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The Crowley Post-Signal from Crowley, Louisiana • 2

Location:
Crowley, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1971 The Crowley Dally Signal, Crowley. Tuck Jan. 12. north of the drain ditch in BLOCK ONE HUNDKED FORTY U40I. City of Crowley.

Crowley Addition, Acadia Parish, Louisiana VALUED AND APPHVIS-ED AT I. HMl.no Second Tax Term For Blanche Long BATON ROUGE (UPD-Gov, John McKeithen has appointed Mrs. Blanche Long of Baton Rouge to a second term on the Louisiana Tax Commission. Mrs. Long, the widow of the late governor Earl K.

Long, was first named to the three-member tax commission by McKeithen in 19ti4. Her first term expired this month, her new term is up in 1976. enough consideration to the long range need of transporting an additional 60,000 persons daily in and out of the vicinity of the trade center. In another study, Prof. Lewin's students found that curbing pollution of the Hudson is more a political than an industrial problem and that the city of New York is the big polluter, not the industries on the river.

Dr. Rogers said the requirements for the social and urban affairs program, in addition to Dr. Lewin's course, includes special courses in accounting, microeconomics, banking, corporate finance, financial management, national priorities, urban economics, metropolitan labor problems, urban politics and the management and politics of municipal agencies. Dr. Rogers, who runs the program, is a Bostonian who originally studied sociology at Harvard.

He is the author of the controversial best seller "110 Livingston Street," about New York City's school system. SiM JUlEHllil RICE FESTIVAL TROUPE Entertaining adult scouters at their installation supper In the Town Club last week was the Rice Festival Troupe. The troupe is composed of, left to right, Arlene Dop. son, Dale Martin, Beryl Baker, Mike Oubre, Carole Goff, Kyle Jones, Sheri Hite, Sharon Smith, Kenny Parker, and Maureen Gray. 1 rivilians riurine the alleged Mv Mail Bankruptcy, Lalayette, Louisiana, the Bankruptcy Court has ordered sold at public auction sale, the following described property belonging to the bankrupt, to-wit: (1) 1.21 acres, more or less, in Section 34 Twp.

9 S. Range 1 East, Acadia Parish, described as follows: Beginning at a point on the E. Right of way line of U.S. Highway 90 for the N.W. Corner of the tract said point being S.

00 degrees 5.8' East, 2, 923.6' from the N.W. Corner of said Section 34; Thence N. 89 degrees 54 E. 240.0 feet to a point for the N.E. Corner; Thence S.

00 degrees 06' East 220.0 feet to a point for the S.E. corner; Thence S. 89 degrees 54' W. 240.0 feet to the E. right of way line of U.S.

Highway No. 90 for the S.W. corner; Thence N. 00 degrees, 06" West 220.0 feet with said right of way line to the point of beginning. VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $140,000.00 (2) Those certain lots or parcels of land measuring 67' fronting on Pine Street by a depth between parallel lines of 140' the western boundary of said property being the Eastern boundary of S.

Ave. and Northern boundary being the South boundary of Pine Street, together with all buildings and improvements thereon situated and thereto belonging. VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $9,000.00 (3) Those certain lots or parcels of land measuring 67 feet fronting on Walnut Street by a depth between parallel lines of 140 feet, the Western boundary of said property being the Eastern boundary of South Ave. and the Northern boundary being the property of the mortgagor. The Southern boundary being the Northern boundary of Walnut Street together with all buildings and improvements thereon situated and thereto belonging.

VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $9,000.00 (4) (a) Those certain lots or parcels of ground, together with all buildings and improvements thereon situated, known and described as being LOT ELEVEN (11) OF BLOCK ONE HUNDRED FIFTEEN (115) of the Crowley Addition to the City of Crowley, Louisiana. VALUED AND APPRAIS-i- ED AT $1,400.00 (4) (b) Those certain lots or parcels of ground together with all buildings and improvements thereon known and fully described as LOT FOURTEEN (14) and all of that portion of LOTS TEN (10) and FIFTEEN (15) lying SCHOOL MENUS WEDNESDAY Redemptorist Spanish delight, cabbage and carrot salad, pineapple pudding, rolls, and milk. Notre Dame Chicken-fried steaks, creamed potatoes, mustard greens, creamed corn, pineapple chunks, trench bread, butter, and milk. Crowley High Chicken salad sandwich, turnips and greens, apple and celery salad, banana pudding, and milk. Boss Elementary-Hamburger on bun, lettuce and tomato, french-fried potatoes, fruit cup, peanut butter cookies, and milk.

South Crowley Elementary-Spanish rice with ground beef, buttered broccoli, harvard beets, chilled prunes, hot bread, and milk. North CrowleyElementary-Pork jambalaya, black-eyed peas, buttered cabbage, apple sauce, cornbread, butter, and milk. Crowley Junior High-Meat loaf, rice and gravy, seasoned green beans, mixed vegetable salad, peach cobbler with biscuit topping, and milk. Firms Argue (Continued From Page 1) sure Act of 1968 a creditable reference point from which bargaining can begin," he said. Nevin testified as the FTC opened public hearings on its proposed rule to make "stock-er" prices the manufacturer's suggested retail price, required under the 1968 law be within 3 per cent of a level "at which substantial sales are actually made." His testimony closely paralleled points made by General Motors Corp.

in its written statement to the FTC. Both firms said prices vary widely from model to model, season to season, city to city and dealer to dealer, making it impossible to pinpoint a nationwide "right" price. Besides the sticker price formula, the FTC proposals would impose new rules on auto price advertising. One would bar comparative price ads which don't disclose that formerly "standard" equipment has been made "optional." A second would bar ads picturing a model with "extras" but citing a "stripped down" price. Under a third proposal, a car maker could not advertise a sale or discount unless he sold to dealers at the same discount.

Ford and GM suggested changes in these proposals but did not oppose them altogether. 'Burial Insurance I 1 ooia ay man You may still be quali- fied for 11,000 or more bu- rial Insurance so you will not burden your loved ones with your funeral and' other expenses. This NEW policy is especially helpful those between 5 40 and 80. Only you can cancel your policy. No me- dical examination neces- isary.

t- OLD LINE LEGAL RE- SERV LIFE INSURANCE No agent will call on you. Free information, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. Send your name, ad dress and year of birth to: Central Security Life In surance Dept. 412, West Rosedule, Fort Worth, Tex as Tiiioi BUILDING DEDICATED WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Republican Party will dedicate its new headquarters building on Capitol Hill Friday, with President Nixon taking part.

The new complex is called the Dwight D. Eisenhower National Republican Center. Mamie Eisenhower, widow of the late president, also planned to participate. DRAFT CALL WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon has announced a draft call of 17,000 for the month of February, the same as January. The 1970 draft averaged 14,000 a month and totaled draft quotas in the early months of any year, however, traditionally are higher.

BODIES AWAIT BURIAL ROME (UPI) About 1,000 bodies are awaiting burial at Rome's Verano Cemetery due to lack of space, Mayor Clelio Darida said Monday. He said 11,700 new graves are under construction and the backlog should be eliminated within two months. LEGAL IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA IN THE MATTER OF EARL GRAY nquo Holiday Capri Motet NO. 23,981 IN BANKRUPTCY NOTICE OF BANKRUPTCY AUCTION SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that upon petition of Charles N. Wooten, Trustee in Graduates Get Political Base By LeROY POPE UPI Business Writer NEW YORK (UPD-The non-political business man is on the way to limbo and so is the politician who doesn't know business principles.

That conclusion is the rationale behind a program called Social Policy and Urban Affairs just established in New York University's Graduate Business School under the direction of Dr. David Rogers. Because many students in graduate business schools today intend to go into national or local government service instead of business, Dr. Rogers said it is important they recognize that nobody can operate successfully in government without some kind of political base. "Also," he said, "it is fast becoming impossible for a business man- to be successful without a sound political base in the community." Failure to recognize this, said Dr.

Rogers, is what caused the city manager movement to fail in the 1920s and 1930s. Rogers said no problem of administration can be solved without digging into the matter of "how the pie is to be divided" and without giving attention to the political tradeoffs necessary to effect reform and change. He also said that while New York new program may be the first in the country, trends in the same direction have been observed at Harvard, MIT, Columbia, Carnegie-Mellon, Stanford and other graduate business schools. They put particular emphasis on the interaction of business and municipal politics in response to urban crises. A practical example of the problems studied in the program is an analysis of the history and prospects of the vast new World Trade Center being completed in lower Manhattan.

In a course entitled Interorganizational Decision Making given Dr. Arie Y. Lewin, the students came up with a report criticizing the Port of New York Authority and the city for failing to give I iViml.i.ijMflii!!!! In Our The destiny of any. nation has always been in the hands of all young people, because older persons must die and responsibilities forward to young people. A nation's most valuable resource is all young people.

Young persons must have the ability to deal promptly and effectively with problems and difficulties In a country. Young people today is our nation tomorrow. Parents, community leaders, social leaders, and government leaders should and must teach young people the values of life. Young people are right in their desire to make the world a better place to live. Let the Generation Gap be closed with a gate of love, understanding, kindness, concern, and appreciation.

Young people live today in the Space Age and 20th Century; yet our nation's heritage is the Environment (Continued From Page 1) reduce water pollution which results in large part from agricultural, industrial and municipal wastes. Water retaining and retarding measures on farms such as dams and ponds, permanent grass cover, waterways, buffer strips, and tree plantings will be stressed. These will be directed toward reducing silt in streams, rivers, lakes and other bodies of water and toward reducing pollution from animal wastes, fertilizers, and pesticides. Off-farm benefits will be promoted by concentrating funds to solve community environmental problems through special projects and pooling agreements. Under these, for example, the funds available to a community could be used exclusively to get permanent cover and other water control measures on farmland in a watershed to reduce the buildup of silt in a municipal water supply reservoir.

Under the program, the federal government will pay about 50 percent of the cost of practices that achieve permanent benefits. Practices that provide temporary benefits will be available only under certain circumstances and at a DIAL TWOS tvi ncttii nudum If NIM (4) c) Those certain lots or parcels of ground together with all buildings and improvements thereon known and fully described as all of that part of LOT TWELVE (12) of BLOCK ONE HUNDRED FIFTEEN (115) lying North of the drain ditch of the Crowley Addition to the City of Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana. VALUED AND APPRAIS-KD AT $1,400.00 (4) (d) Those certain lots or parcels of ground together with all buildings and improvements thereon known and fully described as LOT THREE (3) OF BLOCK TWENTY EIGHT (28) of the Crowley Addition to the City of Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana. VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $1,400.00 (4) (e) Those certain lots or parcels of ground together with all buildings and improvements thereon known and fully described as LOT ONE (1) of BLOCK TWENTY-SEVEN (27) lying North of Drain ditch of the Crowley Addition of the City of Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana. VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $1,000.00 (4) (f) Those certain lots or parcels of ground together with all buildings and improvements thereon known and fully described as LOT TEN (10) of BLOCK ONE HUNDRED FIFTEEN (115) of the Crowley Addition to the City of Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana.

VALUED AND APPRAISED AT $1,400.00 (Continued On Page 7) AUTOCRAT Whole Tomatoes Golden Cream Style CORN 5 Cans! .00 POOR BOY FOOD STORE Western 7th our community. Lai massacre. Riechenberg, from Miami Beach, said Hutto "does not understand why he's being involved in this situation. He didn't do anything he wasn't supposed to do," he said, referring to the orders. Asked whether Hutto knew right from wrong, the doctor said, "He did distinguish right from wrong at the time.

He decided it was right, in his perception, it would not be unlawful, however unpleasant it might be." Magill called two other witnesses Monday, both former soldiers who had been at My Lai when Charlie Company swept the small village, leaving between 102 and 310 Vietnamese civilians dead. The first was Roger Lewis Alaux student at Arizona State University, who served in the capacity of forward observer during the attack. He said Capt. Ernest Medina, commander of Company, had given the order "to destroy the village and everything in the village." The other witness, Steve R. Glimpse, 22, now a cab driver in Portland, said he was in the 3rd Platoon of Company.

He said his unit was posted outside the village and ordered "to catch anything that came running out." FAMED for riding his bicycle backwards during his four-year administration in Atlanta, former Gov. Lester Maddox, 55, gets in shape for his term as lieutenant governor, when he will have no chauffeur-driven state car to use. Name Senators To Committees BATON ROUGE (UPD -Lt. Gov. C.

C. Aycock has appointed Senate members of the Louisiana Legislature's joint committees on Consumer Protection and Reapportionment. Appointed to the consumer protection committee were Sens. W. D.

Brown of Monroe, William Guste of New Orleans and Jackson B. Davis of Shreveport. The committee was set up by the 1970 legislature to make a study of possible new consumer protection laws for the state. Name to the reapportionment committee were Sens. Charles Brown of Tallulah, Lewis Eaton of Baton Rouge, Theodore Hickey of New Orleans, John Montgomery of Springhill, Samuel Nunez of Chalmette, Bryan Poston of Hornbeek and Francis Romero of New Iberia.

The reapportionment committee was created to study reapportionment of the state legislature in line with 1970 census figures. No House members have yet been appointed to either of the two committees. od same. Let the Christian heritage be taught in the home by parents each day. Young people desire less material possessions and more family togetherness in church worship and recreation.

They can have a creative hobby in spare time or be taught to do charity work. Children must be encouraged to be thankful for freedom of worship, good health, many friends, for Christian parents, and for conveniences of living. The hour a baby is born into the world he begins to grow older. Let all parents give children responsibilities and teach them how to make important decisions. Young people wonder just who they are; why they are on earth, and where their soul is going.

Many older persons take care of our nation's most valuable resource young people. Flora Killmer Henderson reduced level of federal cost-sharing. Practices that are good farming techniques that should be performed routinely and practices that are income-1 producing to the farmer will be de-emphasized in favor of those having benefits for all citizens. The program will be run in each county or parish by locally elected farmer committeemen. Under broad federal and state the committeemen will select the practices best suited for meeting the needs of their area; determine which farm land needs treatment; and within the county's allocation of funds fix the amount of cost sharing to be provided each farmer.

Thus, the program provides for a high degree of local determination. The 1971 program will reflect changes desired by the President and, consistent with a House-Senate Conference Report, will make provisions for continuation of 1970 program practices and procedures at the option of county committees. It recognizes that privately-owned land is a major source of pollution, but that good management of this land can also be a major factor in improving living conditions for all citizens. By sharing the cost, the program will enable farmers to undertake measures that their limited resources would not otherwise permit. Recommendations will go to the Congress during the next few months to modify the program 's basic legal authority in order to broaden the program's capabilities to deal with farm-produced pollution.

The program will be administered by the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Department's Soil Conservation Service. Forest Service, and Extension Service will provide technical and education assistance. Tallulah Man Obeyed Order FT.

MCPHERSON. Ga. ilTD-A psychiatrist who depicted Sgt. Charles E. Hutto as trusting and naive was one of three witnesses called Monday as the defense opened its case to prove the young GI opened fire at My Lai only because he was ordered to do so.

Dr. Norman Riechenberg. the second witness called by Rutin's civilian attorney Edward Magill. testified he had examined Hutto and determined he would obey the commands of his superiors whether he agreed with them or not. Hutto, 22, of Tallulah.

is charged with intent to commit 'murder by firing his weapon at urmmiituinijiir- Boa Offlca Opn Wfcdirt 3: P-M. Saturday. SumUr and Hlldy-1M5 P.M. NOW SHOWING Wed. It isn't Math, History or English.

But it's just as basic. Mil To earn a living, he needs the old fundamentals To keep on living, he must learn the right way to drive Yet only one out ot three high school students takes a driver education course Too bad Automobile accidents are the number one killer of American teenagers How important is driver education? Well, it's important enough that trained drivers have 50 (ewer accidents and traltic violations Important enough that many insurance companies offer lower rates for teenagers who have completed driver training And important enough that new car dealers across the nation loan 34,000 automobiles every year to our public schools for driver training It's your responsibility to help make sure your teenager takes the proper sublets in school So make sure driver education is one of them. Where it's not available, we suggest that you consider a good private driving school. When it comes to preparation for living, Al l. learning how to drive safely really is basic National Automobile Dealers Association 0ticiti orqtn-itiwn Amtrtta francftiM ei m4 (fuel 0 L1XJJ METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PRESENTS JACK SMIGHT PRODUCTION STARRING STACY KEACH CO STARRING MARIANA HILL METROCOLOR PANAVISION One in a series presented by N.A.D.A., this newspaper, end the new car dealers of I'SK SKiNAL WANT ADS.

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About The Crowley Post-Signal Archive

Pages Available:
320,489
Years Available:
1898-2023