THE LINCOLN STAR 69 T H Y E A R No. 215 L I N C O L N , N E B . , W IS 1> M E S 1> A 1 M O_ It_M i_jjijjf_, __J_t N_K »_»_L?-I-1- 3? Pages 1 O C E N T S CLIFFO Pullout Agreement Believed Meaningful ... HE HAS 'REASON' TO THINK SO Washington (tf) — Former defense secretary Clark M. Clifford said Tues- day he has reason to believe the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong would release all American prisoners within 30 days if the United States agreed to withdraw all its forces from Indochina by Dec. 31. In a speech to three peace groups meeting here, Clifford said, "I believe that the war could well be over by the time the last U.S. forces are withdrawn." In an interview with The Associated Press prior to the speech, Clifford outlined his proposal this way: The United States would agree to withdraw all U.S. military personnel from South Vietnam, Laos and Cam- bodia by Dec. 31 and end all ground, air and naval activity by U.S. forces in South Vietnam, North Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia by the same date. Return All Prisoners In return, Clifford said, the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong would agree to return all U S. prisoners within 30 days of the joint announce- ment by Hanoi and Washington of this agreement and would refrain from at- tacks that would threaten the safety of U.S. military personnel during the period of withdrawal. "I have reason to believe the North Vietnamese and the National Libera^ tion Front would agree to this as the result ol conversations I have had with a number of people who have been active in this field," Clifford said in the interview. Clifford declined to identify the peo- ple to whom he referred. He added that he did not have any information on how the South Viet- namese might respond to such a pro- posal and had not discussed it with any members of the Nixon ad- ministration. Viet Cong Promise At the same time Clifford outlined his plan, Rep. Robert L. Leggett. D- Calif. told a news conference that Viet Cong negotiators have promised him Coal Mining Down Essen, Germany (/P) — West Germany had 250,000 coal miners in 1970, about half as many as a decade earlier, and coal production dropped from 142 million tons in 1960 to 111 million tons last year, mining industry officials reported. that if a date were set for total withdrawal of U.S. forces they would release all their American prisoners before that date. The North Vietnamese, however, did not change their stated position that a withdrawal date would bring a discussion of prisoner release, Leggett said. Clifford, who served as secretary of defense in 1968, the last year of the Johnson administration, and now has a private law practice here, has been a frequent critic of President Nixon's Vietnam policy. He has often called on the administration to set a definite withdrawal date, something Nixon has refused to do. Clifford's plan as outlined Tuesday contained safeguards for both sides. "If our prisoners are not returned within 30 days from date of announce- ment of agreement, then our obligation to withdraw is terminated," he said. "If Hanoi and the NLF return our prisoners within the time stated, then the other side has the assurance that the enormous pressure of domestic and world opinion would guarantee our complete removal by the terminal date." 1,500 Lawyers, Others Clifford made his peace proposal public in a speech to the National Convocation of Lawyers To End the War, a group of 1,500 lawyers from some of the most prominent law firms in the country, the National Council for an Indochina Deadline and the Committee for Peace and N e w Priorities. "The advantages to both sides in the proposal are so demonstrable that one could be confident they would be carried put as agreed upon," Clifford said in hi? speech. "The United States would remove its troops by a day certain. We would get our prisoners back. The killing and wounding of U.S. military person- nel would end. The enormous expense of active military participation would be terminated. "The North Vietnamese and the NLF would achieve a long-sought goal — the departure of U.S. military person- nel from Indochina. The possibilities of a negotiated end to the war, reached by the North and South Vietnamese, would be greatly increased . . . "An additional incentive to a prompt end of hostilities could be the offer ot the United States to start a program of reconstruction in both North and South Vietnam as soon as the war was over." OFFICIALS ONLY EXPECT 'CHAOS' . . . Parking Lot Clash features By MILAN WALL Star Staff Writer Although a change in next fall's scheduling will bring together at the same time at the same parking lot University of Nebraska drivers and state fair-goers, NU officials are not much worried about the outcome. -We are just going to have chaos," Miles Tommeraasen said matter-of- factly. But the NU director of business and finance said "chaos" is n e a r l y synonymous with the parking situation on the campus a couple of times a year, particularly during state basket- ball tournaments when hordes of high school fans descend on the campus. This fall, for the first time, the first semester of NU classes will begin before the state fair commences, due to a major change in university scheduling. First semester classes will begin Sept. 1 and end with Christmas vaca- tion. The state fair begins Sept. 2 and ends Sept. 8. A 1,000-car parking lot on the fairgrounds has been in use by NU for a year, and that No. 14th Street lot will apparently be called upon to serve both the fair and the university during fair week. Fair But Tommeraasen said the fair and NU have traditionally shared some parking lots in the fairground area, although the overlap has been no more than two or three dajs in the past. The finance chief said he believes NU personnel will take the same at- titude they exhibit during other crowd- ed days. "They want them to come to town and visit the campus,'' he said. He said the 1,000-car "overload" lot — used by both faculty members and students who ride a shuttle bus from there to the campus — has never been full since NU began using it last fall. He said no more than 500 cars were parked there at any one time this year, and he guessed that 200 to 300 was the usual number. And he said lots often arc not filled to capacity during the first week of school. If they were, he added, NU would be more concerned about next fall's situation. But he said officials filed few com- plaints, even during state basketball tournament time when fans often fill the lots in the campus area. The fairgrounds lot is used by NU as a trade, he said, for allowing fair- goers the use of a number of lots during the annual agricultural show. eeks County Property HOSPITAL INTERESTED IN HEALTH, WELFARE OFFICES BUILDING By GERRY SWITZER Star Staff Writer Lincoln General Hospital may acquire the county-owned prop- erty adjacent to the hospital, it was learned Tuesday. R e p resentatives of the hospital indicated to Lancaster County Commissioners Tuesday that the hospital is interested in purchasing the county-owned building at 2200 St. Mary's which now houses the City- County Health Department anrt Lancaster County Welfare of- fices. The south part of the structure which formerly was the County Convalescent Hospital is now under a 10-year lease to Lincoln General which, under terms of the lease agreement, may terminate the lease and offer to purchase the premises from the county after expiration of the first year of the lease which went into effect April 1. Discuss Maintenance The discussion of the possible purchase grew out of a meeting to discuss an agreement between the county and hospital for engineering and main- tenance of the county health and Senate Passes Military Washington
Ruth Spencer of Omaha South was elected lieutenant governor; Julie Martin of Wahoo, secretary of state and Judy Shea of Lexington, state treasurer. Elected state auditor was Rita Wagner of Davenport. Mary Lilly of Blair was selected to fill the attorney general spot. Railway commissioners arc Jan Dickinson of Pierce. Girls Staters Elected; Boys Staters Appointed See Lists On Page ?3 Linda Sue Frank of Carleton, Barbara Oberndorfer of Potter, Joann Pratt of Elmwood and Rita Kay \Vo- jtiasek. Wednesday, Girls State representatives will visit the State Capitol where they will be greeted by Gov. J. James Exon. Today's Chuckle Political economy — two words that should be divorced on the ".rounds of incompatibility. M copyright 1971, Gen. F(J, Corp. \ EWSPAPERl MEWSPAPEJRI 2 The Lincoln Star Wednesday, June 9, 1971 New York Times News Summary » ines Plan To End Vietnam War (c) New York Times News Service Washington — A •'concise, workable" plan to end the Vietnamese conflict was out lined Tuesday night by former defense secretary Clark M. Clifford. Under the plan, which Clifford said he had "reason to believe" would-be acceptable to North Vietnam, the United States could reach an agreement with Hanoi to withdraw all troops by the end of 1971 and win release of all prisoners of war wwithin 30 days. (More on Page 1.) Cholera Spreads Karimpur. India — Cholera has spread along h of the border between Pakistan, according to tiie entire I.:i5()-mile le.'igt \Vos: H:'!ig;>l ami Iv.ist the vVorki Health Organisation. Officials of the org;.mi/:aiion said tnal at least .1000 persons have died of cholera and gastro-enteritis in the epidemic. Public Johs Bill Passed Washington — A $5.5 billion economic development bill (hat includes a large public works program was passed by the Senate despite threats' that the President might veto the measure. The controversial public works program would authorize $2 billion for projects such as city halls and the program has been a key part of the Derrrocratic effort to create jobs for the poor. Senate OKs Military Pay Hike Washington — A substantial increase in military pay was approved by the Senate in a vote seen as a significant defeat for President Nixon. (More on Page 1.) $500 Million In Securities Stolen Washington — Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and New York City Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy told the Senate investigations sub- committee that more than $500 million worth of securities have been stolen in the past two years, much of it by organized crime. Mitchell also said many thefts of securities go unreported or unnoticed. (More on Page 27.) New York Strike Spreads New York — Sewage, incineration, 'parks and school lunch workers joined the strike of municipal employes, but drawbridge operators, who began the walkouts Monday, were ordered back to work by their union. (More on Page 2.) Dr. Johnson Dies New York — Dr. Alvin Johnson, a founder of the New School for Social Research, died Monday night at his home in Nyack at age 96. Founded in 1919 by Johnson and a number of other leaders in American education, the New School has become to be generally regarded, as one of the foremost adult education centers in the country. (More on Page 12.) Walkouts XPW York •'.?' — The municipal j workers who opened the city's | drawbridges and closed some of its sewage treatment plants in .strikes for an improved pension plan agreed Tuesday night on a plan to shelve the dispute and end the walkouts. The men accepted a plan by the city's Office of Collective Bargaining that would postpone until next year action by tin- state legislature on a proposed new pension system. It was Albany's refusal to approve this svstcm that touched off t h c Defection Total Told Bonn I'L'PI) — The semiof- ficial military magazine Soldat imd Technik (Soldier and Technician) said more than 10,500 East German soldier have fled to the West since 195G. The magazine said the number has dropped from 2.170 in 1956 to (>3 last year because of stronger East German border defenses and changes in duty procedures designed to thwart would-be defectors. THE LINCOLN STAR Vol. 69, No. 215 Juno 1, lv/1 Pjblished each weekday by the JOUR- NAL-STAR PRINTING CO., 926 P St., Lincoln, Neb., 68501. Phone 432-3331. Second class postage paid at Lincoln. Neb. CARRIER SUBSCRIPTION RATES In Lincoln, or to vacat'on address: Drtilv, 4$c week; Sunday, 35c week; Daily jnd Sunday, 80c week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Nebraska, Northern Kansas outside of Lancaster Co. Dnily Sunday .Roth i yr S17.00 sis.20 S35.:a 9 Mo" . 1?.05 13.65 J6.70 6 MO B.BO 9.10 17.90 3 MO 4.SS 4.55 9.10 5 - : WRs. 2.00 5 Wks. 1 . 7 S 5 W K S . 3.50 To Lancaster Co. outside carrier boy are.v Daily Sunday Rot" 1 Yr . S18.20 S18.20 $36.40 ? h-.i 1365 13.65 37.30 6 W 0 9.10 9.10 18 20 3 Mo -<.55 4.55 5- ; Wks. 3.00 5 Wks. 1.75 5 Wks. To other slates: Daily -<5c week; Sund.iy, 35c week; both 80c week. Associated Pres: is exclusively entitled to republish all local news printed in tni-, newspaper, and all other AP dispatches. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 9.10 3.50 Complete dinner in 15 minutes. New Macaroni with -fc- Meat Sauce Santiago. Chile i.-r — Gunmen assassinated a prominent, an- tileflisl politician T u c s d a y . I plunging the 7 - m o n I h - o 1 d government of Marxist Presi- dent Salvador .Allonclc into a major crisis. Aliende decreed emergency measures to main- tain order in this country of D.5 million people. Edmundo Perez Zujovic. 57, ciiecl of five bullet wounds suf- fered in an ambush of his car by three men firing submachine guns. As minister of interior under the previous Christian D c m ocratic administration. Perez Zjuovic was in charge of internal security. Some Marxists called him "the hard-handed one." and held him responsible for a bloody clash between police and homeless squatters in 196!). Shortly after the slaying, Aliende clamped a state of emergency and curfew on San- tiago province and put military units on alert throughout the country. He charged the murder was deliberately staged ^ to create "a sensation of chaos" in the country. The opposition C h r i s t. i a n Democratic Party demanded that army intelligence — and not civil police detectives — handle the investigation of the death. In a harshly worded statement the party said it "lacked confidence" in the ad- ministration of the civil police. The Christian Democrats and the right-wing National Party blamed the assassination on armed leftist groups. "This crime is the culmination of a series of attacks by armed .Marxists whose actions have been tolerated by the govern- ment." a National Party state- ment said. The Christian Democrats called for a govern- ved Sn New York EOM l'\n PEIJEZ ZUOVI Chilean Antileftist to w: mil s.u! .sons being identified ment drive groups. One of tii': three pei sought by police \va:- by dciedives as Ronald Rivera Cakleron, 25. who was listed as a member of (lie Organized People's Vanguard, an extreme leftist group. It was f h e second assassina- tion here in eight mfiiiii.v (ie; 1.. garbage disposal facilities and some school lunchrooms. Only about 7,000 of the city's 400.(Kib nonuniformed workers were involved. Meanwhile, the last of 29 drawbridges which had been locked in open position by a strike of .'>liJ bridgetenders was put back in operation Tuesday night alter a Teamster's union local ordered the men back to work. Renegotiation Set The settlement plan provides that if the legislature should fail to act favorably on the pension plan in 1972. the issue will be renegotiated by the city and the union. Mayor John V. Lindsay called the .settlement ''a sensible, ra- tional,, orderly procedure for the next year." He said he would push for the passage by the legislature of the pension plan, which he describ- ed as a ••sound, sensible one," and expressed the hope that a pension study c o m m i s s i o n created by the legislature would come to agree. Victor Gotbaum. executive director of District 37 of the State. County and Municipal Workers. AFL-CIO, said in an- nouncing his acceptance of the settlement proposal that the two-day strike had "made plen- ty of sense." " "We told the governor and the legislature." he said, "that we were one group that would not be ;.i colony in this state." Part of the difficulty in restoring bridge service was the Rene Schneider, commander in chief of the army, was ambush-: absence of fuses and other edand fatally wounded Oct. 22.1 equipment taken by the strikers before Aliende took office. The; when they left their jobs. The government has said tiie crime | district attorneys of both was a plot aimed at keeping i Manhattan and the Bronx Ailende from becoming pres'- ; ordered investigations to see if dent. " ' the bridgetenders had violated I laws against vandalism and theft. Calling the strike "vicious," state Supreme Court Justice Harold Baer i s s u e d a preliminary injunction ordering the municipal workers back to their jobs. An earlier court mandate to return to work already had been ignored over a 24-hour period by the union. Park attendants remained on strike, but all facilities were open on a second day of temperatures in the 90s. Mayor John V. Lindsay held in reserve his threat to seek a Na- tional Guard callup. He said the police department had things well in hcnd thus far. Willing To Renegotiate While Maher was saying this, Gotbaum was expressing a willingness to renegotiate the pension issue and adding that a meeting with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller "could bring about a settlement." The key demand is a provision for retirement at one-half the final year's salary after 20 years. The city approves and says it would cost $30 million a year. The s t a t e legislature, some of whose leaders put the cost at S60 million, is refusing to go along. When 2,000 workers walked off the job at 11 of the city's 13 sewage treatment centers, of- ficials reverted to old-fashioned methods and began pouring New York's daily 1.4 billion gallons of raw wastes into the Hudson and East Rivers. A strike of 300 employes at the seven garbage incinerators failed to halt the daily collection j of 10.000 tons of trash. While it | could not be burned, it was disposed of at landfill sites, which normally receive 65% of the accumulation anyway. Connolly Equates Delay lY/'fh Lockheed failure Washington (ffl — Treasury, dition for backing production of Secretary John B. Connally told the Rolls Royce engines, and • - - • • that some of the 24 American STORY AT RIGHT CONNALLY Congress Tuesday that delay in approving $250 million in bank loan guarantees will drive Lockheed Aircraft Corp. into bankruptcy. He hinted at an Aug. 8 deadline, the date Congress has set to start a month-long vaca- tion. Answering questions for a sec ond day b e f o r e the Senate Banking Committee Connally said he could foresee no circumstances .-that w o u l d manufacture its L1011 TriStar airbus without government- guaranteed financing. He said the British govern- ment has asked for sssurancr of Lockheed survival as a con- banks supplying the money -to Lockheed are beyond their bor- rowing limits without govern- ment guarantee. Connally assured the senators that Lockheed, the nation's largest defense contractor, has sufficient assets to g i v e th'.- government ample security for the loan guarantee. But without the guarantee, he said, Lockheed faces a billion- dollar loss and the government nearly a half-billion-dollur loss in tax revenues. Sen. William Proxmire, D- Wis.. leading opponent of the administration's loan-guarantee proposal, called it "the begin- ning of a welfare program for large corporations." . returns to testify again. Pentagon, Lockheed Sig n New C5A Contracts %^ * %p Washington (UPD - The Pentagon announced Tuesday the signing of new contracts with Lockheed Aircraft Co. decreeing that the firm will lose no more nor less than $200 million on production of the giant C5A jet transport. At the same time, the Air Force issued $61.1 million in "bailout" funds to the finan- cially troubled a i r c r a f t manufacturer to keep C5A pro- duction lines rolling, according to Defense D e p a r t m e n t s p o k e s m a n J e r r y W . Friedheim. Friedheim said that under the renegotiated contract, which superseded original CDA price provisions, production of 81 aircraft is expected to cost the government $4.5 billion. This is §1.1 billion more than the original estimated costs for 120 CnA's, and does not include the $200 million loss imposed Lockheed. The new contract was a com- promise between the Lockheed position, which was that it might be able to make a small profit under its interpretation of the original contract, and the Air Force interpretation w h i c h would have lost the company much more than S200 million. The new contract, Friedheim said, does not include any Defense Department 1 o a n | guarantees for L o c k h e e d ' s ! commercial aircraft production | — also in financial difficulties. \ He declined to comment on; possible aid for the commercial! programs, saying D e p u t y ! on! Defense Secretary D a v i d Packard would testify, to Congress on this Wednesday. Neither does the new contract have any bearing on Lockheed's helicopter development work for the Army or its Navy .ship- building programs. Friedheim said the new con- tract, agreed to by Lockheed after a long price dispute with the Air Force over cost over-; runs, was essentially one ! presented to the company by Packard some months ago. Under the new contract, the government will reimburse Lockheed for all but $100 million of its costs in producing the C5A. Lockheed will have until January 197-1 to start paying back to the government the re- maining $100 million of the loss imposed on it. In effect this means the government has given Lockheed a SlOtl million loan of which S61.1 million paid Monday was part. Lockheed will pay this back in quarterly $2.5 million in- stallments, starting in 1974. and will make annual interest payments. Lean — Tender Semi-Boneless —PORK— Hickory Smoked Sliced 1 Pound Layers Boneless Pork Roast — Pound On Our Lot — Texas Long ' Greys 18 Lb. Average Prices Effective Wed. thru Tue. Sunday 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. Open Weekdays 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. New — Sweet — Yellow — Dry ONIONS Oz. —45c Value Each —BROOKS Large — Lucious CATSUP4 PUREX Half Gallon Piastic Family Size XK TIDE JOLLY TIME —Yellow Or White Pound Bag In. —2 Speed —TOASTMASTER By DEL MONTE —303 Size Can SWEET CHERRIES Outside — Whits Latex $199 10% TiMEX WATCHES OFF FOLGERS "Mountain Grown" MILK At KING DOLLAR Thru 6-15-71 Citizens' Panel Adopts 9 Goals In 4-Hour Meet By LINDA SULLIVAN Slar Staff Writer Saddled with the burden of adopting a governmental plan that will affect all lacets of life in the city and county, the Lin- coln-Lancaster County Goals and Policies Committee adopted nine goals at a Tuesday meeting that lasted nearly four hours and had lost almost halt ot its participants by the end The committee, organized last winter to update the 1961 com- prehensive plan, adopted the goals after studying attitudes and opinions expressed in a sur- \ey of Lincolnites. In the area of housing, the committee adopted a goal after an hour of discussion to " provide sate (free irom safety and health hazards I. decent 'vuth adequate lacihties and livable space), s. a n 11 a r \ (meeting minimum state and local health codes) a n d aesthetically pleasant hous- ing." Enough Housing The goal also, stipulates that an adequate number of single and-or multiple dwellings shall be made available for all persons as needed in Lincoln and L a n c a s t e r County, income. D e a l i n g with economic development and employment, a goal was adopted for the pro- vision of an economic climate which will encourage a balance between industrial, commercial, educational, agricultural and governmental development with adequate environmental control. Orderly controlled economic growth should provide optimum job opportunities, according to the goal statement. Ak Good Neighbor Awards Honor 9 Nebraska Groups Omaha — The Cedar Bluffs Commercial Club, w h i c h developed a community park, is une of 10 Ak-Sar-Ben Good "Neighbor Award winners an- nounced bv Ak-Sar-Ben General Manager and Executive Direc- mcmbeid led a drive to secure more than $75,000 in local support, for a nursing home The group also played an important role in the community's C e n t e n n i a l celebration. Allen-Eastern Livestock 4-H Club of Randolph, Neb. — Long active in community activities, the tor Tom Brock This is the 28th \ear that Ak- club, I'1'1 ycf"'. con{ributcd. P™- .-., „ r, „.. u „ _ , • , \ - , . , ceccls fi om a bake sale to a kidney transplant fund and sent birthday cauls to the elderly members of the community Alcott (Neb.) Lad and Lassies 4-H Club —The club has pio\ided caie loi the Alcott Cemetery groups located bi\ miles west of and in- Sar-Ben has honored Nebraska and western Iowa groups for outstanding neighbor!} deeds and accomplishments Awards for individual recipients will be announced next week The Cedar Bluffs Commercial Club converted an alfalfa field into a beautiful community park Led bv Llovd Konccky and Fiank Zima. the club built a picnic shelter, installed grills. built tables and put up plaj ground equipment A new icstroom facihtv was completed last fall and additional land has been acquired for tennis courts Other groups selected t h e n accomplishments clude Bioomlielii ( \ c b > Good SamariUin Rest Home \u\iliar\ — - \ vohintwi moup ol ladies who sponsor cults pioiccts birthdaj P..II ties Moup entertainment, \\nte letteis and inn errands for the patients at (lie Good Samaritan Hcst Homes Kristow (\ob.) Lions Club — 'I he Bnstou Ltuns have been ac- tive in improving the Bnstow Communitv Hall and the city park The club has been a leader in pi (Aiding aid during summer lams and tornados or winter Miowb The club is, among the state leaders in the Lions' Mghl" pro- grams Rock-Kcc Union 4-H Club of Correcliomille, Iowa — The 5-1- jncmbcr club is involved in more than 81) different projects which have benefited the commumtj . Included are the purchase of a piano for the Valley Vicv\ Nursing Home helping develop the Cor- rectioiu ilie Roll course, and help- ing dev clop a roadside park Gross (Neb.) Women's Club — The. club has sponsored or parti- cipated in almost e\cr> project undei taken in this, the smallest mcoiporated town in Nebraska Town and Country Evtcnsion CJub ol Hay Springs. Neb. — The 11-membci club has been active in helping the elderlj including the shoM'lirm of \\alks during the vvmtei , \ isiting nursing homes dcli\ eiing mail and remembering their birthdays and othei special occasions Napi-r d\clj i Ladies Auxiliary ol the VFVV — The oigani/ation lias been a leaclei in all activ ities of the community . Community Fun Group of Papillion (Neb.) — A gioup of moie than 00 senior citizens, Us Merger Possible San Antonio, Tex. (UPI) — The two major Presbyterian denominations in Texas opened their first joint meeting since 1S49 with a possible merger leading the list of business The Synod of Texas Presbyterian Church in the United States and the Synod of Texas United Presbyterian Church in t h e United States of America split Creighton Publisher's Post Goes To Moriarity Davenport. Iowa —Police Sgt. Mer- rill Putnam snatched a loaded gun from an Omaha man Tues- day ending a three-hour ordeal during which the man had held his wife and his parents hostage in his west Omaha home Police said the man, Dean Wagner 39, was taken to Richard Young Hospital for psychiatric treatment. In the house with Wagner and Putnam when the ordeal ended, was Dr. Samuel Watson, a psychiatrist called to the scene. Wagner's wife said her husband's "mind snapped" over the weekend from the pressures of his traveling sales job. She said he saw Dr Watson Monday and was given some pills, but took only one. She said her husband wasn't himself Tuesday so she called his parents. Mr and Mrs. A. J. Wagner, who came to the home about 9 a.m. Wagner's father called Dr. Watson, and while he was on the phone Wagner went to the basement and returned with a pistol, his wife said. She said the father told Dr. Watson that Wagner had the pistol and Dr. Watson ap- parently called police. 1 oo 2 oo 3.00 4 00 5 CO 6 00 7 00 8 00 a m 9 00 am. 10 CO am 11 00 am 12 00 p m. 1 00 p m. Lincoln a m (Tuc) a m a m a m a m. a m a m. Temperatures 62 2 00 p m 62 3 00 p.m 4 00 p m 5 00 p m 6 00 p m 7 00 p m 8 00 p m 9'00 p m 10.00 p m 11:00 p m 12.00 a m (Wed) 1:00 a m 2 00 a m one year ago High temperature low 70 Sun rises 5 55 am. sets 8 56 p.m Total June precipitation to date 53 in. Total 1971 precipitation to date 1244 in Nebraska Temperatures H L H L ' Chadron 81 43 North Platte 77 56 Alliance 73 46 Norfolk 79 58 Scottsbluff 81 5] Gr.ind Island 81 54 Valentine 79 51 Lincoln 78 58 Imperial 79 52 Omaha 77 59 Extended Forecasts EAST AND CENTRAL NEBRASKA: For the three clays, Friday through Sun day lows will be near 50 north central 1o the 60s southeast, cooling to 1h« 40s northwest to the !ow 50s southeast by Sunday morning. Highs will be in the 70s northwest to the 80s southeast, cool- ing to the 70s over the area by Sunday Chance of rain Friday and Saturday, end- inq Saturday night. i- KANSAS: The extended outlook for Friday through Sunday calK for possible •tain in the central and eastern sections and a slight chance In the west Friday 'and Saturday. Lows during the period will be IP- the 50s northwest loi near 70 snutnpvM cooling to tho 40s northwest ME WS P A PER fl R C HIV E ®. and mid 50s to low 60s southeast by Sunday morning Highs will be around 80 northwest to 90 southeast, cooling by Sunday to the 70s northwest to near 80 southeast Temperatures Elsewhere H L H L 89 65 Kansas City 83 67 89 61 Miami Beach 85 76 86 65 Minn.-St Paul 71 55 68 46 New Orleans 90 65 81 66 New York 93 73 60 54 Phoenix 94 63 68 57 Reno 80 40 78 47 Salt Lake C. 8548 75 61 San Francisco 59 50 94 69 Seattle 58 48 94 67 Washington 91 69 Albuquerque Amanllo Birmmghm Bismarck Boston Chicaao Cleveland Denver Des Moines El Paso Jacksnville Juncau 65 51 Winnipeg 6940 When 11 policemen and a deputy sheriff arrived, they at- tempted to talk Wagner into putting down the gun, but to no avail. Wagner permitted his wife to leave about 10:30 a.m. and his parents about an hour later A short time later Dr. Watson entered the house and then Sgt Putnam. Putnam said Wagner in- dicated he would give the officer the gun if several newsmen outside the house would leave. Putnam said Wagner asked him to look out the window to see if the newsmen had left, and as the policeman did so he grabbed the gun and pulled it away from Wagner, who resisted only slightly The newsmen had already moved from the area Road Crash Death Toll Rises To Five Grand Island U?) — A Dan- nebrog woman died in a Grand Island hospital Monday night as a result of injuries received in a two vehicle crash which claimed four other lives on Sunday. She was Mrs. B e s s i e Larkowski, 65, Dannebrog, who was the mother of two of those killed Sunday in the collision of a car and a pickup truck about three miles west of St. Paul on Nebraska 92. 2 Hospitalized Two other persons remain hospitalized from that crash. They are Loren E. Lewan- dowski, 16, of Farwell, and Donald Reimers, 39, of Dan- nebrog. Nebraska's 1971 traffic fatality toll now stands at 150, two more than had been recorded last year at this time. \ 2 Convenient Chapeh 4300 East 0 432-1225 Ample Parking 6037 Havelock Are. 466-2831 Northeast Lincoln i* Serving with Dignity, Economy and Understanding The cleanup netted 17 junk cars, whose owners had agreed in advance to have them hauled away, several d a n g e r o u s refrigerators an>J a quantity of miscellaneous junk Wednesdoy, June 9, 1971 The Lincoln Star 3 Discussion Heated On Dam fund Omalu (#i - About 250 persons engaged in a heated tuo-hoiir debate here on a $10,000 United Prcsbjteriaa church grant to black militant Angela Davis' defense fund. No formal action or votes were taken at the meeting at Miller Park P r e s b y t e r i a n Church, sponsored by the General Council ot the Omaha Presbyter} Participants were urged to discuss the matter in their in- dividual churches and draw up resolutions expressing support or opposition. Opponents ot the grant argued that Miss Davis, a professed Marxist who is charged with conspiracy m connection vvi'h the shooting deaths ot four persons at the Harm CounU. Calif., Courtihouse last August, dees not need the money 'because she will receive funds from i a remaik which was greeted with lewd applause. i Ablate woman, who said she 'is a member ot the local Presbvtenan Commission on I Ohurcii 'ind Race, said: I "The National Council on Church and Race which made the grant is concerned about the growing number of acts of repression by law enforcement officers." she said. "The people Ion the council are responsible people who weighted carefully the question ot justice with which we are concerned." T h e w o m a n s a i d Presbyterians "should be more concerned with justice" and the reasons why the church set up the legal defense fund, from which the grant was made. A few persons said they felt the legal defense funds should have been given to poorer persons $497,000 Health Depf. Bwfgef Request Okayed They also said the church should not spend its money (o help an avowed opponent of the American sjstem and argued that the system needs no help from the church in providing a fair trial. Supporters of the grant argued that Christians have a duty to see that justice is done to all in- dividuals, however unpopular, and said the church must try to help end racial injustice. Among the opponents was a Wahoo. Neb , man who argued that "the church is off base to get involved in p o l i t i c s , especially when it is fighting tne federal government " "ft is a federal charge against her and \\e are using Presbyterian money to fight the federal government," he added. The Lincoln-Lancaster County Boaid of Health Tuesday night unanimously approved a $491,422 ' budget request tor the 1971-72 1 fiscal vear The "new budget, outlined for the board b} Dr George Underwood compares with a $455.992 budget for 1970-71 j Dr Underwood explained that I the main increases include: | —An across the board 5 f< m- i crease in salaries for all stalf to compensate for the rising cost of living and maintain salaries on a competitive level —Folding wall partitions for well-child clinics which will 'enable the staff members to Castro Keeping Track .Miami 'P — The Cuban government has announced it soon will establish a svstem re- ouirmg every person in the country to carrj an identifica- i tion card. hold private conferences with parents. —A new nursing position and the addition ot a doctor to work half a da.v in a venereal disease clinic. Dr Underwood said they have been having trouble keeping nurses because of the much higher salaries offered by the hospitals The budget request is scheduled to be sent to the City Council and the county com- missioners by June 17th. Space Exhibit Opens Cairo (UPI) — The Soviet Union has opened a space ex- hibition in Cairo that includes a replica of a Soviet Sputnik and smaller versions of the Luna 2 and 3 spaceships, the Middle East News Agencv said. It said Soviet Ambassador Vladmir Vinogradov inaugurated the ex- hibit • - -• '• •f.&fF&S' *?*«•»« ?£ * - «*.«* Buy this trial size and discover new Max-Pax. The great tasting coffee in a throw-away filter. We've made this special 25 j£* trial-size can of Max-Pax® to introduce you to the real ground coffee that comes in its own filter. The Max-Pax filter traps oils and sediment that can make coffee bitter. So you always get delicious, great tasting coffee. Cup after cup. And Max-Pax is so convenient. No measuring. No spilling. No messy grounds. Afterwards, just throw the filter away. Today, buy cither the 25 c! trial-size can ot" Max-Pax coffee filter rings, or the 10- or 20-ring she. Then enjoy great tasting coffee in a throw-away filter. *Sunse«iil Retail Price. 1#IHi 71 NFWSPAPFR! THE LINCOLN STAR 'I'm Working This Side Of The Sfreef, Buster!1 MARQUIS CHILDS Page 4 Wednesday, June 9, 1971 EDITORIAL PAGE EVENTS IN PERSPECTIVE By WILLIAM 0. DOBLER Legal aid for the poor, now being provided to more than one million recipients a year throughout the nation, will be different following the current session of Congress. Members of Congress are fully expected to adopt one of two proposals on the subject, that of President Nixon or that of Sen. Walter F. Mondale. The Nixon proposal now carries the signature of Nebraska's Sen. Roman Hruska. Both approaches, it seems safe to say, constitute an h o n e s t effort to improve legal aid to the poor but the Nixon plan has some drawbacks which have swung many over to the side of the Mondale plan. Nixon's plan calls for an 11-member legal aid corporation, •totally independent and removed from the present Office of Economic Opportunity (OEOi. All appointments to the board would be made by the President. * The problem here is that if you get an unsympathetic president, the board could be stacked against the poor. You don't have it in Nixon but you certainly would have it in someone such as Gov. Ronald Reagan of California. Mondale would have a 19-member board, with five appointed by the President, three appointed by a clients' advisory board, three by a project attorneys advisory board and the others, mostly attorneys, serving by virtue of the organizational office they hold. The Mondale approach does a better job of insuring against political pressures being applied against the program. Also, the Nixon plan calls for 30 days notice of legal aid grants to the governor of the state in which the grantee is located. This is an improvement over the right of gubernatorial veto of a grant but it still invites political intervention that is unnecessary and not called for in the Mondale bill. The Nixon plan forbids legal aid representation in criminal cases and any political activity on the part of legal aid lawyers. Both of these are shortcomings, in that they tend to limit the full range of services and activities in which legal aid lawyers can engage in behalf of the poor. * President Nixon, in his message on the new corporation to Congress last month, reported that perhaps four out of five legal problems of the poor still go unattended today. Despite this, he proposes continued funding for the project at current levels of about $76 million annually. Mondale would raise the future to $140 million for 1972 and $170 million for 1973. That, we know, sounds like a lot of money and it is but it is about what has been proposed, for instance, for funding of the controversial SST program. We have referred to Governor Reagan. It might -do well to take a look at one of the governor's recent experiences. His administration was challenged in court for cutbacks earlier in the year on the state's program of medical assistance to the poor, Medi-Cal. A county superior court judge has denied the cuts in an action brought, among others, by a county legal aid agency. The court ruling said that the cuts were based on untrue evidence, false statements and generally violated the law. ^^ The judge said that the administration, long before it made the cuts, knew that a fiscal crisis threatened the Medi-Cal nrogram but remained silent and did nothing to avert it. Thus, Tic said, the administration could not suddenly use its emergency powers, as it did, to make the cuts. The case is a shocking one in that it represents a preconceiv- ed and deliberate attempt to undermine a public program through dishonest means. When an administration will go that far to serve its own political convictions, you can well imagine that a program for legal aid to the poor must have a firm foundation. . The Nixon administration is given credit for seeking to improve the current situation and the President's bill would be an improvement. But the Mondale bill is better yet and deserves the support of Congress. This is a matter that should be beyond partisan politics. Politically whose bill is finally adopted makes no difference but we should seek to best serve the cause of legal aid for the poor. JACK ANDERSON Franking Privileges t • Frequently Abused WASHINGTON — President Nixon is fuming because Capitol Hill liberals are steal- ing his thunder on drug control. He has been talking about drug control since his pre-inaugural days but has done little to im- plement his rhetoric . . . Congressmen Robert Giaimo, D-Conn., Joseph McDade, R- Pa., and George Shipley, D-I11., have just returned from a pleasure trip to Madrid and Paris at the taxpayers' ex- pense. They claimed the junket was "necessary" because they wanted to inspect some new towns in England, a space- tracking station in Spain and an experimental train in France. .. Rep. V i c t o r Veysey, R- Calif., has been assigned to the House Administration Com- mittee, the same unit that will decide the election protest of his 1970 opponent, Dave Tunno. Veysey promptly filed a peti- tion to dismiss t h e protest without so much as a hearing. Members of Congress are supposed to use their free mailing privileges for official business only. Yet Sen. J. Gleen Beall, R-Md., and Rep. Olin Teague, D-Tex., have used franked envelopes to mail advertising for the Wilson Boat Line at the taxpayers' expense. The advertising packets, in- cluding a season pass for boat rides down the picturesque Potomac river, were mailed to all senators and represen- tatives . . . John Broger, director of the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service, is firing competent newsmen because of their union activity . . . We wrote recently that Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans had backed t h c Trans-Alaska pipeline in disregard of studies by one of his own c h i e f economists. We have now received a letter from Stans's office saying the economist's study was "a preliminary staff comment." Whatever it was, Stans ignored i t . . . Opium smuggling is such a booming business in Thailand that local C h i n e s e en- trepreneurs actually sell shares in their multi-million-dollar racket. They also maintain branch offices in Kuala Lum- pur, Singapore, Manila a n d Hong Kong . . . The Young Presidents organization, an elite group of budding cor- porate executives, recently staged their annual surprise party at Hoover Dam. They danced till midnight between the massive power plants more than 500 feet under the dam's rim. Reclamation C o m m isioner Ellis Armstrong assured us the group had to post a $150,000 bond and take elaborate precautions, all at their own expense. ••: -A- £ The greatest auto tycoon of them all, General Motors' Alfred Sloan, set the policy that got his company in trouble 40 years later for putting profits ahead of safety. This is revealed in a soon -to-be • published book, "America, Inc., Who Owns and Operates the United States," by two of the nation's top investigators, M o r t o n Mintz of the Washington Post and Jerry Cohen formerly of the Senate Anti-Trust Committee. They tell how E. I. du Pont & Co. tried to interest Sloan in safety glass back in 1929. But Sloan replied coldly that "accidents or no accidents, my concern in this problem is a matter of profit or loss." Copyright 1971, Bell-McClure Synd. Jewish Struggle In Russia Courtesy, Awareness Needed The accident Monday in which six people were injured when the driver of their car swerved to avoid a bicycle and the car hit a telephone pole is the latest incident to point up the increasing conflict between motor vehicles and bicycles on city streets. The bicycle population in Lincoln has literally exploded in a short period of time, with a little fewer than 10,000 bikes now estimated to be registered; some five years ago, there were probably less than half that number. Extreme caution will have to be exercised by motorists and bicyclists to make sure that a fatality accident does not occur. City Council members, aware of the pro- blem, have requested the city legal depart- ment to review traffic regulations regarding bicycles, recommend if new laws are needed and to work with the Lincoln Police Depart- ment to insure that existing ordinances are being completely enforced. As is the case with many motorists, many bicyclists tend to think they own the road. They should become more familiar with sec- tions of the ordinance which provide that bicycles, emerging from an alley or driveway, shall yield the right-of-way to all pedestrians and all vehicles approaching on the street, that every person operating a bicycle on the public streets shall ride as near to the curb on the righthancl side as practicable and that bicyclists shall ride single file, except on paths or parts of roadways set aside for the exclusive use of bicycles. People driving motor vehicles will have to realize that bicycles have a place on the road and that extra care should be used when approaching bicycles because there are human beings on them and they are not very well protected. Bicycling has become a very popular mode of transportation and it would be desirable if it did not have to be further by law. Knowledge of the existing common courtesy should prevail. WASHINGTON — The ordeal of the Jews in the Soviet Union must trouble the conscience of the world. The recent trials — trials in name only — on charges of plotting to hijack a plane to freedom were meant as intimidation to scare others into submission. They ask merely for the right to emigrate to Israel. But that is, in itself, a slur on the socialist paradise. Once one religious or ethnic group is allowed to leave, the floodgates would be open and no one in authority could say when the exodus might stop. To press the demand for an exit visa, as a number of Jews have done, is b r i n g i n g reprisals. The obstacles put in the way are formidable, and it takes both courage and persistence to get the coveted pass to freedom. During the past year about a thousand Jews have come out. In Jerusalem recently I talked with several of the new emigres. One was Dr. Esther Eisenstat, a Ph.D. in linguistics who had been professor at a linguistics institute in Moscow. She speaks fluently at least six languages. When she first made ap- plication for an exit visa she was asked why she wanted to leave the Soviet Union. You have a good job, you are rather well paid, you have an apart- ment. What more do you want? Religious freedom is the answer that Dr. Eisenstat and the other emigres give. Progressively over the years the opportunity for worship in the Jewish faith has con- tracted. Synagogues have been closed. Books printed in Yid- dish or Hebrew have all but disappeared. Rabbinical and Talmudic t e a c h i n g , the substance of the faith, must be done almost surreptitiously. ft ft w At the same time the price for a permit to leave has been steadily increased. The exit visa itself, if the applicant wants to go to a "capitalist" country, is about $400. Another $400 is the charge for surrendering Soviet citizenship. The total comes to about $1,000, and that is a large sum in a country where savings are not only hard to come by but are a kind of vote of no-confidence in a system in which the state is all- powerful. Dr. Eisenstat. who went on a lecture tour across the United States shortly after establishing herself in Israel, is a realist. She doesn't believe that the current drive will result in any immediate relaxation of the bar on emigration. She is con- vinced the extremist tactics followed by Rabbi Meir Kahane and his followers will have an adverse effect both in the Soviet Union and the United States. The small signs of dissent in the Soviet Union — coming from intellectuals, writers, poets, playwrights — give rise t o s p e c u l a t i o n t h a t authoritarian controls are eas- ing. The theory frequently put forward is that, with the ad- vanced education required in a highly technological society; freedom of thought is bound to widen. The state will have to Let down some of the bars'. It is a Intellectuals dubious theory, pay f o r their dissent, usually expressed ii the publication abroad o manuscripts smuggled out o the country, with prison term in Siberia or exile remote fron Moscow. These are small chip off the monolith, and th Kremlin keeps its hold throug, a far-reaching system of secre police and informers who ar themselves subject to black mail. Yet Dr. Eisenstat and th others who have managed t get out believe that world op nion does play a part. After th outcry over the death sentenc imposed in the Leningrad tria that sentence was commuted t life imprisonment. While no on will predict when a relaxation may come, an interim settle ment of the dispute would hav a favorable effect. Israe, figures estimate the numbero Jews in the Soviet Union a 2,500,000. The designation "Jew" goe on the individual's identity card, a kind of interns passport, if one or both parent are of Jewish origin. The origi of the mother is t h determinant. In a bold decre the Israeli government recentl; offered citizenship to any Je^ expressing a d e s i r e t emigrate, r e g a r d l e s s o whether he could come to th Jewish state. Since 1917 many minorities ii the vast conglomerate of th Soviet Union have paid will harsh injustice for thei separateness. But ivith th centuries-old tradition of th program as a political instrti ment under the czars, the Jew, have paid most dearly. Copyright, 1971, by UF Synd. Letters To The Editor Brevity in letters is requested but length in itself will have no bearing on publication. Writers are advised that needless details and repetitious matter will be edited out of letters. Too frequent contributions from one person on tha same subject may be rejected. All letters must be accompanied by writer's true name but may be submitted for pub. lleation under a pen name or initials. However, letters will be printed under a pen name or initials at the editor's restricted laws and Something Not Needed and the on sale would be permit- According to news reports, Mayor Sam Schwartzkopf frowns on a proposal for permitting the sale of beer and liquor on Sun- day, July 4. Both on and off sale of beer from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. of liquor from 6 to 10 p.m. ted. This is not a big deal as things go but we go along with the mayor. Something seems to be gnawing at us in regard to the argument that society should be free to do as it pleases, that everyone is entitled to be his own moral guardian. On this basis, one would have to approve of the sale of beer and liquor on Sunday, not just the Fourth of July but every Sunday in the year. We just don't think this is necessary and we think it is an unwholesome influence in the community. There is something to be said for recognizing on Sunday the fact that there is a moral force at work in the world. This same thing holds true for those who hold Saturday as their Sabbath, as do so many College View residents. This is a recognition of the fact that there is nothing wrong with man's exercising a little restraint and refusing at least now and then to indulge himself. In its proper place, we have no argument with beer and liquor but we don't think you have to have it publicly available seven days of the week. Additionally, those people who operate the establishments where such products are distributed are entitled to at least one day of rest. It might be a good thing for them, even whether they want it or not. The restriction against the S u n d a y dispensing of all beer and liquor, either on or off sale, is one of merit and one we should keep on the books as it is. discretion. American Way Lincoln, Neb. Regarding opposition t o LB761 by William Grossman and Kenneth Bourne, I would say they are '-stubbornly" pa- triotic in their resistance to change of the present constitu tional system by the League of Women Voters. Suppose we amend our constitution to appoint officials instead of elec- ting them. Would that insure greater honesty, efficiency and justice than elected ones? Let's enlarge instead of erode our right to vote the true American way. ANTI-METRO ""V^ "',' "*, ~ Sen. McGovern Lincoln, Neb. Important q u a l i t i e s of leadership are foresight and willingness to face truth. As long ago as 1963, Senator George McGovern recognized the fallacies of our Vietnam policy, and correctly called our involvement a "trap." He faced the truth long before most of us did, and he foresaw the damage to be done to our JAMES RESIGN Rededication To Original And Basic Values Will Restore Faith And Happiness To Nation W A S H I N G T O N — The university students graduating this month have gone through one of the worst periods of civil disorder and drug addiction in the history of the Republic, and are now facing the highest rate of unemployment in nine years. Most of them were born three or four years after the last world war. They were 11 years old when John Kennedy cam- paigned for the presidency, 14 when he was killed, 16 when the American ground and air war started in Vietnam. In short, the time of their active memory has been one of unrelieved turmoil, change, confusion, doubt, and tempta- tion. Still, we need not weep for them and. anyway, they are not interested in pity. Their situa- tion is full of paradox. NO generation ever t a l k e d so much about "commitment." yet seemed so unwilling to commit itself to one man or woman, or one useful job of work. None has talked so much about the great political and social issues, of the age, or written so badly about them. Seldom have so much physical and intellectual energy been combined, often in the same persons, with so much physical and intellectual slackness and even laxincss. T h e y t a l k a b o u t ' 'participatory democracy,'' but most of them do not participate in the democratic process. They complain about the loss of "individualism," but run in packs. They condemn the welfare state but lean on it, and praise the good life and personal happiness, but for all their activity, often seem bored and singularly joyless. So maybe this new gener- ation is not so different after all. They are our children with our own features, yearning:', and hypocrisies, only they are more visible, and vocal, and open in expressing their rebellion about the tangles of life. They look and sound more different than they are — TV and the press having dramatized the differences—but most of them do not even look or sound so different, only more in- teresting. The commencement speakers seem to have been talking to the graduates this year, mainly about the war and drugs, emphasizing the astonishing conclusion that these are very bad things and may even be injurious to your health. But the political commencement speech is not very helpful these days, if it ever was, for the malaise in the country among old and young alike is not primarily p o l i t i c a l but philosophical. People of all ages now are looking for purpose and mean' ing to their lives. The ad- vertisers have seen the point clearer than the politicians. "Something to believe in," says General Motors, "a Buick!" But even if General Motors and President Nixon got everything they want tomorrow—peace, revenue-sharing, jobs, and a Buick in every garage—the THE L I N C O L N STAR Published by the JOURNAL-STAR PRINTING CO. 926 P St., Lincoln, Neb., 68501 Subscription Prices on Page 2 problem of living without faith or trust in a noisy changing world of commercial and political hucksters would still be with us. .;, *.. ./.- It was widely believed in 1914-19 and again in 1939-45 that war was the explanation of the disorder of the world, and later that economic chaos was what disoriented the human family, and both, of course, were partly true. But after the wars and the triumph of John Maynard Keynes, the moral confusion remained. Nothing seems to irritate the young graduates of today more than what they regard as this outdated priggish moralizing, but you cannot explain, in the most .practical circumstances, the present tragedies of the Vietnam war or the spiritual anxieties of the age, unless you take into account the moral in- difference of American public and private life. There is no way to remove our difficulties by political gimmicks, or to explain the American dilemma, unless we see ourselves as a decent peo- ple living below our idealistic standards of public and private life. Nixon cannot reconcile his Quakerism and his war policy in Vietnam, and the campus militants cannot reconcile their ideals and their violent actions unless they reject the principle of moral responsibility. ••:• ft ft America is n o t a happy nation today because its people are not living up to the best in them, and its politicians are too often appealing to the worst in them. America has got rid of its faith but not of its cons- cience. And try as they do, its children are hung up on the same old predicament, best defined by Lincoln, for a hun- dred years later they are even more "destitute of faith but terrified of skepticism." The discontent that is shak- ing the world cannot be dealt with by politics alone or at the periphery of public life, but must get closer to the central and intimate places of personal life and moral conduct. "What is left of our civiliza- tion," Walter Lippmann wrote long before this y e a r ' s graduates were born, "will not be maintained, what has been wrecked will not be restored, by imagining that some new political gadget can be in- vented, some n e w political formula improvised, which will save it. Our civilization can be maintained and restored only by r e m e m b e r i n g and rediscovering the truths, and by re-establishing the virtuous habits on which it was founded. There is no use looking into the blank future for some new and fancy revelation of what man needs in order to live. "The revelation has been made. By it man conquered the jungle about him and the barbarian within him. The elementary principles of work and sacrifice and duty — and the transcendent criteria of righteousness, and the grace of love and charity — are the things which have made men free. Men can keep their freedom and reconquer it only" by these means. These are the. terms stipulated in the nature of things for the salvation of men on this earth, and only in this profound, this stern, and this tested wisdom shall we find once more the light and courage we need." (c) New York Timti Service country. If we want for our next president someone who will lead us, rather than just follow the polls, someone who will face new realities rather than adhere to old myths, then we should give positive considera- tion to Senator McGovern. EDGAR PEARLSTEIN Job Well Done Lincoln, Neb. As the 1971 Lancaster County Cancer Crusade chairman. I want to thank the volunteers, the news media, as well as our rural people for the response we received during the recent cancer drive. It is with these dedicated people we have once again had successful results in the rural area. From recent news, we know this is one of the biggest pro- jects confronting our country today. When the President of these United States is concern- ed, volunteers should feel they are with a select group. I am proud of a job well done by everyone involved (whether it was by working or giving. ARNOLD BUCKLEY Rural Chairman Lancaster County Cancer Crusade Young Voices Lincoln, Neb. I heard a young man speak- ing on the radio Monday even- ing in an interview. He had spent four years in the military service, and spoke calmly and factually of the complete futility cf what we are doing in foreign lands, putting troops there, and accomplishing less than nothing. He was not a radical. He had taken part in the recent protest in Washington by returning veterans, many of whom tossed their medals back as a token of their honest feelings about their own sacrifices and future participation in a conflict that has no apparent end. We must listen to these, the non-violent young, who are now speaking out so sensibly. These are not arm-chair speculators among the civilian element, nor are thsy top military brass. These are the substance of our generations to come. If we d< not hear their voices raised ii protest and act upon what the; have to say, then indeed then is no future. The front-page article in tin June 7 Star about anothe young \eteran. a Lincolnitc, i along ;he same line of though and should be read bi everyone. A. W. ".'.• ft ft Thank You Omaha, Neb. The 1971 Nebraska Specia Olympics, held in Kearney Nebraska, is now history, bui for 450 retarded youth it wil remain a vivid experience foi months to come. The 3$ participants from Lincoln pro- grams brought home 48 olym pic medals (first, second anc third places). It takes many people to make something worthwhile and the Olympic Executive Committee owes a grateful thank you t< the news media in Lincoln. AL gave us their c o m p l e t e cooperation. If Lincoln is fortunate to be named as the site of the 1972 Olympics, we hope that many citizens will want to become involved. This track event is not only heart-warming but excitmg-as well. MRS. HENRY CECH Treas , Nebraska Special Olympics ,•, , \, _ • _ The Truth Lincoln, Neb. I agree that we as a nation of people should avoid all people who speak untruths, avoid them as much as possible. I am referring to the article about William Lawrence in the June 5 Star. We adults, although we are only a few who do speak the truth, should do our part toward the proper training and exposing regardless of a person's name or title. It is no wonder the young are acting as they do, with the unemployment rising as it is. There are ways and means of increasing employment if and when the honest people will speak up. CONCERNED ADULT OFF THE RECORD By Ed. Reed Wl. Tk« fetfn.r , .. •nd Tnl>un« Syndiuu 4*9 "Bob, our nest egg hatched and flew the coop." EWSPAPERl MEWSPAPEJRI Prasch To Ask LAP Reconsideration ... IN DECISION TO TRANSFER PART OF HEAD START By MILAN WALL Star Staff Writer Lincoln Schools Supl. John Prasch Tuesday said he plans to ask the Lincoln Action Program board to reconsider a decision to transfer Head Start parent in- volvement activities from .the school district to the local anti- poverty agency. The LAP board voted Monday night, at the recommendation of regional Office of Economic Opportunity representatives, to put the parent involvement component into the hands of LAP. But Prasch told the Board of Education Tuesday evening he was "very disappointed" by the LAP's action, saying "it works opposite to the direction we're moving." As a delegate agency of LAP, the schools have been operating Head Start programs for the past five years. Monday's LAP vote will permit continuation of the programs without the parent involvement component, which will be operated by LAP itself. Involved is a part of the pro* gram designed to promote and coordinate parent participation in the Head Start activities. The schools had planned to combine parent involvement activities of several federal programs it operates for disad- vantaged children as a part of a centralization of all those pro- Iniiviiual Math Plan Shied for Trial Here An ''individually prescribed! instruction" project \v h i c h emphasizes "diagnosis" and "prescription" of individual students' mathematics needs will be tried in a Lincoln elementary school this fall, the Lincoiii Board of Education was •told Tuesday. Associate Supt. Ronald Brandt told the board the IPI program is the ''most thoroughly refined curriculum in any study area" in use in the country. And math consultant Ron Massie said ne believes IPI will not result in the problems associated with another in- dividualized math approach, known as continuous progress math, which was taught in junior high schools last year. Many Complaints The continuous p r o g r e s s course brought complaints from parents when many students who didn't finish the prescribed number of study packets were given "incomplete" grades Reacting to that, the school district is providing a special free summer course to allow any junior high students to finish up. But Massie said IPI. which \\illbe tried at Pershing School next \ear, "is much better developed than continuous pro- gress math." At Own Level And lie said students work at their own "level of difficulty" mastering various skills as they go-Pershing Principal V e r n Martin, who with Massie at- tended an IPI training con- ference last month, also noted there are "no time demands" in the program, so students could not be given "incompletes." Rather, he said, emphasis on determining each student's ability level and then helping him master whatever skills hf can during the academic year. Lincoln Woman Is Injured In Car-Cycle Crash A Lincoln woman was treated for a cut to her leg and released from Lincoln General Hospital as the result of a car-motorcycle accident Tuesday morning at 21st and J, according to police reports. Police said Sharon Ritchey, 26, of 1945 West 0, was injured when the motorcycle she was riding was in collision with the side of a car driven by Ronald Schopp, 32, of 4342 Lenox. The Ritchey vehicle was southbound on 21st and the Schopp auto was westbound on J at the time of the accident. "What they know they should know well," Brandt sug- gested. "The slower youngster is placed where he can succeed," Martin added. The administrators said IPI is not a "modern math" approach, although it uses some modern math concepts. Currently in use in 275 schools in the U.S., it is being instituted at Pershing because the school will also move to a dif- ferentiated staffing approach next fall. Many Aides Reqiured Since IPI requires a large number of aides, Supt. John Prasch said, it would have been too costly to institute in a tradi- tional school setting. Under differentiated staffing, Pershing will be able to use the aides in other courses as well. Martin said a parent advisory committee has approved the experiment, and he said his teachers have given lOOTo en- dorsement. Teachers and aides will take 50 hours of training to prepare for the program. In other matters, Brandt also told the board that eight task forces during the next year will study a like number of major issues in a move to review the entire elementary program. He said the task forces will include professionals, parents and students studying such topics as structure, curriculum, communication and humaniza- tion of the social environment. Supt. Prasch, in a report on elementary playgrounds, said the district should "make a larger c o m m i t m e n t to development" of play areas. Playground Plan Responding to a request from Meadow Lane parenfs for playground improvements at that school, Prasch said the district should develop a master plan for playground develop- mo -' involving parents in development of the plan. Meadow Lane parents had appeared two weeks ago with a master plan for that school. Prasch told the board he will bring to an informal session next week details of a proposal for a master plan. In other matters, the board: — approved an 5)1,000 expenditure of 'building fund monies to remodel a portion of Huntmgton school, a move which would provide a larger room area for team teaching. —heared a report on summer building modification projects, most of which wiil ibe financed out of mainenance funds. —okayed continuation of the adult basic education program in the Lincoln Techni- cal College. —approved a proposal for federal funds for a "public services career program." gram " —okayed previously announced ad- ministrative apoointments with one change (Richard Raecke, who was to have become princpal at Bethany School, will not iom the Lincoln schools. Instead, Richard Spearman was promoted from assistant principal to the top spot at Bethany). grams under one administrator. "Washington encouraged us in this direction," Prasch told school board members, saying the effort to "dovetail ad- ministrative costs and maximize services to children" will be undermined by LAPs move. The school district's ability to provide what it considered the maximum parent involvement workers possible, he said, depended on funds for parent involvement for three federal projects — Head Start, Follow Through and Title I. LAP'S move will mean that agency will have parent in- volvement workers in the field serving the same parents being reached by Follow Through and Title I workers, Prasch said after the meeting. It will a'lso "mean the schools will have to alter plans for the coordinated approach and cut down the number of Head Start students next fall, Prasch said. Follow Through. Too And since Follow Through [youngsters come from the pre- school Head Start program, the move will also have the effect of cutting down the schools' Follow Through program, which follows up on the gains made in Head Start. Asking school board members for permission to seek another hearing with LAP, Prasch said lie believes the LAP board will reverse the action if it is ''aware of all the ramifications." The LAP action would put five parent involvement workers and a coordinator on the agency's payroll Oct. 1. School officials estimate the monies to provide for those workers would force a rollback in Head Start of about 20 of the anticipated 160 students next fall. Cost Of Living Hits New High In Switzerland Bern, Switzerland (ffi — Cost of living in Switzerland increased at a new peacetime record rate of 7% during the past 12 months. The Federal Statistical office said its consumer price index was at 119.6 May 31 compared with 111.8 a year ago, and 118.3 at the end of April. Sharp rent increases were named as a major trend-setting factor. Food and transport costs also were substantially higher. The need to combat inflation was cited as a prime reason for the 7% upward revaluation of the Swiss franc May 10. The government has also introduced what it calls c o m p a n i o n measures, including limited curbs on construction. Wednesday, June 9, 1971 Tb« Lincoln Star 3 Soviets Maneuver Space Laboratory Moscow f/P) — Three Soviet cosmonauts maneuvered the world's first manned space laboratory farther from the Earth Tuesday to halt its gradual fall. They reported they were working comfortably on the six- room craft. The cosmonauts are trying to j demonstrate the feasibility of permanent stations in space where men can come and go in shuttle flights from the earth. Shortly before noon, the cos- monauts with a burst of booster rockets sent the s p a c e laboratory into an orbit of 148.5 to 164.6 miles above the earth, about 12.4 miles higher than the previous orbit. At the lower orbit, the space laboratory was drifting toward the earth's at- mosphere, where friction would disintegrate it. Our 51st Year Golden Ripe BANANAS 10 Lb. Wednesday Only! ^^^ ^^ ^_ _ vvcuncauay VIMJ* IDEAL GROCERY & MARKET, 905 So. 27th Save time tonight. Macaroni Meat Sauce New Macaroni with Meat Sauce Dinner. ORANGE flavored GATORADE m _ . _ IHIRST OULNi'Hl K is here! It's delicious. And it works! CONGRATULATIONS KFOR . . . and the "Fresh As A Daisy 11 award winners. We are pleased to have been a part of this exciting community action promotion Your LINCOLN DEALERS DAD LOVES JUMP SUITS AT WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE WE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE DAD DAD DAD DAD DALV % DAD DAD' DAD LOVE DA LOVE LOVE P LOVE LOV* I' LOVl! IJ---M MAKE DAD'S SUMMER COMPLETE with a Father's Day gift of clothes for his leisure hours . . . SIMON'S suggests a BILL PARRY JUMP SUIT for after-office hours, for evenings on the patio, or for vacation wear. Cool, comfortable, just the thing for relaxing . . . easy-care, too, because it's no-iron polyester and cotton blend. Solid colors or checks. WE LOVE WE LOVE WE LOVE WE LQ WE By BILL PARRY, DOUBLE KNITS, $40 *18 ACTION CASUALS Why not add a pair of casual shoes to Dad's gift? For wear with jump suits and all casual clothes, choose these so-soft brushed Wet Sand leather shoes with matching crepe sole, leather buckle. They're comfort all the way! *17 DOWNTOWN & GATEWAY C O L O R It's Another Happy Difference at Hinky Dinky......A Fabulous Array of th I LV1 *( **7 I %u Top Golden Yellow t, i ~ For Delicious Eating Ideal for the lunchbox, so convenient for • |^ eating anywhere, anytime ... A banana |Ls^J» staves off that between-meals hunger. W^w Top Fresh, Crisp Thin Skin Reds New Potatoes Food Club Bunch H-oz. Pkg. 25* < * top Frelfffi Large Royals !0C Apricots Lb. Food Club 39* Orange Juice JS-* *^-%te* 1. 1/2 Gallon • &c jtm^^^v' ^^^H Ibma,1 Vine Ripened Slicers Helen Says tomatoes are a source of Vitamin C, A and Bl •i *-& f Helen says Celery 3 stalks of celery contain approximately 10 calories Red Radishes or "STg 11 . ^f^m Kea Kaaisnes or ^. Celery Hearts W Qreen Onions Top Fresh kExfra Large i Fresh] Ea. Fancy Deep Red BINGS Nutrition Tip from Helen Cherries contain Vitamins and Iron :5ft.~ &'^ [Green Globe Nutrition Tip Artichoke has Food Energy H-Bar-D Lean and Meaty Extra Value Trim, Too! ^•K'XS?3';.'X---;«;.''W*~* J^WfJT! WILSON vCfflUHED, Save 20 Loin Center Chops ? 69 e Quartered Perk Loin 59' Economical Buy at Only, Lb. Boneless Cutlets 69' Porit, No Waste, Lb PAPER TOWELS Giant 49-oz. Box Gala Decorated Towels 2-Pnck — Save 56c >, t V* Loin End H-Bar-D ;v:>Leai)t"^' Meaty •-.3k'-tft * Pound i* •*••••.- r-T Sliced and Tied. 5l ' ' Gauntry Style — «. . ,,,-JL' , ,i'^-'- I Tender Sweet Meat Fortroii Loaf. l-Ub. Vac Pack Buttersc*tch Chocolate Coconut Pineapple Vanilla 33/4-oz. Can Hawaiian Punch Red 46-oz. Cans Milk Shakes "New" Birdseye 20-oi. Thick & Frosty Can for $' Twc. "x. Food Club, Swift's Premium or Seifz Skin- less Hi wwi- ft-*. •»-••«. CA Sausage Links ,<* 59 ' Butter- 1 Dr. Pepper 6 P GAUL^RD WMITi Brownie .Food Club, 22i-oz. Box, Save 23d SHORTENING Shortening Gaylord, 3-Lb. Cat\ iNEWSPA'FERr COLOR ew Crop's Finest I Top im Helen yellow Florida, Tender Full Ears. Top Fresh Davis Nutrition Tip: Corn a dee vegetable is a source of Vit. i m Sweet Red Ripe Nature's Cooler! 20-Lb. Size, \ T 8*'. ?•••' ''Si; li Sweet California Ripe Tender Top Fresh f — --»»•• -^ *••• • ^« •••w •«i*v^ ^^^^^^^.^^v ^Mk. i^^k Strawberries! Green Beans [Heaping] Basket Helen Says Green Beans Has a large amount of vitamin A Lb. * £,*** i.*s ;^ ;,- , \ 3 «. t'jj , Meet The Watermelon Queen at H-D The 1971 National Watermelon Queen, Miss Lynnette Loeffelman will be visiting the Lincoln Hinky Dinky Stores. 59th & Adams 10 to Noon Gateway Shopping Center .... 2 to 3 17th & South 4 to 5 ltsagreatsday toshopGAlSvAY Call the Hinky Dinky Hotline Sweet Rods 112-800-642-9946 For any advice on food shopping or food Preparation ask Helen Davis Hinky Dinky's Home Economist -^•M*- "—- _— ^ USDA Choice jH-Bar-D ^ia!ilnd§$109 2-Lb. Can 3-lb. can $|79 39* USDA CHOICE U.S.D.A. Choice H-Bar-D Selected Beef Club Steak $-|19 U.S.D.A. Chelc*. Extra Value Trim, Lb. Frost 22-oz. Scallops Top 'Frost,- 7-O«. Pkg. Spiced WindmHI Keebler Sunshine S?J! Nabisco BotlerySesome Snack 8-oz. Pkg. KRKKl'H i-KIKU POTATOES Krinkle Cut Potatoes Every Egg Guaranteed Famous for Freshness Hinky Dinky Sunrise Large Eggs Gaylord Buy 4 Save 18c U.S.D.A. Grade "A" Doz. Scope Mouthwash $1.11 Value 8c Off Label 12-oz. Size Shampoo Beacon Emerald Green 16-oz. Bottle no«dr« •fi^ST.*" Boctine First-Aid Spray $1.59 Value 4'/2-or. Spray Shampoo Lustre Creme $1.59 Value $1 Refund on Jar 10'/2-oz. Jar Moxzema Skin Cream $1.20 Value 6-oz. Size Rubbing Valiant 16-oz. Size Topco Writing Tablets 1 ** 49c Value 33* Envelopes Box of 100 standard or 50 Legal Size. 49c Value. Topco Automatic Transmission Fluid For most cars and trucks. Topco Motor OH Heavy Duty 20 or 30 wt. H Filters OIL Flint Cartridge Type 87* Batteries Eveready Flashlight "D" Size Pkg. of 2 Item of the Wc>?k "Classic Green" Dinnerware 6" Salad Plate Regular 69c Value ... With $3 Purchase Completer Piece Classic Green Dinnerware Save Sugar Bol 50* !BTO 10V This coupon entitles bearer to Save 50" On Classic Green Sugar Bowl Limit one with coupon. Valid only at Hinky Dinky thru Tues., June 15th. (HC-50) BONNET MARGAR| rwirhout n^< coupon £3 1 (Wiring If: II This coupon entitles bearer to Margarine Blue Bonnet lib. Carton. 24' Blue Bonnet l-Lb. Limit one with coupon. Valid only at Hinky Dinky thru Tues., June 15th. (B-10) [COUPON This coupon entitles bearer to Merrigol Fresh Baked with ipon, Dinner Rolls Dozen 39< Limit one with coupon. Valid only .it Hinky Dinky thru Tues., June lilh. (0-9) lEWSPAPERI VSPAPERI 8 The Lincoln Star Wednesday, June 9, 1971 Gary Sleeves says . . . Big SAVINGS ON COMPLETE TUNE-UP . . . ALIGNMENT BRAKES . . . GUARANTEED! LIFETIME WHEEL BALANCE by ... SPECIALISTS 1 ATTENTION 6 MONTHS NO INTEREST SPECIAL SUMMER SALE LEE & MOHAWK Belted Tires ALL SIZES 4 * $99 Plus Fed. Tax 195 O27 • to «* * Exchange All Sizes Limited to Stock on Hand 00 HUNTER • Front End Alignment • On Car Wheel Balance With Lifetime of Tire Guarantee • Complete Muffler Service A-C DIAGNOSTIC Machine & Complete Service & Tune-up U-SAVE Car Care Center STATE APPROVED INSPECTION STATION 489-8818 5201 ilO" St. T U.S.-Brazilian Relations Sink Even Lower By DANIEL DROSDOFF Rio de Janeiro (UP!) — Diplomatic relations between the United States and Brazil have hit their lowest point of the year and are sinking even lower in the muddy waters off northern Brazil where the Amazon River meets the Atlan- tic Ocean. It is in these brown seas, heavy with bacteria and refuse, where the shrimp feed, and fleets of foreign fishing boats — estimates put them at between 400 and 500 — regularly chase them northward along the coast of South America. The Brazilian navy on June 1 sent out warships from Bclem and began giving the fishing boats orders to get out — at least beyond the 200-mile limit which Brazil claims. The position of the United States is that a 200-mile limit makes a shambles of the prin- ciple of freedom oi navigation and cannot be recognized. U.S. negotiators say that if the 200-mile IMit was generally ac- cepted, it would shut off the Mediterranean, the Bed Sea, the Baltic, and any number of smaller s«as and bays, as well as the w a t e r s off northern Canada. a L L, Brazilians retort that the shrimp feeding on the Amazon refuse belong only to Brazilian fishing bofrfcs and, besides, nine other Latin American republics claim a 200-mile off-shore limit, so why not Brazil? The fear of U.S. diplomats is that any day now a U.S. shrimper will be s e i z e d , although the U.S. boats off Amapa are a minority- Most are from French Guana, Guyana, and Trmidad-Tobago, as well as from the Soviet Union, Japan and Korea If a boat is captured its cap- tain could be sent te> jail under Brazilian smuggling laws. The U.S. Congress would be outrag- ed, cries of protest would come from the profitable shrimp in- d u s t r y and the traditional "special relationship" between Brazil and the United States could be severely damaged. Brazil with 90 million in- habitants, has always had a high priority with U S. policy makers because of its size; it is larger than the continental United States. Since the rightist 1964 military revolution that ousted leftist President Joao Goulart, Brazil has recieved more than $2 billion in U S. aid. U.S. policy planners have supported Brazil as a barrier against communism in South America. Brazil's law enforcing its claim to 200 miles off its shore is a tough one. Not only are foreigners barred from fishing for crustaceans, but they are also prohibited from catching any other kind of fish within 100 miles off the shore. Free mothproofing on all drqcleanfng... /' CITIZENS STATE TQ better serv7y7u, our customers, Citizens State Bank announces the following NEW SUMMER BANKING HOURS effective June 7,1971. Drive Up Window Monday through Thursdgy 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday—7:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Lobby Monday through Thursday 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Friday—8:30 a.m. to 7:30 p-fll- There will be no walk-up window service in the front lobby. Deposits made after 2:00 p.m. will be entered as of the next business day. CITIZENS STATE BANK 2500 North 48th 466-2345 Member F. D. I. C. JOURNAL-STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS—473-7451 ER SAVINGS OX COLDSPOT AIR CONDITIONERS Sears It's the way t0 stay... COOL...as a mountain breez f •• \ ingtime air Home Room Air Conditioner Sears Low Price It's Costing YOIJ :' Money S«55«ftK=—SSSie** 5,OOO RTU Air Conditioner Cools off fast for all-night sleeping comfort Compact and lightweight Rust-resistant construction Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plan 7112 8,000 BTU Air Conditioner SAVE $20.95 Reg. $169 149 18,000 $30.95 Res. $269.95 7162 Air Conditioner 239 6690 28,000 BTU Air Conditioner SAVE 359 Colclspnt Dchumiclifiers Removes moisture from furniture, rut;s, clothing As Low As '68 • Kenisan filler k«?eps out dust, dirt, pollen — air stays cleaner • Uses regular hoiise current • Rust-resistant construction 0HOP AT SEARS AND SAVE Guaranteed or Your Money Back • Two fan speeds — choose quick cooling or extra- quiet cooling • Slide-out chassis; weather seal • Rust-resistant construction • Deluxe model blows cool in 3 speeds: including low, extra quiet speed for sleeping serenity • Zinc quiet cabinet muffles noise even further • Air directional control • Thermostat is adjustable Sears «ARS, ROEBUCK AND 00. Phone Scars 475-2651 137 So. 13th Daily 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Mon.-Thurs. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Sun. 12:30 P.M. to 5:30 P.M. SPAPFRI Power Plan Studied Manila I/P) — The Asian iveloprnent Bank said it would id experts to Indonesia (o study the feasibility of an elec- tnc power project in West Inan Pollution Information Salt Problem •war & DRIVE IN.THEATRE TONIGHT! Open 7:45 — Show at Dusk Behind every "successful" man is an understanding woman.. .or two... or three! L ., "I LOVE MY...WIFE" «| LOVE MY... WIFE" IN A DAVID L.V.OLPtR Production ELLIOTT GOULD "I LOVE MY...WIFE" A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR. fRlCS" AND -THE TROPI... HUMAN'...ANIMAL'...OB MISSING LINK? SKULLDUGGERY A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR® • PANAVISION* «» [GPj A Xerox Corp. official told the 10th annual meeting of the Nebraska Safety Council Tues- day that the biggest problem faced by i n d u s t r i a l en- vironmentalists is public in- formation. Charles R. McHenry, head of Xerox's environmental health and safety department, said that o f t e n the public is wholly u n a w a r e of what "en- vironmental hygienists" are doing. He described the job of an environmental hygienist as find- ing solutions for i n d u s t r i a 1 pollution problems and seeing that cleanup systems are prop- erly designed, installed and maintained. The nature of X e r o x ' s photocopying business creates some difficult pollution prpb lems, McHenry said, involving special chemicals and laser light beams. Considerable research is done by Xerox, he said, to find so- lutions to these problems. In other business, t h e Nebraska Safety Council's an- nual report described its "first priority" for the year as ex- pansion of defensive driving courses. Four new driver safety pro- grams were established during Strode To Be Arraigned Friday In Federal Court '0" Street is closed — Use A or Vine to 84th ENTRANCE ON 84th STREET Pussycat Every man walks the line between right ana wrong. One day Sheriff Tawes crossed over. TVEMBJOTMELD TWS SIDE Of THE LAW YOU AM WHAT I NEED COLOR Former Nebraska Welfare Director Harold Strode has been returned to Lincoln and will ap- pear before Federal Judge Warren Urbom Friday, U.S. Attorney Richard Dier's office said Tuesday. Strode, indicted last October by a federal grand jury on 13 criminal counts which charge that he defrauded the state of Nebraska, is now being held m the Lincoln city jail. Lincoln Police Sgt. Edwin Winters, the jail's booking of- ficer, said Strode had been returned to Lincoln Monday from Colorado, where he was arrested last month. Dier's office said Strode will appear Friday at 4:30 p.m. before Judge Urbom in Lin- coln. -We'd like to get him ar- raigned as soon as possible," said Dier. Strode and Dr. Bradley Neer were indicted on 13 counts of mail fraud, conspiracy and in- terstate transportation of stolen securities. The indictments allege that the two defrauded Nebraska of $88,500. Neer, a former official of the Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare, has pleaded guilty in federal court to six counts of the 13 count indictment and the other seven were dismissed. Strode resigned as state welfare director April 23,1970 at the request of Gov. Norbert Tiemann. :he year to this end: in the City of Lincoln Personnel Division, the State Department of Education Pupil Transportation Division, the Platte Valley Life Underwriters Association in North Platte and the Central Nebraska Lite Underwriters Association in Kearne\. Study Planned The safety council also agreed to undertake a long-range study of state highway safety pro- grams across the country for the purpose of recommending the aest possible program for Nebraska. A special report detailing traffic safety legislation passed by the 1971 Unicameral was also presented at the meeting. Lorne Andrews, vice president of State Farm Insurance in Lincoln, was elected president of the safety council. Other officers include Dr. Kenneth F Kimball of Kearney and Cliff Moyer of Omaha, vice presidents, and Stuart Maseman of Lincoln, treasurer. At Positive Side Lincoln Mayor Sam Schwartz- kopf told 250 postal employes attending the 36th annual con- vention ot the National Associa- tion of Postmasters Tuesday to strive to look at the positive side of things. "All we hear about is the neg- ative aspects of our society," Schwartzkopf said, adding he still enjoys reading the sports page because it is all about champions and winners. Schwartzkopf cited the Air Pollution Advisory Board as a positive step being taken to eliminate water, soil, air and visual pollution. The convention will end Thurs- day following business meetings and reports from postal officials. 9,000 Settle Canberra — In the year ended last June. 3,000 Europeans and 6,000 people of mixed descent settled in Australia. Wednesday, June 9. 1971 The Line-pin Siar More In School London — The total number of British pupils rose from 6.9 million to 94 million between 1951 and 1969 OPEN 7:45 SHOW AT DUSK TONIGHT! 48th and'Vine 466 247 THE #1 NOVEL OF THE YEAR- NOW A MOTION PICTURE! ROSS HUNltR F AIRPORT BURT LANCASTER 'DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG- JACQUELINE BISSET * UNIVERSAL PICIURE • KCWOIOI » • Mn* * 1WJ M « AND 'A SHOCKER! FASCINATING!* THIS IS THE DAWMIWOFTHEJfiEOf ^" " mMi 61st & JOYOl HavelockAve 'jnnewsfrcen splendor... Hie most magnificent picture ever! tVMO 0 SELZNlCKSt»«.rT«»crMj»giii£iHwmR THE WIND CLAUKGABLE VMENLEIGII IESL1E HOWARD OLWIAdcMOLLAND STEREOPHONIC SOUND METROCOLOR - An MGM Re-reltMt) Evenings at 7:00 P.M. Must End Wednesday, June 9 'Father Of Swing' is An Apparent Suicide Victim Palm Springs, Calif. (UPI) — Jazz drummer Ben Pollack, known as the "father of swing" in the 1930s when he led his own band, is dead of an apparent suicide at the age of 67. Police said Pollack hanged himself m the bathroom of his home here and left two notes complaining of financial and marital problems. Amqng those who played with Pollack's band were Glenn Millar, Benny Goodman, Matty Matlock, Harry James and Mug'gsy Spanier. Current Movi«s DUMPLING'S Restaurant is the SECOND BEST THING that has ever happened to food in Lincoln. OPEN WEEK 21st St. & Hwy 2 in South Lincoln) 11A.M. ' • ' M- — • 9 P.M. AK-SM-BEN MGES-OMMU 45 MINUTES BY INTERSTATE They're off and running daily. Nine exciting races. Daily double. Two exactas. Admission only $1. Plenty of free parking. Thou- sands of grandstand and auditorium seats. Quick service stands for a fast bite to eat and two fine restaurants to celebrate in. Post time Tues., Thurs. and Fri., 4 P.M.; Wed., Sat. and Holidays 2 P.M. Ladies Days, Wed. and Fri. Come for the sport of it. EVERYBODY LOVES A WINNER! Times Furnished by Theater. Timei: urn. Uciit face; p.m. bold face Code ratings indicate A volun- tary rating given to the movie by the motion picture induitry: (C) Susge'ted for GENERAL audiences. (CP) All ages admit- ted—PARENTAL GUIDANCE suRge'ted. (R) RESTRICTED •—Persons under 17 not admit- ted without parent or a d u l t guardian. (X) Persons under IT not admitted. LINCOLN Cooper / Lincoln: " R y a n ' s Daughter" (GP) 8:00. Stuart: "Red Sky At Morning" (GP) 1:00, 3:05, 5:15, 7:25, 9:35. Nebraska: "The Deserter" (GP) 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15. Varsity: "Little Big Man" (GP) 1:03, 3:36, 6:17, 9:00. State: "I Never Sang For My Father" (GP) 1:27, 3:27, 5:27, 7:27. 9:27. Joyo: "Gone With The Wind" 7:00 only 84th & 0: Cartoon, 9:04. "The Owl And The Pussycat" 9:11. "I Walk The Line" 10:59. Last complete show, 10:15. Starview: "Airport" (G) 9:00. "Colossus', The Forbin Project" 11:40. Last complete show, 10:00. Embassy: "The Ribald Tales of Robin Hood" 12:05, 1:55, 3:45, 5:35, 7:25, 9:15. West O: "I Love My Wife" (R) 9:00, 12:40, "Skullduggery" (R) 11:40. OMAHA I n d i a n Hills: "Andromeda Strain" (G) 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. At 12:05, ,1:55,3:45, 5:35, 7:25, 9:15 P.M. Must end Thursday EMBASSY ' '•' 1730 "O" ST. 432 60*12 . The Adult Version : of Angle Sixondom's Best loved t.i'c Z , •• „ m THE RIBALD TALES OF I R@BIN HOOD i i HMMsh UIVSR,wn> WIVHf1. P Rated X No one under 18 admitted LITTLE BIO MM WSEITHEK THE MOST OULIAROFlNSiNE PROPORTION! DLJSTIN HOITMAN BIG MAN^ Panavision»'fechnicolof» fcPl MELLERDRAMERS at the Gaslight Theatre 322 S. 9 THE DRUNKARD Curtain 9:00 p.m. Wcd.-Sat.; Admission Wed. & Thur. S1.50, Fri. & Sat. $2.00 Special sroup prices of 30 or more cr»>T advanced bale 20% discount on Wed. 9tll Oli,Ab
—
Bob
Herold, an outfielder from the
University
of
Nebraska
at
Omaha, was selected Tuesdaj
as an outfielder on the second
team of the NAIA s 1971 All-
America baseball picks
Seven seniors
four juniors
and three sophomores he?d the
first team, chosen bv the ?s \IA
games committee
The Is <\IA
selection groups
said the team was chosen on tne
basis ot season statistics and not
on tournament plav
The first team Infielders
Budda Crpe
mnior
Outchita
Baptist,
Ark
Bob
Me-shon, senior, Texas Weslevan
S c r n /
Burtrum,
senior,
Livinos'on
A 1 a
Douglas Anthony
senior
Southern Utah
and James Pre'e
senior
New
AAex co
Highlands
Outfielders
Bill Stover sen o' Carson
Newman
Tenn
James
McFarland
senior,
Indiana
Cen'ral
Brian
Felaa
sopnomore WSU Oshkosh
WiS
and Ron
Webb lunior Linfie d Or^
Catchers
Don ita lock
lUiior
Hen
derson Sta'e
Ark
anj Te'r\ Ru !edqe
sophomore Oklahoma Baptist
Pitchers
Ray
Burr s
i u n i o
Southwestern Oklahoma State
Rick Cc
f n
sen or
Pembroke
S a e
N C
an*
Randy
Benson
soohomcre
P'eiffer
N C
The
second
team
Infielders
Jer'v
Bakanec
Slacx Hil s
S a e
S D
John
Harbin
Newberry
College
S C
Kelt
Toki
Lev is
&
Cla'k
0-e
James
Pascarella
New Haven
Conn
and Ken
Dmkel Ft Hays Sta e Kan
Outfielders
El on
Recce
Livingston
Ala
TOTI Beall
Whit \orth Wa^h
Bob
Herold,
U
cf
Nebraska-Omaha,
a"d
Randy Gettman Adams S a'e
Colo
Catchers
Ron
Hodges
Appalach t-n
Sta'e
N C
and Vuke Lacheur
LaVorne
College Cahf
Pifchers
Frank STOCK
G'and Canyon
Ar z
Butch
St nson,
David
L cscon b
Tenn
and
Tom
B-own
Nor,h_as
Louisiana State
Valentine High
Picks Milliken
For Athletic Job
Rook Rivei, \\\o (P; - Eail
Milliken
h a s
resigned
as
basketball coach at Rock River
High School to become athletic
director
at
Valentine
High
Schoo!
Milliken
basketball
ccvch
heie 13 veais and also
tr-a
school'^ luck coach will take
ovci
the
Nebraska
job
m
August
Milliken led his teams la
seveial \\jomiug state basket-
ball touinev,s but never won the
Class C'ltlc His team finished
second last vear m 1968 and
was third in 1957
Bruin Big Men
The Boston Biums had
foiu
men who scored 1U5 01 moie
points
m
National
Hockcv
League games last season Thp\
weie Phil Esposito (152)
Bobbv'
Orr (139). John Bucyk (116)
and
Ken Hodge (105)
Alvarez faces at
the
least
a
long,
clillicult
recovery period, his physician
Tuesday said "theic is every
hope now he will make it ' He
is
however
still
listed
in
critical condition
Alvarez, a car
racing en-
thusiast, was standing on a
special photographers, trailer at
the end ol the pits on May 29
when the red convertible Dodge
Challenger pace car failed to
stop and
slammed
into
the
tiailei
and
people
standing
c'jouad it
One of tne fust of a scoie of
pei sons hit b> tne car as it s'ld
side.-vavs past the end of the pit
aica was a Speedway
satety
patrolman. Harold Bai nhai t 56
lie nas filed
a
SI 5
million
carnage
suit
against
the
Speedway
• Chrvsler Corpora-
tion, the" U S
Auto Club, and
Eldon
Palmer,
Indianapolis
Dodge dealer who was dm ing
the pace cai
Alvarez
\\ho
had
been
t-hooting pictures for a Latin
'\rnei 'can ma^a^ne w is llovn
bv
hchcopte-.
to
Methodist
Hospital, suffering giavc hea-i ,,
and other injuries, including a, Baseball
basal skull fracture
modern intensive care unit, al
sterile, glass-walled area \vhereI
patients
are
under
constant!
e l e c t r o n i c
and
nursing
suiveillance
No
flowers
or
visitors are permitted
Dr T
A Hanna, speedway
medical director, said
after
Alvarez regained consciousness
there was renewed hope. "But,
it's too uncertain to say what the
future holds How much residual
j effect
there
will
be
is
unknown "
Alvarez, one-time head ol the
Kaiser Industries medical pro-
giain in South America, is a
Buenos Aires nose and throat
specialist lie has been coming
to the 500-mile race since
1958
Hospital sources said Alvarez'
ex-wife Hew here from Buenos
Aires and had the intensive care
unit's waiting room
The
sources
said
another
Argentine women, who iden-
tified
herselt
as
Alvarw'
fiancee,
flew
here
f r o m
Washington, D C
Hospital officials
confirmed
the two women
aie
in In-
dianapolis, but refused to iden-
tify them or permit newsmen to
talk to them. "They do not want
to talk to reporters," an official
said.
Also a patient in Methodist
Hospital is Mike Mosley, who
suffered severe burns and liac-
tures when his racer and Bobby
Unser's car collided
on the
fourth turn.
Mosley has left the intensive
care unit for a private room, but
is still in serious condition His
wife has requested no photos of
him
or
m e e t i n g s
with
newsmen.
—WHITE SOX CHOICE—
oodwin No. 1 Pick
n Baseball Draft
<\fter
undergoing
b r a i n
to remove a bicod c'ot
on the left side
Alvarez ic-
mamcd unconscious nine aavs
until Monday
He is in the hospitals ulUa-
Knights' Parizeau
Taken By Blues
In NHL Draft
Monti eal
(UPI)
—
Mike
Panzcau of the Omaha Knights
was picked up in the Na.ional
Hockey
League
intra-lea^ue
drait rluesda\
The Ceiitial Hock'v League
all-iV'i lei!. vMii., \\as taken oti
the New Yoik faim club bv SI.
Louis
ParuccHi plaved thiee \cais
at Omaha THIS past vtat he had
35 goals and 49 assist?.
Barry Ne!son Signs
Pact With Bucks
Milwaukee i.?i — Ban v Nelson
8-foot-10 center from Duquesne.
has become the s e v e n t h
Milwaukee Bucks draft choice to
s'gn
a
National
Basketball
Association contract
Nelbon and his tw.n birthei
Gain
v.eie mamstavs of the
Duquesne teanis which won 59
games and lost 16 during the
past thice veais
LCC Gals7 Team
Fires TOD Score
i
In 2nd Round
\\oncn golfeis w i t h Hie Lin-
coln Countrv Club put together
the best efloit lu«,iday with a
303 total at the Lincoln Country
Club in the second lound of the
Intra-Cit> \\omen s Golf Toui ni-
ment
The Linco'n team also took
top honors in the first lound
The third of four
take place June 17
New York (/?> — The Chicago \ It s
different
in
^.hite Sox decided to nsk their ] basketball where
No
1 choice on Danny Kav
Goodwin of Peona 111, as the
draft opened Tuesdaj,
hoping to convince the 17-yeai
old catcher to become a full-
time
plavei
and a part-time
student
Goodwin, who batted .169.
.427
and .495 at Peoria Central High
School, \vas selected by the
White Sox even though he said
only Monday that he was in
dilemma created by his twin , sought
by
the
majoi
league
football
and
dialt choices
immediately step into the line-
up
So mam baseball draftees
iccene far less '
\\hile the \\hite Sox w e i e n t
certain
thev
could
s i g n
Goodwin the San Diego Padres
wcie certain they could sign
Goodwin the N'o
2 choice —
pitcher John \\ illiam Franklin
of Vienna, \a
— and theie
was little doubt that pitching
was the top commoditv being
| a
.„
..,
i desires to play baseball and
i clubs
continue his elucation.
1
It
is a dilemma faced
bv,
ncaiK all of the draft selections
in
the
regular
phase
—
P! edommantly
high
s c h o o l
seniors — and since the diaft
began
in 1965 moie than 62
per cent have decided in favor
ot
ba-eball
bv
signing con-
First Round
Selections
Thunderbolts Top
Nebraska City
In Legion Play
Jim
Hamersky
and
Joe
Lemon Is combined lor a two-
hitter Tuesday as the Thun-
derbolt fllub smashed Nebraska
Citj
12-5 m American Legion
midget baseball
at
Sherman
held
In the junior bracket Bellevue
Swamped Lincoln Mutual, 19-7,
as Dave Zuei'lm struck oiK l.i
and chipped in with two hits
Steve Hoinb sparked a 10-run
firit inning burst with a three-
i un honipr
Bslievue
100
Lincoln Mulual
"0
Zuerlm (W) and_Curtis.
Livingston
024
140
3-19
x— J
(L) Murphy (1), Kipper (6)
Nebraska City
230 000- 5
2 4
Thunderbolts Club
220
13d
12 10 3
Hamersky, Lemonds (W) and Hart
Kreifels (L) and Couse and Theisfeld
Sox believe the*
Goodwin to do the
j ne \\mlc
' n coiv ince
same
"It's the initial reaction of
din
vouiig fellow
oriented to
college to find himself in that
position," .said Roland Hemond.
director of plajer personnel for
die Chicagoans. "But a lot of
\ oungsters now go to school and
play baseball. I think we can
Horl.
out
something
t h a t
permits him to have an educa-
tion "
U hilc Ilemond said thev could
\voik out Goodwin's education,
he didn't think the same abo' t
a S100.000 bonas — the figure
L'siuilK tossed aiound as the
final inducement in making a
diaftee a full-time plaver and
bait time student
'The
S100000
figure
is
an
automatic- f i g u r e everybody
talks
about
—
but
it s
a
newspaper
figure, '
said
Hc-
mond
' I t s
not a
icalistic
figure for a 17-\ ear-old you're
diaflmg on a long-range basis
Chicago White Sox — O$ ny Gcoa v n
ca'cher
Peoria
Central
Hiqh
School
Peor a I I
San Diego —• Jo^n V.ihlam Frankl n
pikher
Madison High
Srhool
V enna
Va
Milwaukee
Thc-ms E an~c shor stop
Scwanhaka Hiqh School E mo
N Y
Montreal
—
Condrodqe
Hoi i /ay
shortston
Robert
E
Lot Hiqh Schoo
Hunt r/ lie Ala
Kansas City
Roy B'i" u
n I e
Beajmon Hiqh 5 '-cc
S' -JL s
Philadelphia
Roy Then a
T k i"-
LOTII o- H ah School Loi poc C )
Washington — Roqer Ou ogi p tc'i""-
Bs I High SOOCl Gal/C5 o i Tex
St
Louis — Edward
Ku B el
f
a
baseTidn ou 'ieldor pitcher
M-- hbijhoo
Volloy H qh School Ne i York
Cleveland — Dav d Slo^n pi cher
Santa
Clara High School Santa Clara Calif
Atlanta
- Taylor
Duncan
"hor s'on
Gran* Un on Hiqh
School
Sacramento
Calif
Detroit -
Thomas
Very T
shorts op
(slip H qh School Is p N ^
Houston — Ne I Rasrnussen
shor's'o
Arcadia Hiqh School Arcadia Cal f
California — Frank Tanana
pi*cher
Ca'hol c Central High School
Octroi
New York Mets
Richard Pu q
cco^c!
biseman
Hihsborouqh
H qh
School,
Tampo Fla
Boston
JaTics R ce out' elocr
nah H qh Schoo! Andcr'o
S C
Chicago Cubs —
Jeffrey
Wen
n
hnr
B'ebeuf
H g i
Scioo
Oakland
V/il'mm Daricls
h a Ken? e Hiq1- ichoo De' o t
San Francisco— F^ank Ricel
nit^h^r
C ir s'lar Brothers H qh School S/ra^usc
M -t
New York Yankees - Ter / W h i t ' e l d
cutf e dcr
Palo
Verde
High
Sch_o
Blytfe Ca if
Los Angeles — Richard Rhoden pitcher
A Id
ic
High School
Bo,n"on
Bco\.h
Fla
Minnesota — Dale Sodcrholrp
shor'stoo
Coral Pirk Hiqh School t-f id n
Pittsburgh
Gordon
R e y n o l d s
she- stop Reqan Hiqh School Hous'o
Baltimore —
VIi i am
Stem
pitcher
Genesha H qh School Pomora Calif
Cincinnati — Michael Milcy
shortstop
Ed?'
Je('ersor
High
School