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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 1

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Mitchell, South Dakota
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WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy THE DAILY REPUBLIC An Independent Newspaper Sell It FAST With DOUBLE SERVICE WANT ADS Number 10 Pages Mitchell, S. Saturday, August 18, 1962 Final Edition Sinale Copy lOc Volume LXXIX Cooling Period In Nickel Probe Hearings Set By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON WASHINGTON (AP) George M. Humphrey's defense of a mul- timilUon dollar nickel deal with the government will be resumed on Capitol Hill after an indefinite cooling off period. The wealthy 72-year-old Cleveland industrialist's hearing before Senate stockpile probers ended abruptly Friday after a shouting match between Humphrey and Oahe Strikers Nay Return To Work Monday PIERRE group of boilermaker union members who walked off the Oahe Dam project Thursday can be expected to return to the job Monday, a spokesman for Graver-Western Knapp Construction said today.

The workers were employed by the construction firm on the surge tanks at Oahe, work on the tanks IB about 80 per cent completed. The walkout seemed to concern a group of men scheduled to be laid off this weekend. Members of the union said one of their stewards was among the men affected by the layoff, thus triggering the walkout. The company spokesman today eaid the differences had apparently been settled. Sen.

Stuart Symington. D-Mo. But Symington, chairman of the Senate's special stockpile inves gallon, promised that Humphrey would get a chance to return. Just before entering a hospital for a hernia operation that is expected to sideline him for several weeks, Symington told a reporter that Humphrey "or any other witness will be called to testify if this is requested by counsel or any member of the subcommittee." But before then, Symington said subcommittee investigators and auditors will re-examine Humphrey's testimony and records of the Banna mining complex on the jmuch disputed nickel stockpile contracts. Sen.

Prescott who sharply protested Symington's refusal to let Humphrey and a squad of Hanna associates continue their testimony Friday, said in a separate interview that he would insist they be recalled Whiskey Taken In Theft Al Leo's Liqior Approximately $280 and several bottles of liquor were 'taken' in a breakin at Leo's Liquors In Mitchell early this morning. Leo Stedman, proprietor of the store, discovered the breakin tbout 8:30 this morning. Chief of Police Charles Stumm said about $280 and at least two quarts, two fifths, and three pints of whiskey were taken in the The $280 consisted of $40 in change and the balance in $5 and $1 bills. The money was taken from the cash register and from an unlocked safe. later.

Chairman Symington disregarded the rights of other members of the subcommittee and citizens who had been called as witnesses," Bush said. Humphrey, the top executive in a chain of Hanna companies until he became secretary of the Treasury in. 1953, angered Symington by telling newsmen that the inquiry is politically motivated and constitutes a "stab in the back." Humphrey, now honorary chairman of Hanna, has told the senators his company realized a reasonable profit of $7.5 million on a contract to supply nickel to the government's stockpile of strategic metals. The contract was signed four days before the industrialist was sworn in as a member of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's cabinet.

Symington contends the Hanna company's own Income tax returns show a $15-million profit and that government auditors estimate "profits and windfalls" total at least $34 million on a total roduction cost of $11,199,000. Several hours after the explosive hearing, Symington said that examiners would look into "four areas of basic disagreement" between testimony of Humphrey and (Continued on Page Two) PROBI Is Stumm said there was "no marks of entry anyplace. It ap-1 Ma HI OH Phial fit pears either so one hid out there HOIIIBU IfUlCl UI after the building was locked at midnight or they had a key." The theft or thieves left by the back door of the establishment. Rosary Is Set Sunday Evening For G. Pesicka The Rosary for George Pesicka, 36, Mitchell, will be recited at 8 p.m., Sunday at the Milliken Chapel.

Mr. Pesicka died Wednesday at the Veterans Hospital in Minneapolis. The body will lie in state from 7-9 p.m., Sunday at the Milliken Chapel. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m., Monday in the Holy Family Catholic Church. Burial will be in Graceland Cemetery with military rites at graveside.

National VFW MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Veterans of Foreign Wars elected Byron B. Gentry, 49-year-old lawyer from Pasadena, as commander-in-chief Friday. Gentry, stepping up from the post of senior vice commander, succeeds Robert E. Hansen of South St. Paul, Minn.

NEW VFW AUXILIARY PRESIDENT PINNED Mrs. Elfrieda Tice of Mitchell (right above) receives the pin of National FW Auxiliary President at Minneapolis yesterday following her election to the highest office in the Auxiliary. The pinning is being done by Miss Beulah A. Adamson of Denver, outgoing president. Mrs.

Tice is the wife of Mitchell Municipal Judge erton B. Tice, who served as National VFW Commander 1954-55. Twin Cosmonauts Honored As Reds Orbit flew Craft By PRESTON GROVER MOSCOW (AP) The Russian space twins flew into Moscow today for a tumultuous heroes welcome led by Premier Khrushchev, as the Soviet Union hurled another satellite presumably orbit. Maj. Andrian Nikolayev and L.

Col. Pavel Popovich emerged from their plane at Vnukovo airport with space-minded timing exactly as scheduled at 2 p.m. Moscow time (6 a.m. EST). Khrushchev hugged and kissed them both and girls bedecked them with flowers.

The latest Soviet heroes exchanged embraces with top Soviet officials, members of their families and their Russian predecessors in space, Maj. Yuri Gagarin and Lt. Col. Gherman Titov. Nikolayev and Popovich first reported to Khrushchev, saluting him sharply and pledging that they are ready to carry out any further missiins.

Then Popovich kissed and em in another plane from Sochi. The Soviet premier was suntanned and apparently rested for his holiday in the Crimea on the Black Sea. The cosmonauts' arrival was televised and transmitted live to televisiop screens in Western Europe. The astronauts flew in from an undesignated town on the Volga where they had rested and undergone examinations of the effects of their reccrd orbital flights that (Continued on Page Eleven) SPACE Mrs. Tice Sets Far East Trip For Auxiliary MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-A buoyant South Dakota newspaperwoman and mother who is the new national president of the Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, has promptly launched plans to go far in the job.

Mrs. Elfrieda Tice, elected at the convention windup Friday intends a novel trip to the Far East 'this fall as part of her duties. With her, on a trip to Alaska, Japan and Korea will go a 15- Mrs. Finkbine Has Surgery In Stockholm braced his 7-year-old Natasha, took her by the hand as he and Nikolayev waved with the welcoming party to the huge crowd gathered to greet them. Khrushchev led the astronauts and the Soviet officials on a march in front of the welcoming crowd.

The Soviet premier was waving a bunch of flowers in acknowledgement of the cheers of the crowd. Khrushchev suddenly took Natasha Popovlch's hand and she relinquished her father's. The pre- STOCKHOLM, Sweden Mrs. Sherri Finkbine underwent an abortion at the Caroline Has- dausnter, pita i here todayi a Swedish friend reported. The friend said the Phoenix, Ariz, television performer was in the operating room for 45 minutes and the doctor described her condition as satisfactory.

Tempers Remain Scorched As Bill On Satellite QK'd By CIIAOWICK WASHINGTON (AP) After a long countdown, the Senate has finally got the administration's communications satellite bill off tho launching pad. But it left a trial of scorched tempers that seemed certain to' have an affect on other legislation in Congress' drive for adjournment. The senate passed the measure 6fi to 11 Friday after having invoked its anti-filibuster rule for the first time in 35 years in order to get the Joill through a barrier of bitter opposition. The measure was almost like, but not identical with, a bill passed by the House on May 3 by a 354-9 vote. If the House now taking an informal recess until Aug.

accepts the Senate verson, the legislation will go directly to President Kennedy for his signature. Should the House, however, insist that a compromise be worked out, the bill would have to come back to the Senate. This would give opponents a chance to mount a new filibuster against it. The first space-age legislation of its kind, the bill cleared the Senate Friday after proposed amendments had been rejected in wholesale lots. All 11 votes against it were cast by Democrats.

It provides for the creation of a private, government-regulated corporation to own and operate the U.S. segment of a global communications system using satellites as relay stations. Kennedy put it on his "must" list, hut. a small hand of Democratic senators fought tlir measure. They railed it a gigantic giveaway of the taxpayers' investment in space research and said it would create a private monopoly dominated by American Trie- phone Telegraph Co.

Most of these senators favored government, ownership. Passage was assured once the Senate voted fi3 to 27 last Tuesday to invoke an antl-fillbustor rule that limited eaeh senator's speaking time from then on lo one hour. protested to the end Unit they weie briny "naRgrd." Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, who was backed all the way by his Republican counterpart. Srn. Everett M.

Dirksen of Illinois, maintained that, the bill's toes hart been treated fairly. Sen. John 0. Pnstore, floor manager of the bill, told the Senate that. "I stake my name, my ropntivtton, and everything I (Continued on Pagr Two) SATELLITH Kennedy Breaks Ground For Big Water Project daughter, Virginia, a artist and singer, "to year-old youthful demonstrate the positive side of teen-agers in this country," said her mother.

Mrs. Tice will lay aside for a year her duties as women's editor of the Mitchell Republic. The tall, attractive Virginia native becomes the first World War II auxiliary president. With her husband, Municipal Judge Merton B. Tice of Mitchell, she becomes a member of the first World War II husband wife team to head the VFW and auxiliary.

Tice headed the VFW several years ago. Another of Mrs. Tice's three children is a West Point cadet; the third attends college in South Dakota. Besides newspaper and family duties, Mrs. Tice has been prominent in community and state affairs.

A quick wit doesn't lessen the seriousness with which Mrs. Tice takes over her new job. She says Mrs.v Finkbine had come to she is going to direct auxiliary Stockholm for an abortion, fear-j programs this year to what the ing she might bear a deformed four presidents on Mount Rush- Fire Destroys Grain Elevator At Sisseton SISSETON (fl-FIre early today i i i i. liiAi VFW Auxiliary elected Mrs. mier had to give her a little Elfrieda Tice, women's editor of the Mitchell (SD.) Republic, as president.

Gentry is a former University of Southern California football player who was in two Rose Bowl games and played professional ball with Pittsburgh. A veteran of World War II, he has a private law practice and is city prosecutor of Pasadena. The VFW at closing business sessions of its 63rd annual convention also elected the following: Joseph J. Lombardo, Brooklyn, N.Y., senior vice commander-in- chief; John A. Jenkins, Birmingham, junior vice commander- in-chief; J.

A. Cheatam, Kansas City, quartermaster; Andy tug now and again to keep her on tne rignt route. The cosmonauts' plane landed just after Khrushchev had arrived Scheduled Riles Ai Woonsocket For A. Hinker By Republic News Service WOONSOCKET Funeral services for Anton Hinker, who died Aug. 17 in a Bismarck, N.

hos- pital, will be held at St. Wilfrid's Bore, Superior, judge Catholic Church Monday at 9:30 cate general; Dr. Guy C. Riohard son, Bristol, surgeon general, and the Rev. Earl Best, Indian- destroyed a grain elevator and apolis, chaplain.

about 60,000 bushels of small grain In addition to Mrs. Tice, stored inside, The blaze in the Ballet. and the auxiliary elected: Mrs. William Campbell, Neenah, Carey Commission Co. elevator, senior vice president; Mrs.

was believed to have started in the cupola of one of the buildings about 1 a.m. The alarm was turned in about 1:30 a.m. after two men noticed fire in the upper part of the build- Ing, according to Fire Chief Amos Hull. Destroyed were two 50-foot- high elevator Wooden roofs over two capacity concrete stave silos burned and the grain inside was damaged by fire and water. Madison Man In New Head Of School Group PIERRE Of! Supt.

Floyd Thompson, Madison, assumed office as president of the South Dakota Association of School Administrators at the conclusion of a two-day annual meeting here Thursday. He succeeds A. L. Stoddard, superintendent of schools -it Humboldt. Dwight D.

Miller, superintendent at Watertown, was chosen president elect. ether new officers included P. A. Setnes, Sisseton, vice president; H. E.

Marquette, secretary-treasurer; w. E. Cermak, Britton, Archie Brecht, Parker, R. E. stekl, Redfield.

Kenneth Hague. Newell, and Bryc Of dlrectoji. Arthur Klugow, Tracy, junior vice president; Mrs. Alex Miller, Kansas City, re-elected secretary; Mrs. Sam Goldstein, Chicago, chaplain; Mrs.

Glenn White, South Bend, conductress, and Mrs. Walter Bogacz, Meriden, guard. she might bear a deformed baby. Sweden's Royal Medical Board gave legal sanction to the operation Friday on grounds that Mrs. Finkbine's health otherwise might be endangered.

Mrs. Finkbine and her husband, Robert, came to Sweden Aug. 4 after an Arizona court refused to sanction an abortion. Mrs. Finkbine said she took thalidomide, a tranquilizer, during early pregnancy.

Similar use has been blamed for the birth of several thousand deformed babies, mostly in Europe. Sources said the convalescence is expected to extend about the i same period as that following a' normal childbirth and that the couple will be ready to start for i home as soon as possible. "I think we will go home by way of Paris," her husband told a friend. "This has been trying time for my wife, and I am sure she needs some distraction." four more in her adopted state stands for courage, ideals, unity and strength, Before her trip to the Far East, Mrs. Tice plans a ceremonial trip to her home state of Virginia, where the first English settlement was founded, to Delaware, and to the New England states.

Homecoming ceremonies are planned for Mrs. Tice Monday in Mitchell. a. m. The Rosary will be recited atj the Basham Funeral Home at 8 o'clock Sunday evening.

Mr. Hinker was born Oct. 13, 1887 at Woonsocket. His wife, the former Rose Watznauer, preceded him in death in 1942. Survivors are sons, Laverne and Leo of Sioux Falls and three daughters, Mrs.

Florence Ruhoff of Morrtstown. N. and Mrs. Lavina Sinclair and Mrs. Geraldine Sinclair of Sioux Falls.

One sister, Mrs. Mae Sauter, who lives in California, also survives, ficlaries. Cedric Adams Estate $521,716 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Cedric Adams, Minneapolis Star and Sunday Tribune columnist who I died 18 months ago, left an estate of $521,716, the will filed in Hen- nepln County Probate Court showed Friday. His widow Bernice was the Primary beneficiary of trusts and three sons are contingent bene- Former French Official Ousted From Italy MILAN, Italy (AP) Jacques Soustelle, a former French cabinet officer and a figure in the abortive right wing movement to block Algerian Independence, has been arrested by Italian police and ordered deported as an undesirable alien. Police said Soustelle, traveling on a false passport, would not expelled to Prance, but would ue taken to, the frontier of his choice.

There was no immediate official reaction from the French government. Authorities in Paris said they were not formally seeking Soustelle, who took part in the 1958 Algerian military revolt that returned President Charles de Gaulle to power. Soustelle later became a bitter foe of De Gaulle, who contrary to the insurgents' expectations, pushed for Algerian independence. There seemed to be little popular interest in France over news of Soustelle's arrest Friday. Most Frenchmen were eager to push Algeria to the back of their minds after more than seven years of civil the North African territory and a last ditch terrorist campaign by European settlers who feared Moslem rule.

Algeria became independent July 3. Italian police said Soustelle flew from Rome to Milan Inursday, traveling on a French passport made out to Jean Albert Seneque. Officers said the bespectacled former anthropology professor rented a car, drove to Milan's Central Railway Terminal where he ate and made a telephone call and then drove to a hotel at Brescia, E. G. Halvorson Of Chamberlain Dies; Rites Set CHAMBERLAIN Funeral services will be held at Kennebec Monday for Emel Gerhart Halvorson, who died at his residence in Chamberlain Aug.

16. He had lived here Just two weeks and prior to that was a longtime resident of Kennebec. The rites will be at the American Mt (Ulrv. It.l* Ml' i. Lutheran Church with the Rev.

1 rising, 3U escaped and later was mile east and one-half mile norm Arvid Harklau officiating. named minister of information by of the filtration plant. By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) President Kennedy touches off 17,000 feet of dynamite charges today to break a big chunk of ground for a $511 million water project, on a trip from which the non-political tag quickly was stripped.

Here in the home state of Richard M. Nixon, Kennedy would JFK VISIT IN PICTURES Photographs of President John F. Kennedy's visit to South Dakota yesterday on Page 2 of today's edition of The Dally Republic. cent valleys on earth. He dined in his suite at the Ahwahnce Hotel, then watched the famed flrcfall from a balcony.

Red embers of red fir bark cascaded from Glacier Point, 3,500 feet above tho valley, down the face of a cliff in a spectacle that has a 60-year tradition: To accommodate the President, the fireball was delayed 30 minutes, and to impress him, tho quantity of glowing coals was doubled or tripled. The fireball capped a day that (Continued on Page Two) KENNEDY like to do some dynamiting of the former vice president's aspirations to become governor of California. The real activity along that line, as well as in behalf of Democrats running for Congress, will come later in the campaign. Kennedy aides are talking about an outright political jWp to the West early in October. But Kennedy already was teaming up to some extent with Nixon's current political foe, Edmund O.

(Pat) Brown, the Democrat who is governor now and wants to remain governor. The two had a conference planned at Yosemite Park today before taking off for Los Banos and the ground-breaking ceremo- project will supply water to hundreds of thousands of acres of central California as well as to the Los Angeles-San Diego area. Brown attended a Democratic powwow at Fresno Friday night and spent the night there. Kennedy visited Yosemite for the first time and spent the night there, in one of the most magnlfi- Mundi To Ask Amendment To Farm Measure BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Karl Mundt, R.rS.D., said today he will offer an amendment to the pending farm bill which would give wheat farmers a choice of two programs for future crop years.

Mundt said the amendment would provide two referendums for wheat producers. The first referendum would give the wheat farmer a choice between continuation of the present wheat pro- i gram for two more years or east of Milan, where he spent the K001 night. and The next morning he was ar Stolen Vehicles Are Recovered Two vehicles stolen In Mitchell Friday or early this morning have been recovered. The first theft was reported by Mrs. Gene Miller of Mitchell on Friday.

Mrs. Miller told police their car, a 1955 Ford, was stolen from in front of their home at 423 West Second. The Miller car was recovered about 1:30 this morning near Huron. At 7:30 this morning Hickey Roofing Company reported a one- one-half ton Intern a i a 1 datory wheat acreage controls and certificates. Mundt said after this choice Is made, another referendum would be held.

In this second vote, the decision would be either for or against the plan adopted In the first referendum. "On this second vote," Mundt said, "the wheat farmer would have exactly the same referendum he has now, voting either for a government program or no program at all." Mundt said his amendment is identical to one approved by the tills spring and knocked out by the Senate later. Weather Forecast SOUTH DAKOTA Occasional cloudiness through Sunday with a few showers or thunderstorms today and in the east portion tonight. Warmer oast and central today, cooler west tonight.and over most of state Sunday. High today 82 to 1)2, low tonight 55 to 62.

rested on the road to Lake Garda and was brought back to Milan. truck was stolen Friday night at the filtration plant. The truck con lu taincd about one ton of asphalt, Soustelle was put under house asphalt paper'and tools. It was arrest after the 1958 Algerian up-' located at 8:15 a.m., today one White Resistance In Albany, Georgia Said Being Formed By BON MCKEE ALBANY, Ga. (AP)-Organized white resistance to integration is forming here with efforts to consolidate several segregationist groups.

About 20 white persons, including several businessmen, met Friday night and discussed organization plans aimed at economic reprisals against Negroes who boycott downtown merchants. "The boycott is a two-edged blade," said a spokesman, Richard Taylor, "and we feel that our edge Is the sharper." For 10 months, integration leaders have urged Negroes to boy- ott white businessmen because of employment practices and segregation policies. When Negroes withdrew patronage earlier this year, the local transit company was forced out of business. The economic boycott downtown has hurt business to an undetermined extent. Taylor said the white citizens would push for reprisals such as the firing of Negro employes, in eluding domestic workers.

Ne will be in the Kennebec cemetery under the direction of the McColley Funeral Home. Mr. Halvorson was born at Irwin, Dec. 5. 1893.

He had farmed at Kennebec since 1903 and before that lived at Armour for a few years. He was married to Ruth Allyn at Winner May 5, She survives along with five sons, Gene, Harlan, Lyle, Gary and Larry, all of Kennebec and three daughters, Wanda, Mrs. Paul Sweeney of Presho and Joyce and Kathy at I home. Also surviving are 15 grand-. children, three brothers, Charles and Clifford of Kennebec and two sisters, Mrs.

Odella verson and Miss Clara Mae Halvorson of Kennebec. One daughter, Beverly Lavonne, preceded her father in death. De Gaulle. Soustelle also was giv- Investigating Officer Clarence en other responsibilities, including Cunningham said the truck may the Sahara region in Algeria. He, have been taken to pull a car out was Algerian governor general in 1955-56.

MITCHELL WKATHER Average precipitation for portion to year to date Total precipitation for portion of year to date 27.90 High Friday 74 Overnight low 54 7 a.m. temperature BO today 7:33 Sunrise tomorrow 5:41 1 of a mudhole since the truck was left in mud and water. McNamara Sees $4 Billion Saved In Year's ng omesc worers. e- ux an as oun oca groes comprise about 40 per cent I support; the American Nazi Par- tion by white persons in Albany. Outside elements have been rebuffed in similar attempts.

A white segregationist from New Orleans failed in a move to start "reverse freedom rides" north by Negroes here; the Ku Klux Klan has found little local lVOt6 PrOJTlptS Wife's Missing By FRED S. HUFFMAN Military Affairs Writer WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, accused in some quarters of of the city's 58,000 population. "We can force out anybody who shows partiality to the Negroes," said Taylor. "We don't want the merchants to try to negotiate with the Negroes." Several unidentified businessmen and civic leaders talked recently with Negro spokesmen and were sternly denounced by the City Commission, which has refused to negotiate racial issues- The efforts by Taylor and his supporters are the first signs of organized, resistance to Integra- ty and other organizations have 'gotten unsympathetic, if not hostile, receptions.

Recount Action WARREN. Mich. (APi John public, it Is known he was perplexed by Stalir's criticism of his budget actions As the top man in the defense! establishment, McNamara feels 26 All Month '62 '61 Avfc Avg Reo Yl Jan. .12 .35 .47 .35 2.10 '97 Feb. 2.92 .45 .60 2.92 '62 Mar.

Ml 1.19 1.41 1.24 3.45 '08 April 2.2(i 1.80 2.24 250 7.34 '27 May 7.17 5.65 2.73 2.21 10.59. '42 June 5.95 4.9!) 4.03 8.56 '20 July 5.13 1.85 2.26 3.06 8.85 'la AUK. 2.33 2 2.71 2.00 6.25 '23 St-pl. 1 .98 2.16 2.12 Ul Oct. 3.57 1.25 1.48 4.82 'II Nov.

.11 .69 .67 2.71 '47 MISSOURI RIVKH STAfiKS Yankton I Up .1 City 3 8 Down 1 Omaha Up .1 Negro leaders quietly mapped Mellon wants to know where his different budget strategy for a sustained drive, wife's vole went. i giving this southwest Georgia city at least a temporary respite from protest activities, such as sit-inI ocratic Convention, he says, and attempts and prayer vigils. his wife says she voted for him, diana, cited this painstaking per- wife's vole went. He voted for himself as dele gate to the Macomb County Dem- In the' relaxed atmosphere, a too. review of the fiscal 1W13 contingent of state troopers left But the official tally gave him i budget as an example of after five weeks in down- only one vote.

JNamara's ovum-aching in per- town hotels on 24-hour alert and Mrs. iiildcgard Lowe was Ue- sonal control of the Pentagon. local policemen returned to near I dared two votes. Although McNamara has re- he has a responsibility to check closely on what Is allowed to go Hapid into the military budget, which Phmp this year totals a slavering $-18 billion. Critics of McNamara contend military advice is shunted aside and that the secretary's top civilian aides are shaping UK volviim as little BK a few thou- strategy sand dollars.

I The ikfense secretary is known Moiindgi; Stahr, who resigned to become i to feel that this criticism is mi president of the University of In- founded and to hold that military plans and strategy -still are the province of the professional officers of the uniformed services McNamara's assistants, most of gathering in too much control, is convinced that Ws persona) Item- by-Item review of the proposed military budget last year saved up to $1 billion. former Secretary of the Army Elvis J. Stahr Jr. said last month that McNamara passed on 500 items, some in- few thou- i City Pierre Aberdeen Waierlown Huron Sioux TKMPiORATl'KKS II 88 nu 70 ll I 7.1 Hi 7'l 711 Pi-p. .0:1 Ti- 57 'M HI .1:1 1st' normal duty.

1 Mellon is getting a recount, '(rained from replying to Stahr iu (Continued on Twoi BUDGET' SOM'NAR (Vulral Standard Time A.M. P.M. Minor M.ijin Minor Major 2:00 3:55.

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