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The Austin American from Austin, Texas • 1

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Austin, Texas
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1
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Weather Luling 14 Johnston" lil Anderson -IT Sacred Heart 30 "Rogers 35 Burnet 24 Elgin Hays 40 0 Bastrop 39? TSD 12; Thorndale 14 Westlake 2.V Reagan 30 San Marcos 7 Round Rock 14 Georgetown 35 1 New Braunfels 8 CENTRAL TEXAS: Partly cloudy and warm Saturday 1 and Sunday with light and variable winds. Temperature i-range Friday 63-87; expected temperature range Saturday, mid 60s-upper 80s. Weather Data on Page 6. SUNRISE: 7:25 a m. SUNSET: 7:14 p.m.

0 SA Jav 0 I Del Valle 13 Randolph 6 Holmes Read by the Decision-Makers of Texas Austin, Texas, Saturday, October 3, 1970 Vol. 46-No. 82 54 Pages 10 Cents HOME EDITION 1 Granger 6- Travis mm Air Crash Kills Gridders, Coach Wra SILVER PLUME, Colo. another survivor saidiHe said the plane burned in thejtor Lloyd Farmer; Kansas State WeddeU's AuAliit Rep. and Mrs.

Ray King, and A plane carrying the top foot-! from his hospital bed in Den- Dry Gulch Creek area, about hall nlavers athletic "Everyone was looking at eight miles west of this old min- the mountains. We kept getting iing town and fans at Wichita State Uni- were It was near the Loveland Ba- closer and closer. We rugged The; sin ski area and the construc- joying ourselves-laughing. the plane took a dip or some-jtion site for the Straight Creek thing. Next thing, the plane end Continental Diide, killing 29 persons.

Wichita banker John Grooms and his wife. Dr. Clark Ahlberg, president of the university, said in Wichita, the survivors included John Taylor, Sherman, Dave Lewis, Duncan, Okla.j Glenn Kostal, Chicago; John Heheisel, Garden Plain, Randy Jackson, Atlanta, (See CRASH, Page 6) ed up in the trees." IBs Eleven persons nine players, Sheriff Harold Brumbaugh of Tunnel. Among those not accounted; for were the head football coach, Ben Wilson, and his wife; Athletic Director A. C.

"Bert" Katzenmeyer and his wife; Associated Athletic Direc- survived the crash. Those pre-! Clear Creek County said the plane crashed in timber just off dead included 13 play-1 i i-K U.S. 6 a heavily traveled winter route to Colorado ski country. ers. A Colorado State Patrol offi si 5" t-var-j cer said there was "no chance" of other survivors amona the 40 i known to have been aboard the Court Affirms Vote For 18 Year Olds plane.

The Clear Creek County coro ner's office said it may be sev- 4 yltfflrT' aqI Anw KflfAro nncittVA iHpnti. fication of the dead could be es tablished. WASHINGTON (AP) Ajl4th Amendment. for voting in presi- federal rourt Fridav The court acted in a suitidential elections. Futurity.

for vice-president Agnew to add Dallas io his Texas political swing week after next. Agnew will be in Amarillo and Lubbock Oct. 12, and state GOP headquarters here expects him to go on for a speaking in Dallas the next day. There's little or no chance he'll come this way. This is made for collectors of city politics "inside" stories: When a state agency sent a letter this week to mayor LaRue they addressed it to 813 Park Blvd.

That's former city councilwoman Emma Long's home address! Justice of the Peace Buck Smith's 16-year-old son Bucky accompanied his father to the county courthouse the other night and found it unexpectedly exciting. While Smith put in some overtime work, Bucky killed time outside by examining the fire escape which leads to the penthouse county jail. That fire escape is wired for sound. Bucky Smith triggered an alarm in sheriffs headquarters and in no time at all was surrounded by deputies, one of whom led the shaken lad back to peace and justice in his father's custodv. Circuit Writing Reporter.

Channel 24 now has a studio site. It's in the far north at Shoal Creek Blvdrand Steck Ave. With architects at work, they hope to start building in about 60 days. Awaited is FCC response to their application for KVUE call letters. The city traffic dept.

has about whipped its school crossing guards problem. Fifty two smasned into tne snow-necKea, side of Loveland Pass at about the constituuonality of, brought by five New Yorkers The suit said lowering the vot- IftTft 7rir TJrrKfo 9U' in. noine AfV Clan InVvrv a tO nl.4t,n. tA the 11.200-foot level, shortly 6 71. 7 n- fs Bge lo 10 tiuuui2 urvviMun luweiuig ineiivincncu aim uic icw iuifi.

viujjDV anv DroviSlon OX ule CunsuiU- ar a rofllolinff ctrtn rt HpriXlV Tt: Board of Elections. I The decision upheld amend-' ments adopted by Congress this year to the Voting Rights Law, tion and therefore violated the 10th Amendment which reserved to the states ail powers not specifically given the feder-; was en route with players, teamivotin2 rom 21 10 18-boosters and athletic staff to The judges held that denying football game in Utah. The;" 18-'ear-olds the vote would nf rrash wa discrim- al government. jination" in violation of the equal; including bans on literacy tests: known. the and certain state residency re- Amnn hn nrpsumpd ripad protection requirements of The three judges said on 'the voting age question: "Is the congressional determination were a Kansas legislator, the head coach and his wife, the athletic director and his wife and a Wichita banker and his The Colorado State Patrol Huge Crowd Greets Nixon MADRID (AP) President i stale said.

said it first was informed there were 42 persons aboard. Hospitals, the university and the i flvinsr service which provided tX'iij the crew of four listed 40 names that denying the right to vote to otherwise qualified citizens between the ages of 18 and 21 con-sututes an incidious discrimina- tion in violation of the equal protection clause utterly lacking in rational support?" "Surely this is, as Mr. Justice Frankfurter observed in another setting, 'One of those rare instances where to state the question is in effect to answer The decision was rendered by Court of Appeals Judges David L. Bazelon and George E. Mac-kinnon and U.S.

District Judge (See VOTE, Page 6) A Spanish government spokes man estimated that one Nixon was cheered by an estimated one million Spaniards on his arrival in Madrid Friday and received Gen. Francisco Wray WeddelVs Austin Appear Every Day in The Austin ana me pairoi ssiu nguur appeared to be correct. The survivors were taken by ambulance and Army helicopter; AP Wire; toto FOOTBALL HELMET, SHOES (FOREGROUND) MARK SITE OF CRASH A rescue worker probes debris of the team's craft. to hospitals in Denver, about 55? million thronged the streets of this broad-avenued capital as Nixon, with the 77-year-old Franco standing by his side, waved and smiled from the Franco's endorsement of U.S. peace efforts in the Middle East.

The president and his party got another enthusiastic reception by thousands of persons lining the streets when they drove to Franco's royal palace for a miles east of where the plane went down near the eastern base of Loveland pass, a main route across the Continetnal Divide. Most of the players aboard the plane that went down were first stringers. I A second plane carrying 23 Whether to Divide Is Uiiconquered at UT state banquet. In a toast at the dinner, Nixon vpr and the rest of the said the welcome made me realize that the United States Mitchell LaAvyer Hits Panel Choice FT. HOOD, Tex.

(AP) The! The members of Mitchell's' new court martial panel picked wia 'from the for the trial of My Laii inew lo-memoer panel. Brown defendant S.Sgt. David Mitchell, is worse than the original panel, Jsaid is entitled to only ne Mitchell's chief lawyer told theichallenge in the case and this has many friends in Spain." His talks with Franco, he added, have "established a new base for. increased cooperation" between the two countries." some reorganization. jsmaller and more homogenous ff landed safeiy But the "how to" has plagued loups of students and faculty.

I osan utah wnere WiCnita the university for seven years; They say would iPve theState waj to play utah state on and the arguments pro and con teaf ing, Bnd givei Saturday. The game was can- ere in the public eye again! A4S 27pftofnts a Friday at a public hearing P. Assistant Coach Chuck ay the Senior College' pr Presldent sey informed those aboard the Committee of he Coordinating! plane of the crash at the Board, Texas College andl 11 WOuldiLogan Airport. Sedatives were University Svstem i assure that all faculty cooperate jadministered to many players jto protect the unity of the at their hotel and they planned The administration arts program the go to church later. By LESLIE TAYLOR Staff Writer 'We want to provide the best education can for our children." That's an area of agreement between both sides in the current dispute raging ever the organization of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Texas.

There is alio agreement that the college, which teaches approximately 15,000 students, has problems and is in need of Associated Press Friday night hurts because six of the 10 crossings are covered now 14 more when personnel are found. For the first time, many of the crossings are "manned" by women. Something large may soon be disclosed for Shoal Creek Medical Park where the doctors office tower is as full as the waiting rooms. Our Haynie Flat correspondent has a question about the hotel-motel bed tax which the city council may soon consider levying. It you take a room with twin beds, do you pay Northeast Special: A Houston developer, E.

J. Cummins, starts work in about two weeks on the first two buildings in "Executive Terrace Office Park." The site is on Anderson Lane just west of the Chevy Chase Center. Broker on this sizable one: Ronald Tynes. just coincidental: At 6th and West Avenue, ages old location of the Favorite Liquor Store, crosswalk stripes on 6th miss the sidewalk by several feet! Tip for Cocktail Party Chitchat: Tell them how Texas now has three of the 15 largest cities in the US Houston, 6th; Dallas, 8th; San Antonio, 15th. And tell them that only one other state, California, has more than one, in the top 15.

Whatever happened to that barren land irmge? That solid "Geneva The Gentlemen" group returns to the Sheraton Crest Inn's Club Seville Monday with a new Contract running through New Year's It's Some of Your Business: Sears opens a "catalogue store" in city councilman Les Gage's North Village Shopping Center next Thursday. The Texas Tourist Council bulletin note this highway sign: "Eat at Lorey's and Get Contacted at his home In his response, Franco said the talks with Nixon were "of the highest interest," adding: "In connection with dangers we are sharing, our viewpoints have fundamentally coincided in mpmhrrfl arp fmm iha nrffnnal Ratnn Rnu O. C. Rrown! or are under command' caiH hp had iust lparrwvl that Panel wmcn nas Deen approved oy of arts haDDened so fast I William Desobry, of the First of members of that paneU "I am definitely thinking of otrorvthina Maj. Gen.

commander System Board of Regents and program tinder Plan I as wellididn't really think about it until. which calls for dividing as the interdisciplinary we got out," said Glenn uur mam largei, wnicn we a 20-vear-old linebacker from! is fully shared by our .1 into three tuueiies ua jnrIHiir A Plan IT North American friends, is to jChieago who survived the crash uans umier me supervision a Dr pauj EngIish professor 0f provost, must be approved oy2earaDhv and a.in chairman jKostal's mother said her son preserve peace among all na tions. This constitutes the su Armored Division, had namedjcaIiing a motion for a change, two colonels to the panel whoof venue when begms were the principal members of (Tuesday Brown said, the original panel that the MitcheU's case is the first My defense objected to Lai case to reach the trial stage. In addition to that, four other Mm Jud Co, members of the new pane are recommended Tues. under the commands of thosejd a new colonels.

Brown said. 4U. the full board before it can beof the commission wmch'called her soon after the crash implemented on tne I Austin nd said: "Mom. 1'f alive. It jPreme vaiue in numan relations called for a unitary college, said a miracle.

My buddies are all ana is an mdispensawe condi- dead." tion to achieve any further the administration plan, (Se UT, Page 6) Enemy Hits Cambodian Roadways i Mike Bruce, 21, of Sherman.goals," the Spanish chief of unprecedented in the history of U.S. court martials. campus. A decision by the board is expected at the Oct. 19 meeting In Austin.

Friday, opponets of the plan asked the board to send it back to a university faculty committee for further consultation. Jobless Rate at 7-Year Peak Rnhinsnn's snffpstpd that a new panel be made of officers who were overseas at the time a few days after the WASHINGTON (AP PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) Enemy forces expanded their control of Cambodia's lifelines Friday and blocked or disrupted traffic on major highways. A Cambodian communique said only two important land They said the college must be maintained as a whole under the guidance of a single dean with budgetary and appointive control over his subordinates. "tragic result of White House policies. McCracken called a full-dress briefing that filled the otherwise empty White House press room during Nixon's trip to Europe, but denied any political implications in discounting of greatest new coverage October 1969 to April 1970-of, the alleged My Lai massacre.

He also said that it should In- elude officers of every rank. The old panel had no lieutenants, no warrant officers and For this district's "Make It Yourself With Wool" contest at Marble Falls next month they're thinking big. The fashion commentator may be a Neiman-Marcus buyer. getting to be a well worn path from Flordia t3 our northwestern hills. City mgr.

Andrews is dealing for construction of a home up there. His chief deputy, Dan Davidson, bought there. And now the new city school superintendent, Dr. Jack Anderson, is settling in those hills. All came here bv wav of Florida.

But they said the dean needs routes were fully open to travel only two captains, both of whom were unavailable for Mitchell's Highway 1 Unking Phnom Penh, the seat of government, with Saigon, the capital of South trial. administrative assistance. They said division would destroy the broad-based liberal arts education as well as bterdiscinlinary programs, and One "unusual" thing about the Vietnam, was hit by enemy ac- aberration," insisted Nixon's chief economic adviser, Dr. Paul W. McCracken.

He said there are no plans to change Nixon's economic "game plan" because of the report. McCracken and assistant Commissioner Harold Goldstein of the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the fact that the job survey was done in the week that included Labor Day probably distorted both the unemployment and the hours of work figures. Budget Bureau rules set the date of the jobs survey a well as all other federal statistical surveys. McCracken and Goldstein said many youths the biggest category in the jobless rise were li-tcd as unemployed although they probably quit looking for work and returned to school within original panel, Robinson Unemployment jumped close to a seven-year high in September and millions of workers suffered a sharp cut in working hours and pay, the government reported Friday. The gloomy report the latest before the Nov.

3 elections stirred Democratic and organized labor attacks on President Nixon's economic policies, and a White House attempt to minimize the bad news. The report said unemployment rose from 51 to 5.5 per cent of the nation's work force, a total of 4.3 million jobless Americans, and that 45 million rank-and-file workers lost 84 cents a week in pay because of a 36-minute cut in the average work week. "It's essentially a statistical government survey. The jobless total was up about 73,000, but figured as a 375,000 rise on a seasonally adjusted basis because it normally drops sharply in September. McCracken said the work wce' cut was probably partially due to the fact that sot!" workers get Libor Day off as a holiday, but do not get paid for it, thus slashing the figures on "hours of work paid for." Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F.

O'Brien, Sen. William Proxmire, and House Speaker John W. McCormack, blamed Nixon for the increase and AFL-CIO President George Meany called the jobless rise a I plan cannot solve the problems! tioi. Also hit was Highway 4, the vital artery connecting this capital with the country's only deepwater port at Kompong was that the staff judge advocate, Lt. Col.

Edward G. Las-siter, had recommended two particular individuals, both cok Amusements 24-25 Horoscope .15 it claims to meet. Proponents maintained the college must be broken down the severity of the employment figures. He said he had been in touch with Nixon about them. But "I am not in the political department," he said.

McCracken argued that the more than half hour cut in the average work week to 38.8 hours, if accurate, would have been accompanied by a slump in total employment, which did not occur. The total at work remained at 78.4 million, seasonally adjusted. Soni on the Gulf of Siam. A military spokesman said the North Vietnamese and Viet! into smaller administrative units because of burgeoning' numbers of students. They said; Bridje 14 Chorea Page 39 Classified 43-53 Comics 36-37 Dollars and Sense 35 Editorials Farm Roundup 17 Garden Talk ...18 Markets 49-11 Movies 24-25 Public Record 28 Radio-TV 21 Sports 27-34 Weather Your Good Health 7 Con? were now concentrating onels.

for the panel -1 But Brown said, both of those colonels were named by De--sobry to the new panel Jius four others, a lieutenant colonel, a major, and two first lieutenants who are under the command of those colonels. the plan combats increasing depersonalization in the large university by putting ad their attacks on the roads. The new drive, if successful, would sever the only ways the government has to resupply its troops. Heloise It Your Money 8 ministrative officers closer to.

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About The Austin American Archive

Pages Available:
596,892
Years Available:
1914-1973