pared to the" costs of pesticides, She had served the school on a new footing," ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ as a princi- said Ellis. ' " '' ¦ ¦ them." applied year after year, in- pal the longest time of any ad- ...... - j ^^ ra [^^ » QooL and, For beginning ecologists tegrated control is a bargain, ministrator in the 20-school La Today the consolidated El- f omwdtk. , the gin-Millvllle gjK booklet, entitled "Managing indeed," the report said. Crossd Area Public School Dis- Community School ^ Our Environment," provides trict. has 600 plus pupils, 34 teachers a and is housed JIungA. wealth of facts, including: "SYTTENDE MAI" Recently she was honored by in two buildings J *j «S^C/L associates, formeF students — elementary and high school. •The Mississippi River an- GALESVILLE Wis. (Special) nually Carrie's nearly 500 mil- , and school officials at a retire- WEISBROD has supervised lion tons of sediment to the — In conjunction with Norway's ment dinner. Her retirement three building programs in the Gulf of Mexico, an amount of Independence Day, "Syttende will become* effective in late Elgin-Millville District; a new i^^m T^ese are what mom I S^B^MI silt equal to the topsoil from Mai ," Arthur F. Giere, Gales- July. High school building n 1959-60; ville hgh school addition in 1968 fol- 5 forward to on nearly half a million acres of 's attorney and numisma- Miss Erickson in retirement / lm\ff^^cT look* farm land. tist, will have an exhibit of Nor- plans on working on hobbies lowing the school fire on Sept. • Nitrogen fertilizers " at wegian money at the Bank of that include knitting, crochet- 25, 1967, and construction ot a jS^yOTY^ ^6r °Y beautl^u' times" cause high nitrate accu- Galesville, each day. Included ing and golf and plans to travel, new . elementary building in / ^ ' ' ' mulations in food plants such will be silver, copper, iron hoping in 1973 to go to Norway. 1971. ( •f jf I 'on9 anc* short robes 1 and paper money. ¦ Growth of the school district ^ as spinach and beets, but are ¦ "not a serious contributor " to V.A. TRAINS WORKERS from 1945 to 1971: assessed val- "jlM anc* c'us*'ers* water pollution where good The National Weather Service DALLAS (AP) - As part of uation jumped from $287,000 to \ \ \ farming practices are followed. provides detailed forecasts two its clinical affiliation with eight $1,622,000; area increased from ffl«\\ $5423 •The United States produces and three days in advance". North Texas universities and 2.5 sections to 75 sections; en- j |\ colleges, ,the Dallas Veterans rollment, 88 students in grades m_M M * R«s W-W5 Administration trained more one through 12, to 600 students \ \ than 451 health workers during in kindergarten through grade WANTED! the 1971 fiscal year, says E. P. 12; professional staff from / \ 1 SALE ENDS eight to 37 (Jj 1 MEN - WOMEN Whitaker, hospital director. , total staff, nine to Included in the total were 46 (all district personnel) and MAY 13th a?e 11) and over. Prepare now Lincoln Service has helped resident physicians and interns the school levy of $14,299 in Lm V \ 1 for U . S, Civil Service Job thousands prepare for these 1045 Increased to $293,547 in openings who received all or part of J>JOA, f ccou}.<&VWlp during the next 33 tests ev«ry year since 1948. their post graduate education in 1971. ^^^^ • LINGERIE - MAIN FLOOR months, It Is one of the largest and &&*&fr \ Government positions pa y oldest privately owned school* the VA hospital, Whitaker ex- Developments witnessed by Breeze through Summer In bright pant plained. high starting salaries. Ttiey of ita kind and is not connect- the veteran educator: first bus dresses that need no special attention to provide much greater security ed with the Government, transporation, hot lunch serv- than private employment and „( „„ maintain fheir crisp good looks. Variety ol Vmr I?I> ET-C K^ M r> „., ice, full-time kindergnrten , tran- excellent opportunity for fld- *°n ^IIA sition from fl-4 classification printed styles, All cotton In Bizes 10-18. / yrboUwiL , «™™"™J°bs£. «* C dL^Ig the 0£ti^ vnncement. Many position ; - ,'" J ' j ," . "ft WATER WEIGHT to the six-yenr high school and / require little or no specialized ** •*>^\ »%„ «" d 0l1 at nC with all tho special depart- education or experience. TAm-T" ° °~ PROBLEM? $10 to $16 A mcuj. MIL But to get ono of these jobs, , UA ,, ments, and no school buildings you must pass n test, The Y°u w'11 «'so Bet full details older than 1960, SPORTSWEAR - MAIN FLOOR competition is keen nnd in on now »<"¦ «"¦ prepare your Prior to coming to Elgin In some o.ises only one out ei self for these tests, tivo pass Don't delay — ACT NOW! E-LIM A POPULAR NUMBER Excess W MBI in the body can be un- JOHANNESBURG , So. Africa LINCOLN SERVICE , DEPT. 25-3B comfortable. E-LIM will help you lot* (AP) — Motorists of Sandton Pekin, Illinois 615f>4 excess water weight W» tt.., feel that 777 Is the brtst number I am very much interested. Please send me absolutely Gibson Pharmacy for auto license plates, When FREE il) A list of U.S. Government positions and snlnrles; recommend It, the suburb got its separate (2) Information on how to qualify for a U.S, Governmen t Job. te plate, car owners were invited ( te l( «5 Name (j hpa m? 4fa// Where Personal Serufca Age Only ^ City Stale Gibson Pharmacy *\\j *^ V* The Merchandise Itself 7617 Westaat* Shopping Canter plied for 777. Second most pop- The Merchandise Itself ular was 555. Wisconsin ¦ Your horoscope—Jeane Dixon Wm pit ¦ §£« ' ft '\wi couple wed For TUESDAY, May 9 Your birthday today: Your mission in the world is clari- in St. Paul fied* and perhaps simpler to achieve. There is more to do than you had thought, with the extra strength and resources to. S E C T * LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) S ¦ ¦ V-V-¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦ .v I O N " ¦ p work with. Travel features the latter part of the coming* It: . . - " . - ' . : m — Miss Charlotte Setibert and year. Today's natives are fond of evading hidden obstacles; lm\ ¦ m} Lowell Hassler were united in the women have talent for dancing. &». : W marriage April 22 at St. Luke's Aries (March 21-Aprii 19): The natural limitation you ^k^MM^m^mmmm^MmMmmimiMCatholic Church, St, Paul. meet today is there and real, but not as great as it appears. ; The bride is the daughter of Self-expression is easier, concise in later hours; Taurus (April 20-May 20): Discussions started now ram- Mrs. Ottilia Seubert, Marshfield, ble on, may drift into disputes if you let them. Work will be ¦¦- :—-¦— - a*-- . ¦' ' ¦' • ' ' . .— :— . Wis.., and the bridegroom is the a center of personal conflicts. son of Mr. and Mrs, Earl Hass- Gemini (May 21-Jtne 20): You make progress in personal tHE LOCKHORNS ler, Lake City. creative ventures. Put an old score right with a few words and some definite action. Given in marriage by her Cancer (June 21-July 22): Ah old system needs some brother, Ron SeuWrt, Marsh- new methods. Take the needs of others into account, make Diana Sehwake field, the bride wore a floor- Debra Ann common cause for better results. Home life thrives.^ Mary Elizabeth length gown of white polyester Kuhlmann Leo (July 23-Ang. 22): There's much stir and sound in Ferden Mr. and Mrs. Mel trimmed with pearls, She wore today's bickerings but little lasting damage. You can smooth (Carhtra Arts Iludioi Sehwake, Lewisyille, Minn., iece with rib- things out by afternoon. Romance brightens where least a matching headp Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Mr. and Mrs. LelanrJ announce the engagement of bon streamers and earned a Kuhlmann, 409 Sioux St., expected. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): If others are to mesh their Ferden Utica, Minn., an- their daughter, Diana Kay, bouquet of yellow ioses and announce the engagement of , to Thomas W. Hadfield, son baby 's breath. plans with yours, they must know in detail what you are nounce the engagement of their daughter, pebra Ann, Likewise , Miss Connie Svobod a, maid of doing. , you should pay attention to them. : of Mr and Mrs. Walter T. to William E, Bartz, son of Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don't let anything spoil this day their daughter , Mary Eliza- Hadfield , 1276 E. Wincrest honor, wore a fulUength gown ' ¦¦ ¦ Mr. and Mrs, Harold Bartz, of many moods. Having your own way about everything beth, to James Leo Rowe- . . . ¦pr.- -> . . of yellow crepe with floral bod- . 653 E. 5th St. may cost you future cooperation. kamp, sort of Mr. and Mrs. Miss Sehwake is a grad- ice. She wore a matching head- Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21); Actions run into unexpected piece and carried a bouquet of The wedding is planned uate of te«.akato State Col- obstacles, interference. Avoid putting any further invest- Leo Rowekamp, Lewistorr, yellow daisies and white roses. for Sept. 9 at the Cathedral lege and is teaching kinder- ments to the test until you have a clear Understanding. ' Minn. Harold Asleson, Lake City, of the Sacred Heart. . . . ' ' WITH MV NEW POTHOLDeR-5 " " ' Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): No one seems to agree , Minn. ['MOW WHAT DIP I 90 ?"| " ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' garten in Rosembunt was best man. Ushers were Lon- ¦ . Miss Farden is a grad- a graduate of with anything today. Your own : interests require serene pa- Her fiance, nie Hassler and Pat Chromasta. Erigagement told • " uate of St. Charles High ' '¦ School tience. '. : Winona Senior High A reception was held at Coop- BLAIR, Wis. (Special) — Mr. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Tend home and family School arid is a student at and Mankato State College, er's West following the cere- and Mrs. Norman A. Thomp- .'' " Rochester '' State Junior CoL- welfare first. You may have the chance to eliminate a long- ¦¦ . is employed by Pacific Van mony. son, Ettrick, announce the en- standing doubt by alert listening and fast reaction. ' lege. "Her. fiance is a grad- Lines, San Diego, Calif. The bride is employed by gagement of their daughter, Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Ask your friends and associ- uate of Lewiston High A June 17 wedding is Gould Inc., St. Paul The bride- Sally Ann, to Donald 0. Ander- ates for the cooperation you need, avoiding disagreements School arid Winona Area Bui" he never groom planned at Lewisville. , a graduate oE Lake City son , son of Mr. and.Mrs. Theo- over money.¦ ¦ Some¦ discrepancy in your own plans comes to Technical School. High School and Austin Voca- Blair. the surface ' ¦ ¦'; dore Anderson , . . The wedding is planned tional School is also employed A June 3 wedding is plan- Pisces ( Feb. 19-March 20): Conservative handling of , Charles ¦ yo u a rose ga rd en by Gould, Inc. The couple will ned at Faith Lutheran Church , money provides extra benefits, broader choices later. Con- for Aug, 26 at St. ' 'k¦ ' live in St. Paul. Ettrick. tacts which stir emotional reactions develop. Catholic Church. : ^^/©^ s;on-Bec DEAR ABBY: My husband has one brother and one sis- ter. Tht brother married a very rich girl and he has no money worries. The sister married a professional man who vows spoken ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦— Sat,, d o es very ; . - • ¦ ': . . . ¦ " ' - ' ' ' " :. ¦ ' ¦;¦ ' '. ' «»fc MIRACLE MALL — Winona Open 9 io 9 Mon. Thru Noon to 6 Sunday \ . ¦ ^g at Whitehall well, and I • ¦_ ¦• . . . ^^ they are ai. Dear Abby: : TAYLOR, Wis. (Special) - so . on. , easy;: , " '. .:' ¦• Miss Charolet Olson, daughter street. They By Abigail Van Burerv ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦• ¦• ¦ ¦ : • ¦ ¦ • of Mr. and . '. Mrs. Lyle Olson , both have I ' . - . ' lovely large Whitehall , became the bride of homes, help in the house, etc. My husband is barely making ' son of Mr. and ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' Curtis D. Beck, it;- - .A ' • ' ,:.:; A Mrs; Curtis S. Beck , Taylor, Twelve years ago my father-in-law lost his wife and ; April 22 at Our . Saviour's Lu- didn 't want to live alone. The others couldn't take Grand- pa because they traveled too much, etc so he came to theran Church, Whitehall. ., live with us. 3-Day Home Sale The Rev. Clifford Ritland per- We gave up our bedroom and moved into a dinky guest $H BBG MOTHER'S DAY SHOPPING formed the double ring cere- room so Grandpa could have the best. For 12 years this yrKjM0! DISCOUNTS JUST IN TIME FOR mony. Miss Rachel Loga was selfish, complaining, demanding old man lived with us. & soloist and Mrs. Ralph Rasmu- Two years ago he suffered a stroke and I had to care for son was; organist. him 24 hours a day, bathing, feeding, everything! He could The bride, given in marriage have afforded to go to a nursing home because he had by her father, wore a satin poie money socked away and plenty, but he wouldn't hear of it. de sole gown with a full veil I put up with his cursing, complaining and demanding, with a lace cap. The empire and so did my children. All the while, he never gave us; one penny for his keep! Well, Grandpa died two weeks ago, and PIllOW waist was accented with ve- a bou- his will read:A A: nise lace. She carried and share alike. quet of blue and white carna- "All my children shall share " Would you care to comment? A COUPLE OF CHUMPS POWERn tions and baby's breath. lj : Miss Eileen Olson, Whitehall, 8fgf» seems inequitable, to put it brides- DEAR CHUMPS: It was maid of honor and delicately, but I'm reminded of an old Yiddish saying, maids were Mrs. James Lar- "If you come for the inheritance you might have to son, Miss Nancy Sveen and pay for the funeral." ...... Dacron polyester Miss Geneva Beck. They were \^5^5\^^ X attired ini blue dresses with ruf- DEAR ABBY: This is an open letter to my mother: fiberfill b DuPont fled collars and sleeves, and .V M ,, . l P§ ^ \ y ' Dear Mom: If you should ever suspect me of taking Polyester doubleknits* empire waists accented . . . ..by drugs, please invade my privacy because I know that you .. v^&C K A JI \ dark blue ribbon. always want the best for me. REG. $3.99 ; not ust David Beck, Taylor, was best J always tell you not to worry about me but I suppose that * Stripes, , £AQQ W ^^*T^ \ ' man and groomsmen were it is silly of me to say this, because if you should cease iBcquards 9 i utf ^ L S^t^ rllCr '^l IKIT ^C^^ Sj T* plumD, hi)! James Larson , John Hammond to worry about my welfare you will cease to love me. geometries. Fashion * AV Y*«b -W^ DI5CUUIMT ^^ igP ^V pV. n . - ,..., - and Lauren Olson. Ushers were colors 60" wide. M YD. ^ EXTRA PLUMP I pray that I will never do anything to hurt you or Dad ^ PRICE j£ft ^ Gary Fromm and Charlie Frei in any way. I also pray that I will never do anything to ^C of Whitehall. hurt myself but if I do, and you should find out, I know that I x J ^ H if * not just a A reception followed in the you wili do everything in your power to try to stop me, and ^ ^r church parlors and a wedding I will love you for it. YOUR 16-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER reat va,ue dance was held at Club 186. SrMII ¦ , ¦ The bride is a graduate of DEAR DAUGHTER: I appreciated your letter, and n^^ i^^^ pn ¦ ¦ m\\T ^v ?ut ^omPc,raWev, . !. Whitehall High School and was while I know that many will agree with you, some will I / ^^^^ ^ •*• ^^0 ^!. ^ *iP ^WI III Trim the bread of all crusts St. Francis School of Nursing, " ture. Finely chop or grate nuts. (save them for bread pudding To wed in August La Crosse Stir in with seasoned salt and , and is employed by or dressing). For a perfectly WHITEHALL Erloc Hosp ital , Chico Calif. mix well. Spread on very fresh , Wis. (Special) , smooth edge, lay the bread — Mr. and Mrs. Milo Johnson , ! Miss Johnson and her fiance are in a single layer on a trimmed white bread. Roll and Strum , I both students at Chico State slices chill , seam side Wis., announce the en- baking sheet and put in the down, accord- gagement College , ing io directions given above, of their daughter , freezer for 10 minutes. Trim Alta Elizabeth , to Theodore Slice % to VH " thick while cold E. An Aug. 12 wedding is plan- : with a sharp knife. Spread the Wilson , son of Mr. and Mrs. ned in Harlem , Mont. wiih a thin to make pin wheel sandwich- %pfp T inside of each slice es. Makes 24 to 28, M layer of soft butter. It will add Chill , the fill- then freeze. Wrap well ' * to the flavor and keep or put in JEWELRY sog- boxes and seal with •^k \>«*/ Chains, Pins, Pin and ing from making the bread tape. Thaw overnight < « WI ^tXJ. •• J|PM gy. Put on a thick layer of in refrig CARPET YARNS , . . Earring Sets, Tailored erator or 1 hour at room tem- Why pay for less thin thorough filling and top with another but- perature. carpet cleaning? or Dressy Sets. tered bread slice. Slice while cold. Will keep in freezer up to 4 weeks, What is the answer? Ly le' s steam process will clean Put sandwiches in a 'shallow ¦ ^jLXw ^^^^^^^^t^^^^^^aBa^^'/^M^ammmm 4>X»Uv anil up plus tax and extract the dirt -^f ^^¦mwrnmrnm. baking pan, cover with waxed , soil and old shampoo while removing mmmmmmmma^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\mmmmm\mWL BuV ' > * f ixaWaX paper and lay a damp paper Lanesboro prom set 92% ot the water applied during cleaning. Our process mmmmmmmmmmmmm ^' towel over the top. Slip the is comparable to ripping out the carpet , sending it to the W^^Jm^ whole pan into a plastic sack for Friday night laundry and havin mmmmmmmmmmmmm\ ^k^MWm g it thoroughly washed , rinsed and spin , BLOUSES and refrigerate for several m^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^Kfa, ,'' '.S\ *M ' ia*/ JM J?K}L (Spe dried. Ly le' s (eels this is the finest method of cleaning ^^^^^ ¦^^^^^Pt-TS. ¦ , They 're easy care perman- A, *^r hours or overnight . Slice or cut LANESBORO, Minn . 'aiW^mmlmamamamamamT ^.^v^w ^tat '/^w'^P-tL cial) The theme for the for all forms of carpetin g — we have been steam cleaning \J ^ . enl press, lovely daytime U< \h|AT,, while cold. Cut in triangles, — ; '*^ "j ^\ > Lanesboro High School junior- for all forms of carpetin g — we have been steam cleaning '/ ' ^-rV blouses. Whatever your In- W*M strips or tiny squares (circles ^^^^^^ K^'' J^%M$ senior prom is "On (he* Thres- upholstery and carpetin g for over three years now with voriln you 'll (iiul it here in y ^ c waste too much of everything. J^M tt^ ^^^^^0 hold of a Dream.'" great success! ^^^^^WW WammmmmtJMm Si'iiltiiflWia,' itifJfrraT The program will be held at the Lnneshoro Community Hall , Is it true that carpet soils faster after once being OTHER DISON SERVICES Watch Your " Friday from 9 p.m. to midnight , cleaned? with music by Phrcd. The Normally, with do-it-yourself shampooing, all forms FREE GARMENT STORAGE $ grand march will be at 10 p.m. of carpet look brighter Store All your winter cloth«s with Dlton'i Refreshments will be scrveVi by lor a short while. Using a wet 4.00 - pickup after shampooing, a very neg ligible amount of water 'til fnll. Get needed closet space. the sophomores. %^^S FAT-GO and dirt will be extracted. Shags are less "eSsy to clean FREE MOTHPROOFING s Lr.io ugly exesss weight with tha lenilbl* yourself , and moisture extractio n is considerabl y less than NEW FAT-GO dl«t plan. Nothing »nn>- For a limited time all woolen* dry clean- 8.95 Mj tlonsl |uit jtendy weloht lo«» tor those Plan July wedding desirable with shampooing. A prime example would be to ed are mothproofed. ^^ that really want lo lose. shampoo one' s hair, let it dry without rinsing, and vacuum " WHITEHALL , Wis . (Special) LOWER LEVEL " A full tJ-day supply only IJ.30. The prlco the dirt and shampoo out later. I ant sure a test isn' t *\/ ot two cups of cotfe*. —Mr, nnd Mrs. Leslie Wlnsand , $1.00 required to know how ridiculous that would he. That is WATER REPELLING Ask Gibson Pharmacy about th» FAT GO Independence. Wis., announce Plus the regular dry cleaning. reducing plan and start loslno wslohl the engagement of their da ugh- exactly the way carpets are left after shampooing — stiff this week. ter, June , to Ronald Brnntner , and starch y with a film coating the fibers , attracting dirt Two Convenient Locatloni: Money back In lull It not completely V satisfied wllh weloM loss from th» very son of Mr. and Mrs. William and retaining it more than would the new carpet with- I""'"V " 1405 Gilmore (We*t) first packao" . lirvlc* I _ .,_., Brnntner , Durand , Wis, out film. h (Downtown) WILLIAMS Miss Wlnsand is a graduate ii West Fourt BOOK and STATIONERY DON'T DELAY of Gilmanlon High School nnd Call Lyle' s for 10°/o Oiscount on steam cleaning during got: FAT-GO today. is employed by Samuelson's De- May! Let Lyle' s help you spring houseclean and save 10%l 65 Ea*t Lavoe Plaza Her Only 52.80 *l partment Store, Eau Claire. Highway 61 W«»t CLEANERS fiance is a graduate of Durand ** - - FREE PARKING *£3&'V ^m ^^^a*m\ ^^r HB^^^^B'^MH^HP!i^^^H^^^^^^HHKn^^HiH^^^HIvi^**^^r ^•"¦""w v security, the chief of Wisconsin correctional institutions, both "If my memory serves me made without regard fo such trade them for bright uew in- prisons says. adult and juvenile," and replac- right, something over l,5f/0 are* concerns as public safety, and stitutions." Many felons "have to be in ing the prisons "with a 'commu- there for serious crimes, in- welfare." , Malmquist chair- nity-base'd treatment system by cluding murder, aggravated as- The state's penal systeta is Raymond secure facilities, and these man of the task force, said he '* don't come cheaply," Sangor June 30, 1975." sault, robbery, . burglary and already working along the com- v&^Jf^^^^fl^^^^^^^^^^v ''' ^'SV«P^ %3B. £*^ ^ ^ ^ ** mmmm ^^^S^mrmvamB^Lmaxi^mmmmm ^^a^^ammmmm ^' manslaughter, he said. munity-based line of treatment suspects his panel may suggest ' " Powers said. The subcommittee said it ac- " the Green Bay W^k\aMmmmmmmm ^>VWA ^AJ C ,rKmmmmm\mMmammmmmmW^mmM\y knowledges a need for max- to a limited degree, he said, closing t£C!2MSmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmWkJ'

v ^^^^ ^tav ' unit ^^ ^^ of family M Value tmm^aw^ffmaWwayBaaatwB^Ssr^ ^^B ^ dm^^ta. A& . ^/ ^dUpftofc yif J am^mmmmmmmmwav^ A ^^S ^^amm ^ESSammmm\\ ^^^^^t9mmmmmma ^ammmmm\ fr f vJl«K«^^^^^^«^ > J^wk^m\m^^^<^^^^kMmkM\ I * '*%*)!' I 1^^3^^^^^ L ^* ?W£AWmmm\\\\\. "4" 7^*iw^A\mm\\m\ ero ded by new age law MILWAUKEE (AP) —A re- the Family Code under which MAY FELLOWSHIP ... Sister Pat Piper, sented by women from Immanuel United. duction of Wisconsin's age of parents and guardians assure Austin, Minn., was the guest speaker at the . Methodist Church in the form of a skit. Sister majority to 18 tends to erode support of youngsters until they May Fellowship luncheon held Friday after- Pat continued to develop the theme in her talk the value of the family unit for are 21. noon at the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart. when she advised women to- become more youngsters in their late teens, a The lowered age, he Said, The event was sponsored by Church Wo- actively involved and be exposed to their sur- Circuit Court judge complained "shifts this parental obligation with Cathedral women serving the roundings. Sister Pat, a religious for 10 Sunday. in many instances to welfare." men United ¦with luncheon. From left, Mrs. Clarence Krenz, years, holds a master degree from Catholic- Parents shed their responsi- The new law conflicts bilities earlier than they should and Mrs; Men Osborne, program partici- University, Washington, D.C, and has written , the meaning of the Family religious publications. Miss Re- when laws grant statutory Code and "discourages family pants; Mrs. Earl Laufenburger, president of for several, , becca Van Auken presented a vocal solo, ac- adulthood to their children solidarity and unity/' he said. the Church Women United; Mrs. Roger Parks,.: Judge Maurice M. Spracker '.'Today, families are in program participant; Sister Pat and Mrs. companied by James Carlson . More than 200 told a civic group. trouble; trouble so deep and Douglas Johnson, chairman of the luncheoa women attended the event. (Daily News pervasive as to threaten the . fu- arrangements. The theme ior the afternoort photoX He recommended the legisla- ture of our society," the judge "Behold the Woman and was first pre- ture adopt remedial measures said, . ' -A ¦ Y was " . to modify the. age-of-majority . . A •. law, which allows persons who The lowered age "will add are 18 and older to marry with- more poor marriages; marr out parental consent, sign con- riages not solidly based ": he tracts, get sued and drink hard argued. ; Report Soviets tried to liquor. "These 18-year-olds have no Taxpayers should tell legisla- trade, no education nor any tors "jt is not in the best inter- money, How can a marriage est of the 18, 19 and 20-year- without a sound economic base change balance of powe r olds to permit indifferent par- succeed, especially in these ents to walk away from their By ENDRE MARTON ployed missiles on the Carib- ment was to upset .the balance high-cost - of - living times?" ¦ :¦ responsibility of supporting, Spracker said. . WASHINGTON (AP ) - Com- bean island in an effort to of power." . ' ¦"¦ change the world balance of caring for and educating their Children , he said ,- "should . not munist diplomats were told fol- Radvanyi said Mikoyan also children." be deprived of basic family ties ^^^I^^^^^Hj^KP lowing the :1962 Cuban; missile power, says a former Hun- reported briefly on a visit he ^ crisis that the Soviet Union de- garian diplomat. Spracker said the state and should not ¦ be forced on had with President John F. should preserve the intent of welfare at 18." ¦ Janos Radvanyi, who de- Kennedy the day before he fected to the United States in spoke with the. diplomats. Legion Auxiliary 1967, attributes the claim to Mikoyan said "Kennedy had The American Legion auxili- Anastas Mikoyan, top trouble- given him. a firm guarantee ary will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. shooter for the late Soviet Pre- that, the U.S. Jupiter bases in Does TV promote at the American Legion Memo- ¦ MSB mier Nikita Khruschev. Turkey would soon be dis- ' ' • ' ¦nISPk m\ ^ m\ ¦ IT BR^DHHBM^S^^H^H^ -M l % \ am\%n - '' ** ' - rial Club. There will be an elec- mantled," Radvanyi says. IS^M^^BI^HHB^H ** H^^B tion of officers. In a forthcoming book en ¦ ¦¦ - ¦ ¦¦ ¦ . titled "Hungary and the Super- Kennedy established a naval powers," Eadvanyi quotes barricade . around Cuba in Octo- reckless driving Music Guild Mikoyan . as saying in Novem- ber 1962 after it was discovered that medium-range Soviet mis- By WILLIAM HELTON Five-O," "Mannix ," "The FBI" The Music Guild board will ber 1962 that "the missile de- ' ' ¦ ^^ - MERCHANTS not meet this week. The meet- ployment was aimed at defend- siles were being installed on HONOLULU (AP ) - • . . Vio- or "Cannon ," you're more like- 8 ing was incorrectly listed in ing Castro on the one hand, the island. lence' - oi) television may be a ly to be a careless driver than NATIONAL BANK Sunday's social calender due to and, on the ether, at achieving The missiles were removed cause of reckless and irrespons- if you prefer Lawrence Welk , ible driving, a university of misinformation received by the a definite shift in the power the following month after a "The Courtship of Eddie's Fa- Daily News. According to Mrs. Hawaii mass media researcher relationship between the social-¦ tense confrontation between the ¦¦ ther" or other nonviolent iste. .Arthur Bowman, president of ist and capitalist world." . ' ' .- United States and the Soviet says. the guild, there will be no board Union over the issue. He says tliat if. you watch That's the conclusion ot pr, ' ¦cr "Almost in a flash I grasped . business meetings until Sep- for the first time the ultimate The Soviet missiles report- such programs as "Hawaii K.S, . Sitaram , who says he tember. goal of the Soviet Union," Rad- edly were removed in return spent two years comparing the | | fla Winona Daily Newt vanyi says. "I realized that the for a U.S. promise to remove television viewing habits of Ivd Winona, Minnesota purpose of the extremely dan- the Jupiter missiles from Tur- good and bad drivers. MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 gerous Soviet missile deploy- key near the Soviet border. Expanded role Sitaram interviewed 293 bad drivers who had been ordered * . • , ' < pi by Honolulu District Court to ¦ y - ¦ take a safe driving course as a , • for teachers result of traffi c violations. He compared their video tastes with those of 54 good drivers. "Most of the bad drivers list- OKed by WEA ed such programs as "Hawaii MADISON, Wis. (AP) - An Five-O," "Mannix ," "Camwn," expanded and more forceful po- and "The FBl"as their favor litical role for public school ite programs,' Sitaram said in teachers was approved Sunday an interview. "People with safe by representatives of the Wis- dri ving habits tended not to consin Education Association watch such programs." (WEA). Sitara m also found that the Delegates attending the bad drivers could remember BEfll 1m%vSS^S^^S!am^mm\\ group's two-day annual repre- such character names as sentative assembly voted in fa- "Hawaii Five-O's" Steve KRYPTOK OR vor ot changing the structure of McGarretl and Mannix but ( J \^Jy the 45,000-member WEA and could not recall the nnmes of forming a political action body, the actors playing the parts. FLAT-TO P BIFOCAL Wisconsin Educators Politically \^ Active and Concerned. "This confirms my hypo- The cliangcs require revisions thesis that they are living in a in the constitution of the WEA , world of fantasy," he said . which has been basically infor- "They act out the fantasies mational in its political activ- when they ore driving. They ties. probably think they are Mfannix < The delegates called for a or McGarett and are trying to GLASSES Sept. 9 special representative imitate them." f\ There is a message in alt ' assembly to put the proposal * SPECIAL into final form. this , Sitaram said. % <* 04 ptQQ About 900 delegates attended "People learn aggression the weekend assembly, which from the mass media , particu- : ONE WEEK g I also voted to join membership larly radio and television," he ^^^ huOmmm with the National Education As- said. *\ ONL Y sociation , effective this fall. f W%mm In other action , the group or- Air Wisconsin in I I I I OUR SPECIAL $16.98 dered the WEA president to ac- UQ4 tively seek members of minor- black, report shows MERCHANTS ¦ ¦ , m • PRICE INCLUDES: *I BY^^FDA REGULATION, UNLESS „ . . v„ ity groups for seYvice on state- ' ci,* T«« Y0UR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION APPLETON, Wis. (AD - NATIONAL BANK ^mmWmAW <. •- Kryptok^t^u or Flat-Top Bifocalm^^l wide standing committees. , DOES NOT REQUIRE The delegates defeated a res- Air Wisconsin , Inc., liar] 1971 ^ Mr * m\\\\ C\p *r\T I PfTiP*! net earnings of , com- Impact-Resistant Lenses, olution opposing busing of stu- $50 110, W* ! •Choice of any ZYI or dents to achieve racial balance pared with n loss of $B9,Rfi4 in \ \ and rejected a resolution 1970, Karl P. Baldwi n, presi- L ' m 1 i aluminum frame from our THERE WILL BE $O entire .. styles AN Q0 against discrimination in the dent , announced . Ask About Installment Loans for j^. B J collection. ADDITIONAL ^IVDimcH Tho company, ho said , had n CHARGE OF Ufg assignment and dismissal of i [%m i 1O suit everyone's taste! | teachers. 10 por cent decrease in total Many Other Things You Want... ¦: On a special ballot vote, tho route miles flown during 3971, n "¦ ' i»H ^ Gold-filled eyewlre frames priced slightly higher. group ruled out of consideration 7 per cent increase in, number "^ a proposed resolution con- of passengers, 30 per cent in- BOAT & MOTOR J T SINSLE VISION • • AIR CONDITIONING . ^ QQ rrcmning U.S, involvement in crease in air freight and 39 per Southeast Asia. cent Increase in U.S. mail car- TRAVEL TRAILER 9» Knrllcr in the session, the ried. • • MOBILE HOME ¦3 delegates called for cutting mil- ] GLASSES -ar itary spending nnd plugging tax ^—^^^^m ^^maem ^mammawmm If it takes money... Think Merchants! OFFER MAY P;^;Kfi*?^ EXPIRES 11, 1972 loopholes to provide" more mon- For a Bettor Lawn Use ey for education. . ^iiwWtiWl ONE WEEEK ONLY! » "fl&fficcrs elected nt the meet- | " ing included president-elect (Scot^) DOWNTOWN WINONA ^L^^^^ ^^^mm^^^Tff^mm, Mrs. Lauri Wynn of Milwaukee , V 'SV'WA first vice president Allan Sol- • TURF BUILDER I^^^^^ H monson of Wausnu , second vied • HALTS PLUS president Qcorge Ilahnnr of MERCHANTS TURF BUILDER PLUS 2 Racine and third vice president • 1 I I I l l MIIIM I I|)IIII M| fl illlllll l WIV < » NATIONAL y I ' BANK OF WINONA Paul du Vair of Madison, Df)DD BROTHERS | | ;, fy;} i > , iK i, at jK< i! i . ___ The current president-elect , flUDD STORE, INC. Membttr Fedorol Deposit Insurance Corporation Francis Fnizen of Beloit , will TRUE VALUE HARDWAR E assume tho presidency in Sep- 174 B. 41ft SI. Pliant 4SZ4007 102 on the Plaza Bast Phono -454-5160 tember. Winona Dally News | i fl ¦ 1 Abbie Hoffman Winona Dally News I. *" MONDAY MONDAY , MAY 8, 1»7» to speak at Local woman The weather The daily record MAY 8, -Wi . WSC Tuesday Injured SMC Abbie Hoffmsm, member hurt in crash Winona Deaths At Community Two-State Deaths ot the "Chicago 7.'» Indict- ed for disruption of the 1968 William J. Fried Memorial Hospita l Clarence Oian Democratic National Con- RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) student dies William J. Fried, 78, 559 E. Visiting hours: Mcdlcil ind surgical vention, will appear at Wi- near Lewiston Lake Blvd., formerly of Foun- pstlente: 2 te 4 and 7 to l:M p.m. (No r- Clarence Oian , 62, Rushford, cfclidren under IJ.) nona State College Tues- A 19-year old Goodview wom- tain City, Wis., died Saturday 7 to died at 1:30 a.m. Sunday at day evening at 6:30. Maternity patients: I to »:» antl Minn., Nursing Home an was injured in a one car ac- afternoon at Community Me- 8:00 p.m. l/dults only.) Preston, A part 61 the "Festival morial Hospital. Visitors la a pitltnt limited to two at after an Uness of seven months. cident at 4:30 a.m. Sunday :.«n at Rochester on» }lmt. of Life," sponsored by th* A retired farmer, he was He was a retired farmer. Clob, CSAH 25 three mlies south of Philip Freidel, 19, Waterloo, SATURDAY Henry ind Emma WSC Political Science born at Eagle Valley, Wis.,Mov. The son of Hoffman appearance will Lewiston, Minn. Iowa, a student at St. Mary's Admissions HoltegaarrJ Oian, he was born 's 24, 1893, to Leonard and Anna culminate a day-long peace According to Winona County College, died at 3:49 a.m. Sat- Danuser Fried. A lifetime area Lisa Kay Anderson, Rushford , at Rushford, May 5, 1910. He urday at St. Marys Hospital, . area resident, rally starting at 11:30 a.m. Sheriff , Helmer Weinmann, a resident, he married Edna Flor- Minn. . . . . was a lifelong at the Lake Park bandshell. Rochester, Minn., following an in at Cochrane, Wis., March and a member of Rushford ear driven by Gerald R. Schweit- incident at the college April Mrs. Teresa O'Meara , 4820 Bally mem ben will ' 4, 1916. She died in 1962. 6th St., Goodview. Lutheran Church. zer, 17, St, Ctiarles, Minn., was 28." '- . . . . .¦ ' ;.' march from the park at 5:30 He farmed in Bohri's Valley Mrs. Joseph Poulin 1604 W. Survivors are: his stepmother, east bound on CSAH 25 when the According to Assistant Chief near Fountain City from 1916- , p.m. to Sotnsen Hall at 5th St. ' Mrs. Josie Oian, Rushford; one John Scherer , the police re- 69, when he retired and hurved , ( ) WSC where the film will be ear struck a power pole on the WEATHER FORECAST... - . Wide-spread showers, with uniden- Dischargei sister, Mrs. Maurice Ruth presented. ceived a call from an to Winona. Educated in Eagle Rushford; nephews south side of the road. snow in some areas are forecast for today. Cooler weather tified male at 11:28 April 28 Lukkason, Valley School, he was a mem- Ant h o ny Schell, Stockton, and nieces. One sister has died. The public is invited. Schweitzer told sheriff's depu- is expected across the nation except for the Southeast coastal stating there was a student ' ber of the Bohri's Valley School Minn. . Funeral services will be at 2 ties he had fallen asleep. The areas. Showers are forecast for the western Gulf and show- hurt who had apparently fallen Board for many years. 9th" St., in St. Mary 's Hall. Upon arriv- Mary Thompson , 4333 p.m. Wednesday at Rushford accident was not investigated at ers ov snow for the central plains. Showers are forecast for Survivors are; one son, Rus* Goodview. Lutheran Church , the Rev. ing at the scene, . the police sel, Madison, Wis.; one daugh- the scene. the Atlantic coast with snow expected inland in the North- Freidel on the first floor Birth* Owen Gaasedelen officiating, " found , ter, Mrs. Werner (Olive) Enjel , Fatality east. (AP Photofax) of the building, unconscious Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hem- with burial in the church ceme- MISS JACKIE R. Brugger. Fountain (Sty; seven grandchil- tery. and bleeding from * cut on his dren; six ^•eat-grandchildren; melman, 3740 6th St., Goodview, H.15- 40th Ave., Goodview, w»i head. He was found at the bot- a daughter. Friends may call >t Jensen- Local observations three brothers. Dr. Anton Fried, , taken by Praxel Ambulance ta ton of a winding four-story open Mr. and Mrs. Gordon, Patrow, Cook Funeral Home, Rushford Newtonville . Mass.; Orrin. Mad- th 55 . 54 . munity Memorial . Hospital. She Birth Wednesday at 2 p.m., at Zion near Mabel, the defendant Vick- Damage to the front of the and Mrs. Stanley Jackow-: Church, the Rev. M ve- Sunday had been ill the past twq years. Mr; Lutheran . erman negligently drove a 1965 mode hardtop is $200. 1 a.m. 2 3 45 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon ski , 602 Carimona St., a daugh- C. Parkhurst officiating. Bur- hicle that collided with one driv- ¦ A self-employed seamstress, ial will be in Pine Crest Ceme- who No injuries resulted from 52 50 50 50 49 48 47 47 48 50 52 54 First district ter. en by Dennis Breitsprecher, one car accident at she was born Ma^ 10, 1887, at tery, Galesville. died of injuries received in that 4:30 a.m. 1 p.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 midnight on Highway 61 one mile south 58 61 62 64 64 64 63 62 59 56 55 52 Fond du lac. Wis., to Oscar Friends may call at Smith accident. ¦ arid Mary McCullough TODAY'S BIRTHDAY of Minneiska; According to Pat- • ' . . . .: " '¦' Today and Mortuary. Tuesday, . 7-9 p.m. and the defendant denies the al- Alice contest never married. Most of her Paui Sievers, 3oi E. King St., at the church after 12:30 p.m. legation, admits the collision rick M. McDonough, Kellogg Rt. 1 am. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon ' 1, Minn., he was southbound on 51 50 48 47 46 44 42 42 44 46 52 56 • life was spent here, where she 6.-V- - ' Wednesday. and admits that Breitsprecher belonged to St. Mary's CatTiolic died; Highway 61 when he fell asleep. winners named Church. Two-Sf ate Funerals Jurors impaneled were.* Mrs. His car crossed into the left DAM LOCKAGE lane, hit eight guard rails and MADISON, Wis; (AP ) — The Survivors are : one nephew, Phyllis Ender, Hokah; Orin Saturday Mrs. William Fiedler went through into the ditch for State Agriculture Department Charles Frank,, Goodview. and Loken, Houston Township; 6:50 p.m. — Hugh C. Blaske, FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. - Mrs. Claude Redding, Houston 45-feet , spun around and caught has announced the first of the one graadnephew . Robert fire. district winners in its annual 12 barg«s, down. Funeral services for Mrs. Village; Doris Webbles, Hous- Frank, Winona: Two sisters and Sunday William (Bud ) Fiedler , Fountain The Minnesota City fire de- Alice in Dairyland contest . a brother have died ton; Maxine Egstad, La Cres- 6:45 am. — Ray A , six bar- City Rt. 2, were held this Rafter- cent, and James Vetsch, May partment was called to investi- The annu al pageant is June 3- Funeral services will be Wed- gate the fire; , 10 at Fort Atkinson. The winner ges, down. noon at Fawcett Funeral Home, ville Township. nesday at. 10 a;m. at , St. Mary's 4:05 p.m. — J; W. Hershey, Winona , the Rev. Louis O. Bit- The McDonough car Is listed serves the department for a Ten exhibits were entered Catholic Clmrch, the Rev. Msgr. 12 barges, down. tner officiating. Burial was in this morning; nine being pic- as a total loss. . year, as a promoter of Wiscon- Joseph Mountain officiating. 4:50 p.m. — Baxter Southern , Woodlawn Cemetery , Winona. ¦ sin dairy products. tures of the scene and the cars Burial will be in St. Mary's three barges, down. Pallbearers were Ryan Eder, draw- Forecasts The M ississippi Districts and pageant entries involved and also a scale The Dallas fire department Cemetery. , Small craft — 19. Allen Fiedler, Orville Abts, Ar- ing of the accident scene. Flood Stage 24-hr. are::: ': : responded to 1,132 heart attack Stage Today Qig, \ Friends may call at Fasvcett . Today . mond Pashe. Erwih Paskewicz When court recessed this noon calls and 28 drownings in 1971. S.E. Minnesota ¦ District 4, Chilton : Sandra 600 cubic feet per Lake City ...... 12.1 ' . ' ., ' « Funeral Home Tuesday after Flow — 68, and Paul Sweazey. Al W. Holtbert, Highway Patrol Increasing cloudiness to- Harmelink, 21, of rural Oost- second at 8 a.m. Wabasha ...... 12 10.2 0 m. Rosary will be recited officer who investigated the ac- night. Cloudy Tuesday with ¦ 4)urg, a University of Wiscon- 7 p. ¦ ¦ — Luke Gladders, Alma Dam, T.W. ...' ' 8.6 0 ¦ • ¦' ¦ - ' -:• ""¦ ' ¦ ' 12:40 a.m. Emil P. Norbye ; cident, was being cross-exam- chance of showers by after- sin-Milwaukee junior and Betty at 8. - three barages, down; noon! Low tonight 34 to 40.. Whitman Dam .. .. 7.1 J , Funeral services: for Emil P. ined. Ann Tesch, 21, of Black Creek, Norbye Martin Luther Manor High Tuesday low 50s. Whitman Dam .... 7.1 /« Winona Funerals , , This is the last week of the Chance of precipitation to- Winona D., T.W. .. 8.5 ,4 a UW-Green Bay coed. IMPOUNDED DOGS Bloomington, Mini., former October general term of court, night 10 percent, Tuesday WINONA ;...... 13 9.3 0 District 7, Hammond: Geor- area resident, were held today with 63 cases on the agenda. gia Ann Ausman, 21, of rural Jolin P. Brang Winona at Martin Funeral Chapel, Wi- court 3* percent. Tremp. Pool...... 9.2 0 No. 89 — Large black, white The spring term of Elk Mound, a senior at St. Olaf , Funeral services for John P. nona , the Rev, Ellis Eskritt, starts next Monday, with 77 Tremp. Dam .. . .. 8.3 ft Brang, 364 E. Mark St., will and1 brown male, mixed breed, Minnesota Dakota ...... 90 6 Minnesota, CoUege, and Marion St. Luke's Lutheran Church, cases being scheduled. Owens, 19, of Frederic a UW- be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Wat- available. Increasing cloudiness to- Dresbach Pool .. .. 9.4 ft , ¦• Small black fe- Bloomington, officiating. Burial BoatownerV night. Mostl Eau Claire sophomore. kowski Funeral Home, the Rev. No. 101 — y cloudy Tues- Dresbach Dam.. .. 7.8 ft mixed breed, available. was in Oakland Cemetery, Min- day with chance of scat- District 8 Park Falls: Janet Msgr. Joseph R. McGfdnnis, male, nesota City. 2*way Forecast , ¦No. 104 — Medium size black Development' walk tered showers south. Low Kohler,:-21 , of Bruce, a UW- Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, Pallbearers were David Wock- Tue6. Wed. Thurs. Burial will be in Labrador female, available. protection/ tonight 28 to 40. High Tues- Stout junior, and Barbara officiating. enfuss, Junior Markwardt, Red Wing ..... 9,1 9.1 9.2 Woodlawn Cemetery. No. 106 — Two small black raises $250,000 Protection against almost day 48 to 56., WINONA ..... 9.2 9.1 9.1 Vraniak, 20, of Springbrook, a cockers, no license, Leonard Heuer, Herbert Witt Friends may call at the fu- male part every haiard of lost to your La Crosse ..... 9.1 9.1 9.0 practical nurse. . and Lester and Edwin Maus. in Twin Cities boat. And protection against Wisconsin neral home today after 6 p.m. fourth day Tribntary Streams District 9, Antigo: Patricia No, 122 — Small black and liability IOSMH . Allstate Tonight, fair north and cen- Members of the Odd Fellows Lawrence J. Dittrich Minn . (AP ) Chippewa at Diirand ...... 3.7 Elizabeth Jury, 22, of Antigo, a brown male terrier, no license, MINNEAPOLIS, . Boatowncr's Insurance tra l , partly cloudy south, some Lodge will meet there at 7. MINNEISKA , M?inn . - Fu- ,000 to combat gives you bolh. Black at Galesville 4.S UW-Eau Claire senior. fourth day. — More than $250 Ilglit rain or drizzle extreme Lodge members will conduct a neral services for Lawrence poverty was raised Saturday in La Crosse at W. Salem ..... 4.1 TURNABOUT southeast. Rather cold tonight, Root at Houston 6.1 memorial service at the grave John Dittrich , rural Minneiska, the Minheapolis-St. Paul Walk /instate' lows 27 to 38. Tuesday, partly MILWAUKEE (AP)-— Time Tuesday. were held today at Holy Trinity for Development, officials said sunny, highs 52 to 62. Holdings, Inc., a diversified fi- Municipal Court Soe or Phone ture changes. Lows 28 to Catholic Church , Rollingstone, Sunday. nancial services organization, WINONA the Rev. Leland Smith officiat- 5-day fo recast 48. Highs 50 to 70. ,000 persons par- reported a $547,000 net income Appearing for Mrs . Wilma ing. Burial with military rites More than 45 GENE REGAN MINNESOTA WISCONSIN Bicycling youth ticipated in the 30-mile trek SEARS STORE Wednesday through Fri- Fair Wednesday and Thurs- for the first quarter, compared Decker, 4120 7th St., Goodview, by Kellogg, Minn., American with a $5,000 loss in 1971. , through the Twin Cities, ac- 57 en thi Plaza East day: Considerable cloudi- day. Cloudy with chance of shot in head attorney Robert Langford enter- Legion Post 546 was in Immacu- Phom 4S1-7720 Total primary earnings per ed a plea of not guilty before late Conception cording to Jerry Pyle, staff ness with chance of show- showers Friday. Minor day to> Catholic Cem- member of the sponsoring Res. Phone 454-22M share were 40 cents, compared Special Judge Loren Torgerson etery, Oak Ridge. ers mainly in the east and day temperature changes with with BB gun Freedom from Hunger Founda- south Wednesday and again lows in the 30s and low 40s and with a loss of seven cents in the to a charge of leaving the scene Pallbearers were William first quarter last year, the firm of an accident. The accident oc- tion. Friday. ' No large tempera. ' highs in the 5fls and low 60s. A Winona boy was shot in the Marking, Ronald Arens, Jack Pyle said officials hope about said. a BB while curred in Goodview where she back of the head by Neumann ,, Donald Doehling, $500,000 will be raised in Min- he was riding his bicyc le on allegedly struck a parked car. William Clickner , Michael Cor- guil- nesota by the end of May, whe'n E lsewhere the dike behind Winona Indus- She entered a plea of not coran , Donald Grancr and Law- 42 such walks will have Pr. justice been High Low tries, Inc. , 602 E. Front St. , Sun- ty April 24 in Goodview rence Peters. completed in the state. court before Floyd Farnholtz. In years gone by Albany, rain 60 40 .01 day afternoon. Participants in the walk ob- Albu 'que, clear 68 41 .. son oi Mr. One May 4 Langford requested Matthew Pehler, tain pledges from their spon- jmmm\\\\\mm\\\\y I V^amAf J fog 60 47 .. the case be referred to munici- Amarillo, and Mrs. John Pehler, 5-99 E. Wisconsin PSC¦ V sors for each mile they com- (Ext racts from the files oj this newspaper.) Anchorage, clear 45 36 .. Front St., was riding his b icycle pal court. plete. Asheville, rain 73 56 .20 at 3 p.m- when he felt some- She is released on her own Other weelccnd sched- income rises / walks in Min- Ten yea rs ago . . . 1962 Birmingham , cldy 73 66 .09 thing strike him in the back recognizance and trial Is nesota were at Rochester , 51 43 .. uled for 9:30 a.m. June 6. , Al- Bismarck cldy of the head. When he -came GItP:KN BAY , Wis: (AP) - bert Lea, Morris and Alexan- A cruise to the Orient on a U.S. Navy transport ship has Boise, cldy 74 49 .04 home the wound was bleeding. Barry Kurtz , Houston Rt. 3, The Wisconsin Public Service dria. to a been wor, hy Scouts of Explorer Post 2, Central Lutheran Boston , rain 72 4B .07 He was taken to Community Minn., pleaded guilty Corp. has announced income of suspen- Church. The post was picked as the outstanding youth group Buffalo, rain 53 45 .14 Memorial Hospital by Winona charge of driving after $4.75 million for the three , cldy 75 67 .. was arrested at 1 a.m. in the 17-stale Ninth Naval District . Charleston police at the request of his sion. He months ended March 31, com- Cnrlus E Walter , president and general mnnager of Peter rain 63 5B T Saturday on East 5th nnrl . Charlotte, mother. He was treated aaid re- pared with $4.47 million for the Bub Brewery, Inc., became a "life member of the Minnesota Chicago rain 47 43 .37 Franklin streets. " , leased. same 197] period, HEART State Pharmaceutical Association . A 1925 graduate of Creigh- Cincinnati , rain 76 59 1.20 continuing tlie in- He was fined $100. Net income for the 2 months HAND ton University, Omaha , Wa l ter worked as a druggist here Cleveland , rain 5fi 46 .14 Police are George J. Nazionale. 165 Huff vestigation of the incident . ended March 31, was $12 mil- fB before joining Bub's Brewery. Denver, clear 61 36 .17 St., pleaded not guilty to a lion , compared with $12.3 mil- TO GOD TO MAN Des Moines, rain 50 46 .05 charge of operating a vehicle lion. Earnings we re $1,55 per HH Twenty-five years ago . . , 1947 Detroit , rain 55 43 .31 with an expired driver's license average common share, com- Duluth , clear 43 28 Missouri veteran and driving after suspension. pared with WHFJtF.AS: The misfortunes of others have always been Mrs . Wil liam O. Miller was appointed service officer $l.fi7 for the same Fort Worth, cldy 70 55 1.15 He was arreted at 2 a.m. Sat- 1071 period . the concern of The Salvati on Army; and of the Auxiliary to Neville-Lien Past, Veterans of Foreign Green Bay, clear 5(1 32 .. elected president urday on East 5th and Walnut War?. She will work with Carl Hargcsheimer, post service Helena , rain 4fi 37 T streets. liquor in possession , 1:50 a.m. WHKHKAS: The Salvation Army's love for God and con- officers , on veterans' relief cases. Honolulu , clear 64 72 of college group Bond was set nt $100 and trial Friday, Enst Broadway and cern for humanity is expressed by Its uplritu- Harold E. Stassen said that he might consider accepting (14 4B Houston , cldy 72 2. (AP) is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. June Mankato Avenue, nl ministry nnd a wide variety of social the Republican nomination for vice president in 1948, How- , DULUTH , Minn. — The Ind'apolls cldy 74 60 .19 College 1. Eric J. Paulowski , 200 Chest- services which are extcwlcnl to those in need ever ho intends no let-up in his current campaign for the 'ville cldy 82 79 National Association ol nut St., $25 Jacks , Mayer of FORFEITURES: , speeding 40 in a 30- presidential nomination . Kansas City, rain 62 48 .04 Veterans elected Jim Richard D. Lembkey, 18, 520 mile zone, 4:56 p. m. withou t discrimination as to race or creed ; Mo., president Saturday, Little Hock , cldy 77 M .50 Cape GlrardCau , Collcgevicw, $50, minor with East Ranhorn Slrfet and Man- and . of its fifth an- Fifty years ago . . . 1922 Los Angeles, cldy fiB 56 at the conclusion liquor in possession, 0:38 p.m. koto Avenue. (12 nual conference Sunday In Du- WHK11KAR: Hie Salvation Army has nssiMed countless Frank 0'Flaherty was a ppointed clerk of Louisville, cldy 75 1.20 Friday, East Sarnia Street and Gayle G. Ciomirifiki . Iled Top court for Wa- Marquette , clear 31) luth. Trailer Court members of our communilj In their time of hnshn Counly by Judge C. E. Callaghan at tlie opening ses- 29 D. Mnnkato Avenue. , $IB , leaving three Memphis, cldy 75 03 .24 Also ckcted were Donovan Dale R. Johnson , 71 Man- dogs run nt large in Lake park need; v sion ' '¦ ¦ ¦' ¦ :' ' ¦;¦ ' ' ¦ ' ,¦:, - '' ' "¦- ' A ¦ ; ¦ ¦ ' ' ' y ' : ¦¦ ' ' Robert Rucks, civil service di- and not among the people." . . ' ".; :- ...... , ;. - '- . . V . " :'V A ' . ' \ . ' V^ . ' AA ' "-: ' A* . A rector at Fond du Lac, was in Like most other American of- stalled as president of the Wis- ficers, he fe*els that a great consin federation of the Council mistake is being made in not for Exceptional Children (GEO. patrolling and searching the The annual convention ended hinterlands of the war zones. Friday evening and was attend- All the advantages that, were ed by about 400 persons, mostly gained by the American in- teachers and administrators in- vasion : of Cambodia in 1970 volved in instruction of re- were lost when the last of the tarded, emotionally disturbed Saigon troops were thrown out and physically handicapped children. of eastern Cambodia two weeks ago. Now, by not patrolling in William C- Kahl , state super- depth , the South Vietnamese intendent of public instruction, urged delegates have yielded the . communists to seek public old war zone sanctuaries. response , to- efforts of a state task force* District chiefs have been or- studying educational dered to prepare1 for con- planning for all Wisconsin chil- dren. . ventional warfare, a North Vietnamese invasion rather Outgoing president was Dr. . George Stockton, than hit-and-run guerrilla ac- professor of tions. Some troops are being special education at University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. trained to use . antitank weap- ons, Plans have been drawn up to mass the Popular Force pla- A GRAFFITI EPIDEMIC 1 NEW YORK (AP) — There's toons and Regional Force com- a new epidemic in this city. It's panies into larger miliary for- called graffiti and scrawls on mations under a central com- subway walls and trains are no- mand. ticeable almost everywhere. Frank T. Berry, a Transit What Upsets many Vietnam Authority official, says it costs ese,. especially military offi- cers, more than the potential the city more than half a mil- ' lion dollars** a year to remove enefmy threat from the nearby the scrawls. Most of the mark- jungles and Cambodia is the ings are drawn by teen-agers continuously bad news from the using felt-tipped pens. northern fronts. No panic is. noticeable. The •|9 Winoni Daily Newi annual Route One bicycle race , a *60 Winona, Mlrniawta was held last week over what MONDAY, MAY I, 1972 was left of the highway.

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* K ll~t\/.^ * / * ^ru#?^Vi^*¦ ^MI ^ama. amam. ^a *. B ^ ^^MarMaYI 1 aaaam.Iamam. Im ^m* ^ cJlKir/^IW\>J< I * t >? * Lf ^KJM ifiM ^^ISllUmV ^lOfc v / •!""'' .•// ^1%^-LJ^^I^Jna ^aWWm' ^kWM m ^aym^a9mamkWMmMT^aa ^aW ^WuvJ, /. v '^a& '-i trees ^^^3* \*j>*^T' "' v"- < 7*™ *$Jxy *d* .. . start working early. Here In our part of the oountry most folks want to be known personal sense, and as public servants who take seriously Young seedlings take root on fire as dependable. Tfiey stand behind the goods and services their responsibility to provide dependable electric energy, blackened slopes to do their part in they provide one another. They give their best on the job reliably served where and when you need it with the least every day. And they seek to be the dependable kind of possible Impact on environment. stabilizing the soil, preventing erosion, friend or neighbor others can really count on. Maybe there are other ways of being dependable that you and bui Iding forests for the future. Your NSP neighbors who serve here in our great northern think NSP ought to consider. We'd like to hear from you. Help keep our forests green. states want to be known as dependable people too. In a New ideas are welcome. N5PII1 Ourj ob:a brighter life for you

.only you can prevent forest c©° fires. E2f^a\ W rhZ<-^ published as a public service in cooperation with Tlie Advertising Council, ¦iht U.S. Forest Services, the National Association ol Slate Imcstcrs and Ihe International Newspaper /Wvortlsine Executives. • Caledonia fops Winona Winona Daily News MONDAY, MAY 8; 1972 Winona Dally Newt IL in TV quiz Winona, Minnesota ¦ " ALA CROSSE, Wis. — In two extremely close games Sunday 500 attend pageant on High Quiz Bowl, over Chan- nel 8, La Crosse, Caledonia de- feated Winona High School, 110 to 135, and Eau Claire MemoT rial topped Osseo-Fai'rchild, 135 Kell^ to 130. PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) Plainview-, as first attendant, tendance included Miss St. has brown hair and blue eyes. On May 21, Caledonia and — Five hundred persons Sun- and Miss Donna Ball, daughter Paul, Linda Hagan; Miss Aus- The 18-year-old Plainview High Eau Claire Memorial will meet day evening saw Miss Con- of Mr arid Mrs., Floyd Ball, tin, Carol Williams; Miss Ken- School senior is active in th» . school band, choir, yearbook, to determine which team will stance Dittrich, daughter of Mr. rural Plainview, as second at- yon, Cindy Estrem; Miss Red tendant. dramatics, cheerleadlng, mo- advance even further into the and Mrs. Marcus Dittrich, ru- Wing, Denise Baxter; Miss Al- dem dance and as an elemen- Super Bowl contest. ral Kellogg, receive the title of Miss Minnesota, Sheila Bern- hagen, presented the Miss Con- bert Lea, Sue Adair; Miss tary teaching assistant She al- Members of the Winona team "1972 Miss Plainview." Maplewpod, Naurita Johnson ; so is in 4-H and was a home- OPEN HOUSE ... An estimated 4,000 school, including the new addition now under * Doing the honors was 1971 geniality trophy to Mis3 Lynn coached by Charles Stephens, Erickson, daughter of Mr. and Miss Elgin, Cindy Beck, Miss coming candidate. . visitors attended an open house at the Winona construction where demonstrations, were in English department Miss Plainview, Cindy Klassen. Rochester, Vicki Bess and Miss Her hobbies Include Area Vocational-Technical Institute Sunday progress throughout the afternoon. Buses left head of the , Mrs. Richard Erickson, Plain- music, Jamie Kinzie, captain, Runner-ups named were Miss La Crescent, Kathy Bennett. reading, hiking, poetry, sew- afternoon. From the left, George Gurney, Wi- ,:• ' the school every half hour to take visitors to were view. James Keller, William Franzen, Becky West, daughter of the Miss Dittrich, who presented ing and playing the guitar. nona, and Mr. and MrSi Gerhardt Prigge, the aircraft mechanics shop at Max Conrad Rev. and Mrs. Donald West, OTHER visiting queens in at- a modern dance, is 5 feet 3 and Claire Meichlewitz and alter- Miss Dittrich, sponsored by Lewiston, heard an explanation of various op- Reld and guests went to. Birch Boulevard to Lanning's Red Owl, plans to erations in the machine tool ahd die course by inspect the house under construction by the nate William Mills, and of the attend Brainerd State Junior Joseph Plaisance and Basil Thorson, instruc- carpentry class; (Daily News photo) Caledonia tea m, coached by College. She lives on a farm tors. There were tours of all areas of the Mrs. Mary Anderson, librarian, north of Plainview and has fiv« David Brown, captain, Doug brothers and five sisters. A. . Wiegrefe; Preston Drogemuller, Mike Smerud and alternate Dan MISS WEST, who gave a Thimmesch. dramatic reading, stands 5 feet Next Sunday, in the second 1 and has dark brown hair and half of the quarterfinal elimina- brown eyes. The 17-year-old tions, St. Charles will compete Plainview High School senior against a team from Houston, is student council president, and La Crescent Hi g h School an all-star chorus member, ac. will meet Westby. live in cheerleadlng, drama Representatives from St. Club, National Honor Society, Charles will be .- John Brownell, school newspaper and Girls Steven Benedett, Donald Spitz- Athletic Association. She is in er , Roger Randall, and alter- 4-H, is a Girls Stater and Miss nate Peggy Root. The St. Char- Homemaker of Tomorrow, les High Quiz Bowl coach is Her hobbies include horse- LaVonne Geiger. back riding, singing, writing Dirk Abraham , Caroline Ste- poetry, and reading. vermer, Denise Rostad , and Miss West , who was sponsored Scott Lundberg make up the by Peterson's Drug Store, "The Houston team. Sherman Cole New Reliable," plans to attend : coaches the team; and the alter- Concordia Teachers ' College, nate team member is Scott Ann Arbor, Mich. Carlson. Miss Ball, who offered a vo- Representatives from La Cres- cal selection, is 5 feet 1 and - cent will be Ralph Yates, Ste- has brown hair and eyes. The DEMONSTRATION ..' . . Sue Plachecki is erations in various classes. In each class- phen Harn, Jeff Rose, Candy 17-year-old Plainview High the subject as Scott Gillespie, a fellow stu- room and laboratory there were exhibits of Hortori, and Gary McDowell. School senior is active in. the The team is coached by Tom school choir, and enjoys the dent in cosmetology, fashions a wave in work done by students and materials used Unangst and Sylvia Seaton. , hobbies of fishing, collecting her hair while Mrs Carl Benrud and Mrs. in the course. Stampout pins produced in the Coached by Charles Miller and shells, horseback riding, hunt- Lorraine Sch war tow, Goodhuej Minn.; Mrs. tool and die shop were giver to guests. Among Mrs. Catherine Stulken, mem- ing and painting. She was spon- Ruth Kvalvog, Zumbrota, Minn., and Benrud . . . the visitors were representatives of area busi- bers of the Westby team are : sored by Mack Publishing Co. watch, Members of the institute's Student ness and industry and Winona State College. Chester Hilton, David Schreln- er, Curtis Brye, David Moilien, MISS Erickson, who gave a Senate distributed brochures to all visi- Instructors spoke . to a number of prospective CEOWNS SUCCESSOR .. . Connie Ditt- Plainview pageant Sunday evening by Cindy and alternate Jan Velve. ( Evelyn- song and dance routine, Is 5 tors, served refreshments and explained op- students and parents. On May 21 the two winners rich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Klassen, Miss Plainview of 1971. rural Kellogg, Minn., is crowned A hotos) feet 6 and has auburn hair and in the quarterfinal eliminations Dittrich, Schumacher p blue eyes. The 19-year-old will return to play in another Miss Plainview of 1972 during the Miss Plainview High School senior is v ¦ ' ¦ High Quiz Bowl Super Bowl vr s:^'?*/ *''^::**?^." - -; '? .i' - ... ;.*w '""..'•: v .'' .. : . ' &. , : ¦ ' ' , ' ' • ' active in school choir, small game. group singing, plays, drama club, cheerleadlng, school news- Injury of youth mars paper editor. Girls Athletic .As- sociation and modern dance.. She hopes to attend a drama St. Charles school in the Twin Cities. Miss Erickson was sponsored Walk for Deveiopment by Interstate Power Co. Saturday's Walk For Devel- 12:40 p.m. in front that refuse from the march Joe Maas, master of ceremon- of the East man elected ies, introduced the .1972 Miss opment was marred when one Lake Blvd. home of Mr. and would be collected. Area resi- of the participants, 13-year-old Plainview candidates who therm Mrs. Stanley Hardt,.6 of a mile dents commented that in com- Brian KringSj son of Mr. and parison to last year's march went through the swim suit, Mrs. Bruce Krings, 712 W. King west of Mankato Avenue. Sev- there had been little, if any, lit- ILL president talent and evening gown com- St., was struck by a car driven eral of the marchers appeared petition. Pageant singers wero tering from the participants. HART, Mann. Robert Heim, Milo Peter- by Miss Barbara Meyer, 18, 421 at their front door and request- RECEIPTS FROM the pledg- — Janice Jurgenson, Mankato Ave. St. Charles; Minn., was elected son and Tom Hassig. ed that Mrs. Hardt call an am- ed sponsors of the walk have president and James Connaugh- Judges were Gary R. Wage- According to police, Miss bulance. Mr. Hardt provided a not been completely counted , , Meyer was passing a group blanket and pillows for ty, Stockton, Minn., treasurer men, and Mrs. Robert Finne- of the boy but Lofquist estimated $9,200 of the Lutheran Laymen's seth, Austin; Bud Pilacynski, the marchers when several of prior to the arrival of Praxel has been raised for a variety of , Minn.; them jumped on the hood of Ambulance. League Sunday. Inver Grove Heights projects with 260 out of the 621 Election of officers was held Mrs. Robert Hedigan, Bloom-- her car. Someone yelled for her Mrs. Hardt commented that marchers, who started complet- ington, Minn., and Roger O'Day, to stop and when she applied on two occasions earlier, when ing the 25-mile hike. He express- at the spring rally at St. John Lutheran Church, Hart, Sun- DOING THE HONORS ¦' ' . Miss Minne- Ball, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Ball, Rochester. the brakes Brian fell off and she and her husband were driv- ed appreciation to , the citizens . . The annual event was spon- was dragged approximately ing along the route of the Walk, of Winona for their cooperation day with 153 members attend- sota , Sheila Bernhagen, right, presents the; rural Plainview, who was named second run- ing. sored by the Plainview Jaycees nine feet before the vehicle that the marchers as a group in making the march possible Miss Congeniality trophy to Miss Lynne ner-up, and Becky West, daughter of the Rev. chapter of which Dave Marshik came to a stop. behaved in a "very careless by their support of the walkers. Kenneth Schumann, Lewiston, Erickson , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard and Mrs. Donald West, Plainview, first run- Minn., is holdover president.. is president. Merlin Bratberg Brian was still in the hospi- manner" and that they had to The Rev. Frederick Dorn fin- Erickson, Plainview. Others, from left, Donna ner-up. was pageant chairman. tal this morning, listed by au- slow down several times and ished eleventh among the field Guest speaker was the Rev. thorities as in satisfactory con- use their horn to clear marchers of youthful area participants. Fred C. Darkow, Brownsdale, dition. His mother said that the from in front of their car. The 71-year-old chaplain of Minn., director of Ongoing Am- doctor (had told her son that Leslie Lofqulst, march organ- St. Anne Hospice has been a bassadors for Christ, Inc. This when a deep cut to the inside izer, thought that overall the long-time hiking devotee and is an ongoing witness for Christ right knee had sufficiently heal- marchers were a well-controll- said that he admired the "spirit program for youth confirmed ed, he would be released. ed crowd and noted that 250 lit- of endurance" shown by the and older. Its threefold goal is THE ACCIDENT occurre d at ter bags had been provided so youngsters . to witness to all for Christ, find the unchurched for churches of the Lutheran Church,, Missouri Synod, and train other Missouri Synod Lutheran youth to wit- ness. Also attending the rally were eight teen-agers who are wit- nessing for Christ in Minne- sota , Iowa, Wisconsin and parts of Canada. M^^HHHHSH^^^^^^^ |^^HB\ If A ycry fresh , new iiom War- l\ Dartball trophies were pre- /j^^^^^^^HH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^BX II a Body Slimmer in Double- XA sented to the Eyota, Minn., [AaMmmmMmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmaiII ^"^ ^kc fint, real sensibleapproach ta \\ team for first place, and the /^|^^^B^H|^^^H^^9^^^^^^^^^ H.\ // tf*° fcminins fashion slope, Warner'* l\ Stockton team, second place. // unique Doublcfcnit-Pliu molds to IJbc body 11 /aH^^^^^^^^^ |0Hs^^^^^^^^^ B\ Schumann reported 25 new f^^^^^^^^^^^^H9V^^^^^^^^H\ JJ move with it, never against it There's ll sponsors for the Lutheran Hour Im^^^^^^^LK^^^^^^^KammmmmmmmmAll never any pinching or binding. A 1oiilte4 11 from the Winona zone. In TV l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |^^^^H^^^H|// fabric construction, Warnrr's II controls , ministry, there are 10O new |J^^^ |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |^^^ H l| and moves all directions sponsors from the Minnesota South District and 12 from the Winona Zone. ^^^^^^ HSSI ^^^^^^ HI " by Warners* * eren to much ^Mmmmmm mmma ^Bmi!}^^^^^^^^^Hfl ' ^*"^ ' anglci provide lc V^^^^^^^^^^HP AWmEjf cMmmmmmf \\ ^ccn *'' ^' avcra6e // tion of Retired Persons will hold \^^^^^^^Hf ^Hflr H> \\ vcriinaat'S1l- ll its bi-monthly meeting tonight XJ^A^A^Mf r^A^ak'¦ammmv£ 'ammmmmmmwli^^^^^ v\ /Jj at 7:30 p.m. at the Valley View Tower. State Rep. M. J. McCauley , will present an illustrated talk on tho operations of the Minne- sota legislature . All older adult persons arc invited to attend , according to Miss Dorothea Reps, secretary. ¦ FOUNDATIONS - SECOND FLOOR STEPPING DOWN BELOIT, Wis. (AP) - Mary Devine, vice president-treasur- er of Warner Brake and Clutch Co., Beloit, has retired after 48 years with the firm , it was an- C nounced this week . fi/?. "Mary Dovine was an Impor- Pfipate tant factor in building the com- //¦ ll 9 Where Personal Service pany from $50,000 sales volume ls >-/ Is As Important As when she started to almost $44 Q_^ Tin Merchandise Tho Merc/iarulise Itself million in 1971," said Warner Kiel/ ^i ' President William W. Kwfer. On the house Belt sander has bower plus By ANDY LANG field. It is intended for rugged the motor until the sander is off must be used. In making a se- A portable power tool is one work and is Especially useful in the work. lection, tell your dealer what it that is operated electrically and sanding down large surfaces, Extra caution is necessary at is beingused for so that he can can be carried to the material such as sheets of plywood. the edges and corners of the help you choose the right kind. being worked on. An abrasive belt runs contin- material being sanded. If the There are various other types In the case of a portable belt uously over pulley or drums at sander is pushed too far, it will of belts for special operations, sander, the reference to power both ends. Changing the belt is begin to tilt over the edgds and among them the polishing of has a second meaning. For the" a simple operation, although take off too much wood. plastics and other materials. belt sander is a power-plus ma- varying with different makes. ¦ -V- .MM —^ ¦ The belt sander is sometimes K*«.W-WW "-V" . , _ . _ , - chine—the heavy-duty work- Sanding belts are spliced and •JL Winona Daily Nawc ¦ ¦ used for removing old paint •*» Winona, Mlrintiwfa ' - COLONIAL VERSION shows multi-paned ,^^ double-hung lamps, horse of the portable sander have designations on the inside and varnish. Be sure to use windows, shingle walls, brick, wood shutters and carriage to show which way they should open-grit bSts for this oper- MONDAY/ MAY 8, 1972 be installed so that the splices ation. As the finish is pulled will not break. off , it has a tendency to be- House of the week In using a belt sander, it Is come a little gummy, clogging important that the machine be the abrasive even though the in operation betore touching the op.en-grit style is intended to ^ work surface. : Once it has minimize this effect. Some of gained momentum, it is low- this clogging* can be avoided if Retireme you use shorter stroked than LANG ered slowly so that the back By ANDY part of the belt touches first, usual and if you begin at the Builders in the field of re far end of the surface and work noted after which the belt is quickly tirement housing have brought to a horizontal position towards yourself. The machine that some prospective buyers as it is moved forward. Prom should be lifted at the end of have begun to ask questions there1 on it's a case of guiding each stroke so that it is not im- about homes in contemporary mediately placed down again '¦ the sander back and forth in a styling/ . A, .. sort of stroking motion with on a spot that has started to This comparatively new trend very little pressure. To avoid soften. the taking off too much in one might be due to the fact that spot, Because the elderly are traveling much never leave the machine on the belt sander is so surface unless it is moving ei- powerful, you should get the more these days and so are hang of it before exposed to a great variety of ther backwards or forwards. you begin us- Whatever the And when you are ready to ing it for more delicate work housing styles. than rough sanding and paint reason, it influenced architect stop, either permanently or for create a a moment's rest, don't turn off removing. Once you have dis- Herman H. York to covered what it can do, it can retirement home which gives "POEAGHEK t tf mKmnmmtm n wamnM\!rz.,.:v,wvs,\ii.....l:..- _ . be tried as a finishing tool; that the owner the choice of a Disney officials set is, for the final sanding of a CONTEMPORARY VERSION shows vertical rough-sawn windowo and wide overhangs. Colonial or contemporary de- surface. A fine abrasive belt ELECTRIC plywood panels, some stone veneer, exposed rafters, casement sign: . . expansion program for Design L-49 has a living It is a small house—only 904 complex in Florida , two square feet of habitable area-- room, kitchen-dinette ORLANDO, Fla. bedrooms and a bathroom, yet it has a full-sized kitchen, a (AP) — totaling 904 square feet. Ion? living room and two Walt Disney World officials bedrooms arranged in an un- have announced a multimillion 963 W. Fifth There is a one-car garage dollar expansion with storage space/ Behind usual and practical manner. program for The same floor layout is used the $400 million amusement the garage is a laundry complex. .• ' ' .; " . . room, including a lavatory. for both the traditional and . . A stairway to the cellar is contemporary models, with Dick Nunis, executive vice Phone close to the-kitchen. laundry changes only in the sidewall president of the tourist attract- 12 -room and a rear entrance A materials, window types and a ion, made the announcement I conditio*" 452-9275 The over-all dimensions of few details, among them open Friday at a luncheon of the 5i feet 8 inches by 27 feet rafters and wide Overhangs. Florida Press Association. 8 inches include the garage. Nunis said a space explor- THE TWO bedrooms are ation display and a new West- Your Cirltlltd Lennox Dialer identical in size and have been ern frontier pavilion were part State insurance marked "his" and "hers" on of the project. QUALITY SHEET 1 the floor plan. There is a ,sliding Officials said the complex is METAL WORKS, INC. trotibleshooter to glass door between the two expected to spend about $50 J1J1 E. BrMdwiy phone 45<-«t4 rooms, creating "togetherness" million in development costs be in Rochester yet retaining separate sleeping during a period from October Forrest •Taioott , : investigator areas. Actually, one of the 1972 to October 1973. with the Minnesota State Insur- rooms can be used for guests by Nunis §aid he expected Walt ance Division in the hearing of closing the door and drawing Disney World's attendance to complaints on insurance claims the drapes. The bathroom is exceed 10 million in its first and policies, will be in Roches- convenient to both bedrooms as year, and added , "with that ter Wednesday¦ from 9 a.m. to well as to the rest of the house. kind of volume our expansions 11:30 a.m. ¦'" . ' The approach lo the house is will have td be much faster ¦ He will be at the Minnesota under a covered porch , giving than anticipated." ^^^y^^Mk Manpower Services Office, J07 protection from the weather at ^BP 4th St. NE/ No appointments the front door.; A fireplace on GALESVILLE PATIENT are required. . . the far wall of the living room GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) Persons wishing to contact gives the attractive first im — Julius Mason, who will be Talbott ; on insurance matters pression so, important in resi 86-years-old on Wednesday, is making a satisfactory recov- ^ T^^TY^^^M should bring all related insur- I»LAN: Eating area has been a separate dining room , which would cut denlial design. ^^p ance papers. There will be no FLOOR ery at home after having part wisel included in kitchen rather than have down on the size of the other rooms. ' . A pair of bi-folding doors charge for the* interviews to be y separates the living and dining of a leg amputated at Lutheran made on a first-come-first- areas. In retirement housing, Hospital, La Crosse. Pleasant¦ Valley Terrace Subdivision No. served basis. ¦'¦ W~ 3: there is a need for casual, less in the oversrzed closets, hall - '^^^^^^^ V""* T * I t mmmmmmm\\W Wilmcr L. Larson, et ux to David J. formal living and dining. In this More detailed plans LItchy, et ux — Part of Lot 3, Minnesota closet and pantry. A convenient City, plan, the dining room is in- broom closet is near the back Full study plan information on this architect-designed Albert L. Thels, et ux to Kenneth L. corporated as part of a large blueprint Harstad, el ux — EYi of m"M . '. t. W. door. House of The Week is obtainable in a 50-cent baby 160 It. of Wli of NEVi of Sec. 31-107-7 kitchen, with the table set in Whichever exterior is select- ST00S which you can order with this coupon.: & right of way.. front of a bow Wesley Larson, et ux to Hans W. L. window over- ed, Design L-49 offers a good helpful booklets at $1 Frcudcnthal, et ux — Lot 7 , Block 5, looking the rear garden. The Also we have available two ' living arrangement for retirees How to Build, Buy or Sell It" and Park "A" ' Addition lo ; Winona . . laundry and each: 'Your Home - Harold J. Mohom, et ux to Wllma A. powder room and small families. ELECTRIC "Ranch Homes," including 24 Of the most popular homes Freudcnlhal, et ux — Lot 7, Block 5, are handy to the kitchen , shaw Addlllon to Goodview, garage ROLLINGSTONE, MINN. that have appeared in the feature. Steven A. Rckedal, et ux to Thomas and rear yard. The O. Allaire, et ux — Lot 4 & W. 2 feel cellar stair A Good Neighbor The House of the Week ¦ comes up in a good Harold & Myrtbn of Lot . 3, Block ;2, E. P. Whitlcn's Anyirvhere Winona Daily News Subdivision ol Winona. location—in the service area— -—PHONE— Winona , Minn., 55987 Kenneth L. Harstad, et ux to George so that traffic from it can be P. Bronk, et ux — E'i of NWi & W. of Design No. L-48 31-107-7 directed to the outsde without 689-2116 HO feet of WA of NE' .i of Sec. iff ^^umu?^ Enclosed is 50 cents each for —— baby blueprints J. right ol way. going through living rooms. \nmQQt)mei^ Enclosed is $1 for Ranch Homes booklet James O. Rocmer, et ux to Joseph . ;»fy ii- ;|ia '?iA; 8^SAi;;i: i F. Bronk, et ux — Part of SVb of NWV< THE ATTACHED garage is \ tflffl* ^^p' > A -.'<''' - • RESIDENTIAL Enclosed is $1 for Your Home booklet of Soc. 11-107-8. QUIT CLAIM DEED oversized , greater in area . than As Low As...... $10,134 Sharon L. Onvering lo Kenneth J. the minimum N Complete—Include! erection INDUSTRIAL Covering - Lol 1, Block 2, Bcnke ' s so often provided • Name . ' ' on your lot and foundation. .... Subdivision to Slockton. in a one-car garage. Every Emma Llfefskl, by Trustee to Roy E. home owner becomes Faaturas Include: • COMMERCIAL Llterfkl — East 22 leet of Lot 1, Block aware of Street 144 , Original Plat of Winona. tlie lack of storage spaces in • Beautiful bathroom with Eljer FARM Ramona L. Jciewski, et al lo Harold most garages, for after having flxturat, llfatlma ceremlo tlla • J. Libera — Lois I , I, ( J 10, Block • Carafraa kitchen with ganu* WALL PA B NT , Block 80 S, Lots 2, lived in a City Slate Zip 54; Lois 9 4 10 house he realizes that Ine birch cefclneU. 3, 4, S'& A. Block 64, Slockton. A^-Af^ he has so little space for the • Roomy bedrooma, large cloiet* :; : Harold J, Libera, ot ux lo Ramona L. 'yX.¦: ' ' :: ;' :t'^ i;^ x>.- - ¦: *& Jczowskl - Lois 1, 3, 0 fc 10, Block many pieces of power equip • Hydronlc radlent heating— \: : /? :- .: ::% 54; Lots 1 8. 10, Bloc k "0 A Lois 2, ment , garden tools, etc. clean and dreftleee. Property Transfers 3, 4, 5 A 6, Block H, Slockton. In • Cathadnl beamed calling * T- . VNos 1o George W. Wos — Beverly this house, the 12-foot width Low Cost Financing Aval/ablt— In Winona County Part of Govprnmenl Lot 7, Sec. 16-107-7 . PROBATE DEED creates much floor space along WARRANTY DEED Glenn E. LaBarre hy Executor lo Cor- the side of the garage. BILL WIECZOREK don E. Matthees - Part ol Lot 5, Plat -DEALER — Sec. 20-107-7 . In addition to a full cellar, Florence Becker to Robert G. Zenk, of Subdivision of PHONE. 453-38M-, ^;i|||95 el ux — Pnr| ol Blank Block Curtis Arrrmnd Conway, Deceased by Repre- : there is storage on the first floor : .JJ ^J ' / Third Addition lo Winona. sentallve lo Donald G. Fabian, ct ux — regular S8.15 - gallOfl :/ Daniel F. Przybyljkl, el ux to Port Lois k 8. 7 except W. 52 fl. thereof . & -J &J&^i iMlMmmMr mTnaa VamaAW Wk\ Authority ol Winona — Part of NWV< except E. 160 fl. of S. 20 ft. of Lol 7 ^P^r'^G A except W. 52 fl. ol N.,33 It. of Lot of Sec. 34-107-7. 8, Block 3, Original Plat ol Lewiston. Luex Sales Corp to Robert D. Moniel, DECREE OF DISTRIBUTION 0 • : / el ux — West 56 feet of Lol 3, Block ... '^v- ,; ;?.:A ;<«<;. :;; *r .\;v .'- < / . Deceased to Urban '^' Waller A. Matlkc. ^iii iio - 3, Hill's Addition to Lewiston. 3, Block "A" Sim- Malikc, el ol -- Lol : : ^ ^ ';-U.yyS . -M'y' " *some custom O^x Winona Management Co. Inc to Royce on' s Plal In Allura. s ^\ - - ^ Construction Inc. — Lol 4, Block 1, Plea- CONTRACT FOR DEED HOMES ^ col rs G"" o S s^^T §J o sant Valley Terrace Subdivision No. 3. Slark, et ux to Paul W. Wei- A±^m^^^^ ' Curtis J. 1 *** 1 COMPONENT BUILDING SWEMS ^ F, L. Hlldebrnnd, et ux lo Dnvld A. don, el ux - Lol 4, Block 1. Ullca. j/^r «\\' mmmmmmmmmmmmmmam ^ WE Hansen, et ux — Part of Lot 8, Vlllapje et ux lo , Harlan R. sjftb Melvln Feller, lj ir of Elba & ensement across Lot 5<. of . ? ol SW'.l ol Sebo, el ux — WVj SW' ' ¦ s " Gerald (?, Soronson, el ux lo Donald 4; SE'i ot SEU A E' i nl SWU Sec. J. Znhradnlk, <*' "x — Part ol NE'.< of of SE'i ol Sec. 5-105-5 except highway. / E. /^H^^Hfeiv c, SW. ot Sec. 1M07 B. HAVE Donald Unnasch, el ux In Urmrd t^" ^§S5Jb Charles T. Nagle, et ux to Steven R. Lageson, et ux — All land lylnn South A Beeman — Lol 23, Block "A" Goodview West ol County Road 103 In Sees. 35 A Subdivision, 36-105-a except Bartsch Farm In said = Henry C. Jelewikl, el ux to Joseph F . ' Sr- Sec. 35 . IT -AU... ^ Bronk et ux — Lot 6, Block 3, Gale & Roy E. Lllerskl to Joseph E. Malls- A ^' Kohner' s Addition In Winona. ,ew,KI _ Ensl 22 tect nl Lot 1, Block ^ ^^flVBVHVBHp^^^ Henry C. Jezewskl, el ux lo Charles 144, Original Plal of Winona. T. Naole, et Ux — Lot 33, Block "A" Top Quality Roofing Materials: Goodview Subdivision. Earl R. Roller , Jr., et al to Byron H, Hock , et ux - Lol 15, Block , E. R. in Winona NELSON'S 3-Tab, 235-lb. Asphalt Shlnglaa * Building • Boiler' s Third Addition lo Goodview. Joseph F. Bronk, el ux In Edward R. 1072 Dollar Volume $1,117,054 • NELSON'S SURE SEAL 3-Tab, 240 lb, Asphalt Board, et ux — Lot 6, Block 3, Gale A Kohner ' s Addition to Winona. ¦ Commercial 7W) ,tl2!) i^H^^H^P^^^^^^^^^^^ R Shingles Byrnn H, Hock, et ux lo John C. 37fi ,74t Donahue, el ux — Lot II, niock te, Residential «j^^^^^p Good for Laird's Addition to Winona. Public (non-tnxnblc ) 1,700 VA • NELSON'S MASTER SLAB SHINGLES, Fnorav, et t/x fo Roherl _ Martin M. New houses IG ¦nH M.^mm High Wind Arra W. Thaldorf, «l ux — Part ol NE' « ol ™^m^mKmjkmmm S.\ 1 _^B l M^m SE'i of Sec. 30-107-7. Volume same date ^ ^ rk^^ m\mmW Donald E, Oulbmndsen, et ux lo Har- Mineral Surfaced 90-lb. ROLL ROOFING In 1071 $4fi2,480 • riet Stermtr — Lot 6, Block 7, Chule'i ¦ Addition to Winona. 19" DOUBLE COVERAGE SELVAGE F-dward R. Board, Jr . to Thomas J. The* [our ninin ocean areas of Drive Down Rising Costs! • Laskn, et ux — Part of NW'A ol SE' i Earth-Atlantic , Pacific , In- • HOUSING COMPONENTS rABRICATED IN A MODERN FACTORY. of Sec. lfl-107-7 lylno between old hloh- • USINGI ALL HIGH qUALITY BUILDING MATERIALS. Smoot h Surfaced 35-lb and «5-lb. way No. el S. Chicago Norlh Weslorn dian , and Arctic-hold ft.'i.n per • . • BUILT Railroad right of way. cent of the world's water sup- TO RIGID ENGINEERING SPECIFICATIONS. SALE ROLL ROOFING Royce Construction, Inc. lo Wllmor • WF .WILL FABRICATE TO ANY HOME PLAN. Larson, at ux — Lot 4, Block I, ply. r L. • YOUR HOUSE EXTERIOR WILL BE COMPLETE IN ONK IJA i . ^ ¦ ¦ LASTS^^^^H^^^^S^^^^MANY •^ ^ ||| Ui ^ jAU ^^ V 0THER • New Wet or Dry PLASTIC ROOF CEMENT, C«n TREMENDOUS SAVINGS THROUGH FACTORY METHODS . SP CI LS be applied when roof Ii wat DAYS E A CALL US F R Y UR CONTRACTOR ^ ^ ^ H ^ P ^ ^ $ ~4Jah1mmXm NON-FIBRED ROOF COATING • ° ° Store Hourti 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — ROOFING CREWS NOW AVAILABLE — - BOILEROur REPAIRS Monday thru Saturday jt .Sjx-cinlizcrl .Sdrnincs CBS HOMES VBpll^^ " zi lr\r~*ffll$$F .^ ^^ 184 Main Street OPEN FRIDAYS UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Ln Creicent, Minn. 55947 Shoot , Plato and Structural \%lir^ri^FiarfMGVll/J J • J AM INTERESTED IN COST SAVING ON CBS HOMES S,ao1 F'-brlcntlon WINONA PAINT & GLASS I'^aKV ^ ^ - ^/ CO. KENDELL-0 BRIEN n I own a lot tl I am planninr on bld j. a horn*) 276-278 East Third St. ' ^ ^ ^V ^ ^ ^T • All Typas ot Woldln<) LUMBER COMPANY N n mr.: T r 1 , . "LOOK FOR THE VALSPAR SIGN" "Here to Serve." WINONA BOILER & STEEL GO. ArlHtm' . Phono 452-3652 We Deliver 115 Franklin St. "Tubby" Jacked, Mgr. Ph. 454-3120 163-167 Wo It Front Street Phone 452 5965 City . Stntn "Zip Convenient Parking on 3rd & Kansas Streets Permit for Manpower Seven killed on Service office taken Wisconsin roads; Winona's 1972 building permit 2nd St., drew a $3,921 permit to heating and three bedrooms. construct a print shop in their Work, ly Brooks and Associ- valuation rose to $1,437,954 last ; building. ates, Lohse Drive, is scheduled K. Batman Kriesel C A Hanson Klein Byom . W. Nelsestu«n B. Larson B. Lettaer week compared with $462,480 at death toll 309 Work,'by Nels Johnson Con- for completion in eight months. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS this time a year ago, according struction Co., Exchange Build- Winona Construction Go., 51 Deaths of sevens persons Jn to the office files of George ing, is scheduleu for completion Johnsonst., drew a $35,235 per- weekend accidents raised Wis- mit to construct a 23- by 73- Rogge, city building inspector. in one month. 's 1972 highway fatality foot house consin Howard L. Keller, General at 879 Hickory Lane, toll to 309 today compared with KUJAK BROTHERS, Corp., G Acres addition. The Contractor Inc., 4440 6th St., reen split 259 on the same date a year Goodview 978 Municipal Harbor Road; foyer, wood frame house, will ¦¦ , drew a $96,984 per- ago. " . mit to construct an office build- drew a permit for $9,200 to con- have a two-car garage, and Walter Dixon, 27, of rural Be- ing at 52 E. 5th St. The 80-foot struct a platform scale and a four bedrooms. loit died . Sunday when his car by 66-foot one story building 19-foot by 36-foot addition to Work, by owner, is schedul- struck a tree beside a Rock will house the Minnesota Mam- their building. The addition will ed for completion in six months. be added to the northwest side OTHER PERMITS: County road. power Services , 163 Walnut St. Robert Hendrickson, 34, of rhe exterior of the building will of the building and will be con- Frank Brueske, 416 W. How- Hogden S. Dettinger M. Henderson J. Hogden M. Anderson R. Brandtncr R. Landers Paulson structed of wood and steel. It Mount Horeb died Sunday in a be break-off concrete masonry ard St., $150, repair rear stair- will be one office and house way; work by owner is head-on collision east of Mount units, a brick-lifee material, The , , the controls for the platform scheduled for completion in two Horeb. interior will be partitioned off scale. The 60-foot b 10-foot months. ; Two Reedsburg men, Lyle into offices, a conference room y platform for the scale will be George Sturm, 1024 W; 2nd Kruger, 24, and Richard and a testing room, said Keller, constructed adjacent to the* of- St; $1,714, rebuild a l0- by 12- Strampe Jr., 23 were fatally rhe building will be carpeted , fice; foot room on rear of house; injured Saturday when their throughout and the walls wil} he Work, by owner, is sched- work, by owner, is scheduled car overturned on a Sauk Coun« paneled or covered with a vinyl for completion in three months. substance. uled for completion in four ty road. months Ray Urness, 523 W. Mill St., Phillip Bonack, 21, of Green- The building is scheduled for - Duane Speed, 753% t. Broad- $80, enclose porch work, by dale was killed Saturday In La completion July 1. owner is scheduled for comple- way, drew a $24,795 permit to , Crosse County when his car tion in two months. FROEDTERT MALT, Corp., construct a 36- by 65-foot house B. Aasland Scheller C. Williamson Spencer C. Bomow B. Aasland E, Clark C. Eichman overturned in a ditch. 500 W. 3rd St., drew a $16,027 at 512 Kerry Dr., Hillview addi- Harry Krage, 752 E. Mark St., Laura Rogers, 15 months, of permit to construct a 34-foot tion. The split-level wood frame $300, new roof on garage; Barron died Saturday when she by 32-foot addition. The wood- house, will have a two-car ga- work, by owner is scheduled for Ya ledictorian, salutatqrian named fell out of her father's car. frame addition will house ap- rage, three bedrooms and gas- completion in two months. James Andruss, 23, of Madi- paratus to screen out waste fired heating. Gene Karasch, 601 Main St., son died Saturday in a crash products from the* water the Work, by owner, is scheduled $700, remodel porch at 479 W, near Janesville. ¦ ¦ - corporation utilizes before it for completion in eight months. 5th St.;¦ ¦ ¦work¦ ¦ by Bruce. Mc- . Nally. ¦¦ .; • . G-E-T goes into the sewer. 827 E. at High jerry honors Borzyskowski 1ake , 27 Mothballs should be used Work, by Ralph Scharmer, 4th St., drew a $20,767 permit John Burbach, 660 E. San- GALESVILLE , Wis. - Kath- representative. Who's-—-W h o Hogden, Monica Henderson, son, . Wanda Nelsestuen, John With care as they pose a dan- 571 W. Mill St., is scheduled ior to construct a house at 717 E. born St., 827 construct a 24- Jeff Hogden Byom Wendell Klein and Con- $2, , leen Butman, daughter of Mr. Among American High School Shauna Dettinger, , , ger to children If they are ea- completion in five-months. 4th St. The one-story wood by 25-foot garage; work by Students, High Quiz Bowl Team, Barbara Lettner, Bonnie Lar- nie Hanson. ten. - and Mrs. Milton Butman, Et- W and C Printing Co., 119 E, frame house will have gas-fired owner, is scheduled for com- and has belonged to the Na- pletion in six months. trick, is valedictorian of the tional Honor Society for three ¦ Walter Tarras, 563 E. King Class of 1972 at Gale-Ettrick- years. ' ' St., $2,199, construct a seven by Trempealeau High School with Kriesel, who will enroll in the 22-foot addition to house ; work, a four-year grade point aver- University of Wisconsin , Madi- by owner, is scheduled for com- age of 3.976 of a possible 4;(L son, majoring in mechanical en- Counter Ken Kriesel, son of Irvin Krie- mem- adds has been a. pletion in six months. gineering, sel, Trempealeau , is salutatbri- ber of National Honor Society an with a four-year average of for three years 3.919. A He was chosen to be the" stu- ' pafio appeal Miss Butman plans to attend dent council representative in M Ordered Bef.rt <«| A*T Special guest to the University of Wisconsin , Riv- his freshmen: year and is the f WANT M When the weather turns warm and the air indoors seems er Falls, next year and study current president of the Science ¦:¦ ¦ ¦ stuffy and confining, most families head outdoors to work, pre-law, Club. He also was on the High 1 : : ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦'¦; ¦ ¦ ' play, and relax while the sun shines. attend district She has been a member of Quiz Bowl Team. He has re- Wi MAY^ 23rd , : . AmmW£0-^mW-:- , ADA -A A- -A 1gjDM An open air life-style develops with the season, especially chorus four years and has par- ceived the Thorp Essay Con- pm- when entertaining moves outdoors and yardwork seconds ticipated in solo and ensemble test's District award, the Fresh- RUNS MAY 26 ONLY! housework as a prime concern. dairyland fete work.. She also has been a color men Engineering Merit award W 1 ^ M Pick-up lunches and barbecue suppers multiply, ; for con- guard one year, and in foreto- and was a National Merit Schol- venience and to take advantage of the coolest spot; the GALESVILLE, Wis. — Miss Julie Triiax of Ettrick, Wiscon- sics four years, going to the arship semi-finalist. garden aromas. An innovation, the outdoor refreshment * state contest one year. center has practical appeal when snacks and cold drinks are sin's Fairest of the Fairs, will TWENTY - SEVEN seniors at in demand. attend the district Alice in CURRENT president of the G-E-T High School, more than Dairylaad contest at Galesville Gale-Ettrick-Trempealeau Fu- one fourth of the class of 106, IT MAY" be quite a simple project, a serving counter Saturday. She will attend day- ture Homemakers of America will graduate with academic with cupboards below for tableware and barbecue accessories, time activities and speak .at the chapter, she has been a mem- honors on June 1. but location is all-important. A kitchen/dining deck is a 8 p.m. banquet. ber four years and was vice The honor students, who have likely site, and if the counter is built out from the house Two Alice finalists will be" an- president previously. She won achieved a 3.0 or more of a pos- wall, it may also serve as a divider between patio table nounced at the banquet to rep- both the Crisco Award and the sible 4.0 grade-point average and the busy area off the kitchen, A Coupon And resent District 6 at the state Betty ; Crocker Homemaker of are as follows: This One home recently visited was beautifully geared to its finals at Fort Atkinson. Tomorrow Award. She has been Debra Schultz, Donna Adams, active family with a plumbed-in serving bar off the dining 4-H secretary, the county 4-H Debra Hovell , Catherine Eich- patio — great for keeping guests outside for pre-dinner drinks Other highlights of the day in- Junior ; Leaders president and man, Eileen Clark, Beverly or serving a buffet brunch. clude dairy promotions and ac- tivities free che" the Outstanding Trempealeau Aasland, Charlene Bonow, Dan- wet bar isn't essential but if a water line is accessible, , ese samples, A County 4-H Girl. A iel Spencer, Carol Williamson, a drain may be hidden under a wood deck. Not just for old fashioned five-cent ice Miss Butman was chosen to Steve* Scheller Barbara Aas- entertaining, this addition will eliminate a thirsty gardener's cream cones and musical en- be the recipient of the Spoon of land, Alan Paulson, Rochelle compost trail or, if there's backyard pool keep, drip- tertainment. Joe Larson, Spar- , a Knowledge, Badger State Girls Landers Mary Anderson Janet dry swimmers out of the kitchen. ta, former Galesville" resident, , , will be banquet speaker. BUILT between house and garage, the counter has Banquet tickets are available sides-of lx8-inch western pine boards overlaid with lx2-inch at banks and dairy plants in battens and stained cocoa brown to match cedar siding. A Trempealeau County and may tall section at its open end forms a doorway to the service be purchased at the" :door. . '. '. - . court beyond. Quantities of ice are just steps away in a freezer in the garage, and food and drinks are shaded by an attractive beam construction formed of 2x8-inch Douglas fir planks on Wounded eagle either side of a 2x6, with 2x4-inch cross pieces supporting a healing but he'll section of slat roof ing. CASH never fly again D. Hovell D. Adams D. Schultz Will Buy An 18-Word JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) 26°1 ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦^^ — Baldy, the wounded Ameri- Look at your¦' . ' . /' ¦ can bald eagle, will never At U. of M. . M - again soar to the skies in the tradition of his ancestors. K His wing, punctured by sev- Want Ad For May 26 CTEDC -^ M eral shotgun pellets when two '^^^S^IL boys found him walking along Heart research A U.S. 17, has healed after three months treatment by Dr. F. L. Peacock. But the Jacksonville veter- y Af[ EARLIER inarian says Baldy had an al- center planned lergic reaction to a pin used in mending the wing and he" can MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) sities," Dr, Vernier said. only fly short distances because — Construction plans for a $9.5 Research space will be as- Fill IE DEADLINE of an ''arthritic wris-." million cardiovascular research signed to various studies, he Peacock said the eagle will and training center at the Uni- said. Continuing assignment or HOMEWARD^HHP be sent to a wildlife preserve in versity of Minnesota were an- reassignment will be decided Laurel, Md. U.S. wildlife offi- nounced today by the university by an external committee of CTCD f*A HffiS cers therd will attempt to breed and the Variety Club of the experts from other universities. 51 tr uu. ^"wn him with other eagles already Northwest. The committee will make an- Ads Must Be Ordered there. They hope to help pre- The center, a five-story struc- nual reviews and recommenda- PHONE 454-1730 FOR FREE ESTIMATE ^ ^ ^ i serve a vanishing species. ture containing 70,000 feet of re- tioas on the work. Seven other Ragles from Flor- search laboratory space, is ex- Planning for the center began ida have been sent to the pre- pected to open in June 1974, in 1967 and has been financed serve, Peacock said. The Variety Club is acting as a by the National Heart and Lung No Later Than ¦ fund-raising agency. Institute a branch of the feder- The St, Lawrence Seaway is , 2,342 miles long. Dr. Robert L. Vernier, plan- al government. ning director of the project and pediatrics professor at the uni- BABY BLUEPRINT versity, said the center will op- Teacher to retire CONTINENTAL erate as an interdisciplinary re- WHITEHALL Wis. (Special) search facility. , , — Teachers and administrators Tues., May 23 4 p.m. Planning of tho center has in- HOMES here honored the 44-year tench volved the colleges of medicine , ing career of Mr. TeW Hanson engineering biological sci- GRAB BAG and Wednesday at a dinnei at the ences and the school of public Midway Supper Club, Independ- health. Researchers brought to- ence. ft Ad Must Be 18 Words or Less Af \ ASSORTED gether at C^j the center will in- Hanson, who will retire June clude biochemists engineers, ^ "Quality" Factory-Built , 2, has taught at rural Osseo, This Offer Is Made to Individuals Only surgeons ft Homos to fit your budget. , immunologists and Alma Center, Arcadia , Hixton BUILT IN WINONA cardiologists •k . and York schools. He has been Add Will Run on May 26 ONLY at 26c Visit Our Plant It will offer an opportunity ft Plumblng-Electrlcal-Heatlng at Sunset Elementary School s *|- for cooperative research and since 1965. Blind Ads Accepted IU State & City Inspected cross-stimulation ft No provided in a - MODEL ON DISPLAY - , Published in fhe past by this setting that does not now exist In 1971, n total of fi ,00G ships 1111 East Broadway "Ads received without Ih* coupon or without thi money will not be published and wilt not Phon* 454-1SBS on the campus and is available moved in and out of the St. bo returned." newspaper. ($5 Value). at only a few other univer- Lawrence Seaway.

ajfif Excellent ^\i^& — NO PHONE CALLS — (M$ NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGESI JIM LARSON f Values In... ^X . • Builder ^F 267 Woit :s*5» 601 Franklin St. Winona, Minn. 55987 aaatVmam\SVm*maprc# [SjtliriaUt j _ Los Angeles finally claims first NBA crown Tw/nsiopp/e t urns to smile By JACK STEVENSON run but it fell short and in the LOS ANGELES (AP) — Wilt fourth period, the Lakers pulled Chamberlain's scowl could away. . - scare a bear, but he wore a Gail Goodrich scored 12 in smile of satisfaction when/he the final period arid 25 for the said "I think that winning this game. Jerry West had 23 and row , for Sfft in title should make life a little Jim McMillian 20 as four La- BOSTON (AP) — The Boston test of the three-game senei. easier for me." A kers scored 20 or more. Red Sox have yet to break out Mel Stottlemyre will start for the Yankees. The 7-foot 1-inch captain of Halrston, the other starter, of their season-long slump and Eddie Minnesota has won frv« the Los Angeles Lakers relaxed had 13 points but was second to that means Manager Kasko will be making some straight games, 11 of the: last today in his $L5 million home Wilt un rebounds with 14. shake 12, to lead the West Divi'si6n. and the easier life to which he lineup changes to try to things up. . referred reflected acceptance The 33-year-old West, who In Sunday's game, pitcher everything in as a team player. has Won almost The Sox dropped Sunday's Dick Woodson started a four- the NBA during Ws career ex^ contest at Fenway Park to the ¦ He blocked shots scored 24 run rally in the fifth inning to , cept a title prior to this one, Minnesota twins by an 8-4 points and hauled down 29 break a - tie. He singled, commented: "I couldn't feel score, giving theTwins a sweep Danny Thompson doubled and rebounds despite a painfully in- happier if we had won 10 titles. of the three-game series and jured right wrist as the Lakers Rod Carew drew an intentional I was disappointed that I didn't leaving Boston with a sorry 4-0 -walk to load the bases. shucked off years of frustration shoot better, but I feel I con- season mark. Sunday with a 114-100 victory ' Then Harmon Killebrew hit a tributed in other ways." The Twins,, enjoying their two-run single into the left field over the New York Knicks. play For the Lakers, the title best season start ever, comer. That gave the Lakers their their first night game at Metro- mearis about $17,000 extra in ; Angeles 12 years Bob Darwin and Steve Braun first NBA championship since GRACIOUS IN DEFEAT . . Da\e DeBusschere of the their first NBA title since moving to Los politan Stadium tonight at 7:30 playoff money per man. The New York Knicks reaches out to congratulate Wilt Chamber- ago. Chamberlain led the Lakers to four wins in five games bounced singles through in- they came to Los Angeles in losing Knicks get about §10,000 against the New York Yankees. 1960 and their first since 1954 lain in the Los Angeles Lakers' dressing room after Sunday's of the best of seven series. (AP Photofax j will start fielders for two more runs and each " depending; on how many Bert Blyleven, 4-0, lead. Braun hit four sin- when they made Minneapolis NBA playoff game, which the Lakers won 114-100 to wrap up for Minnesota ii the first con- a 5-1 shares are voted. gles for a 7-for-13 tally in tha their home, j The margin in Dave DeBusschere of the los- three-game series against Bos- games was 4-1, four straight ton. He is 20-for-40 overall for a since losing the opener. ing Knicks said quietly, "We played well, : but the Lakers league-leading .500 average. For Chamberlain, this was a definitely deserved : to win. WINONA DAI^ M The Red Sox* problem Sun- big moment. He has been criti- They're a great team." day was the same thing as it cized during his 12-year NBA Walt Frazier led the Knicks was in the first two games of Mon- the Minnesota series—no hit- career and accused of not get- scoriiig with 31 and Eari ¦ :¦ ¦' ¦ ting along with his coaches or roe, pressed into service at ting." • fellow players. guard, finished with 16. Boston jumped to a 1-0 lead As the Lakers won a record At . Goodrich said it for the in the first inning when Tommy 33-in-a-row and total of 69 du- Lakers, "It's just like a story- Harper was hit by a pitch, ring the regular season, there book finish. They key of the en- AL Wlnoria DallyRTS News moved to second on an epror ¦was SPO no such criticism. . None tire year was us working to- ™ Winona, Mlnnetota and scored oh Carl Yastr- came as they beat Chicago and gether as a team." MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 zemski's single. defending champ Milwaukee in Yfndch is the same thing said 1 playoff games. by Chamberlain who drew a However, by the time the Red Sox scored again—in the The 35-year-old basketball standing ovation from the .ciwd of . 17,505 at the Jorum seventh inning when Carlton millionaire was named the Fisk reached base on an error Most Valuable Player. And it when Sharman took him out late in the fourth quarter, the and scored on Luis Aparicio's wasn't until late that it became single—the Twins had already evident he had sufficiently re- championship assured. ¦ ¦ -¦¦ _ . . put seven runs on the board . Brewers run drought covered from the sprained and the game was out of reach. wrist suffered last Friday night in New York; He wore a protec- Bay State Boxers Mlnntiota (8) 8o*ton (4) abrhbt abrhbl tor usually worn by defensive capture roll-off Tovar.rf 3 1 1 o Harptr.ef 4 J "I « linemen in pro football, Thom'n.sj J 1 1 0 Apafio.iJ. J 0 12 The Bay State Boxers captur- innings C*raw,lb 4 1 J 2 YstfikU* 4 0 13 Los Angeles jumped out to a ends after 30 Kil'rew.lb J 1 I » Smlttuf 4 0 ll 10-0 lead and then found them- ed the league title in the West- CAP) Reei»,*b 7 111 P«»f|l,3b Jill gate Action League Sunday by ANAHEIM,, Calif. - ning when Rick Auerbach sin- Darwlmcf 4 ill oter.lb 4 0 to Belves 53-53 at the half. Their The Milwaukee BreSvers ended gled and made the circuit on a1 BraiiiUk 5 0 4 l GrlffiiUb 411 o a 38-p Brye lf 5 0 ID Flsk.c 4 110 third quarter made the differ- in margin over the Bay a 30-inning scoreless spell Sun- wild pitch arid two infield outs. EMBRACEABLE YOU . , . Ne-w. York's Square Garden. The Bruins went on to win 3-2 . State. Blacks .¦ Nslllei.lf OOOO Tlsnf.p 10 0 0 ence; . day as they tripped the Califor- Bob Oliver's homer tied it for Brad Park, 2, and Boston's Bobby Orr and take a 3-1 edge into what could be the de- Mlt'wIeU 3 0 10 Burda.ph 1 I 0 0 James Douglas led the Box- ¦wrestled on the ice during Sunday s Stanley ciding game of the playoff series in Boston Wooti'in.p 4 2 2 0 Bolin.p 0 0 i 0 Leading 75-74, Happy .Hair--' nia Angels 5-2 with the help, the Angels in the fifth . ' LaRocha.pl 0 0 O Mlller.ph till ers, the league's second round Milwaukee went ahead again Ortng>r,p 0 110 Pattln,p Ol I I ston sank a basket and then perhaps, of Billy Conigliaro's i Cup Hockey match in New York's Madison this week. (AP Photofax) leaders, with a 209—576 es they new shoes, ' -«•*¦¦ an inning later with singles by Joso'mph liio Wilt added a pair, sandwiched . Total 3» 114 7 - — raced to a 1,004-2,805. The . Conigliaro is normally super- John Briggs and George Scott Total 37 4 t 4 around a shot by Walt Frazier , Blacks, the first round pace set- stitious about his garments pri- and Conigliaro's blast after which he blocked. The Lakers Mlnnaiola ...... W0 14J 0O1—I ters, carded 2,767 to finish as or to a game. But he tried new "Briggs ¦ got himself caught off Soiton ..,.,.,.... 100 O00 Oil—4 had built a seven-point lead. ' "- ' ¦¦ :¦ ' . the overall runner-up. shoes, and laced a two-run base. Boston edges Rangers, E—Carew, R. Smith, Thompton 1. DP Tne Knicks made one more homer in the sixth inning. Oliver's double and Leo Car- —Boiton 1. LOB—Mlnntiota 10, Boiton 10. 2B—Thompson, Harp«r, Carew. HR— He followed up with a double denas' single gave California a Reasa 1. S B—Flik. J—Thompion, to inspire a two-run rally in the seVenth-inning run. ninth frame. Tom Reynolds' pinch double IP H R ER BB SO woodion w, JO-".. w> 3 a o a • Conigliaro had been batting and an Auerbach single !" follow- leads Cup finals LaRoeha ...... 1 S 2 2 1 I 3-1 0' Granger ...... Vs t M • c .154, had hit once in 11 trips to ed Conigliaro¦ 's ninth-inning TIant L, 0-1 ...... J 114 A 1 the platter, and had struck out double. ¦: By DAVE O'HARA Orr and Mike Walton, part- play goal with just 1:25 remain- Bolin ...... I J 2 1 T 1 six times in his regular foot- NEW YORK (AP) — Maybe ners in a summer hockey ing. However, the Eruins clung Paltin 2 31 1 • 2 school in Canada,, Save—Granger 1. HBP—by R. Wood- gear. -A there's no such thing as a one- combined on to the lead, and victory. ton, Harper. T-1.51. A—11,747. a neat give-arid-go play for the He related he was headey to- Three share 1st man team in the National 1 OVERSEAS DELI/ERY AVAILABLE ward the field prior to the Hockey League but defense- first goal at 5:26 of the opening ^ «¦ ' game when he said to himself: period. i - • '¦«" ''-f i -e - in CC tourney man Bobby Orr of the Boston T "These shoes aren't doing me Bruins comes closest to it. Just i W$ : A trio of golfers shared this Referee Bruce Hlood whistled any good . I'm going to ask the New York Rangers. 18 penalties, including 8 majors change." weekend's Blind Bogey honors at the Winona Country Club "Wc got another great game and one misconduct, for a total He homered off loser Rick , out of Orr with Ev Edstrom ," Coach Tom John- of 76 minutes in the first peri- Clark, and doubled off south- , Br. John son said in almost routine Alampi and Dr. Larry Korda fash- od. However, the Hangers, who ; paw Rudy May. ion after the young .super star struck for three :: winding up with rounds of 70. power play Winner Bill Parsons (2-2) was scored two goals and set up the goals in the first period of the WS&8 ^- '*v* - Jerry Peterson was in the replaced in the seventh inning other Sunday as the Bruins de- third game in New York Thurs- * * * by Ken Sanders, who turned in next spot with a 73, followed by feated the Rangers 3-2 and took day night , were unable to col- Stan Hammer, F. L. Zeches, his fourth consecutive save. a commanding 3-1 lead in the lect. As a measure of Sanders' Mike Gostomski and Weal Wer- best-of-seven series for the cov- valuo to the BreVers, the club ner with cards of 74. eted Stanley Cup. This time" it was the Bruins, This Saturday will mark the who had managed to click on has only four victories in 14 Although playing with a bad games. first of the club's horserace just two of 18 manpower advan- left knee which probably wili tages in the first three games. Milwaukee, having undergone tournaments with a shotgun require post-playoff start getting things under way surgery, Johnny McKenzie spotted Orr three successive shutouts, got a Orr appeared at his best , long-waited run in the third in- at 12:30 p.m. with a neat pass. Bobby moved breaking his NHL defenseman's in and rifled a shot for a 2-0 record for the playoffs with his lead. 20th , 21st and 22nd points. He set the old What proved to be the decid- mark of 20 in lead- ing tally came in the 17th min- ing Boston to the Stanley Cup two years ago. ute of thd second period. With Cotter thinclads Boston short-handed, Orr inter- 'That first period , Orr ran cepted a pass and went down the whole show ," New York ice on another give-and-go with forward Ted Irvine said. "Not Don Marcotte. Orr finally 5th at St. John s only did he do everything, but passed behind the New York Wrn^ ^ » ,^ Tho Cotter Ramblers finished Dan Kujak and Tom Clemens them play better. And then Bruins' fifth short-handed goal Klgmfa*l&t)KkM<*MW^ Vi &' . fifth in Saturday 's St. John's finished third. they start to go." of the" playoffs , tying the record mf . ' University Invitational track Ac Dee Watten was thi? only they share with St. Louis. Only 24 and the NHL's most meet, but only seven points sep- other Rambler to finish among Irvino scored for arated the Ramblers frorn a valuable player award winner the Rangers the top five in more than one for three consecutive in the second period and then OUCH ... Gal! Goodrich of the Los Angeles Lakers second place berth behind the event , drawing a fourth in the years, s. Orr put on a show which left Rod Seiling made things sticky * , * ' winning hosts, St. John' discus with a toss of 115-3 and # n ' *¦ ji1 shows his surprise as he accidcntly crashes into teammate tho Rangers for the Bruins with a power WimKJMCJM* " 'i,*_ * '***'* ' 'A ^* The Ramblers tallied 30 a fifth In the shot put with a , a partisan New ff iWfK , * -JL.. *KZ * jW *¦ * * rf I Wilt Chamberlain in Sunday 's NBA. championship game with York crowd and a national tele- the Mew York Knicks. The Lakers toppled the Knicks 1 14-100 points, finishing well ahead of heave of 40-8. the majority of the 14-tenm vision nudiencd In a state of to claim the NBA crown . Also bouncing off the solid Laker The Ramblers see their next awe. Dodge trap range field , nnd just behind the top action on tho track a t Jefferson center is Earl Monroe of tbe Knicks. (AP Photofax) four, St. John's won with 4fi , Field as they take on Wabasha Down 2-1 and prompted by to open Wednesday followed by Rochester Lourdes at 1 p.m. Coach Emilc Francis' state- This important part is missing and Minnehaha Academy with ment that they had to win the DODGE, Wis. — The trap in every other economy car. - WE HAVE 37 and Austin Pacelli with 31. fourth game on homo ico in range at th^Dfldge Sportsmen ' s Cotter Rot their best finish Madison Square Garden , the Club will be open for practice of the day from the mile relay Engine trouble Rangers were manhandled by shooting this Wednesday eve- When you buy a Volkswagen I team ot Rich Smith , Sean the Bruins , who can wrap up ning, according to club officials, you get USEi GOLF CLUBS Burke , Tom Wise and Tony halts Boland the serlds in Boston Garden with league shooting beginning something you don'i get with any other Kleinschmidt as they led the Tuesday night. Wednesday, May 17. Class M field with n 3:44.8 BELOIT , Wis - Ron rjolanrl, economy car. WOODS - 1, 3, 4 IpZOJjO clocking, nearly two seconds Winona , Saturday bout a valve A 24-month 24,00O.mile guarantee * stem In the engine of his Lotus FIRST FLIGHT <£*)[- AA nhend of their closost competi- (Most others give you at the very best IRONS - 2 THRU WEDGE ^tJiVV tor — Minnehaha Acndcmv. type fil Formula Ford roa d rac' Klelnschmidt and Phil Draz- Ing car and retired after one SINUS SUFFERERS only 12 months or 12,000 miles.) kowski posted the best individ- and one-holt laps of his first TOP FLIGHT WOODS - 1, 3, 4 $40aOO Mare'a oood n«w» tor youl Exelutlve now "hard-core " srNArCLGAR D»- Some economy cars may promise you % ual performances of the day as Sporta Car Cluh of America cono««lant tnblets act imtently and conllnuomly to drain and clear nil no««|. TOP FLIGHT Drazkowski wound up second in regional race of tho year.- ilmu cnvltles. Ona "hord-cora " tablet olvea yog up to I houra relief from one or two more mi les on a gallon of gas. QA/* A(| pain and pressure ot conoestlon. Allowi you lo breathe eojDy — ttopi IRONS & WOODS 4>JUaUU tho milo with a 4:51.2 time nnd Bolnnd started lllth from tho watery eyes and runny noee. You ran buy SYNA-CLEAR al Glbicei Pharmacy But how many give you 12,000 more on a Kleinschmidt set n new school without need for a prescription. Satisfaction guaranteed by maker. Try If grid in tho rain-hampered five- lodny. guarantee? record with n time of lfi .3 in lap practice race for his class IRONS - GOOD SHAPE $90i00 the 120-ynrd high hurdles — at Blflckhawk FarmR. Ho moved Introductory good enough to tie for second. tf *fl CA •If on ewi#( mol/itolfll end »»rvl*»l Ml (*>ikli In Of cvrdonta »>lh lha Vol»»*0(j« AalntMwjrK* Kl,nUa onf • MANY MORE SETS & ASSORTED CLUBS • up five positions in tho first Offer Worth «P*lii9v .lottnfy pdil lotrd Ki b« rl«Ufttv« \r, mcit«'lot at wflilmanitiip .vliMn H tnr.niln «t Haftt) miUi wKirtn.w Tho remaining Cotter points «o»«i tint |«ti|il nnimol w»or oml »a( on ••r>ic« li.ni| will U ,.ra.,.J M rafltifx) tiv (w/ II "i. lap, but troublo developed short- ¦aut CanailitM Vollr«ia«o t>*al*r. And IhU *ll| IM came In the 180-yard low hur- I* «loi\» I ol <.t>oij)>. ti. yv& d.ol.t lo< 4a<«U. SEEi PAT SHORTRIDGE ly thereafter Cut out Ihli ad — t»ka to Glbmn Pharmacy. Purchaie one pack of IYNA- dles where Kleinschmidt cap- forcing him to drop CLEAR 12*a and reculvn ona more SYNACUBAR IJ-Peck Free. out, Subsequent attempts to re- tured n third ; in the RflO-ynrd Delia Import Motors, Inc. The Golf Shop run wherr* Tom Wise wns third; pair tho car failed and ho miss iCVlh Hifihwny 16, fil ami 14 in tho 220 whore Smith was ed tho ensiling 10-lap qualifying GIBSON PHARMACY! WWr WINONA COUNTRY CLUB raco and 25-lap regional WESTGAT E SHOPPING CENTER Petlibone Island third and In the sprint medley race for Wisconsin *"^^" * whero tha team of Rick Klein* his class. La Crosse. » » In lute mod^h Dralle 2 Wdrriore arrives just qualify for in fim^t^ By B.C. LINDEN Dakota, Minn. — passed the David Moffit of Rochester stag- Daily News Staff Writer initial leader John Kuri of Coch- ed a close race in the second before the completion of meet rane heat; but Moffit ran away with NAIA PAUL Minn. Jeff FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. — one half lap. the 15-lap feature. ST. , A- Red Dralle of Eransdale, Iowa, Bunke and Bob Brewington of For the next five laps Olson Volkart started heat No. 2 borrowed a car from his rac- was able to hold a three-length Winona State turned in perform- ing buddy Ed Sanger of Wa- from the front and commanded ances in the Macalester Col- lead, over Henderson, but on lap that position handily until four terloo at 11 a.m. Sunday, didn't No. 7 Henderson went wide into lege Invitational here Saturday arrive at Tri-Oval until 10 min- laps from the finish when Mof- that enabled them to qualify for the dirt of the east turn, al- fit, who had started seventh, utes after registration normally lowing Dralle and Baker to the National Association of In- closes and began the 20-lap placed himself immediately be- tercollegiate Athletics track late pass. Henderson repassed Bak- hind. Throughout the final laps model feature 17th in a field of er immediately and, Baker meet to be held in Billings, ' .. Moffit applied constant pres- 17 cars. having none of it; caught Hen- sure and actually edged slight- Mont., May 31-June 3. Those events normally would derson again before the comple- ly ahead on the last turn. But Bunke, slendor senior from be associated with dismay, cer- tion of the lap. the final sprint was a replay Rushford, soared 23 feet, eight tainly not success. With Henderson out of the of tbe preceding four laps. Mof- arid one-quarter inches in the Brewington Oland But the IoWa veteran calmly way, Dralle began closing on long jump to take first place. fit would close before the cor- 49.4 which meant six runners "went to school" during the Olson, and Baker began clos- ners but Volkart would leave His winning leap — he earlier first 10 laps of the race, found ing on the both of them. With him behind on the straights. scratched on a leap of over 24 finished in a span of 1.3 sec- the groove he wanted to run three laps remaining they were Volkart won the drag race to feet — not only qualified him onds ahead of Mueller. and then began to charge all bumper-to-bumper; and as the flag with a victory margin for the national meet, but it es- As a result of some confu- through the field. many times as Dralle almost of a few feet. In third was Ken tablished a new meet record sion in the administration of Sat- He pushed his borrowed Chev- caught Olson^ Baker almost Johnson of Goodview. erasing the old mark of 22 lOHi urday's meet, no team scor- rolet into the top five with sev- caught Dralle. But no one was set by Jim Bauer of the Uni- ing, was available when the Volkart had so such initial , en laps to run, took the lead on able to pass and they took the advantage in the feature. Mof- versity, of Minnesota back in teams departed the 18th lap and won going checkered flag in one all-en- 1968. A : The'.". ."next competition for ' fit started from the outside of away. . veloping cloud of dust. * the front row, while Volkart Bunke alsomanaged a third- Coach Myron Smith's squad IN HOBBY stock action, Greg started seventh. Moffit quickly place finish in the triple jump will be Friday in a quadrangu- HE WAS probably thinking to Volkart of Minnesota City and lar meet at River Falb. The himself , "Some days you just removed himself from the test with a leap of 44-5 V ¦ meet will start at 2 p.m. and can't seern to do anything ¦ : - of the field and finished one- Brewington, a rapidly-devel- . .: yr ,*r-: *... ; . half lap ahead of Jim Schell oping freshman from Eyota, will include Stout State, the; Uni- wrong." / versity of Wisconsin-Superior, But that's not the entire STREET STOCK (Rollingstone), who had passed Minn., placed fourth in the 3,- Heal (10 laps) Johnson for second on the last 000 meter steeple chase with a Winona , and the host Falcons. story. The first 15 laps of the . 1. Dean erdmann, Winona; J. Duana ' late model feature were exclu- Strain, Rochester; J. DavW Oertet, WI- lap. ..;- time of 9:32.9 and set a new nonat 4. ¦ ¦ Dave Flrigerald, winona. sively a Phil Prusak show. .. -. - • Fealura (1J lape) SCHELL had earlier won tbe varsity record in the process. 1. Duane Strain) 2. Dean Erdmanni 3, The winning time in the event Starting second from the grid, Dave Fitzgerald ) 4. Dava Monkelj J, first hobby heat, holding a the Eau Claire, Wis., driver Rick Hauler, tiVinona. wide lead over Glen Slawson Saturday was a remarkable Winona Archers HOBBY STOCK 9:15 opened a five-length lead over First Heal (10 laps) of Rochester and Bob Jenkin- . pole-sitter Gerhard Wollenburg 1. Jim Ichell, Rolllnsitofle, Mlnn.i 1 son of Winona — both of whom HIGH FLYING CHAMPION . .. Len Dun- Ington, N.J., Sunday. Duncan was taken to But the top individual per- of Austin Minn., Glenn Slawion, Rochester; J. Bob Jen- former for the Warriors in the , before the klnson, Winona I 4. Pat Durnen, Winona, displaced Winonan Pat Durnen can, Lonsdale, Pa., an eight time midget the hospital where he was treated for cuts convene season completion of lap No. 2. Then, Second Heat (10 laps) from second place on the next meet was senior Dave Oland. The weatherman smiled on when Wendell Kuehn of Roches- 1. Greg Volkart, Minnesota City i 1. racing .champion, flies through the air after and bruises but didn't appear to be seriously Oland , who has earned varsity Dava Moffit, Rochester; 3. Ken Johnson, to the last lap. Durnen eventu- bouncing off a guard rail during the feature injured. (AP Photofax) -.. - . the members of the Winona ter caught Wollenburg on the Ooodview; 4, Wayna Henderson, Dakota, ally dropped out and Ron Dona- . letter awards in cross-country Archers Sunday as they held next lap, Prusak had seven Minn. : event for ARDC rnidget racing cars at Flem- and wrestling in addition to Feature (15 . Japs) hue of Rochester finished/fourth. their first shoot of the seaBori lengths on Kuehn and was rap- 1. Dava Moffit; 2. Jim Schell; 1. Ken Street stock action amounted track, reeled off two separate under sunny skies. Beginning Johnson; 4. Wayne Henderson; I. Bob half-mile races in the Identical idly pulling way. It was obvious Jahklnsont (. Dick Petersen, Alma, Wis.; to a pair of. races between archers and . those new to that Prusak was going to be the 7. Grej Volkart. Dean Erdmann of Winona and time of 1:57.9. league shooting turned LATE MODEL For Dodgers Sutton out Sun- winner by a wide margin — First Heat (12 laps) Duane Strain of Rochester. Erd- He recorded the impressive day for the qualification shoot just so long as nothing happen- 1. Rich Oltort/ Rodttstfr; 2. Red Dral- mann claimed a close victory clocking in the open 880-yard .-— where scores are kept for 2) le, Waterloo, towa ; l. Dalai Baker, Roch- ed to his car and, there ester; 4. Cadi Henderson, Dakota, Minn.; in the heat after starting well run but failed to place and lat- placement in future tourna* would be no need of a restart. 5. Tim Lorenj, Ladysmllh, Wit. behind Strain but Strain ran er duplicated his effort in the ments.-v . . The restart became necessary Second Heat (12 laps) away with the feature after two-mile relay, but Winona s 1. Ron Oosi, Eau Claire), Wis.) 1. l-hrt ' The Winon a Archers com- after Fred Prudoehl, Winona, Darrel Zwalfel/ Kasson, Minn.) I. Wen- starting well behind Erdmann. team wound up sixth with a pete in the West Central Field spun on lap seven, but it did dell Kuehn, Rochester; 4. John Fexsen, Winona; 5. Phil Prusak, Bau Claire. who spun while in the lead time of 8:03.3. Archery League and will be Kuehn, and the rest of the field , Feature (to. laps) and rejoined the race iv third. Oland also turned In a f ast participating in seven tourna- little good as Prusak pulled 1. Red Dralle; I. Wendell Kuehn; 1. Tri-QvaTs next scheduled rac- Phil Prusak; 4. Dale Bakeri 5. Tim split quarter-mile time of 51.4 ments this summer. The first away again. ing programs are Tuesday, and inning ioreni ; (..Rich Olson; 7. Jon Swan- for his leg on the mile relay, league shoot In Winona is sched- son, Rochester) 8. Dick Sorenson, Roch- ¦ Then trouble struck Prusak's Friday. Both programs will be- By HERSCHEL NISSENSON walked four, struck ' out three home.." .: but again the Warrior four- ' ester; '. Ron Goss; 10. Gerhard Wet- uled for June¦ 18, while two. spe- car on the 16th lap. lehburn, Austin. gin at 8:30 p.m. Don Sutton's best was and hit a batter, was Bob Bail- he victory kept the surpris- some was unable to finish . . in cial events' — novelty shoots on As Prusak rounded the first brilliant ... but not quite good ey's clean single to right lead- ing Expos one-half game be- the top five. Moorhead; State July 4 and Labor Day. turn it could be seen that his enough. ing off the seventh. hind New . York and Phila- won the event with a record poteting in Anyone interested in shooting left front wheel was "It was the best game I ever After Sutton lett, Jim Brewer delphia in the NL East time of 3:18. with the club should nowhere near the same direc- contact pitched in professional ball, and followed with two hitless in- The Phillies staked Carlton to Jack Peplinski recorded his president Robert Fratzke or at- tion as the rest of the car. And lfer that covers eight years," the fastest time of the season in La Crosse go nings before Ricbert came on a 4-0 lead in the third inning tend the next regular meeting Prusak, now driving a car with Los Angeles right-hander said in the 13th to be greeted by after loading the bases on Mike the 220-yard dash of 22.5 which a broken tie rod, slowed, letting to be held May 24 at 8 p.m. in Sunday after hurling lo innings John Boccabella's leadoff Anderson's double, was good for a fourth place , the Holzinger Lodge. V Kuehn past. of one-hit ball, only to have the single, the second Montreal hit. Greg Luzinski hit a two-run and two other Winona runners wins Shreveport ¦ Dave Roberts of Detroit NEARLY AS SOON as Kuehn Montreal Expos edge the Dodg- After Ron Woods popped up at- homer for the Phils in the achieved the fastest clockings is took the lead, fiowever, Dralle SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) - Golfers Association for players ers 1-0 on reliever Pete Rich- tempting to sacrifice, Ron Hunt eighth and Bobby Bonds con- of their careers. the third brother to skate for ert's bases-loaded error in the singled. Clyde Mashore was nected for the Giants in the Senior Howie Cook finished Michigan State's hockey team. moved to No. 2, since, all the Don Iverson of La Crosse, Wis., who didn 't qualify for the Hous- , ¦¦'¦ ¦ while Kuehn had been chasing shot a two-under-par 69 Sunday ton Open. 13th. A purposely passed after the run- ninth. • - . sixth in the mile run with a Previously^ his brothers Jack Prusak through traffic , Dralle to win the Shreveport golf meet Iverson, a La Crosse college Elsewhere, Steve Carlton be- ners moved up on Duke Sims' The Pirates dropped a home fine time of 4:24,6, and fresh- and Doug won Spartan letter*. had enjoyed a clear shot and its $5,000 top prize. graduate, was a National Asso- came the National League's passed ball. run battle to the Reds 4-3 but man Gary Mueller was clock- through the high groove, The Iverson, 26, finished with an ciation of Intercollegiate Athlet- first five-game winner with a Richert then hobbled Mike won the game ; 9-6 with Willie ing in 50.8 while taking seventh Winona Daily New* CL determined Iowa n literally eight-under-par 276, two strokes ics titlist in 1968. 13-strikeout performance as Jorgensen's bouncer back to Stargell belting a pair of cir- in the open 440. The winning Winona, Minnesota "** came from nowhere to pass for ahead of the runner-up. 'T may He had won $11,000 this year Philadelphia rounced San the mound as Boccabella raced cuits and driving in five runs. time in the quarter mile was MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 tha lead on lap 18. And that wake up tomorrow and not be- on the tour but had not won a Francisco 8-3, the New York ^?-?^????^^?^?????????^??????????????????????»?? ^ »?»»???????»» was that. lieve I won," he said. tourney as a professional Mets rallied in the final three ^ Kuehn remarked later that he The tourney at the par-71, 6,- "It Is a tremendous amount innings to beat San Diego 8-6 in had not chosen the best gear- 954-yard Shreveport course was of satisfaction to win, no mat- 10, Pittsburgh outslugged Cin- ing for the conditions and that, sanctioned by the Professional ter what tournament," Iverson cinnati 9-6 and St . Louis scored after being passed for the lead, said in reference to the meet's three times in the last of the his only chance was for Dralie secondary role to the Houston ninth to nip Atlanta 5-4. Hous- tourney. ton and the Cubs were post- to be detained in traffic. That m didn't happen. "It is very important to the poned by cold weather in Chi- )i£am^ammmmmmmmmm\mMwaYxmTiK& m Prusak, although he somehow WSC netmen young players to have satellite cago. A managed to bring his "sqvir- tournaments," he said. The only hit off Sutton , who rely" car in behind (well be- hind) Kuehn to claim third, was slightly unhappy with the still winless day's events. ST. CLOUD, Minn. - Three "That's racing," he said phi- Winona State College netters 1 mltwSlmmamVXmWSsW&IBlf o Scoreboard ¦ , lasssBaWl T losophically but also noted, glimmer of hope to j j; | * '' offered a ? a r^tttPfM] I *^-fl*^^^^*|*ffpr(FfflWVi it . v. ^^mYTmama\mamaa ^.iaki(^^^^^^vm9jaa\a\maM\\9aa%M iammaa^rn^ ^awaaata\\waMnili'i^^'9 ,^at j a L "that's the trouble with driving the Warriors' weekend efforts, a year-old car — parts get but the team dropped three Baseball Hockey 'fatigued' and then they break. starts in a triangular meet at NATIONAL LEAGUE PlayoHi there wait- Bill Dlvlilon NHL I was just sitting St. Cloud State College-falling W. L, Pet. OB Cltamploriihip ing for something to go wrong, to tlie hosts, Moorhead State New York ...... 11 i .6t7 Saturday 's Reiult and it did ," and the University of Minnesota Philadelphia U 7 .tit No game scheduled. Montraal 11 * -«47 Sunday's Result —Morris Saturday. PlttsMralt » 10 -*« * Boston 1, New York l , Boston leadi AS A MATTER of fact, Pru- Chlcajo ... • 11 - 1 Ntw York at Boilon, matches, with Kopren collecting San Dlno ...... » 11 .«» 4'/i Wednesday '* Oama fith — behind Ron Goss (Eau Clnclnmtl t 11 .411 * ance to impact and penc- I j ^|!i,|"t i..,,. .. I Mca Willi I ' fl« I fmM^W$WmmWmj>t Saturday '! Rtiulti ' I ,^r i i . L TMoe essi I aapiacei > Traoi-iay..A . i. wsa.¦*<• ix.isit- T«« fuTfiwavQ^-'^uSi WtsSSawam^^^i A. (Winona). Koehler and Reithel also Plttibursh Cincinnati 1 No game scheduled. t) tratlon. (You vvoulda t site . I. Sunday "~ BHraBeS ^aSiHEBBl T San DIMO a, Naw York 1 's Oama a} run over steel drill bits «. . A78-1I • »U6 In that race, Goss started teamed to win a pair of doubles New York at Boston, If necessary. - - %*7M wMSffi^aWS&SlW&Em T matches. San Francisco 3. Philadelphia 1 a} tlin way wo did here- V*neCK B78-14 6.45-14 - WJI , $2.05 aammmSa^^^^sam^^f^fi? ¦fourth but took the lead on the Chicago *, Houston 4 C7B-14 6.9S-14 t»t.M |M» ^ never relinquish- The Warriors dropped to an St. Louis 4, Houston J + but the dernotiDtration. VOUr m\\mVmm\mWsWam\mflll 4) second lap and Los Angelas al Montraal, rain 4 illustrates ho\v touch ei o IZH< 7-»-» ilM? !M> ed it. Back in the pack, how- 0-10 mark with 5-4 losses to Basketball 7 - — WftWmMlim\mWm\If 4 Sunday 's Rtiulta Playotls b,.„ ever, a close contest for Becond Moorhead and Morris to go wth Philadelphia I, San Pranclico 1 NBA I .h. ,..i n.fr -g| - --|£-. g{; Naw York I. San Dleco a, |0 Innlngi j '"^ eventually , developed between the 8-1 loss to the Huskies. Champion ship ~ ' 1B^^^ / Pittsburgh », Cincinnati < Saturday 's Reiult e> Thnn Goo74.»a | is.sa \ I But the crowd of 2,000 didn't beating Morris's Bill Sinzheimer Only game scheduled ABA Tuesday's Osmci Championship 4 _—. ; 4 seem to mind the relative lack 12-7 and Moorhead's Craig Har- tan Francisco at Montreal, night Saturday '* Result j that the second ris 12.5. Kopren added a 12-7 Los Angeles al Naw York, night Indiana 114, New York IM, Indiana of excitement San Diego at Philadelphia, night leads best-of-r series, 1-0. late model heat offered , since win over Moorhead's Larry Ol- Hauilon at %l. Louis, nlplt t Sunday's Oama OUR UIWEST PRICED what they probably needed son to his day's accomplish- Pittsburgh at Atlanta, night No gam* scheduled. \ WNflfJ^ . \ Chicago at Cincinnati, night , —^ Monday's Oama rnij r- most after the first heat WAS a ments. Ho gam* scheduled . -H 1199 t D,a »,,.,;, t AMERICAN LBAttUB/ Tuesdey 's Oame t BIACKWAIJ¦ S^^ ** „ rest. The Warriors host Rochester Haw York at Indiana. ,wi de I8^ ¦ l#|T 5 ^- Bast Division / 4 ,i,fl «, • ?}?!! 'ld !! 11, • ¦ ss&s?^.!... bwnf,, 4 In the first heat, Rich Olson L Prlday' Qarne 4 Inin sizes. to?« fit fflmmm "(*i«i «*« r '» o»i »i> ,> /*'!r - ¦ ¦ pius»i.75fed , %§ ?" Junior College on tlie Winona w. . m. 08 Indiana * JORWS&*$' nylon" cord Ml »«• Tax ani) old • «.t , Peterson in track Kamai City t 11 .4)1 4 Then, three cars ~r Olson California 7 10 .411 4 k Train Now for ^ _ T . , , 1 0 Sun, 1 rp.m. to 5 p.m.r Thurs. 7 a.m. lo 9 p.m. ? Dralle nnd Cecil Henderson of PETERSON, Minn. - Rush- Saturday's Rliulli ^ ? To servn you bettor.. and for your • Cleveland 11, Chicago 0 Hk Job Opportunities , , . 7 Detroit 4, Texas 1 ? ,_ I • Mon. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fri. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. ? ford defeated Peterson 84te-47ft 4 convenience wo are open during > • i here Friday In a dual track Minnesota i, Boston 1 In Today's ' Tuel- 7 am# 9 p,,r1, Sa1, 7 a•m• ,0 5 m Oakland 4, New York 1 Mm J thoio lioun: * *° * P' ' 4 meet. Kanias City », •alllmor* 1 r Printing Plants Wad. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. I John Chrlstensen led the Tro- calllornla 1, Milwaukee • 4 J • LAWN BOY Sunday's KaiulU Laam Cold Composition, Ptslt- jans with victories in the 100- Minnesota I, Boston 4 ? 4 MOWERS yard dash (10.7) and the 220- Detroit 7, Texas 4 Up, Offset Prm Opttation and POWER ¦ Oakland 7, Naw York I C«me», Layout ind Dtvgn and Flnmr-TIp Sjartltifll yard (lash (26.6). Cleveland 1, Chicago 0 • S'tcvo Olson was a triple win- Balllmnra I, Kansas City 4 Lino, Typa Setting & Lcttcrprcti Mllwlukaa I, California X • Quirt on tha Gol ner for Peterson, winning both Gl Approved Monday'* Oam« Sea Lawn Boy Mowen nt the low and high hurdles Naw York (ltott|emyre 1-1) al Minn*. for F-nthar Infomtallo* Gil orWrlla tb/; sola (Blyloven 44), nlfjhl as well as pole vault. Team- Only fame scheduled NELSON IIRE SERVICE BROTHERS mate Kendall Johnson record- Tuesday's Oama* GRAPHIC ARTS 11T (Independent Ooodyear Dealer) BADD | ESBi\\\\\\\ ^mm ^^am\mm\\\\\mmmm\ 4 ^^^ nUDD STORE, INC. ed a 20-2 leap in the long jump, Mllv/auke* al Oakland, 1, Iwl-nlght. Boilon *• California, nigW Technical School a) Highway 61 West Phon* 454-5181 TRUB VALUI HARDWAM a school record. Naw York at Minnesota, nllhl 1104 Cwrrlat Av«nu«, Mlnntapalh | | ¦ ^^^^^ 2 ^^ H * IM ¦ .

JML MONDAY, MAY 8, 1972 OP Winona, Minnesota

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Wallcar A

BLONDIE By Chick Young !

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LI'L ABNER v , ' . By A| Capp ¦ REDEYE . . ' .'>>• • By Gordon Bess

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

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

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MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst

GRIN AND BEAR IT DENNIS THE MENACE

NANCY By Ernie Bushtnillor

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"Is needing some big medical breakthrough to I GUCSS WHAT HAPPENS WHEU YA TURN OH THE TV ' impress visiting President, Comrades!... something I AN THE MSWM* like acimuneturel" MACHINE AN' THE AUXER 'N TOASnfc.VACUIW OftNHR *M THE WW big, Mnmf te itVH MLAioHce ir