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Show Page 4THE HERALD,Provo, Utah Sunday, January 17, 1971 Missouri Couple to Note 81st Wedding Anniversary Bennett to Ask Exemption Of .22 mga See Shuey Wallace F. R- Uh Lol Zz R f MACON, Mo. (UPI)—Ward and Anne McDaniel will ob- Jury Gets Fate Of LOS ANGELES (UPI)—A seven-man, five-woman jury with a mortician as its foreman deliberated the guilt of Charles Manson and three young female hippies Saturday in the murders of actress Sharon Tate and six other persons. seven months, the jurors went into a Saturday seasion of consideration with exhortation out from their graves for justice.” “But they really get along pretty well,” he said. “Dad's sight is poor and mother is deaf, but he’s her ears and she's his eyes and they get along, “Motherstill does practically all her own house work. And ODDS OF 34 MILLION TO ONE will be surpassed when this couple celebrate their 8ist wedding They are Ward McDaniel, 102, and his wife Anne, OLof Macon, Mo. They have outlived three of their five children, UAWThreatens to Strike Chrysler Motors Tuesday sleeps a lot. And that’s how it goes with them. There’s a grocery store only a block away DETROIT (UPI) — United and that gives them someplace Auto Workers President Leoto goif they want.’ Ward McDaniel and his wife nard Woodcock rejoined the union’s contract negotiatic:s have no phone. “They never would let me put one in,”their son said. ‘ don’t want to be bothered and ies gedine Wis cee a to talk, anyway.” The McDaniels, who grew up at Winterset, Iowa, and came to northern Missouri in 1920, haveoutlived three of their five children. Their other son, Reuben,lives in Seattle, Wash. The U.S, Census Bureau says odds against both a husban and wife surviving te celebrate their 8ist wedding anniversary are 34.4 million to one. Proposal Would Increase Unit For Classrooms ‘or disrupting the trial and have aameteergeer it SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — Piha ers. The issue of the conversa- Members of the Utah School tion of wage increases to pay Boards Delegate Assembly have a said ake made legislation one mistake, hikes for salaried workers also endorsed was unresolved, observers said. that would raise the basic class“He sentout from the fires of room funding unit from $8,600 three to $9,100 and provide a $17.7 hell at the Spann bloodthirsty robots and, unformillion increase in local and Friday. About 200 dissident tunately for him, one human state funds for public education, little hippie ‘girl, ou The school board Tepresenta- being—the ya tives also voted their ap- Linda Kasabian.” proval of two joint resolutions Mrs, Kasabian was the state’s before the state legislature that key eyewitness to the slayings. allow first and second The prosecution also called 83 hourlyaerahs would class cities to consolidate school other witnesses and introduceddistricts and allow the joining more than 300 items of John Miller, steward of the of school districts across coun- evidence and documents. The unit, complained that some 150 ty lines. defense did not call a single members had been put on the They also agreed, after some witness although Manson testisalaried payroll in 1964 and debate, that the assembly ‘‘does fied briefly outside the presence because of is members not favor” a teacher contracts oftheJury and, declined to were losing work. negotiation law. Cnet Sates and Canada wil Oe erin walk off their jobs Tuesday if agreement on a new three-year contractis not reached by then. The main obstacle to settlement with Chrysler, the only one of the big three automobiile manufacturers without a UAW agreement, was retroactive pay boosts for hourly rated work- per cent of the undergraduates and 70 per cent of the faculty my college are satisfied with the education they are getting.” However, 91 per cent of the students “believe undergraduate education be ed if course work were more relevant to contemporary life and ancial sup) Office aEducation and with the cooperation of the American Council on Education. Trow, a professor in the The survey covered 300 Graduate School of Public institutions “representative of Affairs at the University of more than 2,500 colleges and California at a said 71 universities in the a, fa cm Calley My Lai Trial Continues tloingtesa)int rob bea ste! ie bargaining pated by both sides. peThe UAW says its aee Chrysler members NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—The They said most students are largest survey ever taken on politically moderate and are campuses generally satisfied with today's vast majority of students want educational system. those who resort The students, however, werto violence and disruption en't without some criticism, school. thrown The Carnegie surv2y said students favor making all college courses elective, abolishing grades and ‘giving complete powers of campus government to faculty and students. But Kerr said there is “general agreement that social change should be accomplished through the democratic proHigher Education. The case went to the jury ne late Friday afternoon. Within an hour, they had selected undertaker Herman Tubick as Kerr, former president of the their foreman. University of California at Estimates of how long the Berkeley, and Dr. Martin Trow, jury would take to reach the 77 survey director, released their possible verdicts—because of findings Friday. othe guidelines called for the multiple charges—ranged’ # nine notations instead of merely from sometime today *» weeks. the place and form of sale Deputy District Attorney Vinspecified in the law,” he said. cent Bugliosi said he expected it would be three or four days. FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)-The standing order of procedure for the units that made tricia Krenwinkel and Leslie the My Lai assault was to Van Houten—were not in the detain civilians of military age ith Chryslec Corp, Saturday an offshoot of the latter mother can’t hear well enough Vast Student Majority Warts Rioters Expelled Tate 4 After a trial that lasted and “‘get anything they need.” Survey Claims for questioning and release those not of military age, a witness in the Calley murder court-martial said Friday. Charley Company, one of three companies in the task force that launched the operation. on the Vietnamese village complex on March 16, 1968, did not take prisoners. It was commanded by Capt. Ernest L. Medina, who, 19 witnesses havetestified, told his men to wipe out the subhamiet of My Lai 4. One of same incident as that concern- its platoons was commanded by ing my client ... I respectfully Lt. William L. Calley, who is request thatall charges against charged with premeditated murder of 102 civilians. Sgt. Torres be withdrawn.” Capt. Kenneth Boatman, 28, Weltner said he did not think Resor would answer his wire of Ft. Sill, Okla., testified but Lsaid, “I have a feeling Friday the rule in the task he may do something about force on prisoners of war was: this. “If you came on indigenous personnel, detain them if they He said Torres and Hutto were of military age and call in were both charged with “firing Col. (Frank) Barker or into the same group of someone else to take them back civilians.” However, Torres for interrogation.” was charged with murder and “And if they were not of Hutton with assault with intent military age?” Boatman was to murder. asked by Capt, Aubrey M. A court-martial has been set Daniel III, the prosecutor. for Torres on Feb. 15 at Ft. “We'd let thetgo,” Boatman McPherson. said. Dismissal Sought ATLANTA (UPI)—An Atlanta attorney asked Army Secretary Stanley Resor Friday to drop charges against Sgt. Esquiel Torres because he was involved in the sameincident as Sgt. Charles E. Hutto, acquitted Thursday of charges stemming from the alleged My Lai massacre. Attorney Charles Weltner, a former Georgia congressman, said the charges against both men involved “exactly the samecircumstances.” In his telegram, Weltner said: “In view of the prompt acquittal (Thursday) of Sgt. Charles E. 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