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The Post-Standard du lieu suivant : Syracuse, New York • Page 1

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Lieu:
Syracuse, New York
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Ksl The Post-Standard Weather Partly cloudy and slightly Rain probability 20 per cent. High today 73 Low tonight 55 142nd YEAR VOL. 142, NO. 2fi2 SYRACUSE, N. FRIDAY, JUNE 1971 10 CENTS I'ei Hon Di 'Ivored) Dr.

Eggers Choice For SU Chancellor Last Roundup for Illegal Arms U.S. Treasury Department agents delivered approximately 200 illegal weapons to a serap metal company in Dallas, Thursday for destruction. Left photo shows an agent tossing an automatic rifle on the pile of weapons. Center photo: crane bucket drops the contraband weapons into the metal grind- Morning News Digest A 24th body is discovered in an orchard north of Yuba City, Calif. Page 2 Syracuse Area Headlines De Ruyter teen-ager becomes rounty's latest traffic fatality victim.

Page 13 Chiefs beat Charleston, 8-5, on a 9th-inning grand slam by Rusty Torres. Page 17 Stradivarius Violin Sold LONDON (UPI) A 1751 Stra-divarious violin by experts as one of the world's finest was sold at auction Thursday for $201,600, nearly four times the highest price paid for any violin in the past. "It is certainly one of about half a dozen greatest," said a spokesman for William Hill and Sons, violinmakers and dealers of London's Bond Street, who cast the winning bid at Sotheby's auction house. "There is no use arguing which is greater," he said. "Let us say only it's a jolly fine instrument, one of the very, very best of the Stradivarius line," Known as the "Lady Blunt" Stradivarius because of its 30-year ownership by Lady Anne Blunt, granddaughter of the poet Lord Byron, the instrument was made in 1721, when Antonio Stradivari of Cremona was at his creative peak.

The "Lady Blunt" was offered for sale by California collector Samuel Bloomfield. Thursday's price was ckue to four times the previous world record of $52,800 paid for a Stradivarius at Sotheby's in November, 1968. CMIMEN'S UTTERS dmprtrideit wm is the htstwl A top labor uiuon official charges the Nixon administration is part of a campaign to force a low wage economy on cr. Right photo: an agent watches the ground up metal come out of the conveyor and onto the huge scrap pile to be certain all were destroyed. The weapons were seized in roundups in an eight-state area.

(AP Wirephoto). Taxes to Soar Through 70s Whether you like it or not, and whether you can afford it or not, taxes levied by all branches of government will continue to soar every year of the '70s and probably indefinitely. Columnist David S. Broder of The Washington Post explains why higher taxes annually are inevitable in the following copyrighted article. the United States, Plea made By DAVID S.

BRODER for $2 minimum pay. 1971, The Washington Post imprisoned James WASHINGTON It has remained for Andrew F. steps aside as president of the Brimmer, an appointive official with a 14-year term giant Teamsters Union Thurs- on Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys-day in favor of his hand- tern, to let sUp the ''dirty little that every poll-picked stand-in Frank E. Fitz- tician in elective office in Washington has tried to simmons. keep hidden.

Page 3 Taxes are going up, Brimmer told an audience in Cotnmunfet ambush raises a widely reported- commencement speech last demands on this society. missing. Already there has been what Brimmer called "a Page 3 serious deterioration" in the quality of the basic services the public relies on government to provide, as witness the condition of the education, transportation and Cloudy and Warmer systems in almost any of our major Partly cloudy skies and Meantime, the backlog of demands for new gov- slightly warmer temperatures ernmental services from universal health insurance are forecast for today and to- to child-care centers to pollution abatement is grow- asks- The "Vietnam peace dividend" has msnms already on the books will con- night's overnight low 55. West- enues- terly to southwesterly winds The answer, the obvious answer, the only honest will be from to 20 miles an answer, is that someone is going to have to pay higher hour. taxes if the widely accepted social goals of this decade The top temperature yester- are going to be met.

day was 72 degrees, 21 below The politicians prefer to play hide and seek with the 1934 record high. The low the voters on the tax issue, because the folklore of was 61 degrees, 28 above the iUcs is that any candidate who talks about tax hikes is 1965 record low. The mean doomed to defeat was 68 degrees 8 above last But their ostrich act cannot conceal the fact that year mean and 4 above nor- taxes are going to rjse it can do js deprive the of fi.oo country and the taxpayers of intelligent discus- The sun will set at 8:39 p.m. today and rise at 5:26 a.m. to- of who should pay the bill morrow.

Vehicular lamps Unless dwsstop debate begin, i is must be lighted by 9:09 m. clear enough who is going to pay: the low-and-middle-today. income families who have been socked with most of the tax rise in the past two decades. 'ata Walter Heller noted in his congressional testi-inside I Oday m0ny on revenue-sharing the other day, the federal in-p come tax which, for all its loopholes, is the one ma-Comics ior tax that hits the rich man harder than the poor Crossword 25 has been cut times since the Korean war, for a Death Record ,.9 cumulative tax break of $35 billion a year. Editorials 4 Meantime, thpre have been steep increases in Market Business those taxes that hit the less affluent family hardest: lo- Morning's Mail 4 cal property taxes, state sales and excise taxes and Pwwle 10 federal payroll taxes.

As a result, our national tax sys- Radio TV 16 tern is measurably less fair, less progressive now than Sports 17-18-19-20 it was two decades ago. Syracuse News How can this have happened without stirring a major political controversy? The only answer one can Wrtrw ii is that there has been something like a conspira- women world of poliUcians to keep Uje COLUMNS from what has been going on. Alsop The game is stiU being played. It is newspaper-Jack Anderson not politicians, who have publicized the fact that Bridge 24 the Social Security-welfare reform bUlWUbur Mills has Dr. Lindsay Curtis 12 sent to the House contains an 89 per cent hike in the tear Abby II payroll taxes a $200-a-week factory worker will pay in Dixon Horoscope 25 the next six years an increase so big that it will, in Evans Novak .4 many instances, wipe out the supposed gain he has re- Aiong the post Road 21 cejVed from his recent income tax cuts.

Similarly, it is not politicians but two career men PoE iSSrt 4 in lhc Census wh0 nave srt forth in tne clear- Protect Yourself 21 cst fastnon tne facts on wno Pavs this country Bill Reddv 17 loday- Victor Riesel 5 10 April, the bureau Herman P. Miller and sportsman's Comer A- Herrlot published a scholarly paper that Strength for the Day 25 Me Why 25 (CwHhwed page 2, Crt. J) Committee To Present Name Today By AL LAWRENCE A 17-man Syracuse University committee is expected to recommend to the board of trustees today that Dr. Melvin Eggers be named the university's ninth chancellor and president. Dr.

Eggers, provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs, has served as acting chancellor since Dr. John Corbally Jr. left March 12 to become president of the University of IJlinois. The board of trustees is expected to approve the Eggers appointment when it meets at 9 a.m. today in the East Room of Hotel Syracuse.

The search committee composed of trustees, faculty members, students, an administrator and an academic dean completed work early this week in order to meet the deadline set in March by the board of trustees. Corbally, who succeeded Dr. William P. Tolley to the chancellor's office in 1960, resigned Feb. 12, claiming the Illinois position was one he "simply could not turn down" A week later Eggers, the university's number 2 man at that point, called a rare general faculty meeting to announce there would be "no new money" budgeted for anv university unit a move which was interprctered at the (Continued on Page 9, Col.

7) Dtt. MELVIN A. EGGERS i Husband and Wife Top Grads Jim and Joanne Gize of Baltimore are graduating at the top of their class Sunday at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County. Jim, a near flunk-out in high school, is No. 1 with a straight-A record at UMBC.

His wife, Joanne, had one and is graduating No, 2 the same ranking she had when she left high school. (AP Wirephoto). Hoover Behind Snub Of Murphy by Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI) -FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover blackballed two prominent police authorities as guests at a White House conference with President Nixon Thursday on what the federal government can do about the recent rash of police assassi- The two are Quinn Tamm, executive director of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) and a former assistant FBI director who has feuded with Hoover for years, and Police Commissioner Patrick Murphy of New York City. William E.

Kirwan and George A. Murphy, two law enforcement officials from New York State, participated in Thursday's meeting, Kirwan is superintendent of state police. Murphy, chief of police in Oneida, is first vice president of the International Half Million Lost Daily to Shoplifters A half million dollars is stacked outside a Philadelphia hank vault to demonstrate the beginning of a cUy widr campaign by S.T.E.M, "shoplifters take everybody's money" lo fight shoplifting. Bank President W. B.

Kaglc son, left, and Bcrand R. Kant, president of the group, pose with the money which they say represents the dally losses to shoplifters In Philadelphia alone. On the national level the annual loss totals $3 Mlllon In retail merchandise. (AP Association of Chiefs of Police. Patrick Murphy, a former Syracuse, N.Y.

police chief, said the reported White House explanation that he was not invited because he was not a police chief was "simply incredible." "It was with disappointment and dismay that I learned that the appearance of police of the greatest city in the world confronted by a major problem of violence by The Post-Standard Bureau ALBANY A five months reprieve for public school teachers whose probationary-period was extended from three to five years by a new law passed two months ago, is provided in a bill passed by the Assembly Thursday and sent to the Senate for con- During the state budget cutting fight in late March and early April the Legislature approved and Gov. Rockefeller signed a law requiring teachers to perform satisfactorily for five years before they vere eligible for tenure. Previously they gained tenure after three years. The new law was effective May 9. The bill passed Thursday makes the new effective date, Oct.

I. GOP legislative leaders prepared to seek legislative approval, probably Friday or Saturday, of their plan to increase state aid to private and parochial schools by $33 million a year. It cost only $8,2 million to fund the program in the 1971-72 state midget due to the difference tn state and school fiscal years. The new program will provide state aid for secular educational services like teachers salaries, textbooks and other instructional materials. New York's Roman Catholic bishops endorsed the GOP proposal Thursday.

The million wilt he in addition to the million a year pro guns was not wanted at the Washington conference," he said at police headquarters in New York. "We cannot allow political considerations to hinder cooperative efforts to improve the safety of our police officers and the public," Murphy said. Police department sources in New York said the snub probably resulted from Murphy's criticism of the mass (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Teacher Tenure Reprieve Voted gram of private school aid enacted last year. The Assembly Thursday passed, and sent to the Senate, a bill directing the State Board of Regents to study the staffing patterns in all public (Continued on Page Col, 7) Crane Fall Causes Flood In Manhattan NEW YORK (AP) A con-ilruclion crane loaded with steel collapsed and plunged 17 floors into Second Avenue near the United Nations on Thursday, slightly injuring 10 persons.

It smashed a water main, flooding the area tor blocks. Morning rush hour traffic had been halted by a red light on the southbound avenue, possibly averting fatalities, suid a construction worker, Harold Bergh, 33, of Brewster, N.Y. "It's the biggest miracle I've ever seen. That street is always filled with bumper to bumper traffic." The butldinf! under ton-section is a skyscraper on Second Avenue between 47th and 48th streets. Last week, a crane buckled at 42nd Street and Sixth Avenue, dropping a toad of steel into the street.

One man was killed.

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