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The El Dorado Times from El Dorado, Arkansas • Page 6

Location:
El Dorado, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Dorado (Arlt) Octobar 28, 1972 Local Girl Semi-Finalist In Teenage America Pageant Flowers Aniwtr tg.Prcvioui Puzile Special To The News-Tlmes Sixteen-year-old Susan Spooner of Junction City is one of 36 girls from 22 states named as finalists for the five candidate- at-largc positions to compete for the 1973 title of Miss Teenage America. Selected from 175 semifinalists, the 36 girls were judged on the basis of written evaluation and biographical material supplied by each candidate. Names of the five girls selected as the 1973 candidates- at large will be announced the first week of November by Miss Judith Houghton, vice president and general manager of Miss Teenage America, Inc. As one of the five candidates- at-large, an all-expense paid trip to Fort Worth (Tex.) to attend Pageant Week activities will be awarded each girl and her official chaperone. The girls will represent their home town on the 90-min.

color spectacular to be telecast live and in color by CBS from Fort Tarrant County Convention Center on Nov. 25 The 36 finalists are: ALABAMA: Bari Tingley, 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B.

Tingley Birmingham; and Dorothy Anne Haney, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Haney, Mobile; ARIZONA. Rebecca White, 17, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Robert E. White, Phoenix; ARKANSAS: Susan Spooner, 16, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. J.

H. Spooner, Junction City (Union Co); CALIFORNIA: Mary Ann Bertels, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bertels, Milpitas (Santa Clara CONNECTICUT: Margaret Lewis Kelly, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert P. Kelly, Southington and Marie Theresa Kopp, 14, daughter of Mrs. Theresa Kopp, Stratford (Fairfield FLORIDA: Kathy Lee Stracner, 16, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Jimmy Stracner, Pensacola; GEORGIA: Toyce Tom Ken, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Ip Wai Ken, Augusta; ILLINOIS: Rosie L. Loggin, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Loggin, Chicago; Laura Jean McLaughlin, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Clyde McLaughlin, Midlothian; and Jill Bicket, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Bicket, Zion (Lake LOUISIANA: Frances Elizabeth Bray, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L.

Bray, Bossier City; and Sammie Lee Malanders, 15. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Miller, New Orleans; MAINE: Robin Elizabeth SUSAN SPOONER Palmer, 16, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Carlton Palmer, Bridgton (Cumberland MARYLAND: Kellian Lea Collins, 15, daughter of Lt. Co. and Mrs. F.W.

Collins, Baltimore; Cynthia Ann Gabriszeski; 15, daughter of Mrs. Shirley M. Powers, Baltimore; and Denise Myers, 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers, Baltimore; MASSACHUSETTS: Maureen T.

Maslowski, 17, daughter of Mrs. Eileen Maslowski, Newton; MICHIGAN: Janay Johns, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Richards, Parchment (Kalamazoo MINNESOTA: Lisa Jane Kellner, 17, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. A1 Kellner, St. Paul; MISSISSIPPI: Wanda Ruth Hale, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hale, Lumberton (Lamar MONTANA: Sonja Lee Stromberg, 17, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Stromberg, Helena; NEW YORK: Jody Worstadt, 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Worstadt, Brooklyn; Laura Ann Young, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

John Young, Hicksville; and Alison Reichard, 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reichard, New York (Bronx); NORTH CAROLINA: Sandra Dawn Walker, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby 0.

Walker, West Jefferson (Ashe OHIO: Tana Carli, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A1 Carli, Alliance (Stark Faith Forchione, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Forchione, Canton; and Karen Lynn Washkewicz, 17, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Stan Washkewicz, Garfield Heights (Cuyahoga PENNSYLVANIA: Diane Romaine Kercimar, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kercimar, Allentown; Cathy Yost, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

William Yost, Bath (Northhampton and Holly Ilene Englander, 15, daughter of Mrs. Ruth Englander, Scranton; TENNESSEE: Sheree Dejon Porter, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Porter, Madison (Davidson TEXAS: Vicki Ann Pratt, 17, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. W.R. Pratt, Borger; and Glenda Ann Wells, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen E.

Wells, Clifton. Wine At Student Union BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) The Indiana University Union Board is offering a beginning course in the practical aspects of wine this fall. The announcement of the four-lesson course, one night per week, advised students taste seven different wines per Materials will be The fee for the course is $10. ACROSS 1 Garden flowers 6 Fall flower 11 Elevates 13 Flowers of caper family 14 Introduce 15 Sell in small quantities 16 Entangle 17 Tulip town 19 Arid 20 Regards highly 24 Exhausted 27 Frosters 31 Pertaining to a tissue 32 Fashionable assemblage 33 Feminine appellation 34 Muse of poetry 35 The yucca is New flower 36 Renovate 37 Tales 41 Steamer (ab.) 44 Ex-soldier (coll.) 45 GftTs name 46 Awaken 51 Puffed up 54 Annoy 55 Took a breather 56 Guide 57 Toothed wheels DOWN 1 Stiffly decorous 2 District on Maui 3 Roster 4 Chemical suffix 5 Dry (comb, form; var.) 6 Malt brew 7 Coterie 8 Garden Thieu Claims No Agreement Reached To End Vietnam War amphibian 9 Turkish title 10 Depend 12 Let it stand 13 Algonquian Indian 18 From (Fr.) 20 Makes into law 21 Thoroughfare 22 Term in solo whist 23 Frightens 24 Depots (ab.) 25 skin 30 -----drop 38 Above 39 Musical note 40 Roman road 41 Tree fluids 42 Allowance for waste 43 Flower 45 Feminine name 46 Change in course 47 Puts to 49 Shoshonean Indian 26 Pseudonym of 50 Indian weight Charles Lamb 52 Gam 28 Dash 53 Peer 29 Surf noise mother 1 2 34 5 mmmm 7 8 io 11 12 1,5 16 17 18 1 2021 22 23 24 2526 27 2829 30 31 33 34 35 37 39 40 1 41 4243 44 45 4647 48 49 50 1 5, 5253 54 55 56 1 57 28 (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) Auto Repairmen Needed In County According to a survey recently establish a training class of conducted, twenty men will be approximately twenty men in El needed to meet the demand for auto body repairman the next twelve months in Union and Columbia Counties.

This is according to a survey made by S.O. Reynolds, Manager of the Employment Security Division office in El Dorado and Wendel Grissom, Manager of the Employment Security Division office in Magnolia. Reynolds said now that the demand has been established, the next step toward setting up training is to determine the supply of interested applicants. The training proposal will Dorado. The cost of the course will be born by the Manpower Development Training Act.

The head of a family may receive a training allowance in addition to allowances from the Veterans Administration in case of veterans. Reynolds said that young men interested in training for Body Repairmen should contact the Employment Security Division office in El Dorado or Magnolia. If sufficient interest is shown Reynolds said that a proposal will be written and funds requested to conduct the class. SAIGON (AP) President Nguyen Van Thieu declared Friday only his signature can bring peace to South Vietnam and emphasized that have not agreed to anything peace agreement that is valid for South Vietnam is the one I sign as representative of the whole Thieu told 1,000 of his supporters. He was referring to the broad peace agreement that Hanoi announced Thursday.

North Vietnam accused the United States of backing out on it because of trouble with Thieu. As Thieu spoke to legislators and province councilmen at the presidential palace, his closest adviser, Hoang Due Nha, told newsmen: is no rupture between the United States and South but added: still have many basic principles to work The Foreign Ministry said government is ready to accept a cease-fire but any po- 'litical settlement must provide for self-determination by the people. Thieu and the U.S. military command were reported preparing for a cease-fire. In the meantime, Communist- led troops kept up their attacks across South Vietnam, hitting more than 100 government positions for the second day, killing two Americans and shooting down a U.S.

jet over the southern panhandle of North Vietnam. The number of attacks are the highest since the Communist 1968 Tet offensive. But their intensity is far less than that of four years ago and in the initial stages of the most recent offensive that began March 30. Thieu accused the Communist side of exploiting the proposed peace agreement and ordering its troops to launch widespread attacks. Acting on orders from Thieu, field commanders launched operations aimed at rooting out Viet Cong agents from villages and hamlets.

This is an effort to expand control in the countryside in the event of a cease-fire and to counter similar efforts by the Allied officials said the intensified North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacks were designed to broaden the Communist presence in South Vietnam before a standstill cease-fire, a major point in the peace plan. This one of a half-dozen issues that Henry A. Kissinger, the presidential adviser, says need to be settled before a final Vietnam peace agreement can be signed. He said both sides would be tempted to make last efforts to increase their holdings. Thieu showed concern that the draft agreement by Kissinger and the North Vietnamese made no provision for the pullout of North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam while calling for the withdrawal of all U.S.

forces. think they have the right to stay Thieu said. are waiting for the total withdrawal of the U.S. troops to attack once The North Vietnamese kept hammering away at Thieu and the United States. The North Vietnamese official newspaper Nhan Danh rejected U.S.

efforts prolong the In Paris, however, a North Vietnamese spokesman said Hanoi peace negotiators would be ready to meet again with Kissinger whenever he wishes. But he insisted the United States should sign the agreement next Tuesday, as Hanoi said Washington had agreed to do. Thieu disclosed for the first time that he had proposed about a month ago a plan providing for a national referendum, to be organized under auspices of the United Nations, to determine the makeup of an election commission. Th election commission would supervise new national elections for president and other offices, in which any candidates would have been able to run, Thieu called the plan generous but said the Viet Cong rejected it. Under the draft agreement, the Thieu government would remain in power and negotiate directly with the Viet Cong on the formation of a three-part National Council of Reconciliation and Concord.

This council would help maintain the fire and supervise election on which the parties might agree. Thieu is reported to see this as a disguised form of a three- a coalition government which would lead to the eventual takeover of South Vietnam by the Communists. The U.S. air war continued at about the same level as earlier this week. Eight waves of B52 bombers struck in the southern part of North Vietnam.

In London, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird confirmed what had been generally know here, that all U.S. bombing operations have been halted north of the 20th Parallel. The parallel is about 240 miles north of the demilitarized zone separating the Vietnams and 75 miles south of Hanoi. Fighter-bombers apparently were also out over the North, because the U.S.

Command said an F4 Phantom was shot down Friday in the southern panhandle. The two crewmen bailed out over the Gulf of Tonkin and were rescued. The U.S. Command was reported reviewing and updating contingency plans for the return of more than 500 prisoners of war and 30,000 troops still in South Vietnam. The San Diego Union reported that American POWs released after the cease-fire would be flown to Guam, the Philippines or Okinawa and would remain in the centers until judged physically able to return to the United States.

Missouri Police Return To Work Gulf Oil Prexy Speaks To Petroleum Council Household Services Report Required By Internal Revenue LITTLE ROCK Housewives who pay someone $50 or more for household services during any three-month calendar quarter must report these payments and pay the Social Security taxes due to the Internal Revenue Service. R. Russell James, Acting District Director for Arkansas, said the report for the July, August, and September calendar quarter is due October 31, 1972. The Social Security tax on household wages is 5.2 per cent for the employer and 5.2 for employee. When the quarterly report is filed, a check or money order representing 10.4 percent of cash wages reported for the period should be included with the return.

Form 942, Quarterly Tax Return for Household Employees, must be used to report the Social Security taxes due. After the first one is filed, a copy of Form 942 is mailed to every employer in Births Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Greer, Rt. 5, El Dorado, are the parents of a daughter born Wednesday at Union Memorial Hospital.

time for the next quarterly report. However, if you do not receive a form, you may obtain one from your local IRS office. Mr. James said that anyone who hires a maid, cleaning woman, cook, governess, housekeeper, caretaker, gardener, chaffeur, is liable for Social Security taxes if cash wages of $50 or more in a quarter are paid to one employee. Money given to employees for carfare is to be counted in total wages paid.

Car tokens, passes and the value of meals are not included in wages. Failure to pay Social Security taxes can delay payment and decrease the amount a maid receives when she later applies for benefits. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ford, 1324 W.

First are the parents of a son born Oct. 27 at Union Memorial Hospital. Youngsters born on Oct. 26 were: A son to Mr. and Mrs.

James Malone 2406 Cherokee and a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. George Daniel of Huttig. Mr. and Mrs.

Rickey Lane Crum, 2508 Nevada are the parents of a daughter born Oct. 25 at Union Memorial Hospital. QUESTION- Why Does Howard Bros. Have So Many Customers Everyday? ANSWER: Be Plenty Of Free Parking. Often when maids or other household employees apply for benefits it comes to light that all social security taxes have not been paid.

IRS then has to secure delinquent returns, Forms 942, from the employer, sometimes covering several years with a substantial amount of taxes, penalties and interest due. No taxes are due on amounts paid to persons who are independent contractors and not household employees. Mr. James said this exempts payments to painters, plumbers, repairmen, carpenters and others who provide household services as independent contractors. Shop The CLASSIFIED Today LITTLE ROCK (AP) New standards of public accountability and social responsibility for business corporations are making the nation stronger, Edward B.

Walker, executive vice president of Gulf Oil Corp. told the Arkansas Petroleum Council Friday. is not just a passing Walker said. is the new wave of the future. And it is making us a different but stronger nation.

I believe we are becoming a stronger nation because their is no room for Walker said corporations are ever increasing time and effort on matters of social must recognize that there is danger that as we grow older we becoming increasingly resistant to he said. become, in short, the victims of our own traditional wisdom. It is of course true that there can be change without progress. But let us be sure that we are fully aware that there can be no progress without Walker said the oil industry stop trying to buck trends and start understanding, anticipating and leading. This means we must stop being defensive and He said that government at all levels needs the help of an energy industry that can provide our own best interest we must help meet the public interest, and know what it Walker said.

never was a time in the history of American business when the two' were as much and the as they are He said it seemed ironic that industry that has helped speed up progress and not exactly the best equipped to understand, appreciate and utilize that wFmakI BUTTON HOLES DODSON SCWINC CENTER 711 Main 862-5911 JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) Members of the Joplin Police Department returned to their jobs on schedule Friday after a one- day mass sick call. All but supervisory personnel had called in sick Thursday on 8 a.m., 4 p.m. and midnight shifts. The action was construed as a protest against the city refusal to meet informally with the Joplin Police Officers Association for the discussion of salary levels.

Robert Metzinger, city manager, reported the council received a letter Friday from the police association reiterating its request for an informal meeting with the city council. However, unlike an earlier request which specified a meeting before the council is scheduled to make final approval on the-annual budge new communication cited no time, Metzinger said. Prospects of a meeting were much up in the Friday, Metzinger said, because council members had not discussed the request, which was handed to Bernard Kakuske, police chief. In a letter to the association Tuesday, Mayor Lena Beal said the council did not feel the meeting the officers requested was warranted at the time because Metzinger planned an area salary survey in January. The members were advised to and work with their respective department heads and the city McKissick Endorses Nixon LITTLE ROCK (AP) Floyd McKissick, former national director of the Congress of Racial Equality, said Friday he supports President Nixon in the Nov.

7 general election. McKissick, 50, a black, told a news conference at the headquarters of the Committee to Re-elect the President that the Democratic nominee, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, alienate black from if elected. Nixon represents kind of man who can bring people together, black and McKissick said. He said that McGovern does not appeal to Asked how he reconciled his support of Nixon with the stand against busing for racial balance, McKissick said: I go into a black munity, I find many persons want to keep black schools and that many black teachers have been denied employment in He said he favored education for and he added: by sitting down next to white people is not going to give many any more sense than I have.

not concerned whether schools are all black or all white. concerned with quality education. Numbers is not my McKissick said he was in Arkansas on business and was not being paid to campaign for Nixon. Balanced Beauty Care Cosmetics By Sallye Warmer THi WISHING WILL 1008 863 7501 Your vote FOR Act 1 will start a slow motion change in train crew size. Passage of Act 1 will allow already-signed contracts on train crew sizes between the United Transportation Union and the railroads to go into effect.

Like Act 1 itself, those contracts guarantee the jobs and earnings of train crewmen. Train crews will only become smaller when present train crewmen are promoted, retire or leave train service. With all present jobs guaranteed, it will take about 10 years for this take full effect. But the price the railroads are willing to pay so that the Train Crew Laws can be repealed without affecting any of the present train crewmen. fair to the men and to the railroads.

Let collective bargaining work. Vote to let the union contracts go into effect. Vote FOR Act 1. Vote FOR Act 1 Political ad paid for by Arkansas Railroads Committee. W.

Bill Reed. Chairman 307 E. Main 863-9207 DL 9 ah La dzntrs, THE FINEST IN FABRICS AND PERSONAL ASSISTANCE Downtown El Dorado Off Union Square Cash PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE 0 DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES 3 Days Only Saturday, Monday Tuesday, Oct. 28,30 31 Lay aw ays During This Sale!.

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About The El Dorado Times Archive

Pages Available:
27,015
Years Available:
1964-1974