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The Bee from Danville, Virginia • 6

Publication:
The Beei
Location:
Danville, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Bee: Danville, Monday, Oct. 27, 1969 New York Stock Exchange (Noon Quotations) NEW YORK (AP) The stock market was mixed in moderately active trading early today. Advances held a comfortable margin over declines at 463 to 246 among individual issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange, but the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials at a.m. was off 2.31 at 859.95. Some analysts said there was good chance the market could extend its two-week rally and register higher gains.

They said investors were still optimistic over chances of a breakthrough in Vietnam peace efforts and the market's proved ability to recover in the past two weeks after profit taking. Opening blocks included 17,000 shares of Woolworth off 1 at Opening prices included Talcott. National off at 1 Uniroyal up at Sperry Rand off at and Chris Craft up General Electric, which is being struck nationally by a coalition of 13 unions, was unsold in early trading. NEW Exchange YORK 1.10 ACE. lad 2.40 Ad Millis .20 Address 1.40 Admiral Aetna 1.40 AirRed 1.15g AlcanAlu 1.20 Allea CD $100 AlleLud 2.40 AlleaPw 1.28 AlliedCh 1.20 AlliedStr 1.40 Allis Chaim Alcoa 1:80 AMBAC .50 AmMess Am Airlin .80 Am Brands AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmElpw 1.58 Am Enka Home 1.40 Am Hosp .22 AmMEdv .90 AMetCix 1.40 Am Motors AmNatGas 2 Am Photo .12 A Smelt 1.90 Am Std Am 2.40 AMK Co .30 AMP Inc .48 Ambex Coro Anacond 1.90 AnchHock .80 AncorpNSv 1 ArchDan 1.60 ArmcoSt 1.60 Armour.

1.60 ArmstCk .80 Ashid Oil 1.20 Att Richfid 2 Atlas Chem Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet Inc .40 Avon Pd 1.80 Babck 1.36 Bal GE 1.70 Beat Fds Beckman .50 BeechAr Bell How .60 Rendix 1.60 BenefFin 1.60 Benquet. Beth 1.80 Boeing 1.20 BoisCas Borden 1.20 BoraWar 1.25 Brist Mv 1.20 Brunswk BucyEr 1.20 Budd Co .80 Bulova .60 Bunk Ramo Burl Ind 1.40 Burrahs .60 Cal Finanl CamoRL 1.10 CaroPLt 1.42 CarrierCo .60 CarterW Case CastleCke .60 Cater Tr 1.20 CelaneseCo Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.80 Cerro 1.60b Cert-teed .80 CessnaAir .80 CFL StL .80 Ches Ohio Chrisler CITFin 1.80 Cities Svc ClarkEa 1.40 2.04 CocaCol 1.32 Cola Pal 1.20 Collin Rad .80 Colointst 1.60 CBS 1.40b ColuGas 1.60 40 ComwEd 2.20 Comsat Con Edis 1.10 ConNatG 1.76 ConsPwr 1.90 ContAirL .50 Cont Can 2.20 Cont Co ContMot .100 Cont Oil 1.50 Cont Tel .72 Control Data Coonerin 1.40 CorGW a Cowles .20 Cox Bdcas .50 CPC Intl 1.70 CrouseHind CrowCol 1.07f Crown Cork CrwnZell 1.60 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wrt 1 1.15g Part Ind .306 DaycoCo 1.14 avtnPL 1.60 Deere Co 2. Del Mnte 1.10 DeltaAir .40 Denpor 1.10 DetEdis 1.40 .300 Sham 1,40 Disney Diversind .36 .80 DowChm 2.60 Pees Ind 1.40 DukePw 1.40 di' Pont 3.75a Dua Lt 1.66 Dona Am .40 East Air East Kodak Eaton Ya 1.40 EGAG .10 E'PasoNG Eltra Co 1.20 Emer Elec 1.50 Ethyl Co .72 Evan Eversharp FairchC 50e Fairch Hiller Fansteel Inc Fedders .40 FadDeptStr Filtrol 2 Firestne 1.60 Fst Chrt 2.29f Flintkote Fla Pow 1.52 1.88 FMC Co .85 FoodFair .90 FordMot 2.40 FerMcK .75 FreepSul 1.60 FruehCo 1.70 GAC Cp 1.50 GAF Corp .40 Gam Sko 1.30 Gannett .48 GenDynam 1 Gen Elec 2,60 Gen Fds 2.60 Gen Mills .88 GenMot 3.40a GPubUt 1.60 Tel El 1.52 Gen Tire 1b Ga Pac Gerber 1.10 GettyOil .380 Gillette 1.40 Glen Alden Global Marin Goodrich 1.72 Goodyear .85 GraceCo 1.50 GraniteC St GrantW 1.40 1.30 Gf Nor Ry 3 West Fini GtWnUnit .90 GreenGnt .96 Greyhound GrummnCo Gulf Oil 1.50 GulfStaUt .96 GolfWin Hall burt 1.05 Harris Int HeciaMna .70 erc Inc HewPack Hoernwal Godwin Urges Productivity In Education NORFOLK (AP) Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr.

has suggested, while dedicating the new Darden Building at Old Dominion University, that it might be a proper place to begin boosting the productivity of Virginia colleges. He noted during the ceremony here Sunday that former Gov. Colgate W. Darden for whom the building is named, had compiled enough accomplishments as governor, congressman and college president to become "a defender of the status quo." But instead, he said Darden had chosen to apply "the wisdom of his wide experience to the sponsorship of still further change." Likewise, he said, Old Dominion Godwin's alma mater had grown from a branch of William and Mary to a university in the space four year years but should not stop there. "I can foresee a collision, the governor said, "between the irresistible force of the demand for education and the immovable object of taxpayer The new challenge, he said, will surely be to see that-rather than simply expanding existing physical plants ad infinitum Virginia educators learn better to use what they have.

"I cannot advise you how this might be done," he said. "This is the job of the educators themselves. can only warn the strongest terms that it must be done. "It seems obvious to me that we cannot continue this geometric progression of tax funds without evidence that the productivity of our college plants is increasing." Godwin added that qualitative as well as quantitative change also should be the order of the day. "I think," he said, "perhaps this is one of the things that the students are trying to tell us.

Underneath their concern about the war in Vietnam and poverty and social problems at home, I think there is also a growing concern that they are not being adequately prepared in the college classroom for life in the final third of the 20th Century." Cooler Weather On Way To N. C. By Lower THE ASSOCIATED temperatures PRESS wake of a cool front are expectin North Carolina mountains tonight and all the way to the coast by Tuesday. Fair but cool weather is forecast for Wednesday by the Weather Bureau. The weekend was warm and pleasant in Tarheelia.

New Bern had the highest reading in the state Sunday, 75, but in most places the temperature was in the upper 60s or lower 70s. Rainfall was reported in a few areas in light amounts early today as the cool front effects began to be felt. Cloudy skies were in prospect for today with some showers. American List NEW YORK (AP) American Stock Exchange selected noon Sales Net Aeroiet (hds.) High Low Last Che. Air West 16 17 108 Ajax Ma Am Petr AO Indust 215 6 Ark Best ,30 22.

ArkLGas 1.70 25 Asamera Oil 197 20 AtlasCorp wt 37 Barnes Eng BrascanLt la 16 Brit Pet .47 Campbl Chib 11 11 Cdn Javelin Cinerama 39 11 Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dixilyn Corp Dynalectrn 33 Fed Equit Cp 46 Frontier Air 9.0 Felmont Resrces Oil FOO Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield 16 Gt Basn Pet 76 Husky Oil .30 x23 Hycon Mfg 84 Hydrometi 24 Imper Oil .50 23 15 ITI Corp Kaiser In wt McCrory Mich Sug .10 MidwFini .20 A Mohwk Data 79 Neisner Molybden Newldria Mn NewPark Mn Ormand Ind RIC Intl In Saxon Indust 88 Scurry Statham Rain 57 Inst Syntex Technico Cp .406 .40 150 70 Wn Nuclear Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1969 Compiled STOCK AVERAGES by The Associated Press 30 15 Net change Ind. Rails Unit. Stocks Noon Prev. Mon. Day 443.5 157.6 298.8 Week 446.1 156.8 141.4 299.5 Ago 438.1 154.6 139.4 294.6 Year Month Ago 426.5 152.7 133.1 286.9 1969 Hioh Ago 514.4 207.9 14.7 354.4 1969 Low 513.5 217.7 159.1 360.9 1968 High 418.4 148.0 130 6 281.

1968 Low 531.1 217.4 160.4 368.8 435.6 165.6 135.1 299.1 BOND AVERAGES Compiled 20 by The Associated Press 10 10 10 10 Net Rails Ind. Util. Fan, L. Yd. Noon un un change Mon.

un un Prev. Day 59.3 83.2 76.8 90.5 74.7 Week Month Ago 59.2 82.3 76.7 90.6 74.9 Ado 59.7 80.5 76.8 92.0 1969 Year High Ago 65.9 90.4 80.1 89.4 80.7 64.3 87.0 79.3 92.2 79.6 1968 1969 High Low 58.9 66.3 80.2 91.0 81.4 76.4 89.1 74.0 1968 Low 63.8 85.8 78.3 88.0 90.2 82.3 78.4 DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 20 Rails Industrials 201.81+0.58 4.62 65 15 Stocks Utilities 118.90-0.25 BONDS 287.87-0.67 40 10 Bonds rails 71.01+0.06 10 Second Higher arade grade rails 12 Public utilities 77.80 10 Industrials 79.26 NYSE INDEX NEW YORK (AP) Noon New York Stock Exchange Index: Market -13 cents Index Industrial 57.73 54.73 Transportation 43.87 0.16 Utility 41.83 Finance 74.22 Xerox Woolwth Co 1.20 .60 261 232 110 109 Zale Corp .64 ZenithR 1.40 40 43 Copyrighted by The Associated Press Virginia Zone Forecast Piedmont--Partly cloudy and colder tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight near 40, high Tuesday in the middle 50s. Wednesday fair and cool. Tidewater Area and Eastern Shore Gradual clearing and colder tonight and Tuesday.

Low tonight in the 40s, high (Tuesday in the middle 50s. Wednesday fair and cool. Shenandoah Valley, Upper James. River Area and Southwestern Plateau--Partly cloudy and colder tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight in the upper 20s and lower 30s, high Tuesday in 40s 50s.

Wednesday fair and cool." Allegheny Highlands: Variable cloudines and colder, tonight and Tuesday, a few snow flurries. Low tonight in upper 20s, high Tuesday in 40s. Wednesday fair and cool. Gen. Tompkins Dies; Classmate Of Eisenhower RICHMOND (AP) Maj.

Gen. William Frazier Tompkins, retired Army general who was a classmate of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower at West Point, died here Sunday. He was A Richmond native, Tompkins served under Eisenhower when the late president was secretary of the general staff of the War Department.

After retiring from the Army in 1946, Tompkins became comptroller of the Medical College of Virginia where he remained until he retired in 1962 as vice president for financial affairs. Tompkins served prior to World War I with Gen. John Pershing's expeditionary forces in Mexico. During World ar I he was a captain in the Corps of Engineers in France, During World War II he served at the War College in Washington and in the Far Eastern Theater. Two of his three sons were killed while serving with the Army during World War II.

Tompkins is survived by his widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton Tompkins; a son, Christopher Tompkins of New Orleans; and two sisters, Miss Delia Tompkins and Miss Ellen Tompkins, both of Richmond. Funeral arrangements are complete. Schedule Revised For Southbound Southern Train Revised arrival and departure times went into effect yesterday for Southern Railway's Train No, 47, "'The Southernor," on its southbound run' from Washington, D.C. The train will the capital at 7:25 p.m.

daily, an hour and 15 minutes later than the previous departure time of 6:10 p.m. This means the train will arrive at the Danville station at 12:21 a.m. and depart at 12:31 a.m. It previously arrived at 11:06 p.m. and departed at 111 p.m.

A Southern spokesman said the new schedule, which is efat all points for "The Southernor between Washington and New Orleans, was made necessary because of changes in connecting trains of the Penn Central Railway north of Washington, also effective yesterday. Under the revised schedule, "The Southernor" will be carried from New York to Washington as part of Penn New Central York Train No. 173, departing at 3 p.m. daily and arriving in Washington at 6:50 p.m. In addition, the new schedule will permit passengers using Penn Central's Metroliner leaving New York at 4:15 p.m.

and Philadelphia's 30th Street Station at 5:31 p.m. to transfer to the "The Southernor" at Washington. Northbound from Washington, "The Southernor" will continue to be carried on Penn Central No. 126, with departure time from the capital set at 8:35 a.m. daily, five minutes later than the previous schedule.

Departure times from Washington, Baltimore, Wilmington, and the Philadelphia station also will be five minutes later, with no change in time beyond these points. Testy Issues Are In Prospect For VEA Confab RICHMOND (AP) Some 12,000 Virginia school teachers and 1 administrators began flooding into Richmond today for the annual five-day state convention of the Virginia Education Association, This year's sessionn however, will be marked by issues a good deal more testy than the traffic jams that snarl downtown during the meetings. Up for discussion that looks particularly hot are two items knows as "the professional negotiations act" and the "professional teaching practices act." The first is intended to legalize collective bargaining between school boards and teachers. If a local teachers' association decided it wanted to bar- I News-Leader Backs Holton For Governor RICHMOND, Va. (AP)Richmond News.

Leader today endorsed Republican gubernatorial nominee A. Lonwood Holton -the first time the newspaper has endorsed a GOP candidate for governor in its 73 years of publishing. The endorsement said: "The real questions in this election are whether Virginia, for the first time in more than a generation, is to have a governor in tune with the national leadership; whether Virginia is to continue its implicit support, by the election of Democrats to state office, of the policy of the national Democratic party; whether, finally, any more for conservativesprogressive -in the Democatic party of Virginia. "Sooner or later, if partying labels are to have any meaning at all, Virginia's conservatives will have to move over to the Republican party the party nationally has been the custodan of collective conserva-er tive interest, agent of conservative aspiration. of Virginia--through Lonwood Hol-deserves an opportunity to to try to restore Virginia to the national leadership it to know, and to give Virginia's estranged conservatives home once more." The Richmond News Leader, an afternoon daily, styles itself as independent.

It's publisher is D. Tennant Bryan, chairman, of the publishing firm publishes the morning and daily Richmond Times-Dispatch. Appeals Follow Fine And Time For Weapons Fines and sentences were meted out today in Municipal Court to two defendants found guilty of possession of concealed weapons. Warner William 28- year old Negro of Ringgold Rt. 1, noted appeals after he was ordered to pay a $15 fine for drunkenness and was given a six-month sentence and fined $100 on the weapon charge.

Also appealing similar fine "and sixmonth sentence- -on a James Edward Harrison, concealed-weapon charge was year -old Negro of Pelham Rt. 1, N.C A bad-check charge brought James Rodney Armstrong, 39, of 878 Arnett Blvd. a $10 fine and 30-day suspended sentence. Kay Gauldin Davis, 19, of 616 Huzhes St. noted an appeal after she was fined $50 on an abusive-language charge.

Three persons were fined $10 and costs--a total of $15.10 -for fishing without a license, and more than two dozen drunkenness cases comprised the balance of the docket. Swift Closing Not To Affect Area Distribution The Swift Co. distributing outlet on Craghead St. will be closed effective Nov. 26, but distribution of the brand's meat products to this area will not be affected by the move.

Plant Manager Burton W. Beasley said no decision has yet been made on where the facilities will, be relocated, but emphasized that "we will continue to stay on the market here." be "Our distributed products in will the continue to area just they always have," he explained, "but service will be made from another point." The company's Craghead office has served as headquarters for distribution of Swift products to retail outlets in the area for many years. Mrs. Winnie Osborne Funeral Rites Held Funeral services for Mrs. Winnie Wade Osborne were conducted today at 11 a.m.

at Yeatts Chapel, with interment following in Higland Burial Park. Pallbearers were Jimmy Wilkerson, Richard Broome, Flora, Ricky Osborne, the Rev. S. J. Overton, Wallace Wade Johnny Crenshaw and Harold Wade, gain with its board over salaries or curriculum, the act VEA wants would require the school board to negotiate in good faith.

Furthermore, three regulatory agency would be set up to oversee such negotiations. The practices act would create another new state commission, this one with 22 members, ton give teachers a legal say on who enters their profession, how they conduct themselves as teachers, wh is ejected from the ranks, and on what grounds. Both items will be considered by the VEA's 2,000 convention delegates Thursday. Until then, the delegates will occupy themselves with workshops, seminars and meetings, and on Wednesday night a speech by Gov. Mills E.

Godwin Jr. Hatching and raising catfish is a profitable business in Arkansas and some other states. North Carolina Forecast Coast and Outer Banks: Cloudy with rain or showers likely tonight and Tuesday morning followed by clearing and cooler during Tuesday. Lows tonight 55-64. Highs Tues.

day mostly 60-67. South to southwest winds five to 15 m.p.h. tonight, shifting to northwesterly 10 to 15 m.p.h. Tuesday. Probability of precipitation 30 per cent tonight 60 per cent Tuesday.

Outlook for Wednesday, fair and cool. Coastal Plain: Rain or showers likely tonight. Lows tonight 48 to 56. Partly cloudy and cool er Tuesday with highs 56 to 65. Much cooler Tuesday night.

Variable mostly south to southwest winds five to 10 m.p.h, tonight with winds shifting to northwesterly Tuesday morn10 to 15 m.p.h. and gusty. Probability of precipitation, 70 per cent tonight and 20 per cent Tuesday. Outlook for Wednesday, fair and cool. Piedmont: Clearing and cooltonight preceded by showers east portion during evening.

Low temperatures tonight dipping down into the 40s. Tuesday partly cloudy and cooler with highs 56 to 64. Variable mostly northwest winds about 10 m.p.h. tonight. Northwest winds 10 to 15 m.p.h.

Tuesday. Probability of precipitation 40 per cent tonight and 10 per cent Tuesday. Outlook for Wednesday, fair and cool. Mountains: Partly cloudy and cooler tonight with lows 38 to 48. Tuesday fair and quite cool.

Highs Tuesday, mostly 50s. Probability of precipitation, 20 per cent tonight and 10 per cent Tuesday. Outlook for Wednesday, fair and cool. Arrested GOP Voting Officials Meet The Press RICHMOND (AP) The Republican party prepared toanother salvo in its campaigne to make the vote fraud issue a major one in the current gubernatorial campaign. Attorney general nominee Richard D.

Obenshain was scheduled to meet the press with several of the Republican election officials from Dickenson County who the Republicans say were arrested recently for trying to enforce the state's election laws two years ago. Even as the GOP flew the officials to Richmond, the party's nominee for governor, Linwood Holton, fired off his second telegram to Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. on the vote fraud issue.

The wire, sent Sunday, cited new evidence that politicians in Southwest Virginia were "work. ing" the mail ballot in advance of Nov. 4 state general election. Holton said nearly 850 absentee ballot applications have been received in County and 650 in Lee County300 received in the last 10 and 165 in Dickenson County. days" Holton made no effort to tie the ballot activity to any particular political party or candidate, but urged as he had last week that Godwin send police investigates into he area.

He said the only way "to insure a pure election" is for such investigators "to interview the applicants and impound their ballots if it appears that they indeed are not ill and do not plan to be absent from the county on election day." Carolina Counts At Least 14 Traffic Deaths By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At least 14 persons, half them weekend teen-agers, traffic were accidents killed North Carolina. The State Highway Patrol said most of the victims were young persons. In addition to the seven teen-agers, two of those killed were under the age of 10, three in their 20s and one was 35. The remaining victim was 51. The weekend fatalities pushed the state's highway death toll for the year to 1,422, compared to 1,511 for the corresponding period Lucas of last Taylor, Rt.

4, Zebulon, and Patricia Ann Smith, 8, of Winston-Salem, were the youngest accident victims. They died in separate but similar accidents when they were struck by vehicles near their homes. Six of the teen-age victims died in single-car crashes and the seventh died in an accident involving only his motorcycle. They were Mark Stanley Sinclair, 16, of East Flat Rock; Jerry Wayne Scott, 18, of Iron Station in Lincoln County; Terry Allen Bryan, 18, of Marshall; Garry Lynn Webb, 17, of Rt. 5, Oxford; Randy Young Allen, 18, Eden; Margaret Elizabeth Thompson, 19, of Gaffney, S.C.

and William Roger Pickle, 16, of Durham. Other victims included Washington Jennings 23, Lumberton; Hilda Wade O'Brian, 18, of Rt. 5, Oxford; George Solomon Williams, 51, of Harrells in Sampson County; Walter Edward Dingle, 35, of Fayetteville, and Daniel Carson Blackwell, 23, of Yanceyville. The Piedmont Plateau, in central North Carolina, covers 000 square miles. Internship Plan In Government Is Suggested REIDSVILLE, N.

C. (AP) An extensive program of internships in government, business and other fields coordinated the state level may be the way to bridge the gap between college students and the "establishment." That's the suggestion than 90 representatives of both segments of society who met over the weekend at ChinquaPenn Plantation near Reidsville to discuss their differences and try to establish "communica-rying Student body leaders from most of North Carolina's colleges met with state leaders business, industry, government and religion in a program called Operation Interface. The usual meeting ended Sunday. The suggestion for the internship program, to be coordinated through the North Carolina Board of Higher Education, de veloped out of a series of small group discussions. Presiding at the three day meeting was Alan Albright, president of the student body the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

ence The originator of the confer. was Roger Jones, director of educational relations for Western Electric, one of the industries that financed the meeting. He said before the confer. ence that the sponsors hoped would "get across the idea that a student is not just a radical and a businessman is not just money -grubbing scroundrel." During Saturday's program, former North Carolina Gov. cial bond Sanford proposed a spe.

Terry issue to provide low. interest loans for college students. Sanford said such loans wou'd ease the financial burden caused by rising college costs and skyrocketing interest rates. Blacks Warned To Be Wary Of Dick Nixon DURHAM, N. C.

(AP) Dr. Reginald Hawkins, a Negro candidate for governor of North Carolina in 1968, likened President Nixon's "forgotten man" to Ku Klux Klansmen of 1876 and warned blacks to be wary. In a speech Saturday at dedication ceremonies at Malcolm Liberation University, Dr. Hawkins warned his audience not to forget "when in 1876 the Ku Klux Klan was turned on us. "Be mindful of what Nixon his likes are doing to us toand day by turning loose the forgotten man in the name of law and order, he said.

Mrs. Betty Shabazz, widow of the slain Negro leader for whom the school is named, said black people have made tremendous but contributions thee to human history, have been blotted out by "The the white has originated nothing, she said. "He stole it from black people and today we don't even know the black contribution to civilization." The Malcolm school was organized to train American Negroes to establish a separate nation in Africa. Students Protest 11 Suspensions For 'Dorm-In' WILLIAMSBURG (AP) Hoff Electrn Holidyinn .20 HollySua 1.20 Homestke .40 Honeywl 1.20 HousehF 1.10 HoustLP 1.12 .70 IdahoPw 1.60 1 Ill Cent 1.14 Imp Am INA Co 1.40 inland Rand St 2 InterlkSt 1.80 IBM Int Harv 1.80 IntMiner IntNick 1.20a Int Pap 1.50 Int .95 lowa Beef lowaPSv 1.32 Itek Corp Jewel Co 1.50 JohnMan 1.20 JohnJhn JonLogan .80 JoneLau 1.35 Jostens .60 Joy Mfg 1.40 Kaiser Kan GE 1.36 KanPwL 1.18 Ind Kenncott 2.40 Kerr Mc 1.50 KimbCik 2.20 Koppers 1.60 Kraftco 1.70 Kresge SS .40 Kroger 1.30 Lear Sieg .50 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehmn 1.61g LibOFrd 2.80 Libb MeN Ligg My 2.50 Lina TV 1.33 Litton 1.891 LockhdA 1.20 Loews The .13 Cem. 1.12 LongisLt 1.30 Lucky Str .80 Lukens Sti LVO Corp Lyk Yng Macke Co ..30 Macy RH 1 Mad Fd 3.56g Magnvox 1.20 Marathn 1.60 Marcor Inc Mar Mid 1.60 MartinM 1.10 May DStr 1.60 Maytag McDonnD .40 Mead Corp Melv Sho 1.30 Merck.

1.80a MGM Microdot MidSoUtil .88 MinnMM 1.60 MinnPLt 1.20 2.20 Mohasco 1.10 Monsan 1.80 Mont Pw 1.63 -Nor .80 Motorola Mt St TT 1.24 Nat Airlin .40 Nat Bisc 2.20 Nat Can .80 NatCash 1.20 Nat Distil .90 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat Genl .20 NatGyps 1.05 Natind NatLead Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Natomas .25 Nev Pow 1.08 Newberry NEngEl 1.48 Newmnt 1.04 Niag MP 1.10 Norfolk Wst Norrisind .80 Nor AmPhil NoAm Rock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoSta Pw 1.60 Northrop Nwst Airl .45 NwtBanc 1.20 Norton 1.50 NortSim 1.22f Occidnt Pet 1 OhioEdis 1.50 Okla GE 1.08 OklaNGs 1.12 Olin Corp .88 Omark Ind If Otis Elev Outbd Mar OwensCa 1.40 1.35 PacG 1.50 Packtg 1.60 Pac Pet 1.23 1.20 PanASut Pan Am Panh EP 1.60 Parke Davis 1. PennCen 2.40 PennDix .60 Penney JC 1 PaPwLt 1.60 PennzUn .80 PepsiCo Perfect Film PfizerC 1.40a PhelpsD 1.90 Phila El 1.64 Philip Morr Phill Pet 1.30 Pitney Bw .68 Polaroid .32 PPG Ind 1.40 ProctGa 2.60 PubsCol 1.06 PSVCEG 1.64 Pubikind Sup .28 PL 1.76 Pullman 2.80 Questor .50 Raiston .60 Ranco Inc .92 Raytheon .60 RCA 1 Reading Co ReichCh .50 RepubStI 2.50 Revion 1.40 Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2.40 Roan Sel Rohr Cp .80 Roy CCola .54 Royal I Dut 2d RyderSys .50 Safeway 1.10 StJosLd 1.80 StReaisP 1.60 Sanders .30 SaFelnd 1.60 SanFeint .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering .80 SCM Cp Scot Paper SbCLInd 2.20 Searl GD 1.30 Sears 1.20a Shell Oil 2.40 2 SignalCo 1.20 SingerCo 2.40 Smith KF 2 SCarEG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.20 SouNGas 1.40 Sou Ry Pac 2.80a 1.80 Spartan Ind Sperry .47 SquareD .80 St Brand 1.50 Std Kollsman StOCal 2.80b StOilind 2.30 StOIINJ 2.70g St StauffCh Packaging Ster .70 StevensJ 2.40 Stude Worth Sun Oil 1b SurvyFd Swift Co .60 Systron Donn Tampa El .76 Tektronix Teledyne Tenneco 1.32 Texaco 1.60 TexETrn 1.40 TexGSul .60 Texasinst .80 TexP Ld .45 Textron .90 Thiokol .40 TimesMir .50 Timk RB 1.80 ToddShp 1.20 TrnWAir .500 Transmr Transitron TriCont 3.15g TRW Inc TwenCnt UAL Inc UMC Ind Un Carbide Un Elec 1.20 UnOiICal 1.60 Un Pac Cp UnionPacif 2 Uniroval UnitAirc 1.80 Unit Co Un Fruit 1.40 Unit MM 1.30 USGypsm 3a US Indust .45 PlyCh .84 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40 Univo Pd .80 Upiohn 1.60 Varian Asso Vendo Co .60 VaEIPw 1.12 WarLam 1.10 Was Wat 1.28 WnAir Wn Banc 1.30 WnUTel 1.40 West9El 1.80 Weverhsr .80 Whirl Cp 1.60 White Mot 2 Whittaker Winn Dix 1.62 26 154 43 33 33 181 83 1006 365 4078 529 37 37 523 154 154 154 32 35 35 22 22 14 45 41 23 23 19 40 163 58 37 19 52 10 32 32 71 29 20 20 20 37 51 157 37 40 39 12. 39 47 50 29 27 26 27 49 x10 60 27 23 112 21 126 52 55 32 32 124 16 20 159 161. 147 38 49 146 68 20 20 24 25 27 163 29 29 13 32 31 311 79 45- 25 10 135 337 47 38 37 37 47 893 16 87 155 17 we 109 33 125 53 38 19 19 50 32 138 13 40 105 137 19 x18 57 25 29 26 27 27 x11 15 15 140 30 30 30 46 47 28 40 40 46 124 170 103 5 50 50 56 43 43 29 29 29 27 36 25 16 23 23 23 306 48 28 339 47 39 245 105 55 214 67 53 97 28 47 124 43 152 46 45 x54 51 21 7 63 10 65 65 101 68 453 31 25 133 32 137 135 135 33 47 47 49 161 28 34 401 33 96 415 221 392 53 53 53 31 31 281 100 45 45 38 533 A 56 127 x69 42 41 42 34 34 25 15 The Student Association at the College of William and Mary will press its case this week for 11 men students suspended Saturday night for entertaining eds in their dormitory rooms. The 11 were part of a massive "dorm in" demonstration, designed to pressure the istration into liberalizing social regulations at the state's school.

Sunday some 400 placard-carrepresentatives of the 000 member student body paraded around the colonial us in support of the 11, and SA leaders urged students to keep the situation peaceful. Bob Beason, president of the senior class, said the tration action in suspending the 11 had been "clandestine, sneaky and immature," but said anything other than a peacefu demonstration of support fo "just tears up our case." theme SA agreed Sunday to take the case to the Board of Student Affairs, a joint group made up of faculty, students and istrators. Both the SA and the board had endorsed the "dorm in." Saturday, however, when girls flocked into the men's ories, college officials distributed a two-page flyer signed by Dr. Davis Y. Paschall, president of the school, warning that men found with girls in their rooms would be suspended.

Sunday, the SA officials tested that the 11 suspended had been only a few of the participants in the "dorm-in," and said all of the participants should be punished if any are. The students also claimed that the suspensions were illegal, since they were not heard by the college's disciplinary committee but were made on the spot. Despite their anger at the pensions, however, student ers Sunday voted down propos als for a classroom strike or campus sit-in, and decided to await Tuesday's session with the board. (AP) New York Stock selected noon prices: Sales Net (hds.) High Low Last Che. 19 29 16 23 186 33 33 32 273 142 133 59 115 23 33 112 33 237 36 131 104 32 11 297 36 180 x40 283 40 20 20 20 365 66 24 27 55 139 76 107 106 21 149 72 72 85 20 14 22 40 16 x11 23 34 313 3134 22 40 32 32 16 16 16 113 45 21 13 1434 169 50 34 34 80 43 43 52 27 27 233 65 137 249 53 83 145 290 286 286 54 54 16 12 35 15 33 35 24 277 1077 30 49 90 755 32 1171 243 28 18 62 108 34 60 37 37 37 4714 17 32 39 39 30 453 28 50 50 16 32 25 x133 23 23 62 18 29 29 60 20 2 145 85 27 155 76 35 35 23 20 88 16 36 40 46 32 11 17 317 28 37 36 28 52 x68 30 16 47 46 27 1 131 45 30 29 29 29 23 2334 23 33 109 273 Steering Group Wants Changes In Abortion Law RICHMOND (AP) An 80- member steering committee has been formed to and lobby for changes in Virginia' rently restrictive abortion law.

The committee was formed Saturday at a meeting at the First Unitarian Church here, where women members protested the fact that most laws on abortion are written by men. Abortion, said one committee member, is "a woman's problem." The committee, headed by Mrs. Betty G. Kenley of Richmond, passed a resolution calling for elimination of tions "performed by nonlicensed persons in nonaccredited places" and for support of abor. tion reform through "amendment and court action pending appeal" of the state's present laws.

Virginia now permits legal abortions only to save the life of the mother. Our drycleaning gives vour winter clothes a Touch of See June on Petticoat Junction CBS June Lockhart's wardrobe maintains a bright touch of spring only her Sanitone drycleaner can this same bright springtime feel provide. Your clothes can share Sanitone. now and all year long by de- Certified Master Drycicaner pending on Laundry Dry Cleaning 1095 Riverside Dr. Dial 792-1511 BRANCH OFFICE Lynn St.

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441,865
Years Available:
1922-1989