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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 1
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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 1

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Parity Cloudy i to Sunday Edition 25c 125th Yer. 47tH Dy. Blocmington-Ncrmal, Sunday, March 8, 1970. 84 Paget. 6 Sections Eclipse Awes Millions ilJMiU 11) n.lt4wwtl wav ju rrvwd ul emal I ertyiae t(rt 0fr4 II II Manaiiwm, ml llrif kUltl lrkf led UW IhfxWfH (t U.1 'V i lr tlo) tt.n'.f tV.af If latl) tirtameeo tt 13 ft' M'mi or Mjier IW lie bWlu Wl 'incf rail UiJUrff N.gN ltl Or KftU II mi (Wktti- rr IS le ol ll sun It- WiW t1U rmff it pnW rwrtl lunar htnm imxf- By N.

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woiiM-n blark frto. if kr.ied ttl ti lril ol Ue ctufrh w.t4tlng rr, and rrral elderly mm pbiTl biiiirrrU hat wrr llrir lean Tie nw wi laitdtall neM at portJtwesi rTHffla at 1:17 pro KST. At Prrry 11a Ihkk rlsid veiled sert lc. lUil lhmiands lw lad Ri'h-errd had Ihe rare senfaunn of nddi av Ml d.nkne similar to lhal of mitltiirht Nixon Outlines Space Program Brownie Didn't Crow tun ittraUr Is.Bl iIwJt iJ CalaUJI lilt ftl4 II Ul UM(tl $CCI Mail Cri of Hkr.lM iiJr II iihk II XiUri "I c44.0 bp HW tjr atvi )rl Umr in a fi''iJ ol IwirtU I M'ri: lr ut4 Ma(r tiwMjirii a il rj Ivw itik huiif Itu ti lie Si'li i'h ti llif oultrl I' vj jutw Nanluiid I VU 4 Id Ikwrjji, lm lie tUki4t hil liwtf lrlfivArr U1rl rToftkmg Ueif A bWk Ur tll't-lH a life A rH itml U.nt brrfl tU'V tM 4 tirrp Oil a H' betl Kit il nkcn a tartu. iiie ixjtp cjau a pwvir.i tul a ky darkened Ten.

lfl blotknrM willed, two of lie in Utf4 to rr. Wt.llr i MlaCf frilittil) tt1-fl lie caw ml. rbk rn rriuimd daimc aiiv In Ibe wamp, laficj bi inj bunmn f4o4Tri ol llie ti Il4 ni in Norfolk. a al I in LsT. an rlfiuinl lo lruin-t and, ground al quick duk, buddlrd in a rornrr of Heir He, aiwl nw-kr) pjr.u ed and hurtled abtiul.

Tley rtluJed all oMcrs of anui while Ihc ethpe wa in progrt The dutks and swims in lie im lo an bland in lie middle and bunched O'kkrni tojatlrd or roottrd and iwMers crowed at the un'i reappearante. Paby Iambi ran lo a barn corner and huddled A normally dm ile naingujii bulii'd lie Driitf I'lavor SINGAPORE (AP) Th ovtm-mnl it monitoring entry availbl pop record in island rpwblic oitt what it regards as "drvf flavor" in lyrics tHat load yovtht to narcotic VM. The first rtroe rocords bannod bf Iht Minith-y of Cvltwrt art "Puff, It Magic Dragon," "The Pwhtr" and "Happinott it a Warm Gun." Chicago 7 Defense Attorneys Post Bond CHICAGO AP) William M. Kunstler and Leonard I. Weinglass.

defense attorneys sentenced to prison for contempt during the Chicago riot conspiracy trial, posted bunds Saturday pending disposition of appeals to the U.S. Circuit Court ol ApHals. The appeals court a week set bonds of $15,000 each for the lawyers after Judge Julius J. Hoffman, the trial judge, had refused to set bail for stajed execution of their sentences to May 4, permitting them to remain free. tootlor did not cow bofoio, ajvr ig.

or odor odipio. No cockled twice, vo'hw'oHfollf, how over. I'Ownio eppoo'od on tU vition. Two Prisoners ht.Y ItlH VU lAPl lffi-ifciil Nitn ftmiorxj hl bt a Ukl td balanced par? pro grain ihdi ludri unmanned probe of rnrvic ptjiiwu il IJTOi and en-laa'ly Amtflcan on Mart 3 biJImo nule. unmanned "grand i( ihf rcnxie pUrtll could lat at lAf at II rai Taktnit adtania of an Unrju alijjniwr.l ol in planru, XKKTcraH iuld whip Jupiipr, fjfurn.

I'ranu. Nrplune and Pluto lurd no lim for a mannrd Mar cp-liMn. Spct Tk Frc While lie early 1930 fc Mill a poMihiliiylfctn a recommrnded by a lack ftrc on wre objectives headed by Vice lYTMilcnl Spiro T. Afncw-Utf rvidcnl did cpfcifically airrpl lhl goal. Adopng a M)rt of middle ground between an all-out space program and a kimpy one, Nixon said.

"We must realize that space expenditures must lake their proper place within a rigorou system of national priorities." Dr. Thomas 0. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told newsmen that there still is a possibility of a manned launch In Mars in lfl36. But there are othrr possibilities. 1X3 and 10.T8.

depending on Kidnap Exchange Congress Whittles Down Nixon Appropriations Requests IMnoeEttfi(n)Dn Agnew Seeks Suburb Resources To Help City Minority Groups rciKi thai art lartJ-er aJm.g he ln No drlmiie oVetjioni ill be nrttry before lT. he laid. Tbe I'rtsidenl pul his dn on paptr, Mv Ahtd He maor objrcine. ranging from continud epJorin of Ibe mom lo encouraging more internaitonal rooperatim pce and putting knowledge Umi gained to practical use "We slwuld move ahead." Nixon mkI. "llh bold etploration of tl planrts and the universe.

In the ncxl few enrs. scientific satellites of many lynes iH be launched Into earth orbit lo bring us nc information about the unlven. the solar )lcm and even our own planet. "During the next decade. He will also bunch unmanned spacecraft all planets of our solar system, including an unmanned vehicle which will be sent to land on Mars and to lmeMigattriU surface.

In the late 1970s, the "grand tour' missions will study ihe mysterious outer planets of the solar system Jupiter. Saturn. I'ranus, Neptune, and Pluto. Tlw positions of the planets at that time will give us a unique opportunity to launch missions which can visit several of them on a single flight of over 3 billion miles." the President aid Preparations for these ventures will start in 1972. Nixon said.

estimates that actual spending for the same year, fiscal 1970, will be $5 billion more than he forecast last April. The final appropriations total became available last week with enactment of the last regular appropriations bill eight months after the financial year began. This was a $19-billion measure to finance the Health-Education-W'elfare and Labor Departments and the antipoverly program. It was reduced $800 million below an earlier version which Nixon vetoed. The total appropriations voted for 1970 reached approximately $199.5 billion as compared with the previous high of $195.6 billion approved for fiscal 1969.

The contrast between the slash in appropriations for the financial year ending June 30 and the concurrent $5-billion projected spending increase illustrates neatly that what Congress appears to do on money matters and what it actually does often are quite different. Brunswick. Engint at right was on way to pull out a diosol train of West Gorman Railway before it turned over. Voldotie, G. IAP1 lory Co lor, II, of Voldotta.

shows bit elitoppointmont in hit pot OOtlO', B'Ownio. eftor Solwr doy't to'ol oclipto of tho sun. 2j. d'd a girl. Vildahna Amount Monzon.

19. The Costa Rican ambassador. Edwin Gongora. told them when they arrived at the embassy that they were nol in aylum. but they were his guesis and he would Iry to arrange ihnr departure for Mexico.

Monon had been arrested Him uk alter he acted as intermediary in another terrorist kidnnp-exchange plot. In that incident. Foreign Minister Alberto Fuentes Mohr was abducted eight days ago but then relead unharmed after the government freed a student guerrilla leader and permitted him to fly to Mexico for political asylum. Monzont Charged The government said the Monzons had been charged with theft and ownership of weapons. The Monzons talked to newsmen briefly at the Costa Rican Embassy.

He said he was a grade school teacher and a student of economics. The girl who appeared surprised to find herself surrounded by reporters and photographers, said she is engaged to Aguirre Monzon. Mansfield Hopes For Geneva Talk WASHINGTON (AP; Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield said Saturday reconvening of the Geneva Conference on Laos could lead to consideration and possibly solution of the entire Vietnam question. The Montana Democrat told reporters he hopes a conference can be called and that "there is no reason why we shouldn't discuss the whole Indochinese situation." He added that a return to the 1954 and 1962 agreements "could well prove to be the answer to the difficulties that confront us in Vietnam and Laos." Mansfield said that while President Nixon did not directly ask Britain and the Soviet Union to reconvene the Geneva conference in his Laos policy statement Friday "the implication is there." "In my view, a reconvening of the Geneva conference would meet with the full approval of the President," he said. Asked about the possibility South Vietnam might not participate in such a conference, Mansfield said "If South Vietnam wanted to participate, fine.

If not, we ought to proceed anyway." South Vietnam, like the United States, was not a signatory of the original Geneva Accords of 1954 which set up the two Vietnams, Laos and Cambodia with a three-nation International Control Commission Poland, Canada and Indiato police the agreement. Both, however, signed the 1962 Geneva Freed Me Mid she has had nothing to do vtth rvbtl activities. Hie other Iwo guerrillas demanded freed by the leftist rebel group art Joit A. Sierra and Leone I del Cid. Instructions that FAR sent lo Guatemala newspapers hours after Holly had been abducted said the four prisoners were lo he delivered lo the Mexican Embassy.

Still Looking Police said they do not have del Cid in custody. They said that during the presidential election last Sunday del Cid tried to set a ballot box afire with a cigarette loaded with sulphur. Del Cid fled, police said, and they are still looking for him. Unofficial sources said Sierra, a 60 year-old labor leader, is already in Mexico possibly in the border town of Tapachula. Holly, 40.

was seized as he was driving back to the U.S. Embassy after lunch. Six gunmen set up a two-car roadblock to stop Holly's station wagon and then forced the attache into one of tht getaway cars. Holly, married and the father of five sons, has been in Guatemala since July 1M8. A native of New York, he has been in the diplomatic service since 1957.

He was the latest American victim of a continued terrorism in Guatemala by rebel bands from both the extreme right and left. John Gordon Mein, an American ambassador to Guatemala, was ambushed and shot to death in August 1968 just a few blocks from the spot where two U.S. military officers had been slain by machine gunners the previous January. Inside Church Nostalgia Methodist churches, past tense, is the subject of a women's department report on page C-l. How they are perpetuated nostagically forms the angle.

Siulilr Bloomington area sculptor shows some, of his wares in a women's department feature on page C-3. He'll tell of others to Bloomington-Normal Art Associatioi audience this afternoon. Scoiiidoiii It's Girl Scout Week. How adults show their interest in Scoutdom is reported in women's department feature on page C-10. Index Classified D-l Deaths B-8 Editorials A-4 Farm B-7 Features D-l Sports B-l Weather D-4 Women C-l WASHINGTON (AP) Congress cut President Nixon's appropriations requests by $6.4 billion in voting a record $190.5 billion of spending authority for the present fiscal year.

But, paradoxically, the President now Johnson Doctors 'Quite Satisfied' SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP) Doctors said the condition of former President Lyndon B. Johnson, who is trying to diet away 20 pounds of excess weight, was stable again Saturday and that he is improving from a cold. "We are quite satisfied with the president's over-all progress and with results of observation and treatment he has had to this point," physicians said.

Johnson has suffered pains in his chest, at times severe, since he entered the Army's Brooke General Hospital here Monday. lilATHMALA iAPi Tlve govern-mrnt freed Saturday Iwo of lour guerrillas that a terrorist band has demanded in exchange for the life of Kidnaped Sean M. Holly, labor attache at Ihe Embassy. Officials said the two guerrillas were taken to the Costa Rican Embassy. The Rebel Armed Forces-FAR-seied Holly Friday as he was driving to the embassy and later gave the government 48 hours to release the guerrillas.

The dealine expires at 2.30 p.m. Sunday. Not in Asylum The two prisoners released were identified as Jo-e Manuel Aguirre Monzon. back on city problems and claims that he should not financially contribute to their solution is closing his eyes to the direct relationship between the economic viability of his country and the city." the vice president said. The suburbs have the land, money and jobs that are scarce in the cities, he said, but they are "not being sufficiently utilized in solving inner city problems." The Nab is a government business partnership formed to increase the training and hiring of the hard-core unemployed.

Mobutu Summer Visitor KINSHASA, the Congo (AP) President Joseph Mobutu will visit the United States in the first half of August, the presidental office announced, on an invitation delivered from President Nixon by Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers on his recent African tour. Sold Motorcycle with Pantograph Want Ad If you have a motorcycle, bicycle, golf clubs or any other items of interest to the Spring Sportsman which you no longer need now is the time to nffer them for sale. William Jones, 717 Hilltop Mobile Court did: MOTORCYCLE Triumph 1964. 450 CC.

5000 nilti. condition. $725. Ph. 828-7053.

"Sold immediately-had 5 prospects to buy" was the message from the advertiser. To put an ad to work for you just Ph. 829-94 for daified.CALL COLLECT if placing your ad longdistance. Open Mon. thru 8:30 A.M.

to 7 PU Sat. till 6. Just 83 per day for 15 words or only 41 per day more for 28 words-both on the special 8 day plan. WASHINGTON (UPI)-Vice President Spiro T. Agnew called Saturday for greater use of suburban resources to help city minority groups rather than improving conditions in the ghetto, which he called "a subtle form of racism." Allowing members of our minority groups to find possibilities for decent housing, income, jobs and educational opportunities only in a limited geographical area that is already or is destined to become a minority enclave encourages segregated living and the development of racial hostility," Agnew told a conference of the National Alliance of Businessmen.

He urged suburbanites to take a greater interest in the problems of the cities. "The suburban' dweller who turns his 'Pill' Warning Triggers Hassle WASHINGTON (AP) The Food and Drug Administration's announcement last week that it plans to require a warning of hazards in each package of birth control pills sets the scene for a classic industry-government struggle. If recent FDA history and the early response of some drug industry and medical people are any indication, it may be a long time before leaflets mentioning the possibility of fatal blood clots or cancer find their way into packages sold at the corner drug store. "The text of the FDA's proposal raises serious questions about the relationship between the doctor and the patient," said the American Medical Association. lyrt Chain Reaction Brunswick, W.

Germany (AP) locomotive attempts to pull out another loeomotivo, right, that dorailed in heavy snowdrift noor i.

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Pages Available:
1,649,462
Years Available:
1857-2024