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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 1

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Weather north, THE DAILY REPUBLIC Only 4c Per Word ami ftOft high In Volume LXXXX Number 283 An 24 Pages Independent Newspaper The S.fo. Newipapef Served by Both AP and UN Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1973 Mitchell, S. D. ant for 12 (lays.

Cancel as soon us yon get and only flfrprotjrfate tato. fteaeh the Rig Market, over Bfl.flOO readers through Thfi Dally Repnbllc. Call Mn-5511, stop in, or mall It May. Edition Single Copy lOc Nixon Submits Federal Housing Plan Direct Cash Payments Would Help Meet Needs WASHINGTON (AP) Tcr- "the most promising way to approach, that developers per cent lax credit that would ming the federal government achieve decent housing for all make newly-built units "avail- be the equivalent "of an addi- "thc biggest slumlord in his- our families at an acceptable able at special rents for low-in- lional interest yield of morn lory," President Nixon urged cost." come families and the govern- than one-half of one per rent" Congress today lo authorize a Recommending that first pri- mcnt in relurn would pay the at current interest levels, new experiment that would pro- orily be given to the elderly developer the difference be- The objective, would he to vide the needy with direct cash poor, Nixon said the cash sub- twecn such rents and fair mar- make investment in housing payments to help meet their sidies "would be carefully kct rents." oans morc attractive, housing needs, scaled to make up the differ- In the field of public housing, "The American dream cannot Nixon said the direct pay- ence between what a family Nixon announced he was lifting be complete for any of us un- ments should be considered as could afford on its own for his Jan, 5 suspension of "the css jt is within the reach of all a potential substitute for mas- housing and the cost of safe section 2' program under which of us said Nixon "A decent; sive public housing projects. and sanitary housing in that gc- new and existing housing is home'in a suitable living elivi- In a long-promised special ographic area." leased for low-income fami- ronment is an essential part of ti irl 4 It nt iVin 1 Close Gas Stations In Protest Of Phase Four Bob Covicllo and Dominic DISciullo place signs on cars blocking gas pumps at (heir Everett Chevron station.

Hundreds of Massachusetts gasoline stations shut, down Tuesday in the face of a state government legal threat to hah a three-day boycott in protest of the Phase Four price ceiling. (UPI Photo) Courses by Newspaper Distinguished Scholars To Share with Readers i 10 live, not just linger, Twenty of the academic.and contact (classroom) session.How Can It Be Achieved. Dr. The pro bi ems or Id's, most distinguished from Dr. Cochrane at Dakota Richardl 'Growing Old Should Be A Time To Live' ABERDEEN, S.D, (AP) Lt.

Gov. William Dougherty, speaking at the Dakota Nursing Home Convention, said growing old should be a time to message, Nixon said that the Nixon said that under the di- lies. cash payments appear to be reel nayment nlan. "The feder- Nixon also proposed a major al government would provide experiment designed to ease quailed recip.enls with an ap- the home-buying burden on propriate housing payment and young families, would then let them choose He asked Congress for au- their own homes on the private thority to test a program that market." would gear mortgage payments Nixon said a recent study to expected changes in family "it costs between 15 than make the same that dream." McGovern Asks Order Reversed WASHINGTON Inducted Into S. Highway Hall Of Honor South Dakota ASCS Executive Director Charles C.

Droz of Huron to reverse an order issued earlier this month which directs county ASCS offices not for crop drying. Indicted payment over the life of into Sout Dakota's Highway ernmenl to provide housing for people than for people to ac-'the loan, families would make llc quire that housing themselves smaller payments in the earlier pjcrre. on the private market." Inductees were Dave Inductees wee Dave years when they are hardest Gustafson, Sioux Falls aA In'1970, Congress authorized; pressed and larger payments tractor; 'Earl Coyne, former to assist farmers who need fuel a $150 j)ii on experimental later on when their incomes Brown County highway superin- flPVin 1 un 1 "Mi ctirl i 11. i i program in housing allowances arc higher," Nixon said. win in McGovern made public a inv olving more than 18,000 fam- w- scholars will be featured in America and the Future of Man, the unique Courses byjplemental Wcsleyan.

To obtain the vital sup- enrichment Newspaper program to" be'educational kit that will assist published by THE getting the most from the REPUBLIC. The series will be published psychology, Harvard; Dr. Carl Rogers, resident fellow, Center for the Studies of the Person. The Challenge of Change: Dr. Kenneth Boulding, professor of University 'of our older the number one priority of state government in South Dakota," he said.

"In the areas of transportation, nutrition, housing over a 20-week period, starting the first week in October, Executive Editor Bruce M. Stoner said today. Courses by Newspaper is a program funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, administered by the University of California at San Diego and distributed by Copley News Service. Cooperating in the program is Dakota Wesley an University, Mitchell, with Dr. a a Cochrane, vice president for academic affairs, serving as coordinator.

The articles to be published are intended for at least three possible groups of r-eaders: the person with casual interest in serious exploration of the problems of our times, the person desiring to supplement what he reads in the newspaper article with additional study for his own edification, and the person who has a need for or who desires to obtain degree credit. The 20-week program provides for two semester hours of credit. Readers seeking degree credit can obtain information on fees program beyond reading of thc.e i University 'Of and mec ii ca care there is much newspaper articles, those in- Colorado; Dr. Herbert Kelman, lo be done lo make Hfg better i ninVintvl Plnrlro flflnnr nrnffiSKOl 1 iu- A cfato terested should send $10, with name and address, to: America and the Future of Man, P. 0, Box Wayne, N.J.

07470.. The lecturers who will write, the 20-part America and the Future of Man series are: Introduction: Dr. Daniel Bell, professor of sociology, Harvard. The Past is Prelude the American Experience and its Relevance to Today's World: Dr. Carl Degler, professor of American History, Stanford; Dr.

Oscar Handlin, Pforzheimer University professor and director, Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, Harvard. Reading the Signs and Portents: Dr. John R. Platt, Mental Health Research Institute, University of Michigan; and Dr. James Bonner, professor of biology, California Institute of Technology.

People of Plenty? The Limits of Abundance: Dr. E. J. Mishan, professor of economics, London School of Economics; and Dr. Henry Wallich, professor of economics, Yale.

The Good Life What Is It? House Upholds Veto Of Minimum Wage Bill WASHINGTON (AP) The be overridden and has House is expecled loday lo sus- called on all union local leaders 11 President Nixon's veto of a i to carry the message to their Itilll i i v.j»\* oiivnc in Pnnrtnncc bill. increasing the immmum wage despite a determined effort by labor leaders to salvage th i Sla leaders failed in four previous efforts In sler the two-thirds majority needed lo override a veto and a Cnrintn representatives in Congress. Meany also sent the members a 12-page analysis of Nixon's veto message, rebutting it point by point and calling it "a collection of myth and distortion of fact." Although tho bill finally Richard Clarke Cabot professor of social ethics, Harvard. The Rule and the Role of Law: The late Professor Her- jert "Packer, Jackson Eli Reynolds professor of law, Stanford (Prof. Packer died soon after he had prepared this essay); Professor Kurland, irofessor of law, University of Chicago.

Was Malthus Right? Problems Posed by Overpopulation: Dr. Garrett Hardin, professor of human ecology, University of California, Santa Barbara; Dr. Roger Revelle, Richard Saltonstall professor of population policy, and director, Center for-Population Studies, Harvard. Science Hero, Villain or Dr. Philip Morrison, professor of physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Dr.

H. Bentley Glass, distinguished professor of biology, State University of New York at Stony Brook. The Future of Man, the Organism the New Biology: Dr. Leon R. Kass, tutor, St.

John's College, Annapolis; Dr, Robert Sinsheimer, chairman, for the elderly in our stated Dougherty added. Telegram he sent to Droz, challenging the authority of the state executive director to make such an order. Priorities under the voluntary fuel allocation! program are established byi presidential order, not on the state level, McGovern told Droz. The South Dakota Senator also asked Washington officials ilics. Nixon recommended this effort be expanded and that figures be gathered on the cost of safe and sanitary housing in parts of the country.

tendent, and the late S.P. 'Tex" Bidwell. Gustafson began highway construction work in 1919 and Much of Nixon's message dealt with high interest rales, the current scarcity of mort-. gage funds and possible ways credited as among The to ease the situation. first to use many new The President said he will i ventions in highway construe- The President said a final de- propose, legislation to allowkion in he state, cision on the wisdom of the in- lenders a tax credit of up lo COyne was Brown County novativc approach probably per cent on 'the interest superintendent for 32 inl975 "late in 1974 or earn when they put their mon- years.

Bidwell, a highway con." ey into residential mortgages, tractor, was credited with in. of the Agricultural Stabilization I jr or ne moment, Nixon said, "When a savings and loan as vention of a highway deck fin- and Conservation Service, thejt ncre would be a continuing sociatioff," for example, placed ishing device. agency charged with neet i 0 provide some federally- at least 70 per cent of its More than 300 persons attend- farmers oblain fuel, lo clear up; ubsidizcd housing tfolio into mortgages, Nixon led the ceremonies, held for the the notice issued by Droz. 'Hundreds of South Dakota But he recommended, as a new'said, his plan would provide year. farmers urgently petroleum products for need crop drying," McGovern said.

"Top officials of the Department of Agriculture have advised my office that crop drying, along with all agricultural needs, is a high priority for allocation of existing product." One Of The Sextuplets Dies From Lung Disease DENVER (AP) One of the Stanek sextuplets has died from a lung disease common in prematurely born babies. A doctor says three of the other infants show signs of the same ailment. Julia Stanek lived about 44 hours before severe hyaline membrane disease caused her death Tuesday night. Doctors department a 1 i ia Technology. of biology, Institute of Conculsion: Dr.

Paul Saltman, vice chancellor for academic affairs and professor of biology, University Diego. of California, San good condition. GFP Returns 5,668 West River Prairie Deer Hunting Applications PIERRE, S.D. (AP) There will be a lot of unhappy deer this of is how many appli- meat prices. putting idle acres back into The babies were about six! premature.

lor i talked to the only 15,135 hunters them. That cations-were returned this week by the South Dakota Game, Fish.and Parks Department for West River Prairie deer hunting permits. Ed Nielsen, license super-1 "You can presume that high production to try to offset ns prices are a part of the reason I mg costs of operation for the increase in appli- That will tend to reduce habitat available for wildlife through the winter, and Powoski said pheasants would be particularly hurt by the reduction of cover. "It could affect most mother, 34, and reported moved by Julia's Stanek I able for the season Nov "slip was and. 23-25.

death, but! The.20,803 arp a are a cations," Department Secretary John Popowski said today. "All you have to do is read the papers. You see increased prices, reduced buying power, inflation. species," he said, "But the "flhe 1 "onS-faSS oS' LSe it certainl? pfifffnt Sly QaiH niinihpP of' PIH Ulu pncaaaill UaUaJJj IB I lives and dies within about a mile-of where he is hatched. 'Habitat is probably the most SOmewhat Ut Sti11 par nn Hospital had her the first time since thc babies liable ui A TllP.sdaV nr ninlil Tho dVdliame.

12959 blood transfusions Tuesday afternoon and a respirator was used to aid her breathing. Dr. Darrell Miller reported the condition of two of the sex- tuptets had declined, with both showing signs of the hyaline disease. They are Catherine, Julia's only sister, and an unnamed brother. Another boy, Steven, was reported in fair condition with indications of the ailment.

Miller said that two of the boys, Jeffrey and John, were in were born Sunday night, The father, 31, was at the hospital at the time of Julia's death but left a short time later. News Briefs Where Was He? based solely on the men dccid- ui inir In on aftpp rnnat fnr thp. evcry- on lhe weath- anlelope license applications reached a record this year, 11,150. There were 7,700 licens- Miller said of Julia's death, B' Facie Hills "deer "The blood oxygen level had 'permits are still being sold, an steadily decreased. Her blood interest is running heavy for pice lly hurt the pheasant buying it at the store.

You just; population for next yea r. A can't accurately calculate how miht emi a big a factor price is," mjd might pemi a healthy per ccntage of the birds wouldn't clot due to the low ox ygen content. One transfusion was performed and it seemed to help. But the problem redeveloped shortly after the second transfusion." Popowski fears a side effect to survive." for' of the current economic situ- as year's relatively mild auaaujl ation could hurt next year's winter and good cover for the Department officials say In-lpheaMnt id among factors that season. terest is high for almost every husling season in South Dakota this fall, and they attribute part many to be South Dakota Cre dited for the 32 per cent in glamor game bird.

crease in pheasant population, He said there are indications game officials reported this of the 'interest to high retail i more farmers and ranchers are fall. A ffth effort failed in the Senate, passed 287 to 130 last June, Re- Now they arc letting labor i an and conservative make the main fight. Democratic opponents Mcany, ln i 2 votes of scrapping il has soul every House or an 1 i HI-PHIL' the substitute. Abourezk Urges Nixon To Select Co-Chairman a ni Wednesday cl Nixon to expedite of a federal lhe Old West said the bill, which would raise tho $1.60 an hour minimum lo $2 Uiis year and $2.20 next year, would increase- unemployment, and add lo inflation. W(I The bill also would expand coverage of lhe minimum wage Sen.

law by bringing five million stale and local government em- Prnsidcnt ployos and million domes- selection tits under ils protection. fori Nixon has proposed a slower lhe minimum lo 12.10 0 a fwj 1 1 1 roinniis-iinureuse in lhe minimum lo ii wntii KCUH'llwt the uiu VYLSI iw-b llus year, $2.10 next year, $2-20 in J975 and $2.30 hi 1970, The post was uiulie a tan uh June 20 with the rcMtnauun u. aUj loenage l. Ian during the 1902 Cuban mis- 'sile crisis when President John IF. Kennedy delivered an ultimatum lo lhe Soviel Union lo (Withdraw ils weapons? i Asleep in the cabinet room of No.

10 Downing Street. MucMillan recalled in an interview today thai Kennedy would phone him Iwo or three times a day to consult and he- i cause of the lime difference the calls often through at 5 a.m. So he slept in. PocketstflO Million NEW YORK (AP) Jack L. Clark, who was accused of I pocketing $10 million while investors in the nursing home dm in he headed lost $200 million, has been sentenced lo a year in prison.

The 47-year-old Clark Is lhe wife Kathy Francis, 29. Muilin was also given eight separate five-years-to-life terms on second-degree murder convictions. The 26-year-old Muilin has! claimed he received to kill 10 people. Douglas-Home has warned the Soviet Union its harassment of ss en intellectuals is having a bad ff cl in Britain and olh- er Western countries. The British foreign secretary urged the Soviets on Tuesday, to ease pressure on writers, acien- tists and others who are assailing the Russian system from The official position was conveyed in a message lo lhe Soviet ambassador.

Coffee In Prison JUIK- Hob McCaughoy the Old 8 loii have failure lo nuinc di i by teenage workers, The difficulty facing lhe labor lobbyists is inuinly one of urilli- co imelic. There are 192 Uopubii- suid cuns tno and if all 435 juimiu ,,..,.,.1. ivuiis in uiu MUUHU, tuiu jt uu ijg diuinmm," AbouiuK 1 members volo il only takes U8 "Our urou nceuh int lo sus tt in ve io. 'Ito Republican Policy orttiuweU lhe ConuniUw. cjiicf policy arm o'f Couu of lho GOP leadership, Qyor- il'lt'UllOn Ut f.j_..,.i lulmltnlniflv Hiinivti-lKil exchunge.

Masi Slayer xio, S.I)., nTuesauy 1 a chairman uosl. i -unaha is io i vc only Soulh Uustulutid. tou The (Hmemcnl suid flopuull. Incluiles 'cans would supnorl "a adin'- gc'iieral omiiesly Ihei king proclaimd Tuesday as a overture to the guerrilla SANTA CUU2, Calif. (AP) movement.

WAFA, the official Herbert Muilin, un honor Palestinian news agency, re- itwdent turned mass sluyur, has levied lho olivo branch, saying been sentenced to serve life in tuutt liciiu nU Suil, il and uboful ie Nebraska Wyouiiug. I mluimum wajje." Santa County Superior Uces of the Jordanian regime." Couri Judge Charles S. Franieh And, government sources said sentenced Muilin on Tuesday to the amnesty did not mean lhe life terms in the first-degree guerrillas would be allowed lo murders of alleged dope dealer operate against Israel from James Ciauera, 34, and house- Jordanian territory. We All Have Our Hangups-Woman Driver Has Hers all liuvc our ami ttlvira Apuute found otie lu after she got her driver's Her car jumped tin and climbed a pole She was helped out of tlic upended aulo Uy a passerby. She had to lhe police how slit wub nut bjureil or.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
75,074
Years Available:
1937-1977