Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 March 1973 — Page 10
Pag* 10
Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana
Wednesday, March 14, 1973
Reg. 74 e
Ice Cream
49*
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LIMIT 1
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14 oz. bottle
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2-roll pack 1000 sheets.
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Regular,
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Deluxe, 2-ply Garden Hose •/i" x 50 ft. 100'; vinyl, brass couplings.
Music Maker Pack
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Shampoo 4 o/.
Reg. 49c
Envelopes
Box of MM)
2*
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Tussy Lip Gloss Fresh-as-fruit scented shades. Reg. SI.00
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Feds Re-Establish Wounded Knee Block
WOUNDED KNEE S.D. (AP) Federal authorities have re-established a barricade around Wounded Knee to shut off the flow of supplies to militant Indians who have occupied the village for two weeks. The Justice Department said Monday the roadblocks manned by 300 federal marshals, EBI agents and Bureau of Indian Affairs police were set up again because the Indians used the free access to the tiny village to replenish ammunition and weapons. Wayne Colburn, chief of the U.S. marshals brought into the Pine Ridge Reservation, told newsmen the cutoff of supplies to Indians would deprive them of all normal comforts. “I'm sure as hell planning on changing their life-style,” he said. “We're going to be more
strict. This will be a tighter, more strategic blockade than the last one.” Federal roadblocks around the village had been taken down Saturday. But 1 B1 agent Curtis Eit/gerald of Chicago was shot in the right arm during an exchange ol gunfire Sunday, and the barricades went back up Monday. Colburn said he hopes a second encirclement ol the village will prevent reinforcements from slipping past federal agents and joining the entrenched Indians. He estimated 1 5 0 persons moved into Wounded Knee during the weekend. bringing the occupation force in the hamlet to about 300. There were no reports of gunfire after dark on Monday. There had been sporadic gunfire almost nightly since the Eeb. 27 takeover.
The confrontation did not appear close to resolution. No lurther meetings have been scheduled between negotiators for the Indians and officials ol the Justice and Interior Departments. Russell Means, a leader ol the American Indian Movement which led the occupation ol Wounded Knee, said Mondav that all the demands issued by the Indians during the seige have now boiled down to one involving an 1X68 treaty. Means said the treats promised Sioux Indians all the land west of the Missouri River in Dakota Territory, an area which includes North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming and Montana. Nov we want it.” Means said. I he Indians earlier had demanded investigations of the B1A and the tribal government at Pine Ridge, home of 11,000 Oglala Sioux.
Taft Seeks Change In
ICC Rate Making
WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. could be shipped to Ashland, Robert I alt Jr., R-Ohio. called Ky., from Baltimore, Md., for for reform ol the rate- inly about half as much as making practices of the Inter- rom Toledo.” state Commerce Commission. latt also said the recent "To he perfectly frank,” Taft a heat sale to Russia may have told a meeting of the Great hurt U.S.-Canadian cooperation, l.akcs I ask Force, “keeping w hich made the Si. Law rence our ports open year round Seaway possible, won't do much good if the ICC "Ihis wheat sale for the first keeps diverting traffic to east time put the United States in coast ports.” direct competition with Canada Taft said the ICC has dis- and a new wave of protectioncriminated against the ports on ism has given some Canadians the Great Lakes and this has the impression that their induscost thousands of jobs at trial expansion is jeopardized” Toledo. Cleveland and other he said.
ports. I he ICC was created to prevent arbitrary discriminatory rates, he said, but it has not done its job. “As a result of the ICC policies. electrical transformers made in Zanesville. Ohio, can be shipped all the way to New York City for export, for less than they can he shipped to Cleveland,” he said. “An importer of sugar in Columbus could have it shipped from Norfolk. Va.. for less money from next door in Toledo. Iron ore
The task force set as its major goals the following: Appropriation of $3.46 million for completion of the full season navigation extension demonstration project in fiscal year 1974. Implementation of the provisions of the Merchant Marine Act of 1970 in the Great Lakes region, and reinstitution of shipment ol Department of Detense cargoes through Great Lakes port% aboard U.S. flag
vessels. Elimination of the construction cost requirement for port interests forcontainment areas for disposal of polluted dredged material.
- Elimination of discrimmatorv inland freight rates for service to Great Lakes ports.
Promulgation jointly by the United States and Canada of uniform regulations in regard to disposal of vessel wastes. E 1 i m i n a t i o n of discriminatory tolls and user charges on all inland waterways.
Appropriation and release of adequate funds under the Eederal Water Pollution Control Act amendments of 1972 to meet watei quality objectives agreed to by President Nixon and Prime Minister Eliot Irudeau tor the Great EakesSt. Lawrence Seaway system.
Justice Department To
Probe Nixon Contribution
WASHINGTON (AP) The Justice Department has been asked to look into possible violations of federal election law in connection with a $200,001) contribution to President Nixon's re-election campaign by a New Jersey financier. The case was turned over to the Justice Department by the General Accounting Office Monday, with a request by Comp-
troller General Elmer B. Staats also to look into the possibility of additional violations of the new Federal Election Law. Subject of the investigation is the Finance Committee to Reelect the President, and insolved is whether the committee failed to report as required a cash contribution by financier Robert E. Vesco, received on or after last April 7 when the new election law took effect.
Law Professor Soys ERA Is Empty Symbol
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) A University of Chicago law professor said yesterday the proposed Equal Rights Amendment for women “is an empty symbol that will contribute only to the further fracturing of our society.” Prof. Philip B. Kurland said in a statement released here a better answer to the problems of discrimination would be legislation directed to specific problems, such as federal laws prohibiting discrimination in employment. His statement was released at the Statehouse here by Citizens to Oppose the Equal Rights Amendment in Indianapolis. The ERA passed the House and will he considered by the Senate. Kurland said the amendment is ambiguous and does not contribute to the major goals of the women’s right movement. He called it irrelevant to
abortion reform, day care centers and equal employment opportunities. Kurland said the amendment could not only eliminate discrimination against women by state action, but * also could eliminate any preferences given to women by state and federal law. “The costs to women will be particularly great with regard to domestic relations law,” Kurland said. He said the proposed amendment ‘sutlers from ambiguity that makes it impossible to know whether it contemplates a notion of “separate but equal,’ which has been rejected as a construction of the Fourteenth Amendment with regard to race, or a so-called unisex standard.” The ERA would prohibit sex discrimination by law and. extend equal protection of the laws to both men and women.
A spokesman for the committee described the GAO as irresponsible for referring the case to the Justice Department. ''ilie General Accounting Office is once more raising a question lor which there is a conclusive precedent supporting the actions of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President. On that basis, the GAO conclusion is irresponsible.” the spokesman said. I he case revolves around whether the contribution from Vesco was made before or after April 7. Maurice Stans, the former commerce secretary who headed Nixon's finance committee. contends it was a preApril 7 contribution and therefore did not have to be reported. A report by Phillip S. Hughes, director of the GAO's Office of Federal Elections, says the money was delivered April 10, three days after the new law went into effect. Stans’ argument is based on the premise that the funds had been pledged earlier than April 7, that Vesco made a commitment to give it on March X. 197Z and repeated this on April 3. Stans acknowledges receiving the money in his office on April 10. The Hughes report said. “The money was raised abroad and was not available to Mr. Vesco’s representatives in New York until April 6. “Although Mr. Stans was informed on April 6 that the funds were available in New York, arrangements-could not be made for delivery of the funds on that date. The money,” the report said, “was in the custody of Vesco's representatives during the period from April 6 to April 10.’’ Vesco and several associates are facing charges by the Securities and Exchange Commission that they milked $224 million from Investors Overseas Services 1 td., a mutual fund empire mat Vesco gained control of two years ago.
