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Show fKERET 2A NEWS, September Monday, 15, 1969 7 GOBI Joins School Board CALIF. ALAMO, Barbara -- (AP) Tv Mandnuent, the this appointed month to the California State is a Boarfl of Education, student who frowns fcliaJght-- ' disoidpr. on &Jmpus Is l v I' Bgfbara was selected by a sirring 5 of stu- (omnilttee f Associ- - dents' on die California t ini'iHiliiiiiiinmiimitinmm.tmiHiiiiiiiitiiUf US's I Peoce : r ' i KvW.I tiMtiiiiiRiimmiiiiiiiiidiiiiim.'iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiit a lion of Student Councils to be first student advisory member on the California fS " 1 .: is C ; U & y5 ) s v ra porting , - tobacco i- - u,ni-for- - 5 9 week away. As far back as 1498, when John Cabot explored the eastern end of the route, Europeans sought the Northwest Passage as a shortcut to the riches and spices of the Far East. The great trading companies sponsored several attempts to find the route. Now the treasure isnt spices, but oil, the vast supply on Alaskas northern slope. A Northwest Passage open to huge tankers would cut thousands of miles and dollars s u bcommittee reon its own detailed survey of 89 cities, released statistics largely tallying with Mitchells, and showing that arrests for narcotic and mari-- ' juana violations doubled dur-m- g the past two years as drug usespread to schools and suburbs. THC'SAND TYPES By "now it appears that there are'x thousand different drugs that in one combination or another find their way into the hands and heads of our youth, Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, said of the survey by his juvenile delinquency I , . Strait. Theres nothing ir. her way now, said a spokesman for Humble Oil Co., the ships owner. Her linal destination, Point Barrow, Alaska, is a The , . 115,000-deadweig- ht fied. . '7 are increasing numbers, turning to marijuana, hard narcotics and other dangerous drugs as a way of life, Mitchell testi- v Bai-ba- - 56 per cent 162,177 last year of them under 21. Our young people are, in frighteningly w SELDEN, N.Y. (UPI) -Lynda Lee Sinclair, 12, and her friend Laura Pepe, 15, decided to try out some old pills they found in Lyndas home. The effect was lethal: and died Sunday, Lynua Laura was in critical condition today, still unconscious. Anthony Sinclair, 14, who had originally received the prescription for a nervous condition, noticed his sister , and her trend fooling around, thought, late Saturday , he night before he went to sleep, Laura, who was staying the were and Lynda , night, . squeezing each other at the IMERGBNCY; Student Aid Bill Faces A j - . 114-da- y Space Role Second; She SaVs " f WASHINGTON (UPI) elements of the House joined forces today in a fresh assault on an emergency hill education officials have said 1$ necessary to prevent chaos fot students, banks and --T- V WASI JINGTpN. ; (AF) Senate Democratic Loader Mike Mansfield said' the aw JCUfUtfnr MOSCOW Floor Fight Cl A In. Clear, Mansfield Says Hun- Ing, .dapping their hands and , PITTSBURGH (AP) drerls of demonsti'atcrrs strung ''chartting. then' marched bVck i io blocks 'marched WUDJdct where the 7.. d tro r rfrom the Negro Hill District a - March leaders ' said they into the downtown today called ' Black wbuld stage similar demon- ay tliey to press demands Strattons, Monday Negro jobs irt the construction industry, , . of fAlse tyC.ashes. am woman first, a cos' mi&ut second, .said Valenti- Tereshkov a, accepting the ejeshes front Mrs., Arm!-- .'gene Johnson, a clothing pi anufacturer from lslip, N.Y. ;Miss Tereshkova was host- es5 today- to 34 members of a touilng delegiilloil'. of fiie American Wommi for Interna-- ' One-pa- ir it - -- e Central Intelligence Agency played no . part,', in-- the slaying of a suspected South Vietnamese double agent, colleges.;1 1 , 'Eight members of the Armys Special Forces, the Green ' B6rets, ate ' being held in the "slaying.- - The 'The marchers, estimated hy Army bas , not. yet, ; police- at over .3.000. filed four announced whether ,the irtett ' ahrrft: ; through .'the citys tlieie hands 'will shut down the entire city v will be, prosecuted.; " are , From what I know about ' Freedorrij. until these injustices chanting; tional'.Uiiderstandmg iiowin: DisMid Michael ; ended.' Mescow on;, theiT bnoffinaT wfre(iom,i Freed(mi." , it. the CIA is in tlie clear, ' r . niond, one of ilie march lead-'- . n tour of East "7-Mansfield .said in a interto tlie.uu'ocehslOu ' .Leadiiig ers and member of the Black ' Euiope. ;,f :k , thejr destination', the Von- - Construction Coalition, which- - view. who in Miss Tereshkova, traction site of U.S. Steel piivate life is the wife of Corps pew office building Andrian cosmonaut Soviet in an impromptu news con-fwere several demonstrators of the carrying lai ge black I Rags erne,; Disniond said, ,Ve Nitolayevv Swan feel this mornings demonSoviet Women's Committee, with a clenched fist syttibol to the uiU ifie. ndiss ' organization 2 tf of black power illustrate' stration on painted ' women in the USSR people of Pittsburgh the total them. I siiiil-, and she Tiny t pretty, feeling of the black eonimur.-- , The- - marchers - walked The WASHINGTON (AP)' inglv accepted the artificial ty;. 0 the injustices, that have ev clashes from Mis. Johnson. ; around the US.' Steel build-1- . been reused by the - trade trumpeter swan, once on the The e clashes were a peredge of extinction, is making unions," Disniond Said. a comeback, the Depaitment fect match for Miss Tereshko the oi.derly ' . of Interlof says.; . a s soft blown hau . Moon Rock andHe added thatmatch , Displays would peaceful 2 She also appeared delighted - The have a major part in the department's bui eau of WASHINGTON (UPI) a set of American Indian - . -- Mreelar-relapping- -- . woman-to-woma- Trumpeter Makes Comeback , r Congressmen favoring tough; new laws to combat campus rioters and opponents of high interest raes were united in a fight against a bill that could encourage banks to makj college student loans. INCENTIVE FEES . cent iper in incentive fees above the current seven per cent interest ceiling imposed by. the government in guaranteeing1 such privately made loans. Bankers claimed they need at least 9 per cent interest to break even in mak-- , ' ' ing the loans. ' The Senate has passed' a but the measure, House bill has been stalled for' more than a month. Jts'back-er- s have refused to open the bill io amendments that would punish college administrations which show i a reluctance to deal harshly - !$k'kr work ornaments, the top tanking woman, in President Nixons administration, Mrs. Patricia Reilly Hitt. assistant secretary of the Depaitment of Health, Education and Wepres-eded.- b lfare. The Smithsonian - Institution puts on display a single moon lock this week. The rock will be displaved, beginning 111 a nitrogen-filleWednesday, glass container surrounded by a plexiglass bubble three ini lies diameter. d 111 to get more Nenegotiations groes jobs in the construction industry. While the maru.eis filed through the downtown, negotiators trying to settle the dispute made reservations for a meeting later in the day. Poses As Kidnap Victim , Traps 'Talkative Abductor BEVERLY (I PI who lot Hit eiht Js CM.1F. polne ileteilive. Iiouis pl.ned the JMit of a kidnap 10 a ntim tiee. i.iptuioil hand-itifie- .l tlie ted alnim toi Htii it.gr the weekend when he walked into the cap su'poi Alan Ramo. It 011 of millionaire Simon Ramo viie chairman ot the Sib billion TRW company aero'paie Ini., was fieed unhaimed when a laretaker heaid his cries foi help The Y200.000 lansom was never paid Detective Rnhaid Rodriguez. 37 took the plate of young Ramo on a hillside ovei looking a watet reservon in a valley about two miles northwest of the uty btush-coveie- Nothing happened d fot eight hours. Then, at 6:20 Saturday, accosted by a gunman near evening, John J. Santen. 23. a tlie front door of his home. The abductor took Ramo in merchant seaman from San Lorenzo. Caltf., approached a car to a secluded hillside Rodtiguez through the brush. above, the - nuarier-niil- e long He was armed with'1 a Franklin panyon Reservoir. Kamos legs were handcuffed pistol. to a tree, his arms 'handcuffed Rodtiguez fired once, - nar-- 1 behind his back, and a handowiy jnissing ,Santens head. Other officers hidden in the kerchief gag jammed into his mouth. ' biusii closed in and Santen . The kidnaper later returned sitrrendeted. to the Ramo home and slipped Sarten, who was to be for- a note under the door mally charged with kidnapdemanding $200,000 ransom. waived to ;iis right ing, icday, At 1G a.m. Saturday. Ramo remain silent and was talking managed to loosen the gag with detectives, police said. and began . yelling for help. Details of the abduction, Russ Kyle. Sfi, the reseivoir rescue and capture were caretaker, heard the shouts revealed Sunday bv Beveilv Three carloads of Beverly Hills polite chief Joseph P. Hills police soon arrived on Kimble the scene. Rodtiguez took Young Ramo was returning Ramos place and began the home front a date xhonly after wait for the return of the kidmidnight Friday when lie was naper. . " . sport fisheries and wildlife reports successful nestings of the big birds in Nebraska and Minnesota this summer. Tlie hatching of a young swan at Carver County Paik in Minnesota is the first reported in that state ill 100 yeais. the de- creased about partment says. In 1932 the number of tium-pete- r swans in the continental United States was down to 69 . and Uiey were found only in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, The department says the trumpeter population now is about 4,000, including those in Alaska. DESERET NEWS SALT LAKI CITY, I. UTAH First Seem Office, 34 Advertising end Circvlefien 141 S. AWin St. Sel) Lekd City, Uten Mild Established June 15, 1150. Published eech evening. Entered at Lake City Post Office es second Oese mat ter according to Act of Conorest March 3, W9. The Deseret Nes Publishing Com for pany assumes no responsibility manuscripts and photographs contnb utef, Photographs and crticles may be reprinted only with written permis sion given in advance lAft'lEft DELIVERY RATES One month (deity only) $ 2 00 Six months (deity only) $12 00 One year (daily only) $24 00 One month (daily and Sunday) $3.00 Six months (daily and Sunday) $10 00 One year (daily and Sunday) $34 CO MAIL DELIVERY RATES 00 mo. $3 Daily (Sunday by carrier) $2 25 mo. Daily only mo 50 $3 and Daily Sunday 4 mo. 3 50 Saturday only yr. 4 00 4 mo. 2 00 Church News only I yr. 3 50 Alt met! subscriptions are payable in advance Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Saturday only and Church Nwt area mad outside earner oeiive enly. 19 s . - AMENDMENTS BLOCKED It (UPI) -- Although the draft call has tripled in the past four years, the number of young Americans charged with criminal violation of the draft has in- similar rioters. i WASHINGTON The measure would permit the government to pay up to 3 came to tpe House floor today under a suspension of the rules which would prohibit amendments. House leaders were concerned whether they could get the needed votes for passage. two-thir- waist, he said, according to police. Detectives said later the girls probably were trying to help each other breathe. Antoinette Sinclair, Mrs. who had been asleep, was awakened early Sunday by noises. She found her daughter in convulsions in the living room, while Laura apparently was all right. The pretty seventh-grade- r was taken to Smithtown General Hospital, where doctors said she had a drug overdose. Mrs. Sinclair then telephoned back to her home, where Laura had lapsed into unconsciousness. Draft Cases Zoom, Judges Get Tough Draft evasion, once a relatively minor problem for th selective Service, has increased so rapidly in the past four years that previously softhearted judges have taken a hard line with violators. - wjh from the trip around South America. as the But Wednesday, Manhattan jousted with ice floes near Banks Island, a Humble Cil official said no decision on the routes commercial possibilities would be made until the early 1970s. Stanley E. Hass, Humbles project manager, told newsmen aboard that mountains of data gathered on the voyage would be fed to computers later this month. The number of times the ship became stuck in ice and the ice pres- - , . Sen--at- , Federal Tanker Manhattan today achieved its goal of being 'first' through Northwest Passage. Brother's Medicine Proves Fatal To Girl , y FEASIBLE? NEW YORK (AP) Nearly five centuries after sailors began the search for a Northwest Passage above Canada, the SS Manhattan has become .he first commercial vessel to negotiate the icy waters. But the historic voyage of the massive tanker, specially fitted with icebreaking equipment. hasnt proved that the treacherous northern route is feasible for shipping. The 1,005-foo- t. ton ship smashed through heavy ice north of the Arctic Circle Sunday to hit open water at the mouth of Prince of Wales a confusing patch-wor- k riddled with loopholes and full of unfair inconsistencies. For example, he said, penalties for oeddling marijuana are much more severe than those for LSD, which he called much more dangerous. 162,177 ARRESTS Since 1958, Mitcnell said, and narcotics marijuana arrests have increased more than 16 times to a total of laws hoard. She will have no vote Barbara helps her younger brotheis and sisters wash the dishes, spends an hour every day practicing the piano, likes Gone With novels such as ' Is $ ' t the Wind'' and makes about ' r .iu, half of her own clothing. She 'f 4 ' T & Catholic a attends girls !& i k school and hasn't had any "v. ws t ytA ' V ' f first-hancontact with stu, dent activists but she generally doesn't approve dftheit methods. mT ' Personally I believe incus AP Wirt In positive action rather than c , violence or destruction V Barbara Marshment, 16, new- - student member of the California State Board said in an interview. " " of Education, listens to Max Rafferty, state school chief. There are a lot of aspects . la education. Involvement , In ' undertaken to prove that a MOSS The he was concerned by censorWATCH activities Ls important. But monk know as networks done legendary by its not the only thing.- Learn- - , ship being industry, being in behalf of big business inter--' Biedan the Bold could have-doning in the classroom is Impdroff the airwaves by ests to nudged it 1,400 years ago. Bill tant, too. keep from the people concern over health hazards information A need. a brawny, wear ,a, she Verily, they Although of cigarettes, may be forced - CBS blue and Irishman wiho braved Hurrito school spokesman denied skirt .whlte , by competition to substantialwhite pleated ,of news programs; cane Debbie en route, said he v The blouse, blue blazer and saddle ly bolster, its advertising in responses from ABC and NBC was glad to be back. . former Fort Lauderdale, Fia., were unavailable.- v . Barbara vuioebnt shoes and newspapers magazines,' should boat builder put wobbly sealegs think , public school Sen. Frank E. Moss,, ; E N COUKAGING 1)EBT? ashore at San Salvador Sunha ve strict dross codes How- - . says Rep.-- Wright Patman, To avoid a big jump after accepting' a brief pvei,schoJl authorpies rtpist day of the House Bank' tow from an oil tanker. havaf the final say? she aidre- - in printed advertising. Moss , chairman and Currency Committee, ing says, the Federal Trade ComTOREE-Wa- y Astronaut race, -S- en:-' mission should keep an eye on told a news conference Sun-- 1 CANT RUN Gordon Allett of - Colorado newspapers ahd magazines day banks are encouraging Frank; Borman, commander consumer indebtedness. of the Apollo 8 moon flight, is announced, today lie would no( after cigarette ads are taken 4 e not eligible to run for the off the air. Moss is chairman seekJhe post of Senate ' - Patman criticized the unsolleader, leaving the of the Senate Consumer Com- - icited from his home state of credit bf card mailing ' race '4,;,vthree-wa2. Indiana, lloosier Republicans, -- i niittee. 4 patfle by banks in a period when . i who recently had been menamong .Sennit Pnwttrd- - H, they- say - they, waat to bring Baker, Tenn.; Ecrnan llruska, , FAVOR BIG BUSINESS?,- -,, down the rate of inflation. - u tioning Borman as a possible i f, r , Communications Neb., and Hugh j&cett, Pa. In opponent for Democratic Sen. A Vance Hartke in 1970 checked a brief statemeoLwAllotl said,-- 2 Commissioner Nicholas John-- , . .. SAILOR .TURNS UP lobe sailor,'; Wissing ' for'a 2 out ' BprmanS eligibility for ; networks, have no 'toTnjnltments son censors programs, including i month, has turned up in the the post and discovered that from any of my .colleagues At- news broadcasts,', to favor big .Bahamas after ra', nor have asked for such comhe has)' given up his Jndiana ' business Johnson said Sunday- - lantic crossing from Ireland residency. mitments. d Urged committee that present drug f I the " ls IT Icebreaker Pioneers Route Through 'Passage' WASHINGTON (UPI) Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell urged Congress today to overhaul federal narcotics laws so authorities can put peddlers in jail and stem the tide of youths turning to drugs as a way of lile." Mitchell told a Senate sub- sk h- S BUT Drug Law Overhaul times. Recent Justice Department figures indicate the number of draft " defendants in years when 300,000 men are drafted each year is nearly the same as in 1945, when nearly a million civilians were called and 4,287 refused to serve. In their dramatic inwere 341 draft there crease, defendants. In 1966 the draft shot up to above 300,000 and the defendants increased to 516. In 1967 there were 996 defendants, and 1,192 in 1968. In 1965 the average Tw'o recovery teams equipped with oxygen packs w ent down more than 500 feet the into Mannington No. 9 coal mine today to begin a seaich for the bodies of 78 miners killed 10 months ago. One team, headed by John Ashcraft, West Virginia mines director, began penetrating along a main tunnel as far as we can go. The other team remained at the foot of the elevator at Athas Run portal, on standby in the event the first team ran into trouble. first team would to 114 miles in hours. The team far as it could hoped ROYAL four to five was to go as and erect a rubberized and plasticized seal. Then crews would clear away the rubble from the tunnel betw een the portal and the sealed-of- f section. Take it easy, boys, James Westfield, inspector for the U.S. Bureau of Mines, said when the teams rode the elevator to the bottom. tpienos sen- ALL-ELECT- America's finest piano for the home SUMMERHAYS MUSIC CO. 1343 So. Main 486-134- 9 RIC With Electric Carriage Return Touch the carriage return key; it flies the carriage back to the margin for the next line. But theres more: four repeat characters, repeat forward ASSURANCE 88- - full-siz- e character keyboard, variable impres- Whai with chemists puttering about with ail sorts of new fibers and miracle fabrics bubbling out of sion control, line space selector ...everything keyed convenience and speed. SCHREYER'S SPECIAL TRADE-I- or N OFFER: Typewriter ... 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Wool absorbs moisture without feeling damp. It adapts io changing of heat temperatures because it's a and cold. Miraculous. But naturally. And wool takes naturally to fine tailoring as in the lithe and long lines of Hart Schaffner & Marx Astra suits. You'll find the Woolmark in the HS&M Charta Cloth suits shewn in our color ad which appears in this newspaper today. The Woolmark is your assurance of quality tested products made of the world's best . . . Pure Wool. inductions when began NOTES - 31. 1965, new ships we would design to sail these seas. Mining officials ous year. Some of the cases include more than one defendant and some are appeals, but the department said charges against 3,118 were pending July sure it encountered would L two key factors, Hass said. Another problem, ship officers said, was that the Manhattan couldnt generate full power in reverse. Thus, it needed open water astern to back up and take a running start at huge ice blocks. But Hass pointed out that the Manhattan was picked as the best ship we could find in the short time span given us to gather the data we needed, He said the Manhattan "is not anywhere near the Cottonwood Mall 275-445- 3 328-972- 8 |