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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 2

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Mitchell, South Dakota
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2
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Two THE DAILY REPUBLIC, Mitchell, S. Tuesday, May 17, 1960 Senate Urged To Probe Spy Incident Folly WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) called in the Senate Tuesday for a full investigation of what he called the "falun ders" of the spy plane incident. Mansfield, the assistant Democratic leader, spoke out alter Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas had urged unity among Americans in the face of new international crises h.2 said may follow collapse of the summit conference.

Johnson told the Senate it seems evident that the determination of the American people is going to be tested as never before. "If there have been mistakes, responsibility will be assessed coolly and objectively," Johnson said, "But one mistake we cannot afford to make right now is to weak en the free world by division within our own ranks." Mansfield, on a different tack, said it is up to Congress "at the proper time" to "trace the chain of command or lack of it jet in motion the U2 flight, this flight which has undercut the deeprooted desire of the people and policies of the United States peace." "The blunders involved in that let us call a spade a blunders in that in cident and this nation Eaid. "We shall find out why, on one day, the Congress and the people pf the United Sates are told by thj secretary of state that, in el feet, it is the policy of the United States to sanction the continuance of reconnaissance flights across th. borders of another nation and Why the Vice President, on TV last Sunday, confirm' td his policy," Mansfield said. "We shall find out why thla happens at one time, and hen, subsequently, in Paris, the President tells Soviet Premier Nlkita Khrushchev and the world that such flights had already been halted, last Tuesday by Ms order and are not to be resumed." Soviet Rallies Denounce U.S.

Spying Flights its handling are for to face," Mansfield House Group Gives Final OK For Pierre Work WASHINGTON Wt The House Public Works committee to day gave final congressional approval to nine new buildings proposed by the General Services Administration. The projects, previously approved by the Senate Public Works Committee, now are eligible for appropriations which must be made by Congress, before construction can begin. The buildings include Pierre, S.D., federal office building, $3,415,000. Economy Will Expand Slowly Resi Of Year By STERLING F. GREEN HOT SPRINGS, Va.

(AP) In dustry experts today agreed with government economists that the half-trillion-dollar American economy will expand slowly and unspeCtacularly through the rest of 1860. A forecast that national output will total 507-bllllon-dollars worth of goods and services slightly below government estimates was prepared for the spring meet- ng of the Business Advisory Council of the Commerce Depart ment opening here today. The council, a blue ribbon body of 170 top corporation executives, is confering over the weekend with Secretary of Commerce Frederick H. Mueller and other government officials. Vice President Richard M.

Nix. on will address the council to night, but reporters are being barred from the dinner meeting, as from all other sessions. An appraisal of the business outlook, drafted by a panel of pro Sessional economists selected by She BAG and prepared in consultation with Commerce Department experts, showed the early-year pessimism of many businessmen evaporating. The private economists predicted that production will rise moderately, throughout 1960, at a slightly slower rate than government economists forecast at the start of the year. One government official said the findings "definitely push into 1961 any consideration of a business downturn." The major supporting forces, according to the Industry group, are a continued rise of personal ncome, strong consumer demand, and increasingly heavier outlays by corporations for new plants and equipment.

The total output of goods and services, however, is expected to Village McGovernOKs Three Debates With Mundt RAPID CITY tfl Rep. George McGovern said Tuesday he wiH cooperate with the League of Wo- men'Voters in its efforts to sched' ule a series of three debates next October between him and Sen. Karl Mundt. The two are opponents for the Senate seat now held by Mundt. McGovern wired Mrs.

Hal Rubi da, Rapid league president that she feels South Dakota voters would benefit greatly from such public discussion of the' issues. Ike Calls On Old Friend In French By MARVIN ARROWSMITH PARIS Eisenhower paid a surprise call today on an old mayor of a French village which made the President an honorary citizen a few years ago. And who served as hastily enlisted interpreter for Eisenhower and the French-speaking mayor, 67-year-old Jean Minot? None other than Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Slipping away from the tribulations of trying to salvage the. summit conference, the President anc Macmillan drove Elsenhower's limousine to the picturesque Paris suburb of Marnes la Coquette.

It was there that Eisenhower lived in 1951-52 when he was su preme commander of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces In Europe, The first stop on today's hour long tour was at the beautiful villa in which Eisenhower and his wife lived nearly a decade ago. With Macmlllan at his side, Ei senhower took a nostalgic tour 01 the gardens. He did not go into the villa. Then Eisenhower and Maomil Ian drove to City Hall to see Mi not. But on arrival there excltec villagers reported the mayor was not in his office.

Eisenhower was about to drive off when Minot, a portly gray haired man, came huffing and puffing across the square. The mayor cut loose with a tor rent of French. Eisenhower spoke in English and neither understood the other. So at that point Macmlllap seated beside the President, vol unteered as an interpreter and the conversation went merrilly along "I wanted to show Mr. Macmil Ian the place where an honorary remarked.

I was made Eisenhower With that the mayor grasped the President by the arm and ushered him out of the car and into the building. As Eisenhower' left, Minot ex pressed regret that he could no stay longer. Alluding to the end of his term as President, Elsenhower smilec broadly and told the mayor: "Aft January maybe I'll come bacl stay MOSCOW (AP) nouncing American were reported today Rallies de- spy flights from major Soviet cities as the Soviet press ntensified its indignation campaign against the United States. The Communist party organ Pravda said the people demonstrated in Moscow, Leningrad, Stalingrad, Kiev cities, blasting cles" in America. and many other 'reactionary clr- The general tone of the papers indicated that the Soviet press and radio would continue to build up teellng.

Speculation increased that the stage was being set for a show trial of Francis G. Powers, pilot of the American U2 plane downed on May Day 1,400 miles inside Soviet territory. or three billion dollars the 510 billion foreseen government analysts in all two ihort of by most January. President Eisenhower announced on Wednesday that the gross national' product reached a record annual rate in the 'irst quarter, as Hie economy rebounded from the 1959 steel strike. This was 29 billion dollars above the 1959 output.

Consumer demand was slower than expected, however, in the first three months of the year. It accelerated rapidly In April and the early part of May, the in dustry group said. On the other hand, industry purchasing to replenish inventories is due to fall off sharply. Balancing these factors, the business economists predicted that the industrial production Index, a measure of the physical output of mines, mills and utilities, may average 111 per cent of the 1957 base over the full year 1960. It may reach 112 per cent by end of the year, according to the forecast.

That would be three points above the present rate, but only 1 per cent above the showing in January. The industry group was divided about evenly on whether corporate profits would reach the 51 billion dollar level, which the admin- Case Calls For Land-Taking Policy Reform WASHINGTON Sen. Francis Case (R-SD) said Monday he will oppose further bills to authorize water projects unless Army Engineers arrange equitable treatment for owners whose land is taken for big reservoir projects. Case protested when Maj. Oen.

William F. Cassidy, assistant chief of Army Engineers for civil works, said it would take several years of study before changes could be made in existing land Inking practices. "It shouldn't take years," Case said. "If it does, Congress should hold up on its authorizations. It is not fair to the people when the engineers can't deal in equitable fashion with the land owner." Case suggested Cassidy "think it over" and see If engineers couldn't come up with some recommenda tlon.

If they couldn't, he said, "I shall oppose any bill authorizing projects." Chairman Robert S. Kerr (D Okla) of a' Senate Public Works subcommittee suggested Cassidy try to recommend something at a meeting today. The subcommittee, considering land taking practices of the engineers, heard protests from land owners in three states. Principal protests came from representatives of land owners in the Oahe and Big Bend Reservoir areas in South Dakota and in the Oolagah Reservoir of Oklahoma. The South Dakota groups protested that Army Engineer appraisals were below fair market value and allowed nothing for loss of a going ranch or cattle business, nothing for relocation expenses and the like.

The Oklahomans protested low prices paid for farm land and for oil and gas lease lands. Cassidy outlined procedures en gineers are required to follow in acquiring lands. He conceded land owners cannot always be Justly compensated. Nothing can be allowed, he said, for intangible values, nothing for toss of a growing business. Sen.

Case suggested a percentage formula, to provide additional payments for intangible values. Case said the Missouri River dams prevented potential flood damage of 220 million dollars compared with actual damage of 17 million. 'If that kind of protection Is jlven to the people downstream, people whose properties are being flooded and destroyed are entitled to equity," he said. Case also suggested the Corps of Engineers hold public meetings to the start of land takings 'or flood control dams, similar to those required for Interstate highway routings. 'This would give the engineers an opportunity to state the 'ground rules and promote better relations with landowners," he said.

Case suggested the hearings be required in federal law. Istratlon timatlng used as a Treasury basis for es revenues in President Eisenhower's budget message. Many felt that earnings would be about two billion dollars lower. Urge Change In Law Regarding Mentally 111 HURON Ml Changes in the law regarding placement of mentally ill persons was endorsed by tho mental health committee of the South Dakota Medical Association and other groups here Sunday. The group met with committees of the Mental Health Association, County Judges Association, Bar Association and the Board of Charities and Correction.

The proposed changes would allow placement of mentally 111 persons in private psychiatric facilities optionally at th.eir own expense in lieu of placement ta Yankton State Hospital. Also, placement of certain mentally ill persons who cannot be expected to benefit by treatment in the State Hospital in certified nursing homes. Sniper Is Sent To Tennessee Mental Hospital NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) An youth w.ho has admitted nine recent sniping attacks has been committed to a mental hospital for observation.

Judge Homer Weimar Monday ordered Howard Criswell sent to Central State was bound to Hospital after he the grand jury on nine counts of assault with intent to murder. One of two persons wounded in the attacks, Mike Johns, 36, under goes surgery today. He was shot 'in the stomach May 4. WCTU Poster, Essay Winners Are Selected Winners of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union state.post- er and essay contests were announced by Mrs. Mary Hansen, state director.

Poster winners, listed from first to fifth, are: Grades three and four: Jan Vonburg, Mitchell, William Strand, Stickney, Resalyn Kaplan, Sturgls, Ruth Johnson, Marvin, and Eddie Mnhs, Union 31, Davison County; Grades five and six: Margene Peterson, Sturgta, Sue Breclt- enridge. Mitchell, David Blum, Milbank, Caroline pel, Mitchell, and Dorothy Droge, Planklntan, Seventh grade through ninth grade: Shirley Hohn, Letcher, Robert Faulhaber, Wessington Springs, Barbara Lindell, Milbank, Crystal Rumpel, Arlington, and Kathy tiuchanan, Sturgls, and Jerry Murphy, Henry, and Reinhold Banek, White River, finished first and second in the competition between grades 10-12. Essay winners, listed from first down, are: Grades five and six: Kristine Robison, Mitchell, Elaine Ketchem, Rapid City, Joyce Fink, Tyndall, Joanne Ormand, Billhead, Cheryl Barton, South Shore; Grades nine and 10: Robert Nash, Platte, Karen Kludt, Wessington Springs, Mavis Robley, Mt. Vernon, and Janis Temple, Willow Lake; Grades 11 and 12: Darla Scott, Letcher, and Joyce Davis, Wessington Springs. Judges of posters were Mrs.

Irene Broderick, Mitchell, and Mike Sougstad and Arthur Headley, both DWU art students. Essay judges were Mrs. Elmer Hurry, Mrs. Anita Hof and Mrs. Earl Lewis, all of Mitchell.

Russian'Space Ship' Sighted Over New York NEW YORK (AP)-The Soviet Union's huge "space ship" was sighted over New York early Tuesday by one observer as a pulsing streak of light. This could indicate it tumbling in its night rather than being, on an even keel, or else that its special cabin now has been set free. The satellite, as seen from suburban Long Island, sped up from the southern sky on schedule at 4:17 a.m. as a bright point of light. But the light faded, grew bright faded again and grew bright In regular rhythm, passing northeastly across a sky almost clear of clouds.

Stars were clearly visible above it. Tumbling of a "space ohip" could be bad for any iboard, putting them out of con- unless they could correct the spin. Moscow has announced that the satellite contained a 2V4-ton pressurized cabin which, upon signal, would be separated from its carrier, presumably with backward- firing rockets. This propulsive force in separation could set either the cabin or its carrier off course or spinning. The Soviets said no plan was made this time to return the cabin of the "space ship" safely to earth and predicted it would burn up'in the earth's atmosphere it came down.

Safe re-entry of a manned vehicle is a principal problem of getting a or space on a pioneering flight and back home alive again. 9 ARRESTED HAVANA (AP) Nine persons have been arrested in Camaguey province on charges of counter revolutionary activity, Cuban au thorities said today. NOTICE TO BIDDERS bids will be received by the Board of Education of the Mitchell Independent School District No. 45, Davison County, South Dakota, at the office of the Business Manager, 403 East 6th Avenue, Mitchell, south Dakota, until 5:00 o'clock P. M.

Monday, the 13th day of June, 1960. Bids to be submitted for: Furnished approximately 460 feet of 72 inch chain link fence, complete with posts and fittings delivered at Litohfield School, Mitchell, South Dakota, as per plans and specifications on file in the office of E. E. Schmierer, Bust ness Manager, 403 East 6th Avenue, Mitchell, South Dakota. Prices to be submitted separately for materials and installation costs.

The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Bids to marked "Bid on Fence" and addressed to the -undersigned. Mitchell Independent School District No. 45 E. E.

Schmierer, Business Manager, Mitchell, South Dakota Missing Plane Feared Down In Hojave Desert LOS ANGELES (AP) A plane missing with four the ex-wife of musician George have been forced down on the Desert, searchers say. The hunt for the single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza is being pressed on the desert and the desert side of the San Gabriel Mountains. Pilot Ralph Quartaroli's course from Las Vegas, to Van Nuys, a Los Angeles suburb, would have taken him through the mountains at 1 p.m. Sunday. "There was bad weather along the San Gabriels." said Civil Air Patrol search director Capt.

R. P. Almond. "Quartaroll's frinds say he always tried to avoid bad weather. He may have made a landing on the desert." Quartaroll, owner of a Modesto, cannery, was accompanied by Jayne Liberace, 42, Inglewood, Industrialist Ross Perrino, 49, and Perrlno's wife, Bobbie.

Mitchell Students Win 7 Firsts At Craftsman Fair Mitchell Junior and Senior High School students won seven first place awards at the SD Industrial Arts Craftsman's Fair which was held at Aberdeen Friday and Saturday. First place entries of WIN Ham Lewis, eighth and ninth grade wood turning; Allan Nichol, eighth and ninth grade architectural drawing, and Duane Letcher, 12th grade mechanical drawing were selected as most outstanding entries and will be forwarded to Dearborn, to compete in the Industrial Arts Awards sponsored by the Ford Motor Company this summer. Other winners, were: Seventh grade mechanical drawing: LeRoy Johnston, first, David Shahholz, second, and James Cooper, third; seventh grade woodturn- Ing. Merrill Putnam, first; eighth and ninth grade architectural drawing, Nichol, first, Dennis Plerson, second, and Charles Crum, third. Architectural drawing: David Nelson, first and Bob Talbert, third, in the I0th and llth grade competition and Duane Letcher, first, in the 12th grade competition.

David Miles won a second place award in the eighth and ninth grade woodturning. Instructors of these students are David Bellinger and James Sopoci, Junior HJgh School, and Frank Prick, Senior High School. Red Cross Oilers Water Safely Instructor Class An area Red Cross water safety instructors' course will be held May 31-June 4 at Morrow Gymnasium on the DWU campus. Announcement of plans for the course was made by Dr. Wayne Unzicker, Mitchell, Instructor will be Charles Elson, safety service representative for the state from the midwestern area office of Red Cross.

St. Louis. The course is a 30-hour zone school. Enrollees must be least 18.years old. It in; not necessary that they hold Red Cross senior life saving certificates but they must be strong swimmers.

There will be no instruction fee or enrollment fee for the course. Surrounding American Red Cross chapters may use chapter funds to send and they may pay transportation and maintenance costs if they desire. Enrollees must purchase their own text- boot wid make their own ar- for lodging. Chapters expecting to send representatives to the course at Mitchell are asked to call the Davison County Cross Chapter, WY6- 3087, or write Mrs. John B.

Smith, executive secretary. Only Overplanted Farms Will Be Notified By ASC Farmers wjll not be notified If their farms are within their wheat allotments or permitted acreage of Soil Bank base crops, it was announced Monday by M. R. Bates, chairman of the Davison County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee. The county chairman said ASC farm reporters are making the anuaj performance check.

All farmers are asked to cooperate, as they have in the past, with reporters so that accurate information will be reported. Accurate records, said Bates, are in the best interests of all farmers. explained that the reason notices will not be mailed to farmers who are in compliance is primarily in the interests of economy. Farmers wanting to know their crop acreages may inquire at the county ASC office. iFarmers who are overplanted will be notified as before, said Pates.

They will be allowed a reasonable period of time, specified on the notice, to dispose of their "excess acreages And avoid penalties provided by law. Darryl Fatten Receives $2,000 Assisianiship Darryl Patten, Dakota Wesleyan University senior from Hitchcock, has received a $2,000 half-time as- slstantship at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, for graduate study in theater arts and drama during the 1960-61 school term. Patten, son of the Rev. and Mrs. James Patten, will teach sections of freshman fundamentals of speech and work around the theater in addition to his graduate He will be lu-residence from four to six weeks in some Kansas community on a community theater project.

He was selected on the basis of scholarship and his potential promise in the field of teaching and work a graduate student. Patten majored in music at Wesleyan with minors in speech-drama and education. He was named to Who's Who In American Colleges and Universities, is a member of Theta Alpha Phi, appeared in nine dramatic productions and is active in the Methodist Student Movement, Mitchell Man Is Listed A Director Of Hotel Group PIERRE UP) A Huron firm capitalized at one and one-half million dollars to form Hotel Leasing, which will operate hotels, motels and related facillies. Directors of the concern are Paul Holm and Paul R. Christen, Huron, and Phillip Christen, Mitchell.

Community Electric, De Smet, also filed articles of incorporation with Secretary of State Selma Sandness. It was capitalized at $200.000 with Richard Vander Vorste, Glenn E. Holverson and F. James Me Adaragh, all of De Smet, as directors. Fa.ntab, Sioux Falls, capitalized at $100,000, to operate a printing business.

Directors are Michael J. O'Connor Merle A. Thiele and Fern I. Thiele, all of Sioux Falls. Civil Service Has Jobs For Radar, Radio Personnel Civilian radar repair men ground radio installers and U.H.F, radio repairmen are needed in Civil Service, positions at the Air Force Base at the Minneapolis-St.

Paul International Airport. Starting hourly wages are $2.74, $2.64 and $2.45 depending on the abilities and knowledge of each applicant. Persons selected will be headquartered in Minneapolis and will travel throughout North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and upper Michigan. The technicians will generally work as teams and do maintenance work at Air Force bases, radar squadrons and weather stations in these five states. Persons interested may contact the local Civil Service representative at the Mitchell Post Office or write to the Board of U.S.

Civil Service Examiners, U.S. Air Force, Mlnneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, Minneapolis SO, Minn. Pilot (Continued from Page One) high school class. He played football, as a guard.

He also was a member of a fire-fighting patrol. He also once was a lifeguard. Powers spent four years in a pre-medical course in Milligan College, Johnson City, and compiled a minus average. He again finished 22nd in his class, this time among 59 seniors. But the unobtrusive Powers had one He took his first flight at the age of 14 as a passenger paying a $2.50 fee to.

a woman pilot who was making short Joy-riding hops fron. an airport at Princeton, W.Va. His report on the flight to Ws father, OUver W. Powers, a cobbler shop proprietor and former coal miner, baa been described variously. One report has the quiet youth exclaiming lyrically: "I left my heart up there, pap, and I'm goin' back to git it." Another version bu blm eiyiog more matter-of-factly: "Daddy, I like it up there.

It does something you. It gives you something. Someday I'll have to go back up there and find out what it is." On graduating from MllUgan in 1950, the year the Korean war broke out, he enlisted in the Air Force as a private. advanced to second lieutenant as a jet fighter pilot. But he never saw action in Korea.

Powers resigned from the air force in 1956. A short time later, personnel officials of Lockheed Aircraft Corp. were making a routine check of former Air Force pilots and looked over Power's apparently uneventful record. They were impressed by they saw. They sent a routine questionnaire to him.

He responded and was hired in May 1956, as one of 17 pilots in the company's U2 program. There followed four more years of obscurity before his name showed in headlines. Powers was assigned to a group that was to operate planes, ostensibly for weather research, and was sent to Adana, Turkey in August 1956. With him went his wife, the former Barbara Moore, 24, of Albany, Ga. He made repeated flights.

Then, last April 30, he remarked casually that he was flying again the next day. He asked his wife to help pack his bag. The next day he was captured near Sverdlovsk, deep in the Soviet down on a spy mission, the Soviets said. options. The department's modernization program was authorized by Congress last year.

The Arlington post office is one of 1,400 3uch new buildings to be placed under construction in the present fiscal year. Across the nation, there are more than 35,000 post offices. They handle a total of 62 billion pieces of letter mall and parcel post each year. This is a new high and an Increase of more than 24 per cent above the approximately 50 billion pieces handled annually only 10 years ago. Election Air Force (Continued from Page One) oped energy amplifying tube called klystron.

This makes possible the radiation of enormous energy several million watts Into space to bounce off a missile target and bounce back to register at the sending point. Further development of the power tube conceivably could produce greater even fantastic amounts of radiated energy. The unit here is one of three BMEWS stations being built to scan the skies over all the ap proaches from the Soviet Union and her satellites. The others are at Clear, Alaska, and at Fyling dales, England. Their purpose Is to provide at Last 15 minutes warning if enemy missiles are fired at this country Within that time, retaliatory bombers would be taking off and civilian populations would be seeking whatever shelter they can find.

The Thule system is to go Into operation this fall. That in Alaska is not to be completed until the summer of 1961 and the English station still later. Their combined cost is nearly a billion dollars. The hule station is perched on a rocky arctic hilltop. Four an tennas, looking like giant bed springs, tower above buildings which house electronic emputers and power generating equipment Each antenna is 165 feet high and 400 feet long.

Its weigh may double from ice during win ter storms, and it must be strong enough to withstand 185-mile-an hour arctic gales. Heart of the system is the com puter setup. Data picked up by radar must be compared with all known information on satellites space debris and other objects as part of the process of determin ing whether an actual missile is on its way. Further will determine where the missile aimed. All this has reached the testing stage now, and technicians are using pre-recorded radar impulses to check the system's accuracy When the system is operating Its findings will be flashed south ward to air defense headquarters in Colorado and thence to other high commands.

(Continued from Page One) would merit calling the Paris meeting a success. He had hoped Eisenhower would the admini- stratlon'i position further by his jnow canceled Moscow visit. Now he may be forced on the defensive by attacks on the administration's part in what the general public may well view as the fiasco of Paris. Some Democrats already are suggesting that the administration was not properly prepared for Khrushchev's onslaught. Others have questioned the timing of the spy plane flight.

Some have wanted to know why Eisenhower waited until Khrushchev's explosion to let it be known lUblicly that there would be no nore such ifter both he and Nixon had de- ended them as necessary. Adlai E. Stevenson, twice the Democratic nominee, said Monday Khrushchev "could hardly ignore tiese threats to continue to violate Soviet airspace and preserve his eadershlp at home." Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) aid in a statement that the spy Khrushchev (Continued from Page One) "He knows very well nhat we won't attend a conference as long as the Americans will not give us satisfaction." A bit earlier, in a sidewalk in terview, Khrushchev said he was to return to Moscow if his demands were not accepted.

Macmillan arrived ficst at De Gaulle's Elysee P-lace for the Big Three meeting. He was' six minutes early. Then Eisenhower drove into the palace courtyard. from his trip at the Soviet Embassy. The Big Three waited, a while, then went on withou him.

Khrushchev had stated his intentions in his formal morning news conference on the Rue de Crenelle near the Soviet Embassy. Politics (Continued from Page. One) and the Senate Public Works committee. The only further action needed is the a al of the House Public Works Committee. Sisseton got the last post office approved under the department's old lease purchase program.

One of last buildings for South Dakota approved under the commercial leasing program is the one for Arlington. It will provide 1,763 square feet of space plus an outside loading and ample hard-surfaced space for parking and truck maneuvering. Specifications call for new modern lighting and equip ment, including a low, open patron counter. Summerfield said the Arlington facility will be typical of the buildings going up elsewhere in the country. "These new post offlceu," he said, "contain not only the modern patron service counters and eye saving fluorescent lighting, but provision ii made for patron after regular business hourt." The Arlington building is ex- cidd to be completed about Sept.

1. The lease will run for 10 will) live-year renewal plane Incident "was extremely unfortunate." But he contended that Khrushchev exhibited "almost contemptuous indifference" to Eisenhower because the Soviet leader believes his country Is more powerful militarily than the United States. Vote (Continued from Page One) those who will vote for someone besides Kennedy because they'd rather see (Sns. Lyndon Johnson or (Stuart) Symington nominated Instead of Kennedy." Besides Kennedy and Morse, the Maryland choices include furniture man Lar Daly of Chicago, Baltimore draftsman Andrew J. Easter and a spot marked "uninstructed delegation" for those preferring an uncommitted delegation to the national convention.

Morse said he'd be happy to get 35 per cent of the vote, but his campaign coordinator, Mrs. Lane Berk, suggested 25 per cent would be more realistic. "Anything over that would be a moral victory for Morse and should help him avoid an upset defeat In Oregon," she said. Nearly every major Democratic leader in Maryland endorsed Kennedy. He came here after ticking off victories in New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Indiana, Nebraska and the big surprise last week West Virginia.

His followers hope his Maryland showing will give another nudge, to the leaders of uncommitted oisj- state delegations who began leaning toward him after his upset West, Virginia victory over Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn). Election supervisors, estimated a turnout of about 30 per cent of the 866,878 Democrats and 345,700 Republicans before the polls close at 7 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

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Available in the new spruce green and antelope tan shades. COMPARE '10 95 BECKER'S MEN'S WEAR 210 N. Main.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

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