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Leader-Telegram from Eau Claire, Wisconsin • Page 2

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Leader-Telegrami
Location:
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
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Page:
2
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ft A The Eau Claire Leadsr Eay Claire, Friday, May 2,1969 Rustin Says Colleges Take Easy Way Out (Continued from page 1A) going to strengthen rightist forces in this country. Nor am I interested in infantile leftism. Must Move Forward That's to say protest that is so outlandish that instead of causing the society to move forward, it, in fact, causes the society to move in the opposite direction. Now, my criticism is not of protest per se, my criticism is of particular types of protest. I could name a of all I'm very much opposed to the use of violence as a means of appearance of youngsters on campuses carrying guns and attempting to get decisions while holding guns at the heads of the administrators is first of all very bad for the students.

Because they are being systematically taught in college that social change takes place at the point of a gun. This is not true. And they're going to be very much disabused. Second, it is humiliating to me to see college professors and presidents so filled with guilt and so masochistic as to submit while they would not submit to Ku Klux Klanists coming on the campus with guns. Why do they submit to Negroes? Because they really do not believe as yet that Negroes are equal.

They say, "Well, that's only Negroes behaving that way." They wouldn't tolerate this from white students. Assails Elitists Secondly, I'm against what I call putschisftn, browm shirtism. Any time 20 or 30 people seize "buildings, which must.be used by thousands of people, they're being putschists. In addition, they're being elitist, that is to say, they think' they have the right to make the for thousands of people where no vote has been taken. Who are they that they should do this? So I say violence, putsch ism have no place in social pro test in this nation and certainly not on the campus.

Q. There were reports that black students at Cornell armed themselves from fear of an im minent attack by some white students. You mentioned psychological stress that the ghetto student is under when he is dropped into an Ivy League school. How are you going to re solve this? Matter for Police A. That is a police matter or.

better still, a matter for the university to take care of. If the university cannot take care of it, then it's a police matter, I think there's been brutality to Negroes for centuries. We have been able to mount a concern about brutality to Negroes precisely because people were fairly convinced that Negroes were not engaged in aggressive vio lence. It's going to be increas ingly difficult now when people see pictures of young Negroes carrying guns for us to get attention called to that degree of brutality which is still left in our society. People will' get the notion that Negiroes are engaged in aggressive violence and, therefore, that the brutality may be justified.

So I think these people are doing us a grave disservice with these guns. And I simply do not be lieve that there are organized groups of white college students on campus, at this point, which are prepared to attack Negro students with violence and guns, If Negro students continue to carry guns, that may very well happen later. Q. How are we going to re solve this, given the feelings of the black militants? Have to be Honest A. The college administra- tions'will have to be honest with themselves, and first of all, be- 'lieve that Negroes are equal to other people and treat them accordingly.

If Negroes and any other students engage In this kind of behavior, something must be done to prevent it. And I think tie college administration needs to stop playing young Negroes cheap. Now everybody knows that the ghetto schools and high schools are basically inferior. Efforts to get more youngsters into college and through college is a good but it must not be done in a cheap way. Inexpensive but Ineffective Now, it's very inexpensive to give in to the demands of Negro students for black studies.

But it's also ineffective. What colleges should be doing is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars for remedial work, bririging the students' mathematics up, bringing their reading rate up, bringing their ability to write a decent sentence to the fore, developing their thinking processes through courses which are useful. But of course this will require a much larger teaching staff, many more hours of teaching. Schools May Get Added Funds Here Eau Claire County school districts will receive an additional $932,056 in state school aids if ttie State Senate passes, a school aids bill passed this week in the State Assembly, according to Assemblymen Louis He said the Eau Claire city school system would receive $822,899 more neit year than It did this year in State aid; the Altoona system receive an additional the Augusta system would gain another $39,702 and the Fall Creek school system would receive an extra $37,396. The bill also would need the signature of Gov.

Warren P. Knowles, who last week vetoed an Assembly bill that would raise from $39,000 fo $42,000 the property value per student that the state would pay school aids on. The latter figure was recommended by the governor's Tarr Task Force committee. "It should be pointed out," Mato declared today, "that the governor's veto will not result in the school aid deficit being met. Furthermore, it would not provide relief to the already overburdened property taxpayer" The bill provides that the' increased school aids would be made up out of 1969 71 state budget.

It also provides an additional $5 million for the veterans housing loan fund, Mato said. An increase in the s.chool aids, Mato continued, would be to lower the mill rate by about 4 mills on the average. "This type of state expenditure is an example of saving money by spending money," he suggested. STATE POST-Robert Kirk, Dunn County civil defense director, was elected president of the Wisconsin Civil Defense and Disaster Association, Inc. last weekend.

Kirk, who succeeds Nicholas H. Braun, Racine, is now serving his sixth year as the county director. (Staff Photo) Bloomer Stock Firm Meets USDA Order BLOOMER livestock dealer here has complied with a U.S. Department of Agriculture order to meet bonding regulations under the Packers and Stockyards Act. The department said Thursday Bloomer Livestock Market, furnished the bond after it was ordered to cease and desist from business under the act without filing an acceptable bond.

The order, like a permanent injunction, is used to insure future compliance with the act. The act is a fair trade practices law and requires livestock dealers to provide bonds as a measure of financial protection to sellers. 'Metro' Government Eyed for Twin Cities ST. PAUL (AP) The. Twin Cities area may be the testing ground for a new type of metropolitan government formed as an attempt to meet the problems of urban sprawl.

Under a proposed new governing plan for the Minneapolis St. Paul area, sewage treatment, solid waste disposal, transit, parks and zoos and possibly law enforcement would be planned and financed by, a single metropolitan agency. Other more varied functions such as control of schpols, libraries and zoning would e- main the province the individual municipality. The core cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul house less than half of the 1.8 million people who live in the Twin Cities area, which in turn makes up about half of Minnesota's pop ulation.

Because a metropolitan government which would take over all functions is not politically feasible, Minnesota style met- roplitan government would handle spertfic functions which proponents say have to be financed a's 'broadly and equitably as possible. Stronger forms of metropoli- tan government proposed elsewhere have been rejected here. The Minnesota version, a compromise between the all encompassing agency and a weak advisory system without fiscal powers, is unique, backers say. The brainchild has many fathers, including the Citizens League, an independent, n- partisan organization working for better government. Whether the proposal can bt herded through the' rural- dofninated legislature without emasculation by urban 1 a w- makers jealous of municipal interest remains to be seen.

Colfax Man Graduates COLFAX (Special) Duane Schindler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schindler, Colfax, graduated April 25 from Dunwoody Technical Institute, Minneapolis, after completing a two-year course in sheet metal work. He is employed in the. Twin Cities.

Proposal Cheered, Blasted Hearing on Private School Aid Draws Crowd MADISON (UPI)-A $26 million bill to provide state aid to parents of private school children drew between 3,000 and 4,000 to a hearing Wednesday, one of the largest crowds for a hearing in recent years. The Senate Education Committee took no action on the proposal, authored by 18 lawmakers. Hearing Moved Twice The frequently noisy hearing was conducted in the Assembly chambers, where 1,000 persons crowded in and the're'st waited outside. The committee had to change the site of the hearing twice. The measure, which opponents said would be unconstitutional, would provide annual state cash payments to parents of private school children'of $50 for each elementary school fwipil and $100 for each high school pupil.

The measure introduced in the wake of the closing of several private schools. Proponents of the bill argued that, if the trend continued, more public schools and teachers would be needed and already burdened property tees would be strained even more. Sen. Raymond Heinzen, R- Marshfield, noted that the constitution bans direct state grants to private schools, but there is no prohibition of aid to parents. "If grants to students on a college level are constitutional, they should be constitutional at the prep school level," Heinzen said.

The two-year cost to the state has been estimated at $26 million. Opponents said the bill threatens to violate constitutional separation of ctorch and state, and argued that private schools should be supported by their paifrais alone. Supporters of the measure sai private schools are having to close their doors at an alarming rate because of cost increases, and that state aid is needed to keep them operating or else great numbers of students from private schools will be dumped on local school districts. "If private schools should close down, it would be a calamity," said Sen. James Devitt, R- Greenfield, one of the bill's authors.

Taxpayers, he said, "can't afford with our resources to educate every child in a public school." Sen. Joseph Lourigan, D-Kenosha, said 'the cost estimate of paying grants to parents would be $13 million annually. "But if we don't pass this, I predict it will cost mil lion in the next year to educate the students now in private schools," he said. ,4 public schools are, getting Under the bill, families with less than $3,000 a year income would get twice as much in grants, and for those earning less than $2,000, the aid would triple. The Rev.

Richard Kleiber of Green Bay, a'spokesman for the Wisconsin Catholic Conference, said students' in the 4 'T. 4 1 factory educations, but that "we cannot have good Catholic schools unless we have good schools." Support for the bill also came from the Milwaukee Common Council's Legislative Council, which has expressed concern impact on local "taxes should private schools continue to close. Raps US Machine tools and oil are being sent from this country fo Russia which is the chief supplier of North Vietnam's war supplies, Alan Stang, New York writer, told Kiwanis Club members at the Black Steer Thursday. Stang is author of a book, "The Actor The True Stofy of John Foster Dulles," and contributor to the John Birch Society magazine, American Opinion, published in Belmont, Mass; by the society's founder Robert Welch. He was in Eau Claire as a guest of the Eau Claire County TRAIN Committee to speak at the Birch Street Labor Temple Thursday night on the subject, "Let's Stop Helping Communism." Birch Society founder Welch urged formation of TRAIN committees in his May, 1966 bulletin as front organizations for the society.

Supplies to Russia Slang's comments on plies going to Russia came during a question period after his talk on street riots in Chicago during the Democratic party convention last August. Stang told Kiwanians, "We are sending machine tools to Russia." These are more important than weapons or tanks, he said, because a tank can be destroyed but machine tools can be used to turn out more tanks. He said Russia and Eastern European Communist satellites are getting oil from the United States. One hundred per cent of North Vietnam's oil is supplied by Russia, he added. Stang offered quotations from Measles Clinic May 2 in Buffalo ALMA (Special) Children between the ages of one 12 are eligible for, free measles vaccine during an: immunization clinic May 4 in Buffalo! County.

The clinic will be held from noon to 2 p.m. at Mondovi and from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Cochrane. Drivers Pay Fines in Dunn MENOMONIE (Special) John Malzac, 26, Duluth, appeared in County Court Thursday morning and pleaded guilty to April 17 county charges of driving while under suspension, failure to report an accident, and no registration.

Sentences of 60 days in jail for while under suspension, $47 or an additional five days in jail for failure to report an accident, and $27 or an additional three days in jail for no registration were held open in abeyance until Judge W. H. Bundy studies the case further. Youth Bound Over Robert Geiger, 18, Rt. 2, Spring Valley, appeared i County Court Thursday and was bound, over for arraignment in tfie upper branch of Circuit Court on state charges of uttering as genuine three bank checks.

One check was dated March 1 and cashed for $15, another was dated March 6 and cashed for $25, and the third was dated March 14 and cashed for $10. A $500 signature bond posted by his parents still continues and the matter is being set for trial. Barry Zurn, 18, Rt. 2, Boyceville, appeared in County Court Thursday and was found indigent. The court appointed Menomonie Attorney Howard Thedinga to represent him on three counts of arson.

The defendant allegedly set fire to a barn owned by Emil Beyer in the Town of Tiffany Aug. 27, a barn owned by Tom Smith in the Town of Stanton Aug. 27, and the Granger School owned by Leonard Busch in the Town of Stanton Sept. 1. Zurn told the court that he is home on leave from the Army and is on his way to Vietnam.

He is being held in County Jail under a $500 appearance bond. Driving Too Fast Stanley Hutter, 18, Rt. 2, Arkansaw, forfeited $47 in County Court Thursday for driving too fast for existing conditions. Forfeiting $42 each for inattentive driving were Mary Steinke, 22, Rt. 1, Menomonie, and Sherwyn Oas, 22, Elk Mound.

Charles Pfingsten, 18, Rt. 1, Elihwood, forfeited $32 for speeding. Drivers were David Rasmussen 20, Rt. 1, Prairie Farm, and Richard Sundby, 18, Rt. 1, Ridgeland, failure to stop for a stop sign; Joseph Mendel, 21, North Hall, Menomonie, unlawful backing; John Bates, 30, Rt.

2, Colfax, failure to give audible signal when passing. the Walker Crime Commission report which indicated radical youths had planned forceful confrontation with the Chicago police months before the Democratic convention even to planning the exact day upon which the main battle would take place. He also reported thart J. Edgar Hoover, F. B.

I. director, in February, 1968 well ahead of the convention had reported on plans for uprisings at the convention by radica' youth groups including Students for a Democratic Society. Stang Gassed Twice Stang was on the scene on the streets of Chicago during the riots and was tear-gassec twice, he said, adding that in view of the provocation of police, he. is happy he was not shot. What, happened in Chicago is not only Surprising, he said, it is dumbfounding exercise in police restraint.

Despite the fact that police were pelted with rocks, bricks, lye, oven cleaner balls with and nails anc blocks of soap with imbedded razor blades, no one was killed, he reported. Some elements of the press may have been attacked cause police couldn't differentiate between reporters and he said. "I personally saw some mounds of human filth wearing C.B.S. credentials, you know, the Columbia Broad- thcasting System. They were filthier than the yippies they were there to cover," Stang declared.

N.B.C. and Newsweek credentials were worn by two reporters who turned down Slang's photographer's offer of pictures of "revolutionaries" throwing at police, he When questioned by the'Rev. Daniel and the Rev David Sharpe about his use of a.privately:r'published copy of the Walker, Commission report Stang told Kiwanians the report was "deliberately planned' 1 to be misleading and confusing "This is a very clever 1 i which contains the truth in order to cover the of the people seeking to he said. Nominating committee chairman Pete Scarseth reported the following nominations for" club office: Arnie Carlson, president; Jim Kleiner, first vice president; the Very Rev. Dean Gordon Brant, second vice president; John Gonsolley, treasurer; and Johannes Dahle, Art Klingler, Ken Merchant, Adoph Odland, Dave Owen, Jack Postlewaite, and Lloyd Zillmer, directors.

Raymond Boettcher, representing the' Cooperative Educational Service Agency of Ozaukee and Milwaukee counties, said the bill is an effort by private school interests to get state funds "through the back door." "Two years from now, they will be asking for more money 'or, grants," he said. Jay G. Sykes, chairman of the Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union, said "there is no-argument with the right of maintaining a nonpublic school system," but that ttie bill would be "patently unconstitutional" and needs at least an opinion from the attorney generall. A spokesman for the Milwaukee Jewish Council, Saul Sorrin, said the measure "will encourage the proliferation of private school systems" and could "sound the death knoll for the public schools." Two students, Tom Hendncks of Newman High in Wausau and David Peters of Holy Name Elementary School in Racine, spoke in favor of the proposal H. C.

Weinlich of Madison, Female Conference WASHINGTON (AP) Virginia Knauer, President Nixon's consumer affairs adviser, had a luncheon conference with her two predecessors, Esther Peterson' and Betty Furness. "We three girls see eye to eye on dedication to helping the consumer," Mrs. Knauer said after the luncheon Wednesday. Dunn Jury Panel Drawn for May Term MENOMONIE (Special) Dunn County Clerk of Courts Robert Smith announces thai the panel or jurors has been drawn for the May term of Circuit Court. Composing the jury pane are: Mrs.

Walter Glenny, Town of NewMaven; Mrs. Gerhard Nyhus, Town of Sand Creek Mrs. Fred Town of Sherman; Edwin Lentz, Town of Colfax; John Pickerign Ralph Pittman, Mrs. Palmer Miles and Mrs. Herman Kuehl Town of Eau Galle; Mrs.

La monie Stone, Town of Rock Creek; Helmer Ruud and Paul Klatt, Town of Red Cedar; Allie Schlough and Guy Schlough, Town of Sheridan; Mrs. Freeman Holt and Robert Guptill, Town of Menomonie; Alfred Suckow, Town of Tain ter; Mrs. Herbert Deitsche Town of Grant; Robert Moats Town of Elk Mound; John Ubel, Village of Knapp; Mrs Theodore F. Meyer and Melvin Score; Village of Elk Mound, Mrs. Kenneth Whistler, Village of Wheeler; Don Ubelhode a Perley Entzminger, Village Colfax; Roy Frieburg, Village of Boyceville; Bruce Daggett and Mrs.

Alice M. Ford, Vil lage of Downing; Mrs. Lawrence Halverson Willard Price, Harold Flaa anc John Mittelstadt, first ward of the City of Menomonie; Joyce Hagen, second ward; Harold Schadney, third ward; John Driscoil, fourth ward; Mrs. Richard Berg, fifth ward; and Marshall Heintz, sixth ward. Compsoing the list of reserve jury panel members are: John I.

Johnson and Mrs. Ray King, Town of Grant; Leslie Utphal, Town of Tiffany; Joe Nusber- ger and Clifford Stevens, Town of Hay River; Norman Schlough, Town of Wilson; Mrs. James Tilleson, Town ol Dunn; Marvin Quilling, Town of Lucas; Mrs. Clarence Winter Town of Rock Creek; Kenneth Reed and Mrs. Dan Kiekhafer, Village, of Colfax; Mrs.

Earl Radke, first ward; Mrs, James Bloss and Mrs. Joe second ward; Mrs. George Bush, third ward; Mrs. G. E.

Weinkauf, fourth ward; John Noreen and Gordon Vande Berg, sixth ward. Farm Help Tax Deduction Caution Urged Farm employers are reminded that wages paid to extra help they hire during the summer months may be covered by social security. Stephen J. Leszcynski, district manager of the Eau Claire district office, pointed out a farm worker's cash wages are subject to social security tax if he is paid as much as $150 in a year or works at least 20-days on a time payment basis. The employer is held responsible for both the employer and the employee tax, Leszcynski said, "so that the employer deduct the tax when the wage is paid." The employer is also responsible for getting the worker's social security number and including it on the report to the Internal Revenue Service.

"It's best to get this when the employee is paid," Leszcynski added, "so that you have it when the report is Further information on social security coverage of farm employees is available from the Internal Revenue Service or from the Eau Claire Social Security Office at 715 South Barstow St. Decentralization of Cities Results in Tax Problem A UPI Wlsconsconsin Special (Editor's Note: This is the seventh in a scries of articles on the Wisconsin tax situation. This dispatch deals with the conflict of the city and its suburbs, with emphasis on the Milwaukee metropolitan area.) By MARY PAT KLEIN MILWAUKEE (UPI)-For the last 10 years, one of the cities' biggest gripes has teen the growing disparity between its fiscal burden and that of surrounding suburban areas. The conflict is largely a controversy over the distribution of slate aids and shared taxes. Some Wisconsin communities get 70 per cent of their revenue from the state.

The average community gets 46 per cent. Milwaukee gets 31 per cent. The discrepancies occur in every aid area as state allocated strictly on a percentage basis of payment made, rather than need. Thus, state aids pay 48 per cent of the local highway costs for some towns, bul only 28 per cent of Milwaukee's highway costs, where an extensive system of local expressways is needed. Oak Creek, where the Electric large power plant is located, receives about $2.3 million from the state annually in shared utility taxes.

That averages out to more than $180 per person, some 20 times the per capita utiliily tax return in Milwaukee. The disproportionate financial picture is also seen in the area of school aids where the city of Milwaukee gets just $12 per person from the state. The suburb of Greendale gets $99 per person and Oak Creek gets $50. Yet while large Wisconsin cities typically get less fiscal help nothing to such costs. Families from the state, they are forced to provide more services for a greater number of citizens than the suburbs and.

in some instances, even to service the commuting suburbanites themselves. Among the projects a large municipality must deal with, In addition to the ordinary city government functions shared by suburban communities, are the construction of public housing, the building and maintenance of parking areas for commuting workers and the upkeep on such cultural centers as the Milwaukee museum or space center. The large city must also provide more extensive service in the traditional government functions of fire and police produc- tion, road construction and up keep and schools. With the exception of education costs, the city's services are necessarily broader than those of the suburbs not only because it has more residents, but also because at least to some degree, it also services non-residents. For instance, suburban york- ers occupying downtown office buildings are assured of fire and police protection by the city of Milwaukee, yet they contribute from outlying areas are admitted free of charge at the museum, but they do not share the fiscal burden of maintaining it.

Capacity to Pay Every local community depends basically upon, the property tax for revenue but here again the large city is at a disadvantage. The capacity to pay property taxes is based on the full value of property per person and the average individual income. Seven of the 12 most fortunate cities in Wisconsin in terms of property tax base are Milwaukee Wauwatosa, Oak Creek, Cudahy, West Allis, Mequon and Brookfield, Glendale has the highest tax base with a full value property rate of $14,674 per person. The average value in a Wisconsin city is $5,440. In measuring personal income, the 12 areas with the highest rate per person are all suburbs of Milwaukee, Madison or Racine, Mequon, a northern suburb of Milwaukee which lies in Oaaukee County, has the highest income rate at $4,040 per persons.

The state per capita average is $2,575. Since suburban areas enjoy the strongest tax bases in Wisconsin, it is logical that they should also be capable of paying, the highest rates. However, the state aid and shared tax distribution formulas negate such logic. Although the suburban areas are most capable of paying the higher taxes, the very fact that they have this capacity enables them to have lower tax rates. Returns Funds There are two reasons for this.

First, the state returns sonal income rates gets more money returned for local revenue purposes. Secondly, the higher the state fund returns, the less a municipality must charge in property taxes for local needs. Thus, the area's overall tax rate is lowered. The city of Milwaukee in 1968 had a tax rate of $39.87 per $1,000 of equalized property validation. None of its 18 suburbs or 10 bordering communities had such a high rate.

The lowest rate in the metropolitan area was $20.55 per $1,000 in the town of Bmokfield. Milwaukee residents are as, a disadvantage not only because they pay higher tax rates, but also because the revenues must be used for more services than the suburban collections. No suburb has a block area designated as "poor." Few have even a single family on relief. Milwaukee has thousands and, therefore, mjist provide general must'use 37 cents of every tax dollar to.finance fire and police protection, while the western suburb of Wauwatosa requires just 8.6 cents of each dollar fpr public safety expenses. Wauwatosa can afford to spend nearly 56 cents per tax dollar on schools, Milwaukee only 41 cents.

Suburbs, with a naturally strong tax base because of high income residents high property values, also get greater fiscal aid from the state. In addition, they do not have to offer the quantity or extent of services the city must. This enables them to spend their funds for improvements as opposed to mere maintenance. But, this picture is changing somewhat. As counties assume greater responsibilities, suburbs will be forced to share more equitably in metropolitan expenses.

speaking for the Wisconsin Edit- cation Association, said parents have a right to send their children to private schools. "But any viable private education system should be support' ed by its patrons and hot the public at large," he said. "Tha state cannot afforti to subsidize two school systems." Jackson Bookmobile Schedule Reported BLACK RIVER FALLS (Special) The Bookmobile schedules for May have been released by Mrs. Margaret Larsen, extension librarian of the La Crosse Area Library Development which visits Jackson County every three weeks. 6 and 27, the bookmobile will be at North Bend, 9 to 9:45 a.m.

Melrose, 10 to 10:45 a.m.; Shamrock, 11:15 to 11:45 a.m. and i 11 12:30 to 1:45 p.m. May 7 and 28, City Point, 10:15 to 10:45 a.m.; Indian Mission, 11:30 to noon; Hatfield, 1 to 1:45 p.m. and Merrillan 2 to 2:30 p.m. May 8 and 29, Pleasant View, 9:15 to 10:15 a.m.; Disco, 10:45 to 11:30 a.m.; Levis, 1:15 to 2 p.m.; Northfield, 2:30 to 3 p.m.

May 9 and 30, Taylor, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.; Hixton, 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. and Alma Center, 2 to 3 p.m. Flour Enrichment Practices Urged- WASHINGTON (AP) Agriculture Secretary Clifford M. Hardin has urged the nation's flour millers to help fight malnutrition by paying more attention to vitamin and mineral enrichment' of their products. Hardin mentioned flour enrichment in remarks for the 57th annual convention of the Millers' National Federation here Wednesday night A trade spokesman at the convention told a newsman that most bread and flour sold in grocery stores already is enriched with nutrients which normally are added to flour mixtures by bakers.

"I would say more than 90 per cent, perhaps 98 per cent, of the white bread sold today is enriched, and this includes family flour sold in stores, too," the trade spokesman said. An Agriculture Department official said there are no federal regulations requiring flour sold in interstate commerce to be enriched with such nutrients as thiamine, riboflavin, niacin and iron. Lambs Lack Joy LUDLOW, England (UPI) Lambs just don't gambol like they used to, wrote Carol Milner in a letter to The i Wednesday. She said that lambs have tended to stand beside their mothers or sleep since the introduction of pesticides and chemical fertilizers. "Is this a coincidence?" she asked.

"I would like to know if any of your readers have noticed how lethargic and lack- funds according to the taxes while the county assumes, 6 au ceived from a particular area, the fiscal burden of public as- attempt to mainiain their high HE EA CLAIRE LEADER The increasing costs of edu-i' "i joy our modern lambs cation are also sending local taxj a re." rates skyrocketing as suburbs 1 not according to need. This means that a community with large corporations paying high income taxes, a utility paying a major share of state utility taxes or residents with high per- sistance. The large city also requires more administrators and service personnel to care for its greater population. Finance Protection This means that Milwaukee'ing to need may be adopted" academic ratings. Then, of course, there is the threat that the Tarr Task Force 4 advocating distributiou of state! rcft funds at least within rl in Eau Cliir.

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