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The Daily Sentinel-Tribune from Bowling Green, Ohio • 1

Location:
Bowling Green, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WU ot I i vV "HV; i- Z1 i vl QitieS and shifting, this caucus would seek to bring pub- tCOLUlIByS (UPI) Tin Ohio tent -efthe; Democraticprof House and Senate have ed-for the weekend, apparently Kurfess repeated hii tnaiatenee floaer to a soldUroto the that tfae approprjationa bill la problem than they he- beginning of. the 4 per cent state income tax discussed by leaders frota both parties. i a basic rorwbkh. Democrats and Bepublieans allkecan get together and resolve the impasse which sees us into the new fiscal year with a seeming inability to adopt a.tax measure funding an appropriations UH which was paksed five-weeks ago," said House Minority Leader Ai. 'A budget-tax were -at -V week.

Shortly axter adjournmentv, the. whole ban game, again the 8peat an attempt 1 storatiod of to -the might be made next weekto go -House palied $7.8 billion ap- to the Housefloor with ta iSj iaunaj, notw vcmumip cummnwm, I veiled a nine-point plan, for neg- will open np otiating -settlement on ukL budget and taxes, todMlng.re- Be Indie Thursday, House Democrats committee, up indicated Housh a. bill allowing county bos, pitab and tubezculosb hospitsb to. provide health insurance for The Senate unanimously agreed to an emergency danse and sent to. Gov.

John J. Gilli-gan a bill authmizing minors to get. treatment for venereal dis1- 'ease without parental, consent. The House passed, 75-7, and sient to the Senate a MU extend-ilng from seven to 15 days the for obtaining motor Vebi- eto The Senate swore in form-! er Sen. Harry Jump of WU- brd as its clerk at an annual aabry of $21L6, replacing the (retired Thomas E.

Bateman. wbo have the per-' -formsnees of state university ad- The jSenate unanimously pui-' ed and 'salt to the Hoaaa leg islation removing file two-mill -celling on voted county. tax lev-. lei for the support of services, care and placement of children. RID Fer 1 Game Pretecters Abo given, unanimous ap-' proval and sentto the House, a bill permitting game pro-'-.

tectori to enter property to enforce state litter. and wa .1 tercraft bws.f- 'r In other legislative develop-' ments 't The Senate unanimously passed and re tamed to fiie lie school subsidies up to a minimum $880 per pupil in an districts, and to $125 per pupil for nonpubUc schools, requiring an. extra $80 million. This new, proposal puts into definite bin form our desire to cooperate with Republicans on a reasonable agreement, Lanc-ione laid. wJU' aow ace if the Republicans are sincerely interested in cooperation.

House' adopted by voice vote a resolution honoring Dr. Robert White, retiring, president. of. Kent State but there were seme loud voices of dissent from a sectioQ of the chamber occupied by lawmakers to the Senate. Among' the Democratic pro--posals were restoration of $4SJ; minion to carry out the existing program in Ohio, $40.8 million for welfare payments, $38A miUon for i various state agencks, $23 million for higher $19J for administration of a state income tax, $16 million for a state, employes pay raise, and $14 million for the state emergency' Also requested Vrai a guaraih teed floor vote" on.

extending Medicaid and revising the school foundation Lancione also' indicated his vi Mil hot unable to say what 'vjBntHouse Weaker CharlesF. sfbrm it "might take sywmp yuwijoo a v.ii:iv.:.r IWtes: GOP' The nine point file House Republicans' wu intended to be part dont (join us soon in a reason-S c. budget compromise able IgreementJ file (Mi House Kurf ess, BBowling Green, said his.members during a aneiour dliwus -Showed -no particular seniiment toward accepting the which includes a graduated lto wiQ be (ting Its respansQK. t'c --v 5 -J I 1. 41- .11 A llA -m.

m. A 1 fl mr- Home DeKveryV Me per weak Bowling Croon, Ohio; Friday, July 2,1971 lie Single Copy -V- i- ulaiies feneinv .1 ii J.V.- 1 4. .4,3. I r- Military sources uid tiie White House was so upset by reports of an unauthorized raid tt seat a colonel to investigate. The command bald only- The 7th Air Froce is routinely checking to see tint normal fer hours after, the Communists begin their bombardment of the South Vietnamese.

The communique Mid govern ment infantrymen kilted 16 Communists Thursday in fighting' six miteg northeast of Fuller. Troops of the South VietaameM InfantryDlvt kilted 12 Vlet Cong ta fighting Thursday 12. mites 'south- of South Vietnamese forces reported roe man wounded." bean i voithr? by one point ta the' regional. The Judges cued Pauls esiyUence and professionalism air striku were called' against them. The uid two Air Force F4 Phantoms and six UR.

Navy A7 Intruder. Jet fighters responded but white thdy were en route tho North VietaameM-opened up on four light planes from poattfcms Just north of the The, bigger planes then hit the antiaircraft sites, wiping out a 87. millimeter site, killing seven Communist troops and touching off 10 secondary explosions, indicating ammunition wu hit The command this trikes fitted the category of "protective reaction .1 an inherent right of self defense. They uid no UR. planes wen lost ta tiie strike.

Thursday night but allied helicopters, planes and! artillery broke up the attack. Field reports uid four South Vietnamese wen kilted and 10 wounded ta.the battle. Military sources said two tha South Vietnamese dead and bur of the wounded werq struck by misdirected 'tilled artillery from' nearby Camp Carroll, ta the fighting bight The South Vietnamese command reported government troops killed 28 -North Vtetna-mese and Viet Cong ta two other battles along file DMZ and also near Fuller. American and Sooth Vietnamese helUopten and fighter-bombers strafed- and bombed the North VietaameM positions 5 Pad TLorcniear (top), Toledo, and Rh Bowling-Green, discuss procedures for (ironing out5 that cent, and they should know. -Paul Wednesday was named yloo in the natioq at Vocational Industrial Clubs of America auto body com 1 The two boys havo been running 7 neck and neck aU through competition Rlcx the local contest, while Paul beat Bid1' ta metal repair as one of the qualities which won him flic, award.

The boys were guests at -the Penta-County High school Board of education meeting. They both graduated from that school this year. (Sentinel-Tribune staff PtaX' operating procedures wen fol tawed.7,. It waa tiie such air strike into the. six-mile-wide DMZ, separating North and South Vietnam since March 80.

Although thp-target ana wu ta the supposedly Demilitarized Zone, tt ta technically part of North Vietnam. To this south of thq DMZ, North Vietnamese mH pinned down, a South Vietnamese force under a 45-minute mortar barrage near. Fire Base Fuller SAIGON (UPI) The pommand acknowledged today that UR." planes attacked Communist antiaircraft sites in die Demilitarised Zona (DMZ) hot Mid tt wm a protective reaction strike provoked when North Vietnamese gunners opened fire on an -American plane. UR. military aourties direct knowledge of die incident gave a different account They aid American planes attacked a North Vietnamese troop concentration believed assembling rockets ta dm supposedly neutral zone and that die planes were not fired on first The military sources said the raids -were carried eut by 14 UR.

Phantom fighter-bombers and five reconnaissance planes prmed with small rockets, diet tha raid was unauthorized and hat Washington feared, have repercussions at the Parte peace talks. Tha official version Mid Forward Air Controllers (FACS) on Wednesday morning potted Communist troop concentrations on tha southern aide of the Hal 'River which divides the two Vietnam! and 'COPTER TRIP CANCELED ataeelg -s x. 'i-'f; -j. 9-'. go -to courts may SEOUL (UPI) Vice President Spin T.Agnew Canceled a planned helicopter visit to American: and South' Korean, troops near tha Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea today and, instead received an extended top-level briefing on the military situation in the area.

drinking age if they wished to keep tt at age 2L BLAMES SUPERIORS LONDON (UPI) An Ameri-, can Army officer charged on nationwide television that his superiors were jof war crimes ta Vietnam. He said thaf when he com-' Wallace gays Alabama teas key to ballot to two weeks before the House votes on a Commerce Committee recommendation that CBS President Frank Stanton and the network he cited 'for. cop-tempt of Congress. The committee asked Thursday for the contempt charges Stantons refuel to turn over to Congress film for. tiie CBS news show, "The Selling of the plained prisooersjwere iortiu-ed COJ.D1IBOS I (UPI) Secretary) of State Ted Brown said Thursday ratification of.

the 16th amendment to the U.fe. Constitution meant 18-year-olds could serve on Juries and run. for office, even seek file offihe of governor. 18-to D-year-old group came enfranchiaed bte Wednesday after Ohio became the 38th state to ratify file amendment, making tt law. Brown aald hb office interpreted the new statute as giving anyone II years of age and older the right to be an.

elector. Wa say they can sign petitions, run for office and be named for' Jury a aid He said the ed group could even run for governor 'there no age restriction on any state offices. As far as were concerned all hes got to have ta $50 to qualify, uld Brown, referring to the filtag.foe. they told him, if your ktomach is too squeamish for this' stay sway. Lt CoL AnthonyB.Her-r bert, 41, a much-decorafedf rf- freer who served both jn Korea and Vietnam; was interviewed at his Atlanta, home by ndro's Thames Television.

-The interview was shown on In- dependent Network Thursday night. The bill provides' that "special consideration he given Vietnam veterans tafilHng- fiie Jobs. It authorizes special asatetance to areas with a local unemployment average of 6 per cent or more when tiie national average faOi below 4.5. per cent Nixon vetoed- an accelerated public works approach tills week as inflationary, but his meauge Mid he favored tiie $2R billion public service Jobs bill. Other congressional action: Draft: With the expiration of the draft law, Sen.

John C. Sten-nis, predicted that thme will have to be compromise on aU sides, fawiwniif the White House, before it will be renewed. The Senate pasaed amendment oh the law currently is ta a triple headed dead-lqckand tiie future la uncertain. CMtempt: It will be 10 daya -Gilligan Ohio reiolutiont 1 77 WASHINGTON(UPI President who vetoed a similar bin teat yearagya now he will sign a MR billion meMure to create up to 200,000 public service Jobs. The bill passed Congress Thursday after conferees worked out the differences between Senate and House versions.

The measure would authorize 90 per cent federal matching grant! to state and local governments to create Joba.ta such fields as recreation, education, health and police and fife protection whenever tea national unemployment average exceeds 4.5 per cent The current rate'te per cent Although it is intended primarily-to put the- unemployed back to work, tiie bill also would have tiie -effect of helping financially pressed states and cities straining their budgets to hire additional or cutting back on other services to do so. PaUie Pressure Possible Johnston said) public pressure would probably be mounted against the General Assembly to taka action on the ma aue--'. 1 TheyH argue, Tf youre enough to vote, youre ojd enough to sign a contract, he aid. Johnston said the legislators might want to take the blue to the voters and let diem decide whether to reduce die age of maturity- Brown, a Republican, predicted the new -group at voters would not flock to the more fiber al Democratic Party, but would follow the patterns of their would say 90 per cent of them will vote dm same politi cal party their parents, he uid. "Thats my own philosophy.

He uid a difierenct might be noted, however, far the way they vote on special bond bines. "Now on the bond issues when it comes to spending money, its a different thing, he Mid. They may be a little more liberal when its spending PRksSUKE TRIGGERED Dave Johaaton, director of fiw Legislative jTervice Commission, predicted ha courts would nlt-lmatdy have the responsibility to deckle die righto of 18-year-olda because of a constitutional question Theres probably a constitutional question as to whether die 18-year-old voting age applies to an elector, Johnston said. There are a lot of interpretations and I think It would come to a court caac' Hoi explained the right 'to serve, on Jury duty and run for office applied to electors and dm Ohio Constitution currently stipulates that a person must be 21 years of age and older to be an elector. Although the U.

S. constitutional amendment reduces die voting ige, Johaaton aid there was some question as to whether it would automatically change the qualifications of an elector: Brown admitted there could be a court case to determine the limitations of the' new law, Sen. Stanley Aronoff, H-Cin-cinnad, may circumvent the issue through introduction of leg-station changing the age maturity from ,21 hr IS. Aronoff, chairman of -the Senate Elections and Retirement Committee and prims sponsor of the 18-year-old vote ratification, said he plumed to submit a bill ta 10 to 30 days. If the age of maturity ware reduced, to 18, Aronoff saU; then the newiy-enfrenchlaed gram of voters could also sign legal contracts, be held responsible for debts, marry- without parental consent, sue and ba and drink alcoholic beverage.

vHe noted, however, lawmakers could act separately on dm legal WASHINGTON (UPI) In a very unofficial ceremony Gov. John J. Gilligan tunv ed over to the federal government the resolutions from the Ohio General AsMmbly making the Buckeye state the 88th and deciding one to ratify a constitutional amendment giving 18 yera olds tha vote. MONTGOMERY," Ala; (UPI) Gov. George Wallace claiming that tt was Alabama- instead of Ohio that made the 18-year-okl voting amendment part of the UR.

Constitution, Thirty-eight state legislatures must ratify amendments to make them part of the The Abbama legislature waa the 36th when tt adopted a Joint resolution Wednesday afternoon. North CiraUnia legbla tare became the' 87th a' couple of hours later, and. the Ohio legislature Wednesday night became tha 88th-However, Wallace did not sign tha Alabama legislature's ratification resolution until 11:25 p.m. EOT after Ohio had ratified and ha Mid the Abbama resolution became official onlywith hb signature. Wallace wm operating under a legislative technicality that requires the governor to routinely sign all Joint House-Senate resolutions.

However, file resolu WASHINGTON (UPI) The new- Communist propoMl for peace ta Vietnam already has triggered fresh pressure on President Nixon' from. congressional doves to set-a deadline for total UR. withdrawal from Indochina. But tt appeared President, while still seeking a negotiated settlement and release of the war prisouen, may find the latest proposal for from acceptable; ma briefs JPREEMAN ELECTED Waste Although applies tiros to firms requesting federal permits to discharge wastes into lakes and streams were aent out by the UR. Army Corps of Engineers ta Buffalo, only about 10 per cent of the industries ta the Greater Cleveland area met the filing deadline.

"Presumably all the taduatrier that did not meet tho deadline are ta viola tiro at the Refuse Act of 1889, CoL Ray S. Hansen in June to 5R per of the nations force even though 1.1 million more persons were out of work than ta May. i.J- Layoffs Workers at fiVe General Motors Corps 23 assembly division plants arourn the country will be indefinitely laid off at the start of tho 1972 model year late ta Ao-" gust because of productl.n schedule adjustments. COLUMBUS (UPI) Herb Freeman of Cleveland hit been elected of, the Ohio Council of Chapters, National Association of Social It wm announced today. Fteemau, whA la supervisor of Foster Care at tha Cuyahoga County Welfare Department, will serve a term aa president 1 tion Itself stated that roly the legislature a a.

required to adopt tt. Article of the UR. Constitution spells out whats needed to ratify amendmeata, saying they "Aall be 'valid to all intents and purposes, as part of fob Constitution, when ratified by! tiie legislatures of three-fourths of the several states. Cigarettes The Federal Tirade Commission, accusing the to-. bacco Industry at unfair and deceptive advertising, imposed the health warning on 1 cigarette packagM be extended to all fonna of, cigarette advertising including billboards and magasiiiea effective Jan.

1. Traffic The Ohio Department of Highway Safety estimated 38 persons would die ta traffic-related deaths in Ohio during 1 tho Fourth of July holiday weekend. Officials also estimated 1,800 other persons would suffer non-w fatal Injuries -during that period, FORECAST Clear and cool. Low ta the upper 50s. Saterday: Mostly sunny, high about 10.

1 FrobabQity of precipitation near zero tonight and Saturday. LOCAL STATISTICS High Thursday ..89 High a year ago Record high (act ta 87 Low this 61 Low a year .72 Record low (set ta No precipitation ta the 24-hour period1 ending at 7 a.m. today. SUN AND MOON SunriM today 8:01 a.m. Sunset, ...9:18 p.m.

Moonrise ..8:58 p.m. Moonaet r.l:40 gjn. WEATHER REPORTS High Law Fry. Chicago Los Angeles cy Miami Beach cy (Paul New (hrteana cy New York ty Phoenix Waiting aU Dr. Daniel -EUsberg i during what seemed a flawleu return from mans longest spaceflight, 24 days.

They established the. first, manned orbital space station file cornerstone id eventual colonies ta -Results' of. file autopsies on file three, men have not been published. Theories as to the cause of their death have ranged from possible asphyxiation due. to failure of their oxygen life support systems to heart failure end failure of their circulatory systems due to file shock of returning to earth's gravity after, so many days ta a state of weightless- urns carrying 'the' ashes were bora on gun carriages pulled by armored cars sctom the eobbjpmonM to the tomb of V.

I. The Soviet leaders then carried them, to the Kremlin Wan, tha pantheon of Soviet heroes. Guns of mourning crashed under the azure sky ta the tl-degree temperature the urns werd placed ta the Kremlin WiIL The ceremony wu televised. -to tho -mourning nation which had made favorite sons of Georgi Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov and Viktor Patuyev. The cosmooauts died Wednesday from, nyaterlous causes MOSCOW (UPI) An anguished Leonid L-Brezhnev and other Kremlin leaders today carried to.

nichM. In file Kremlin Wall the ashes of the three Soyuz 11 cosmonauts who died mysteriously on their return to earth from a that wm to1 have -taught man how to livo ta spies. American astronaut' Thomas Stafford, commander 1 of tha Apollo 10 moon mission, arrived today the personal representative of President Nixon and Joined, the 19 surviving spacemen in. the final accolade to tha three cosmonauts. Tens of thmiMnda of Russians njwded tatojRed Square as the .1 Weather Scattered ahowera and thunderstorms, which accounted for at least- three deaths ta New York State dotted much of tho US tiro ogsta.

today, accompanied by typical summerlikc warmth. Rata feu ta moat of the nation, except the Northern Plains and Pacific Cgdat states, where, fair skies prevailed; 1 High ways State Highways Director J. Phillip Richley canceled $00 million ta. contracts 'for future highway projects and blamed the action of the administration of former Gov. JamM A.

Rhodes and its "no new tax Attitude. Richley also Mid no mw personnel will bo hired by his department except for jobs currently being negotiated, and no new major purchases win be jlrrested District Attorney Jim Garri- i son-talks to newsipen ta smilea ta Cambridge, Mau after that Supreme Court deciaion allowing, newapap- ers to continue publlahtag tha Pentagons secret Viet- nam report supplied by him. Ellaberg free on $50,000. ball pending a U5. District on charges of thett of govem-ment property.

1- a New OrleaM after hfr arrest by federal agents oo brib-, i A ery charges related to pin- bail machine operations. Jobe Unemployment dropped I i.

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About The Daily Sentinel-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
326,577
Years Available:
1890-1988