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Easy Scan and Print p^ air idea ' gaining support HELEN* .AP -A stale's air .quill) implement..>-, plan doesn't require the p>vernsri ii&ulut*. t>u! 11 does require his

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Published by , 2016-02-11 06:39:03

An underground growth Museum curator quits

Easy Scan and Print p^ air idea ' gaining support HELEN* .AP -A stale's air .quill) implement..>-, plan doesn't require the p>vernsri ii&ulut*. t>u! 11 does require his

Easy Scan and Print Friday morning April 14 1172—9 bll Jr '^^

I — Bit SKy of Montaia reran wa port: expansion'
>dav nighl in a free whrrhtif pubbr
±t color of the Old West to the mod' ritled their resii
menl da\
iuo\ers.4) B g St> highway promt
tce-luil in;a Callatin Canyon fuel TV dliigrccn>
«d spill ng m cr Ttn ai adjicrr car- where (he new'
plei would: be lj>
c toe more lorrru) sty!e .hearings of
nleresunf as Hie issues that prompl- A prepared re!
A <uUnl Qiati
> etir-ens swarmed into ibe Ksrsl Mufid. Dr. Jnhr
here ud squeezed tiieir way either J Vr Con-ellv
in the dance hail or ir.lo the wild Knignl satd: Si
c heer the pros and cons of the hip-

r Bif Sky project drew cheers: wit-
4 project drew cheers. Loud toices
ate.- which side was talking,
jpponei clulieaijn! a Btj Sky oppo-
ly. and it seemed tike they would
aleVhtie bigrrwayatepsrliner.toffi-
ran tiie corner wtawevUiey were

in the barroom yeiled for 8
rereiyed this answer from the dance

i-Wilsall, rompLtined he had never
so many loud demonstrations, and
mes imptorcd Ihc crowd to quit!
kin(
be starting any tights," one ol their.

! (jjblic hsanrf. o.-.e<»f the ciliiers On-j
: rtcres S3 thai the dsnee haE gi cup
t'jitlieiar
3 drinK." he said, "2m! I know jump

ighway An underground growth Gus Ostrum and Denny Karen, employes ol B&rry O'Lenry. hou<
is eyed work on a sewer pipe installation on I2lh Street West be favo
tween Broaiiwatcrand Wyoming Avenues
■ Suie Bureau Doitsinj at the
Museum curator quits
— The Monlarj Hujhway Lomnis
ighway iron; the Ualium Canyon ts D) ARTHUR KCrrt'lllNSDN Tkr director »:■! Monpn. :• « ytirn,d WHKN THK VI-TKKANS ir.l l<iiinnr> .in.J Koir.ii.r.ic
ir Kr.nis not yet anyway. Gaunt Slate Bureau Hek-r.a njlivc. "hart 1«i> lailine about thi» Mrmtinal RuilrtD!! that 1k.h<« !!><■ mu»iitr. i;rpnruriail for
tas:bibty of such an extension. Ken for Oiriv w Inar v^j.-n and hruHf dcrnM fi w.i% nirr.pli liil m (hi.- l.'iipitf,! (r.mp'« '" 1'JM buJd If awn be
nt of Highway* fepres«nla:ive irorr. HELENA — Robert Morgan curator, ol M;uk.iii. Dull .. m^i: |ji.Nilrr. »<irki:<J mi i.iii port rariEidej,
Jit at a public hearing here or. the Ihe Montana H^loncal Museum, has icsiened Munt-in t Uiisciy scli-uodS irl!>t. lui ■••■mn vijfnt v.\ .i yiilunlrri >^lf*r w.ia fmplrjyfd (Vsrat:. Shelby i
ile spur from the Galla-.tr! is the Big from the irctitulicn he fcrow up with to work
full !inw as an artist. btt-n cxh.l»:!:ne rik »ofS «iiUi^"eal -B.i»i He wurked with sculpli.r Kuriy Autu, a.'it I'rrry F. R<-!
the base of Lone Mountain on -Jse ,.nw. l.i-> IVIers creaii.iK tho lA-wisand Cbu ;hicf sbrining o
His resignation wzs reluctantly aue|jled rtrmtty w «all.Tics tn Mnilaiw. »>.,rrniK. ■horjnsi in the mu%>.-jm. \t-: Urgnl nui«-jm an sitr housinij o
r.1 va cntitued during the heari.i{ by the board of directors of lliu MnnDna Hj.v AfiMna »«J DiMorre j ill rn:^ in Dii' njliim lirvtitra ti lii;> •jij'-'l
nentai impac: of extending the road lorlca! Soricly at iu March 30 rnminp to be ;«■■
connect with U.S. 2J7 near Eras'. effective June 38 "WITH 7IIK F01X0WINU U >■ bull ^p reari .-crvi-'f i.% i urat.n i needed.'
ral road funding envisioned the ex- the «!<• ">f !ii> an -'*:tr.-1^ «x»y i"twn>-« "I by a ti.ur with (lie «o
Society director Sim Cilluly saic IRr cura surre.% ' Oill-jlv'aid The
>' Commission has not to dale pro- tor his been reUiticd to act as coreulunt lei ilisirvrd is ariinx cir&"i,< hum May !»
<toEnnis\ Skoogsaid The High- six mcnlte to a year to assist * nrw curnhrr Hal Mcstfn.>.. ibrknUin jiwisrif: ;iwl Kfi when Mi.-rurl Ke.-.nedy i'll to Junr I
I to take a look a: the fias.bility of Moigan. rjltorully recognized a> an iitlhont>
an cawboy arlUt Charles Marion Russell chnirmitl «1 Uir «nr:rly's Ira-^. and (iiiluiy ,. uhinCtiljly aj3nameddir<il»r
i of the area have been Lakes, ar.d maintains ht< studio al hit iiomc in Heleiu. bMi viiid tin bqtr'i «<- r<-lj"Ui>i l» w i- Mni- Morgan «;» !umi-il c.'lk'l 'I 't.r Mn<cu:i.
}le alignment or*, loot.
GtlXULV SAJD SIX ui scwi pp gar. ko. but the i-uran.i wisfttJ !•» cntt-r trie
Ihe depctriment could nol ptccwd foi curator had b«-n received, more arc pr'\-itoaiT fidd
set lor the proposes Sjanisr. Peaks potted and a replacement for Moreen prot.-..
xulble conflicts hly waulit be named next montn "I K.uifl v.v.< uq fur h.'xjr. wial a wjllop il
o Eiura like the Big 'ky hud Hip
•ce Und exdunge ta brought both is tu is Strarrv sjio lle'> Jt"*" "> *'•'•
jpost ftr frorr estdent </ (j lu n Th '

elected as Graybill calls panel meeting

onal fellow rU-U-NA iAI i lie toi- u riy lu I the
w I itji II e \t >
national corapelition among pr| ■ rover ial Voter Tdu Jin n or to the June b eleclion at li i mm - wi Mali Ik
cy itical ncieniisU icutnausu <-<d which the proposed cunttituuoi: SAD) a 111, I
<n Uw fa-ully ineinbtn lor tl- Cbmmitlet of \loiun., jj- toes lieforc the public fur »i - it) tc !!.•• Supi publi a u I ip opened I I I> ifad jr lutir
t«d" prognmf which i funded by the , «il fjvk jiJ n ht|| ih e *o kii t on
jojrnrd Ctm I tulio ill Lot- j;tRiar.ip m rejecticri i» »5J.9« Z UeiissUUttuur Oiria: S K»^>- k»i|ter in tilt ^(iliciil J I ' tcqiunlion Radi
» jFord'Faundalion The ioU! i.irluda 110.000 in n ttt (Jf»i riund. locattd 3d r lei
r7fe. nHtfefheiSUfe Bureau lor (our venlion will (all rr Jhn<u> >■■ r.Wil. obj*cl«J !•• lh» qualion uf «l:f.lj« Main n 1| al I Ho rrl ilirke jrd Sh«lbv
fc C^ptU 1 to try lo nuke i me federal fisndi trade . availatti on delegates >|n'.-:il:iit and" '.IJin Cun<Ao fdi-gjles
by the' li S. Department uf :r Ail cms n t e»pe? <.d lo The release sai
plar] for its uirerum lUlm Housing and Urban Develop- inenl fler finaladjuorr. can lilr for otker.puiil ffiie t jr evtikaltuiai I Hi id ed
and !te loo, pfolnt>.-d belore tlif filing dead! m Uj> i t s^ow c committee l^e lame whether
Tlit 10 an •neettni *as V at 5 ji m
_ o' Ihe flm was ajlhor th« life addinj,"
clM b> Convert oi rresldtui •o tnf Supreme Court tzed shartlv aeiore djoumment leased' l(jbu*in< *

Leo Ot^jbll Jr re Gnsit ..-Tiling* were ':prQKrruing »s IWerutoAofaIlIfl,a,d,Veeoftleeorn,,Kn,d«.u!,.!,•,-!. ^.■*". <"*."™I-""^".T*li.1»^i*l'f.1M"is""tin,?1If! 'm«r•i«>m•u-ch>«•t.A■«i»t/»W4i I )m*d h Qoc&'ntir t
planned by the convention when Au Is nicnlj^n »rilw. Votfr
Falb lawyet wno <p|wi"(e<i IV iiadJotirnMifne die — without
of the 100 d<Kiat» lo the (01 Efe«fltidiitrf«il"l«iLr>CTofaci«railM«ilifo«n ab/rie
by KvJalefl^lhMrrd; "
mttM to hande post-ron. irtflnj Vdale for aeofher meeP'-■ pbtl-rorv^iiliili elforti lu «!u- V .""."""O"1"*• .»• J
««iUon public -nlofmanor «c- in h.1 ait
nobii March 24. in ■-cpautsefdtSceomlpiutWuiiri.otnU..cl -t'h:e.•(■*«■ Jw„ (or tk•e ..i."i&*ni'ft^ com_
Jfittl.Wo,olher:tliir.e» -^ Theque»libciiofi*heUi«jlie/"r^;;■-'•>:.

Vc«ivB;iior.;i|.liriJlIy-«d)Ourned:. |u lint nieeUngfwai held

Easy Scan and Print :^*--' " ":rS*^ ^'■i'-i'~&*^?'*3-'&\^^l£&£-}&i&

fate voting

Wif-Sv'^'iW.4:--:-^!*.'*- . ■%■;'.■•-■■..».

rvbtin^haivoiued Mo iy'.'for 30'da« irameaiatcly pn- provision; r«juini"ii one year 5
. ;.iit»ry;!»ws: Iroir. the stateh'MSi' residency within ihe slate ar.d
or In (he (lfft;on in which lie 35 ays *iinir. the cour.ly ait
foih* courthouse.' -•.• ■waclw! lu vole rlcarly urronvtitutonal
aid Manure bw
sibenry be- An Additional tmdeniy re Uuailaiil taid II.i- high court
quirement covering xininpal dwision liaity (»pfn the que^-
1°" wting ir. :i !-!ale eico.ori. clrflinns held lhat voters hnd f.or> i>! ■.hnrttcrir. residtr-cy
. however. isstilN'3l:d. Tttu-. i! ;,nci teld !h?l Mnnuna Uk
mrsitv v.-Jfrs ir subsequent
'a.'penion ilrsirc! .'.o regster In olcwor.s m«l h»c lived ir. ffic
.vote, (if must .he * reside-.! ai stale for 4D days pricr to k
thtf lime he rep*lc> and s;Jtt. stole demon jn-i Vi (fays
registration must be j:c:n.
ptishrd within tlic <;j;ulnry pc Two legislators file
riod set [ortli ." Woodahl <nC
HISLENA i,M- - Sen. Sliir, Co.iventinn as coinirjllee coor
Slate law pranstj Its! vo;cr> dinator In that job. lie served
must liave occn a rrei&'ni •>! Slepliens. l( -Havre and Ken as the liaison be'.weer. the com
the stair for 1') day* ?nn.- to Everett M Snonttnd. K-C011 inilte» and PriviStnt Leo
\o\n\t in a prmiicn:.^ tucctiof: Graybill J:
and 40 days before 'r.l:n; r. rad. filed Thursday for reelec
ia\ older ptenior. "A'cMtitii tion to the Montana I.CKisbuire.

lascaacCuutity ,\uy .1 Krfd .Sti-nticnv. «hu operates .1 ra Baucus lilrti lor Detnocraiir Seeing spots in songi
dio stitiun jnd rablf* tfilevisiiw nomination In I'm Kami ir.
3ujrdivi i hail fnu|ihl I!.-.' atMr- conjpjry. <<-r»'«:d tn the itfcb Dist 18. part ol Mk-oula Onu West and Senior high schools combined their talents ard <J.-o$<,£d in
-i-j generals iipinion i> "i ar.d 1971 ■.«sion> Ht cam- numbers in a festival concert Wednesday at Wesfs gym. the program were p
Montana la* an tcsidrsry n- ps:fiii in Dill. U. wlikcb mvers Win contest Here Russell Creaser's a cappeUa choir from West prepares symphonic bands: <
quiiemcnti the t-ounlie of Kill. Thimlcau for ""Play. Beggars, Play!" If anyone in the audience Directors were froir
•'•■•In lh< TeiimisM tdje. the Judith Basin and Liberty HARDIN - David Svaren ol thought he saw'sputs, he was correct. For the singers were
. Supreme Court wcidij s Harden was one ol two second-
law r«) jirini one >'iar ^'j:e Snortbnd a firisc;. seeks a place winners. an<1 Rick Likeib
residency and Uuc« ir.on'.h- second twin in IW IE. wiikh ol llardin was une of Iwn third-
within a Riven muni}' place winner* in thr sMte Amer-
tmtj. tn (Jliricf. Taolc, ['on- ir^in l«j£ion and Auxiliary Amer-
Thn Montana Lcgikliilute. ur.- dera sitd Trton counties. inmsm and ^overnmcr.l te&t for
"d'tr.s slstc cnnslil'jlKi-.jl pruv: luali schnol juniors. Second
•iior. »Ho~vnK Hie legislature to Abu paying Ihr SIS ligjila- place winner received (30. wilh
-Islablish parts o! v:»iinj »• (20 lur Uiird pber
quirerr.enis. hart held in 1947 l:ve filins :et it the olliic uf
thai the constitutional iirnvivcn Swrctarj' uf *.ili Krjuk Mur
M one ywr wiis valiil and ;tat ray was Max S. naiKus. Mis-
. anv voter had to live in a ronn- <»uU liwy«. who was em
ployed by the <'or..shlnti<m.il

Court's drug sentenc

ilfcXLNA IAP: - The njiht court exceeded itt ;unid;rtion •0 ihe criminal sale of dan- in MieDrc
.judge-aclu
of a district court jud^e to :m- in requiring liim Id serve 30 getoai drugs on Jan 15. 1972, tence and
pe>c a jail term when deferring day^ ui the county jail tn Ril* and .added
imposition of a secler.te under linjts. to two teen-age girb. - . disttne'fon
Ine Dangerous Drug Act was
upheld fhunday b> Voctanj's The court ordered impesi'^un Wcodbary's csu.isel srfued gran ng a
Supreme Court. ol sentence on Woodbuiy :e-
fcrred for two years on the •■on- irA ihe court s Ncveiiber IS?, upon coic
The unanimous apimon by diliun he serve 30 dayi in the
Justice Westev d<lies cUnf:ed opin.01 n the Drev. case n imposing <
CDUrtv tail txjinning Lat reb. condiUonj
Ihe Inhunil rujjng ol la t No- olvmg Ihe MSU sadcrl 10I'
21 The- clar
tirber in *hrh-» Mnrttnt- the dutrlcl cuuri wfiout n-ru

Slite Uiuvers y student was diCion 10 imposo a jail Inrr n
iIokcJ In Mt\r half his pi
<entrr*i attend i lasses and delerred sentencinga.-
strvi> the other half ih>
rtiiiil c

to Prepare for Our In II appe-il from tellui
lim< (j)unt) nnan L. Kond
ANNUAL I ly 18 oirlintrd Ihr trjl

Hike yourself;intp|0(ieg

Get ouffifted^allrfheli

1'FXENA 1A Pi -

l^ih snd Game Commissicn 1
-heduled lo elect oflicen a( ifs
Apnfst 12 meetirg m Helena
B Jono Biilini 1

chairman ol the fiteircniber

\tate agenry and Amolil N

Kiedtt Boulder a vice rha t

nun *■ ^- :'~
411 ol vthe com-nosioncr !

Easy Scan and Print

p^ air idea '

gaining support

HELEN* .AP - A stale's air ir. his cvm modified plnr thai cy^ op;nion. jn ttifectivj
.quill) implement..>-, plan stripped the Stale Hoard of mcaiv^ of ^trergl.'jcniai! thot
Health's stnnpvn! 90 per reo: representations " Quarter aid.
doesn't require the p>vernsri sulphur nxidc cmiuron require
Anderson oprxKed the hoard
ii&ulut*. t>u! 11 does require his qualitv plai pla.i -is b«n? l(x» stringcnl and
nol ro.-npatible with (fee stand
■endorsement. Ihp Eriv.r:>n:ne». ,i little in:; derided In t.-r^.l a Mrdi of surrounding stales.
bl Protection Agency reaf hearing Miiy 1.1 or. moving uif
firmed ir a teller In Sen Lw reqwrratCRts (or cciupli;im v Quarts atn rulfirmcd ir
Me-.ralf. D-Mont with :•>!: %-^rdards Aack IhiiT the letter lhal II:- <uie rir
In a letler la Mcicall. John yj.-^ In June HI. i97fi. A Vllor ;«!«pi standard.! more slrinsen:
vi\ se.nl ta ihc KIM requesting tun tin fedvra! standards
R Qiurlcs -Jr assistant to lhat il r««:a<i(JiT Ihe loufih
bn;ird pijn Ili-jctldi In the ilwnee oi
miiiistraior lor ndirjcnio.il sin jpprovshlc plan. Ihc EPA
Thf EPA. with both plans m can impose federal sUmdard;
and general counsei. «i:d thai tand luv nut indic»U'd ^ pr<*F- Hut an- lfl»rr than ;he stand
erenre. 2lth:<uph the wui^ht ards endowed by a stale health
in most stales "rfce jcitrnor Ixard."
has primary ics-poaiibiUy lor ■Ihe rei|drrmenl in our
budgeting j.nd allncmon of re emulations llul a ttonTtxit rn r;c5 added: "I should tn,.
lorsc- a plan •■*.. in ihc aecn- that the national stand
sources rt m»< felt very
will pnrfect ijjairat all
strongly tfeal resresenuliciK and anticipated id-/erse

concernine Hue and ciher trot s ol jir pollution

ters within !ht (rovrr.-.ot'- pow
er should be known to him ami
endunsud by him.

Ciov. Furresl H. Anderson Sid

nol endurse ihc plan, sn3 sen:

Weed-free hay policy

would replace embargo

HELENA 'Al'i - A pohcy senuitin> Insprtlior. ».i;ld uke place
stttcrre.il on r.o> to n« The"$u^«»led jKihey provides l»elon- a field k. rjt for hay
"Kit ivouid bt Mi!d to an out-
notions wctdfrw hay o: iwri llul Ihe Oallalin Coouly Wmd litter or hunter (or use on the
irlo national forest- /ai fall and Undid or £iter.sicn Service n>-
winter me hy mounted bitr- Thii wou|d n-.em outfiltcrs
game hunting parti» wi- su% ice lamiers and ranrhtrv hv
geled Thursday !i; slate ; nd
nfferirf i field inspection sen.'

The puliey was suggested in Tills srr.ire *ojld inriiidc a , " "'" %<? '

pUre nl ar. rmtargc under she clean-bay M-rtifiialioii rwo noxmas weeds for Iheir

1972 Gallalin National Korcsl fom i.j»-r.jii.',n

policy for dude ranches nut

filters and hunters Harriet Miller

Officials uf Ihe Csilatin K'or-
esl arr rM|U>rini; adeqiulr icr-d

to be packed n. rather than lor to file Monday

hay to be stored at cjrr.pHw
This is because much c! Ihe In-

«*j! hav >s «airt ir. 5*> «in. liUt'NA Aji II rn I lurerl (' d. t<ntwi> *i(h Lit
M kf relu nirj! roir lui "■ ^ tt"IP^ °r<- M»s Miler
u-nirutco with noxioj. *eeds >et» o ramp* 1.111 „ nuit
SUK Ajmul ural Cwrdi^ im Vonuru l-ndi/ s id dn ■ <l I'cop't M" tjprcsdng
ix s ^'*««>r wilr Jiftwtirrenl
lor lloigbs 0 Sn Ihuil thr
su^Koled polic> was, Uie rir.ull 1 slen and ilocs rot
ol two Tieettn^. ^Herded b> c*n I venae a

Jr. On o c/eor day...

SUte Depa-tmerT
and feed [
slront untl< r Hnlion

Coiburg boosts Silhouetted against the sunlight in time Friday morning'' to pause;on '
Earth Week Billings Senior High School this the stairs and stare ironva-sch«ol
co-ed seems to be taking in ail the. beginning to feel Uie pleasures of
wonders of a spring day. Unruffled, spring in Montana.
by her school schedule, she took

I week Mbs Miller i

Khl K Na Ar 1 - The pr sine upenn e-derl

nwUoti ol bartn Wwi t> Man ♦♦♦»♦♦»»

Una s achools lu bn.11 puiscd LET'S PU
by Sopermtendenl of (Milii Ir
•Iniclion RiijD/a Lolburc w>io WATCH
iir(ed educators and studuils
Thunda> lo rrnevt thnr envi tON
fonmciflM) awirenex
\ Barlh Uecx a 1m onoidc ob

^,V Mrvance btglrs Mi>nda) ji d
&*■ conlinues Ihrtiutft tW *wk t

( TitillHIigl tod A~pnl 21 by Wjlk
1 ^Di when Montarjnj hjve
t ;^b«en ttteti Ib walk oY bujje

SiSisS■ttd&-l',)ft->lead ol

Easy Scan and Print

idea ConCon
TV planned
ipport
HELENA (AP) — Five night Oscar S Kvaalen, R-Umbert,
trial <•) 5 opinion ar effective ly television telathon sbcnrc aie tests the convention's pasUd-
"f roe-.'s of !U»i-gt!.eitrj! these Jet for prime-lime evening joumniem authority to spend
hours just ahead of the June 6 the JM,»62 it has available in
■>ni -eptavntal mis Ouarln aid public vote on the stale's pro stale and federal funds.
ire \rdertoo imposed the uoird posed new constitution — pro
»..• plan .s Imiis ijo ,(n,,geal and A decision fcs eipecud to be
viding no legal banirr is handed down by the five jus
mil compatible with the stsnd- tices within a lew days after a
lled ards, ofsi:rroi'ndinj> states erected by the Montana Su hearing set for Tuesday after
noon is Helena
'.',.* Quarlcs aky realftrm preme Court
Ddaib of the par.eltype As the Voler Education Com
';c the letter that the »"jte -an mittee meeting begin, with H
"" adopt standards more sirin^ert thorn were fiven Friday to the of ib 19 delegates present.
Voter Education Committee by Gravbili said. "Well meet.
ihsn the federal standards Constitutional Conventirai Presi Whether it* official or unofn-
dent Leo Graybil) Jr., D-Great r:ial. we don't know "
,i"n He .ladtd. "li ihe absetx-e o! Falls
He announced that printing is
ujf; *" spprovahle plan, the L'l'A" He said toe shows — on the to begin Saturday in Biilirp of
rsn imposr- federal sUsdards Wednesday. Thursday. Friday, 5*5,000 tabloid-site copies at the
Saturday and Sunday nights proposed constitution, complete
, ,n lhal ire lower than the stand- preceding the election - will with eipianatioiu sf the
Ief ards cnSursed by a VJtlr health he made possible by buying for changes from the present l&SS
Jbout |7,0QO the TV movies
cm b<>91<1 scheduled for these nigHls. ducuroent.
Irr- QuaHi» added. I should n.i,- The Billings Gazette is han
Each show will bit two hows
phasi2e thai toe ration*! sund- and be aired on eighl stations dling the job for about $13,000.
fur ird^ w;il protect against ali al varying tiroes between S which includes deiivery to tne
on- kiuwn and anticipated advene p.m. and 10 p.m 56 county clerks.
«.• effects of ai? pollution "
Craybill said praenl plans At first, he iaifl. It «i
/ policy call lor five or six delegates to Ihougbt the copies wuuld cist
embargo form a panel to reply to ques Ihe cacnlicj !3 cents each to
tions presented by an in- mail la all registered •oters
liupeclion would lake place Hn»,-evtr. amngemenu were
les befere a field is cut for luy nouncer-mtKkraior. He wtU get made »ith the Post Office ts
«! thai wojld be' said to an out". - get them under a butt rate. »
;s- fitter a: hunter for use or: the the questions from other dde, counties bow wM pay uni> :
rv. CliUatin Kortst. gales manning telephone jet cenu each - a savin; sutf-
up for the shows.
by Committee members gcrierii-
The questions will cone
rv. This wiiitld mcjn outntlcrs statewide; from the public ly agreed that the most o.'-.er.-
asked question ius to do «c
jnd hLiticii umiHI lave hay "If the Supreme Court says how to obtain copies of the pro
we have :o be fairer Iliac we posed constitution.
1&. Irw oi Mxitim weeds lor :heir are, we could have several leg
islators or opponents on the ►♦»»♦♦♦
\ Miller panels." GraybiU suiO, refer
NAonday ring In the fact that the con GEM
vention is CL.-rer.Uy involved in DISPLAYS

two lawsuitt

One suit, brought by delegate
Charles H. Mabcney, I-tUncy.
tests Ihe right of delegates to
file for election to other public
offices by Ihe April 27 deadlise.

The other sail. Died by Rep.

in current ul duconlent with the
wo wi> things atv" Miss Miller
,1 uid "People are expressing
she ^satisfaction with government
™. Hut won I iislen and docs not
rat- seem to tat- 1 sense a

b! 1-"believe will have significant On a dear day...
I. 5" implicalinns ior Ihe corning

■ lr..fhcplst two weeks Misj 'Silhouetted against the sunlight in time Friday morning to pause, on
Millrr-ius adarnscd rawt than Billings Senior'High School this the stairs and stare from a school
> "rmethp in |n,r wiem co-«d seems to be taking in all the beginning to (eel the pleasures of
wonders of a spring day. Unruffled spring in Montana.
nJ he ujjll paign .by .her.school schedule, she took

into the itrtion of"th<

iU'l neii v Kit Miss Millt-r n

i funnel stale stiperintendKit
of |Jibl i iRStrurtion

♦-♦

IT'S PUT A

UCHDOG

Kb

Easy Scan and Print

in the voting

6JCf3J,H &es>«lptnfittb««S,besnhlo,wemdodmearrakteedaInnd- jmKnu Voted i&a.fer election while Re^ubh'cam la (WBaopBbtleitb^/l>^byaa^^d)oWtbil^
sjo&nitUpo4dStOkJ tprhoevifstiXoTnd*d.eg■atii were toUdly Voi^.ttigBKtUpUS-SO-ifiiodlwlepeodetits tavotedmerit.
autribtite certain: federal funds-iti* private';"and- rdifjoai
T or tfafus quo esmp.'but only nine of ^'.K JUmCES-OFTHE PEACE.\AlthouV> «* reiorm
^tig records position was to take JPs out of the constitution, delegates put <scahnososlusp.cD«ermtoricirla.tls7-s1u6ppwohritleed!ntdh'eerpie^nodnejtJt>^z6«p:paorMrdfl"ir4iep^ii:nU*
unn in, and then kept them in by a 53-U vote on thia motion
^REFORM" and lUtttsquo-admiUedlyu to delete them. DemocnU and Republicans both voted U. RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS, hi retaining the mtnl
"--(Sues amply could not be considered against the reform position by three-vote margins. 30-27 and right-to bear arms, delegates voted 5243 against additional-
i the two However, the State Bureau 19-16. Independents opposed the reform position, 4-2. language which would have outlawed state gun registration
Ti it considers show a Hear distinc- (Reform vote—yes). Democrats opposed the anli registration clause 39-1T while
10. CAMPAIGN EXPOSES Although it passed 4t-U, a RenubBcans supported it. 24-9. Independents opposed iL 4-».
isla- controversial proposal to sse public funds to finance Supreme
Court election campaigns failed to get the required majority The 21 issues are fated by number at the lop of Unvote
b Burcsni survey of IS key convention votes for final passage. It was seen as a reform to make the judici chart, and each delegtte's vote is listed below Y means yes.
^delegates spot their vote, between reform ary more independent. Democrats favored it 37-17 while N means no, and A means the delegate was excused, absent
^ squopasitloni Republicans opposed it 2S-I0 Independents opposed it 4-2. or not voting. Each delegate's reform-status quo-absent re
(Reform vote—yes). cord for the first IS issues is listed in parentheses after his
r f TfaAvWeehait also includes delegates'votes on sizaddi- 11. TWO-MILL LOOT. Delegates voted 43-32 against a
"1*1 JS1 * tan tami mtmst but ™ "Kcssarily a motion to keep the current two-mill limit on statewide prop name.
_ H&* trttheaines erty taxation. EKminating the liirit was seen as a reform to
alow more equitable school financing. Democrats opposed Vote Chart
I'KE^NIAL LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS. DeJegatcs re- the two-mill restriction 31-13 while Republicans favored it 16-
14 <nd Independents split 3-3.1 Reform vote-no). DHJX,AnTtE. ",...__
MjBWS a move to have the legislature continue meeting 12. BOARDS OF EQUALIZATION. Delegates defeated.
•to fears Instead of annually as (he reformers wanted. £3-32, a move to retain the present county and state boards of 40-I.U
its voted 38-16 for reform while Repubhauts split 17- equalization and supported the reform position of statewide
assessment and equalization. Democrats supported the re tsss
~ 't voted 4-2 for reform (The feform position form 43-12 and Independents supported it 4-2 while Republi
cans opposed it 18-16. (Reform vote—no). fwtlllHJi
■$"*^*V£»,DAY ANNUAL SESSIONS Ddcgtla voted Td-24 IS. HIGHWAY EABMARKtNG. The closest vote came CnMtlla
on a motion to put the present highway earmarking provision
t-e-lKi«Jr»(,r^orn> poutkn of ginng the legislature more time on the ballot. Reformers wanted to allow the legislature to
"*f*.afncidt{elie'tcthiangngIctd mteheetanannunaulaltliyme(IlnimaitlattoerSOcodamypsr)o.mDiesme',ocdretltes- override the earmark, and defeated the batlat motion, S0-3O
'voted for reform 41-10 Republicans voted reform 22-12 and Democrats supported the reform position, 42-10, while Re
^Independents supported it 4-2 IReform vote-yesi publicans opposed it. 19-14. Independents voted 4-1 for re
form. IRetormvote—no).
> -1 3- REAPPOaTIONMENT COMMISSION. By a 55-36 14. CITIZEN LAWSUITS. Delegates rejected. 51-44. a
v, iSblhcn'me*n•t**en*r}n*mrctrteiaotnedsteaens iansdaepTeenfdoernmt biycjmiosUsttjvscturdceanptpsoro-f proposal to give citizens a greater right to sue in environmen
^ugavenaneat^DemacnU rtled for the commission 33-18. tal cases. Democrats supported eitiica suits by a 34-22 martin
aitn.d2I7n-d7e.pIeRenfdoernmtvsoflaev-oyreesd).the idea. 3-2. Republicans op^po^sed
rtRepSfllcanffavored it 19-16 and Independents favored it 3-2. 15. RIGHT TO PARTICIPATE. An attempt to delete this
proposed new right, which aims to expand public access to
^(Reform yote^-yest) government, failed M-37. with Democrats voting 3915 in
support of the right and Republicans opposing it 20-12. Inde
t ADVOCATE OR OMBUDSMAN. Reform- pendents supported the right. 3-2. (Reform vote-noi.
._» postton to help the average person in his It. TWO SORADS OF EDUCATION. By rejecting. 54-38.
ig government but in (his vote the reform was a motion toiuve one board of education, delegates cast their
„_ „ »e"new constitution 48-43 Democrats wanted kit with a two-board system destined to strengthen the uni
7tbe people a advoctie left la by a 33-32 margin, but Repubti- versity system. Democrats favored the two-board concept. 31-
S.overnhtiminjly opposed it 244 while Independents 21, Republicans leaned toward it, 19-15. and Independents
supported it 4-2.
|LOr*S BALLOT Ddccates voted 55-44 to retain the 17. UNtCAMERAL. Although the unicamefal-bicameral
tjtst.cl seven independent executive branch officials. > legislature question will be settled by the voters, the dele
gates couldn't resist discovering thdr preference in a straw
irmersTbelicfs that fewer elected executive offi- vote. UnicamenI won. 47-39. Democrats favored unicameral.
|plnpSiBt respocuihiUty on the governor. (The —ll2r9l-2f9t Fw»h^i»"l»e™»R<e»p»»u»b«lihcwanwsultemanMe.d.Sli^g|htJlJy 1towar»«di bicameral
, .^ „_,. Kt liter reduced to six officials). Democrats sup
ported the reform 29-2S while Republicans opposed it 24-12 . II GAMBLING In one of the most emotional debates of
the convention delegates rejected by a SMS vote a motion to
^tad&depeaaenUtputM (Reform vote-no). outlaw gambling entirely and west on to put it on the ballot
as a side issue DemocnU opposed the motion 18-18 while
irmcrs rallied to delete *' RepiM[e&aao^ndependent>sittiportedtt;ll-lSand32
mHn-tarconlUTuttoiF-raeinlng that it -
win the tutore'Tbe vote was 56-33 to » DEATH PENALTY In attsthcFinotional debate
i Democrats voting yes 3S-U while Re-
ddegtlcrvotcdJMJ against a motion which would have
i voted Jor ddetwn 3 abolished the death penally-m-Montana Delegates liter put
that question to the people too" Democrats supported abali
te^ voted SH7 Uon ol the death penalty 33-17, but Republtom opposed it
_rtform position of 2M and Independents voted 51 illicit >L

rcteotionofMudges 21 PUBUC AID TO PRIVATE EDUCATION. Ddegltti
reaffirmed the present ririrtJ^jttinrtiatiSam' state mads

Easy Scan and Print

fas showed in the voting

Democrats voted 29-28 for election while Republicans la- for nonpubiic schools, bal by a 54=40 vote allowed the state to
vortil.tSe roenl plant 2M6 and Independents favored merit. distribute certain federal funds to" private and rclinouj
12 I Reform vote-^noi i sacnhsooslsu.ppDoermtoecdriatt!s7.slu6pwphoirlteeIdntdheepemnodteinotns JopMp0osaendduR4epTubh-
, » JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. Although the reform
' position was to take JPJ out of the constitution, delegates pul SI. RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS. In retainm* the prescnl
them in. and then kept them in by a 5S-45 vote on this moUon right to bear arms, delegate voted 51-43 against additional
• to (Wet. them. Democratspid Republicans both voted language which would have outlawed slate gun registration
against the reform position by three-vote margins, 30-27 and Democrats opposed the imi registration clause J9-I7 while
.iU-16. Independents opposed the reform position. 4-2. Hep«b!ic»ns supported it. 219 Independent* opposed .t 4-2
olidly ' tRelorrn vote—yesi.
The 21 issues are listed by number at the top ol the vntp
fie of ; 1». CAMPAIGN EXPENSES. Although il passed 49-46. a chart, md each delegate's vole is Hsted bdo*.. V raesns yes
controversial proposal to nse publir funds to finance Suprerat N means no. and A means the delegate was excised absent
■dlvis Court election campaigns failed to get the required majority cr no! votac EaeS de!ega!e\> ri>lorm-s!atus quo-ibs
owed for firul passage. It was seen as a reform to make the Judici rord for the first IS issues is listed in parentheses aft
urau ary more independent. Democrats favored it S7-1? while
Republicans opposed il SS-lo Independents oppwett ir 4-2 name
votes (Reform vote-ycs>.
Vote
rform II. TWO-MILL LIMIT. Delegates voted tt<a against a
»ddi- motion lo keep the current two-mill limit oa statewide prop
erty taiation. Eliminating the Brail was seen as a reform to
inly a allow more equitable school financing Democrats opposed
the two-miU rejlrictioe 3113 while Republicans favored il IS-
time 14 and Independents split J-a. ■Reform vole-noi
dele-
xnli It. BOARDS OP EQUALIZATION. Delegates deflated.
2 and 63.32, a move to retain the present county and stale boards of
equalization and supported the reform position of statewide
55-36 assessment and equalization Democrats supported the *e-
form 43-1! and Independents supported » 4-2 while Republi
4>por- cans opposed illS-16.1 Reform vote-no i.
ntsof
3318 13. HIGHWAY EARMARKING. The doses) vole came
il 3-2 on i motion to pul the present highway earmarking provision
on the ballot. Reformers wanted to jllow the legislature to
■Jorm- override the earmark, and defeated the tallol motion. 60-30.
in his Democrats supported the reform position. 42-10 while Re
nwss publicans opposed it. 19-H. Independents voted t-l for re-
'anted
publi- form. (Reform vote—no>
idenu
14. CITIZEN LAWSUts. Ddegalts rejected, 5m a
in the proposal togjve ctaens a greater right to sue in environmen
iais, a tal cases. Democrats supported citizen suits by a S4-M margin
e offi- and Independents favored the idea. 3-2 Republicans opposed
it. 27-7 (Reform vote-yes).
iThe
ssup- 15. RIGHT TO PARTICIPATE. An attempt to delete thU
24-12 proposed new right, which aims to expand public access lo
government, failed 54-37, with Democrats soting 3915 in
lelete support of the right and Republicans opposing il 20-12 Inde
hat if- pendents supported the right. 1-2. (Reform vote-noi.
-33X0
l«Re- It. TWO BORADS OF EDUCATION. By rejecting, M-38.
on 3 a motion to have one bond of education, delegates cast their
lot with a two-board system designed to strengthen the uni
limits versity system. Democrats favored the two-board concept, Ji
alne? ll. Republicans leaned toward it. 19-15. and Independents
haul
supported it 4-J.
SMI
lion of 11. UNICAMERAL. Although the onkametal-bicameral
legislature question will be stilled by the voters, the dele
gates couldn't resist discovering their preference in a straw
vote. Unicaraenl won. 47-39. Democrats favored unicameral
29-20, while Republicans leaned slightly toward bicameral.

-l&.16lnA.pf'vl»"»'--<~<.|riramfn;>t -t

II. GAMBLING. In one of the mast emotional debates or
Ibe convention delegate rejected by a 56-36 vote a motion to
outlaw gambling entirely and weal on to pot it on the ballot
as a side issue Democrats opposed the motion, 36-11. while
Hcpubticftu indlodtpcnoerrts supported it ta-is and M.

II DEATH PENALTY. In another emotional debate
delegates voUd 4M] against a motion which would have
abolished the death penalty in Montana Delegates later put
that question to the people too. Democrat! supported aboli- ■
tion of the death pnalty 3M7. bill Republicans opposed it
28-Band Irdepcndetli voted 51 against it. . .

reaffMirmPeUd BthUe CprAesIeDntTiOtnPrRtIbVanAaTgEauEuDtU'uCsAiTnIgaOoNy.stDaelleefgusntdesj Cub Scouts Curtiss Renn, 10, left, arid l^life--^
Bcddes. 10, both from Pack 18; lest-outithe^?■'
sets out drums they set up Saturday for the Boy SMfe^
Exposition at the Shrine Auditorium. DS

covered all aspects of scouting...

Easy Scan and Print

i«C4U,tlr^urNS$is-N\^^

Swedish AAassage:
KDUm

WANT AD DEPT. Tiain lull • Ml M'I
HOURS lanala* IralWBt.
haavr tqutp^ au
Monday to Friday pqMlr. body twtdar.-macU ■« shoo
8 a.m. to S: la p.m. w. TV,

DEADLINES TRAIMINftfiltVICIS. 9Q A<w. 0. %U-

Weekdays :< p.m. day
preceding publication
Saturday. Sunday, Monday

4 p.m. Friday

Dial 245-3071

HENDRICK'S SfC SrMlape.Mtffw.lorl
occepr.w«ikf»>»nim
Landscaping & Sodding MLCICLEIK

»iv« Ontl IM UHL M Can SINNY EVANS lU-III
U«l •nnMn H Monlara gr
F«t« ESTIWAT(s-n<.U

11 Ham. a**t#Hlj(>PM» 4 !dMl •«•
Jt#rt >miw««tttv. Coed tv«QM

An antique attraction 4 ft* jfaewoMbtM Ccw, ,„ ihf THE WOOD SHOP
» M« |tort fa* kw»t Uf nld pittbn.
Dressed in vintage costumes, Mrs. Betty mj Hm* Wwvix* hwlrc. c«>mUmm may »tfTM»pk*r« witlt f«O *i
Mitchell and Mrs. Albert Thomas used an an &X4 >v >»r pmoa «te cia. m twit tAitr- S«*} tUrTifte UUry
tique car for a ticket booth. Purchasing a tick
et for an "old home" tour is Mrs. Lois Hos- t*M t> i>c Cm. « jpjritr fiw4 fltoymwif. C*>l L»rl at'
kins. ACM8 PEMSOMKEL
> SC>VICE ulr.r-lniovttr;al»tnr,yf4mnoof,ro«1ti,a1h»>laca>l.airltnpu«etrctntla..rkU.•ltv,tairril/Mfaltir:M''•'-<.*.
Continued spending TCIKCL Emal«>ina«i. tnuu
by Concon defended
Aerial spraying, chemica paoela «A0 Hn Big nwnay.
24tn St. West control for weeds, iniects, Parl or Ml i^na aaittia*i (
end Broodwste sagebrush. All spraying lllU<*U»WMAJ»
fully guaranteed. Lie. by artWrad aul.iM
latmnl) state & federal govt. Mon
tana owned and operated. T
OLD TIME MOVItS Simplol Soil Builders. 456-
i-MO P.M. 2804, Billings, Mt. HUDA PARTiCUlAlt TVPIWOAMN
•tall al«>| Moann MM a tMlMU
Spring Cleanup Mntn lafciclM wKI ba «var 21 «*li
is defense of a suit dial- pvvng i« \-tn*t mtf ««•• groomta1 and awa I* conv«n« vatl**ith
HELENA <r\P) — Two attar- lengtni continued spendng by KvgaSntfM»llCrI«.uPlK«.fetll«afafiit«Ofl.. BJHingi Im gaapla. Far iatanlai* ivrira *l*ri*g QiMli-
oey-ddegates to the Coa- Huitaii to oiMCTOit ».O. am hh
stituttooal Convention com- coBVeaUon's Voter Educa >«»* same* wklattt >ar an
pleted drafting a "votuminoos" tion commiuee, eonUIns ugu- 4lr;«afB>«n miiwi *»■■> ICC- Putl Untc
brief Sunday to be presented to menu and exhibits, HfSh KhMl eip
Uk Montina Supreme Court Arhtnl
Mbodaj. to Jerome Locndorf. R-Hdeoa. fling* HUM
th
Tbe document, to be sub- Loeodorf and Marshall Mur
ray R-KabspeU chairman of MELROSE. (API - Three
toe recently adjourned coo-
venbon s Rules Commitloe. peoons were BDed, another ,™?i»°*3<r«;«*«»».»•*
ipenlJSundjy m Helena corre- four injured in a head-on colli
Utmf the research efforts oTa sion souUrof Metrose SundayJin
poup of Uwyn-ddegatei.
^qny
On Tuesday IX I p.ra. an ad-
venary hearui| is scheduled Beaverbead County Sherifrs
before the tttgh court: At that
time arfiuneatj wifl be present spokesmen In Dillon said VEVOU«LA«»<»OWtO
ed hi a suit by veteras lefisla- names of the tataUUeS would be
tor Oscar Kvaalea. R-Lambai. not be rttaoed until next of kin wn»a i»a ii»if«>aa?;gfi:,iijfEgw

The suit nan>B member! of were notified.
the Voter Education Committee
and convention oflkiab, >nd Authorities said the accident
Uendorf said that they too
occsred stwrtlj before t p.m. HiaBi
may be present m about five miles south ol Mel-
menu are made H>.J«-oiiS flarninmiorl «altrpfaoita<«
rue

Arthur Adler of Mciran, uid

if his children vrete hdtpi- "'•" acoliio CaocaJit. Call ]»ai
" with tnjiuio, authorities
said. Adler and his 7-yor-old OoFlold Tree Service
son Allen are buspiUlued In insiueoALiCEMiEO,
Butte ind are not listed u se-
rioujly tturt.

KEU LODGE - The Red KathleenAdlef. 10, was rush »af»ltlilno.va«au.na.|4a -'
ed toa Great FUQs hospital hy
Lodge PubUc Library has ambulance with what author
planned a weeklonf senes ol m,, aamtti „ ,«„„„ hca<l KITCH ENS-BATRROOrAS
cvenU to cdebrale Nalionil iJjr*.™r»i.c..«.Afi«j5i-
Library Week inJKne>

All prognmiiwdl beheU u. Authorities idcntiiitd the oth ILOIM'SSaLBCTRlTCHIN} . -
UieUbory dub room beglanuii
^„ in^jured pfer?so^n as ^James JHae

**tM?w.pdniLy. D^o-n. Srcanlitn. nCoo- <*■' «hertin spokamen »aid T>a»llad>a Trim* PJame«1.Ma.w y
dhi^^win^peik'oa'Uie

&fflKW&X: vjss; AM alc«lap>W.lll-il». ■-1-'-

Easy Scan and Print

Mining stock s<

brings federal

By JACK MAYNE wis released here an 12.000 bail ddenda'n
SPOKANE. Wash. SAP) - A following a hearing belort a- chasers -
federal grand jury here has in V..S magistrate. Foriker was chase sh
dicted three men for selling un
registered securities for more being held in Los Angeles in were :cj
lieu of 15.000 biil. smitfc siid rUies ar
lh»n SHQ.OOC to 133 investors in Campbell ind Tedrow were ston. son
11 states and British Columbia,
Canada. responsible for incorporating_jl**«* «•
Nevada Tungsten and Copper.~ants. IK*
fr. addition to sale o! unregis Inc.. in Nnad>. ».iii two Wast-" :pr0s|Sect
tered slocks, the indictment
charges :he men with aiail irtglon corporator.;, 3;g West cha3es»

fraud, conspiracy, sr.d nuking Resources. Inc., and Trans-Pa- f*naing
ciiic Resources. Inc. SEC
false statements. , After the three tirnii *« in-

During bullfight in Seville, Spain, its the bull Indicted were Alien R. Clamp- corporaled. ihe Jidiclnienl said f^rch
Throwing the bull for a change instead of the matador who goes bell, Los Angeles: Cllne F. the :hree men begin seilitig mon;y [
cartwheeling. The bull was unable to continue Tedrow, 52. Spcka-e. and Jo
after digging his horns in the sand. seph £. Foraiier. Reeds Ca stocx at 10 cents a share in (ration •
Washington. Idaho. Montana, used to
lif., a former Los Angels stock Utah. Nevada. California. In- ing pro;
broker.
U.S. Ally. Dean C. Smith said iuru. illinuk Nebnslu. Smith tc re$s

authorities are still attempting Dakota. Wiscouin ana lo one ^Iccnt!
investor in British Coi-jir.bia. The |
to locate Campbell Tcdrow The ir.ditlir.rn: saia t.ic three ">"< 'ra
ConCon lawyers
2.i mil]
go to court today

HELENA (AP> - A i Convention delegates, in purpose of informing the public
leg*!, brief Was too much for Januai)', lulhoriicd spending on what the new constitution
the Italy rof Oonslilii£ioazl Coaf m excos ol US 000 by the Vot- would mean il it is ratified
—? "vention^ttoracyt (o cope with er Education Committee for the June 6.
_, ^ JXdR&g&iio' the paperwork
~Xa wbS'LbejtQled with the Supreme Highway toll
*"r * Cduld ^niUli^TLesday morning.

weekend by. liwyer-dde- reaches 60

_ Jtlck'tto {{hchrctcelnt&lyd&dbjbrtiiridMd

comention ifl ddccje to a suit

>J «e«tifij{o'birfSrtheTspcn<tni

Lortn highway pftral reported,
stid DePord A spokoSun for Ihe highway

er died patrol aid LiUey was
venjar•»«J"*■rh£e<«J(eaicoulaa ci»sr jorcocnt;ioatnhtei veenhiclUeie Kocaurr
fdcdwtth- treated and released a' ih
Sweet Grasj County tlotplttl
tosUrSf
AndcrJoh *isiUled whaiUfei:

Easy Scan and Print

m
Tuesday MSming^

Mining stock scheme
brings federal indictment

By JACK MAYNE was released here en K.000 bail defendants luld potential pur* and &W.00C shares ■ of Nevada
SPOKANE. Wash (API - A following a hcirinj before a chasers that they rou!d pur
federal grind jury here has in U.S. magistrate Foraki* was chise shares hcicrc the issue "jngsten »\ 10 cents per share
dicted three men (or selling un being heSd in '.An Angeles in were registered «itk t'e Setu far a total income of 137J.0O0
registered securities lor more The sales took place between-
than M70.000 to 133 investors in Ueu o! 15,000 bail. Sf.ilh said. rilies and Enrhango Commis May. 1968 and Maj. 1970, tbeT
Campbell and Tcdnnr were sion, something the government indictment states.
11 states and British Columbia stales U illegal. The defend
Canada. responsible for '.ncerporating
Nevada Tungsten and Copper, ant.*, the niictrrrr «atr? lo'd
In addition to sale of unregis toe., in Nevada, and Wo Wajh- ipruspects tltat then stock rjur The stock was advertaid-in- ■
tered nocks, the indictment
charges the men with mail ixglon corporations. Big West chases would be held in esc ow ftUe newspapers articles'ln
fraud, conspiracy, and making
false statements. Resources, inc.. and Trans-Pa pending registration with the the Eastern Mining News of

Indicted were Alien R. Camp cific Kesources. Inc. SEC Spckane. which the in&clmenl
bell. Los Angdo: Cline E. .•j/j vas specifically set up
After the three fines were in
Tedrow. 52, Spokane, and Jo corporated the indictment sa:d Purchasers were told thai the jr: cperatnl bv Campbei for

Dunne bullfight in Seville. Spam, it's the bull seph E Foraker Reieda. Ca- the three rr.es begin selling money pa d ir idvance ol rc;u Itut purpose. Trie govemirseat
charges $25.IX)0 was improperly
for a change instead of the matador who goes til..-a (urincr I.os Acgeics slock nock at 10 cents a share in nation vn'a the btC <vcu d e
cartwheeling The bull was unable to continue broker. diverted from BigWesland Ne-
after digging his homs in the sand Washington. Idaho, Montana. used lo purchase addiL ital rrn vziz Tungslon 3 tiaT mining
U.S. Ally. Dear. C. Smith said iadc paver t
iwyers authorities are still attempting Utah. Nevada, California. In- in; picper.y. for costs reLiting
lo locale Campbell. Tedrow
a, .,,in 'purpose of informing the pabbc <iiana. Illinois. Nebraska. .Smith to registration and for ether le The Westeiiv Hiitiag News
pecdlhg- on v,hal Ihe new constituboa
Dikcli. Wisconsin and io one gal costs, the complaint statf
ie'_V6j ) Mould mean if it It ratified The government slates Ihe w i used tff lure' new investors
'fvor1the' June G investor in British Columbia.
The indictment said the three men fraudulently sold a loul of and lull three wbn had already
2.S million snares of Big Wesl. invesied. the grind jury

Seo.»3 slures ol Trans-Pacific charged

Astrological forecast

For Tuesday en Sense oi Humor can ae

By S\ DNF.Y OMARR frcaiKt ally K«p promisp'

ARIfcS March li Apr i :to one who is in transit. Write
: Hcme p operly ervir n
men'—these are * bjec' in or call
SCORPIO Oct 23 Nov 2i)
titanic Make adjustmc-ts Obtain valid hint from Li
Don't overexiend /ounelf
bra message tress venahli
Taurus «-d Libra persons are ty Relatives ejihtbuienden -

in pictbrc Family -nember rv to change plans Shot
makes surprise request an journey may lead_to de*df_
nouncernenl Be ready
dTd tithcr forcct*DotttJ>*'£.
in too much Sfa hiAjSOr J"
TAURtS [April 3>-M« 20 garuie effort] ■; t
■ Perceive meaning of mes SAGtTTAJUOS (Nov., S )
sage Study reactions &l Dec 2)1 Money tto'
neighbors relatives Become may leitporanry bo*''?
more aware dien Pis.es fd Be wtUings.to
charijes OperCti
indivdual could play key musiciUon *7!vo. ., .„
role" Ko'd ofl on journeys ency lo 6e cxtravjginl.'citi^''-'
letter writing 'S oj ne<d time

to evaluate less Gemini Virgo'.Si&S&u \
GEMINI (Mjy 21 Jure Ml
i.beci any lerdency lo be
Htravagaiil Don t nuke Tin
ancul commilnient until you _
"■ ■ £ft

now rarf' learn
fa.-t.oUjfcTjoso'

CANCER (Vune^l-Jnly il>£^ *\

trying
soon

tpond accordinfly i-.,
your own judgmcet Fli
what you start ?l« io'-of
past < Perceive

Easy Scan and Print

dockets kayo U.S. ships;

copter crash

SAIGON (UPD-Two U.8. rocketing to the Da Nan* area In South Vietnam, a new bat man South Vietremese division to a rtnm that Preiidcii Niiob':
Wavy warships were knocked in 10 days. No casualties or tle seemed to be shaping up lias been trying to crave north
out or action by North damage were reported wound An Loc. toe batlercd ward lor renre than or.e week. hid ordereda ruli »iombio*o(
Vietnamese gunfire in the Gulf provincial capital 60 miles north ■wnh Vietnani,pendli)g rcacttbo1
of,Tonkin aad twouilon killed, Fighting spurted upward of Saigon. North Vietnamese Wilh the attacks ilong High lo attacks UU-vtedtertd" igaintt
Hana ami Haiphong—th* t
markedly in Cambodia, particu- way 1 in Cambodia, the Com

tropes also lUpped.arouod the may.be trying to secure
fnltn;rwias frorrr&njoo-
town ar^ittackeilntirtal KnV
, about luljway ip Saigon. to Cambodia. Tie only othe*

Boih An Loc and Lai Khe are roads ac'HiifhWayiTS iniH
astride I&tfmy U-the vital which brancK off fiijhways 1
BorttHoalh hijtrway from' Sai ■andll.^ *
!j*ereconttaii gon !o Cambodia where 120.000- LairB said (hereWaLnolnilh
forth Viefcum as
weHa?" against Communist
forces and supply lines in Laos,
Cambodia and Sooth Vietnam. More snow ConCon education

Radio Hanoi has said five Scattered maw showers
U.S. ships were set on fire by
Communist share batteries bul toraga Tbarsday. Hjk
the U.S. command said only Wednesday M t» «, low ling is argued
two ship. Che fuided missile U to 35. More waiter oa
destroyer Buchanan and the page 7.
frigate Wordee were hit by
Communisl fire and two sailors Index
woe killed.
The UH1 "Huty" utility Viub, wettlur. obiti ....1 HELENA lAPl — A1M5 deci
helicopter wu flying supplies sion of :he Missouri Supreme Missouri case in defending the wheo he told the five justice^
for South Vietnamese troops in Comla 10 Court w.i made the hub Tues committee's right to spend $58,- he appeared for hinadf <ax-«n>V
the tiddijyihtn It crashed :,«>l day of argument! for and against 962 in sutc and federal funds. of U*t I* defendcat commlu'cif
unknown causet in f*hu Yen Markets II the right of committee of Mori- mcmbcTs ji tbe smt hrciifbfei '
province. 2W miles north oi Una's adjourned Constitutional That decision, argued Mar Sute Rep Oscar £ If*T "*"
Saijon. All four crewmen were Wsmea 1I-1J Convention ;o spend public R Lambert a.
killed. Clasdfled n...2MI funds to educate voters about a shall Murray. Kaiiipell. and Je other commitle
Sporti lt-11 proposed new constitution. rome T. Loendori. Heferu. held as a former Cor.
About 25 rounds of 82mm that memben of a similar com-
mortar shells nil Iht VS. Eye opener Lawyer members of the Vot miltee are in reality agents of JoJhonstlcCa,,\ W'eHsil.ey' >
hdicopler base at Marble er Education Committee set up the state or the public to super
Mountain, adjoining Da Nang. Sdoee kai bceo mak- by the convention before it ad- vise the expenditure of public picked Up tbe
at 1 a.ra Wednesday (noon iag gnsl ctri«e> lorward. jwrncd March 24 tofii the Mon money which has already been reference and
EST Tuesday), the fourth Now li'i ooljr I* ytmn tana Supreme Court* about the legally appropriated for i defi ra> about i\
beUad lite cook book*. nite purpose "
I am
Murray made tbe point clear

e" N ^ had to brush his bike agent el (be;
' *""" i,9.<?*,rt Tuesday orncUl

park it In,ail during tbe
_^ i next few hearing, bctonr lbe4iti
> are predicted court look Judder"
leos

rmttee's
lawyers

Among-'(be jo-
v»ere about a doita
the 1972 cohvtstioa,

uct is.se
the. voters:.
Cea-Coai

Jr Great

,1r^*M/ae,roor.hke- .

:M|M?tcra. " , Hd abrrfffbomb -After*



Easy Scan and Print

!>£

(AP «?£'•> Bnfjuner sen! oft ariet ttnhe what they called racist policies 'But Brimmer uid -the van lalo htelcrt took away (heifcd.
generalf, Appeals court *Vfnn^'tlheh-f'cu«uM '61' of the church ota official! showed sacrifice eral CMemment it rettoriru at
JobtbtU." black players who Were kicked 0 S Dulnct Court,Judge Ew and deep concern* about the Crow Reservation
nity of Ml lite Wyoming team by for ing Kerr last 'year dismissed case and took rnahy steps to tromilntcrtort,,
leaing^ mer Coach Lloyd Etton and the the civil right* suit b» the n avjnd dropping the 'players Tbe Departracnti of Int^o, dore Roesevetrrtmwni
mule urvnknt mlvenily trustees former payers and oral argu from the- team such is meeting nal Park at Uedon ft u-r.
rpmotiJ of tig1 -ftc u „(,,»« three of menu are scheduled May IS wilh university otficulj a'ifSi^iJOWJS*"pr'o!^actveto«anro«««ieidce'd of u rah beds managed of
trustees ard Cov Stan Hath federal aeeney ja
tMiin wncn ofboni eventually returned lo be(ore the W the Big Hem Mountains with 35
" from the ^e team mat dropped from buffalo.
De™*
tthc squad (or Violating i coach The Payers attorneys cor He told the appeals court the THIS TIME however the wilTlhpeaeyKf>oOr MfCenocmimngertchet~bgurd
officials finally stood up and shaggy aruraab win be protected
tended the coaching rule v*s were counted on toe side of the In a 10rt)»*crc posture to pro «nge to bepn this spnng/fr
vide t different kind of cconom Jlur^crs Canyon to Little E
anconsllljtiorul but Bmimcr Constitvtirm and agaiiul a ic benefit to therprojnotion- Qk Canyon near Arrows.
Springs >nd far a corral bold
of Appeals in a legal bnd that The 14 players wore black ar argued it could be uppoded rdjpouj iltick
If the time came when athletes mounds when the) went lo Ea • Bnmmer said there are dtf
can use stale-owned facilities ton office one dav before the (tinea between the classroom Brimmer said the hearing be

debate and (he playing fields fore Kerr concluded thai the
for such protests then it will 1963 Wyoming Brigham Young He said the playing field a i
be lime Tor the km lucre and University pie at Laramie howcasc for a planned state- playen had refused to play

our state official! to termin BYU is operated bj the Mor without wcansg armbands on Second jailer su
,ite such compeUjve athletic men Church and the blacks
sponsored public activity fre the Sdd or to play again for
activities ; lid they were objecting to quented by paying citiiens an
licipaling a sporting rental the university unless Eaton was

bred Eaton who resigned at

and not a debate on lax-sup Wyoming in 1971 as as istant By RiaiAHD R GEESLER Both men, said Meoks ear
ithletic director now is a pro Gaactte Staff Writer **» a month and were
ported property open to public r was susoesded ployed ts custodial persor
fcssional football scout "Jtboul tenure" J ■ :.
WYoters to receive admission Bnmmer said it would be irn of.?ShSe«rflffltJearmneosonA.tMo elehk*]wcaoin«-

Bnmmer said for late offi practical for the appears court Uraiing intestigiUon into
dais, who are named in the to order the players reinstated charges of official mbwooduct in
suit along with Eaton, to have the Yeilowitone County Jail
lo the team even if it found in WEEKS1 INVESTHIAT]
booklets permitted the players to wear (heir favor. Only one of the 14 James P. Coyne, ». oMli toto alleged mtjconductbiot
armbands during the sarw Grand Ave., Monday was sus bepn Thursday when aiirti
would have been acquiescence stiD is at Laramie and he no pended without pay until further
notice. Mecfa said Tuesday.
. HELENA, (AP) — fnforma in a religious protest. longer has any athletic eligibil in the county jttrproicltcd
lion booklets for voters ballot- Coyne had been afternoon Jail
ing on the proposed constitution Murray said registered voters Brimmer said athletes should ity left. er — 4 pj». to midniibt — for Resorts bom the jaU v»r)
this June haic been distributed should receive these pamphlets not be allowed to use the play- the past seven months. He had
to county clerks and recorders. in tthhe maiill bbeffore MMay 77. ing field to "display, sym- Brimmer claimed there was announced about three weeks to what actually toot pi
bolicatly or otherwise, a protest igo that He intended to resign to
' statea!?1""* SeCrt<anr °' m wh0 tave "* rcccivcd 'After that date, he said, vot- against any sect, any church, J general scheme by some on. return to Butte to work for his Thursday. Some ofikillj :
*ny religion, or any religious the campus that football week father.
copy should contact their coun- beliel." end to "embarrass or harass prisoners becu smashing db
Daniel Joe Kcrbcr. 21, of S27 in I heir ceEs and shouting.
Mormon believers." Heights Lane, a night jailer for Deputies reported that a r
He said the state "has a the past U months. wa> sus.-
ty clerk and recorder. A limil- Brimmer accused the black strong, firm public policy di pended Thursday for suspected tress was set on fire by pra
The .pamphlets' contain the ed number of the booklets are players of trying to paint Eaton misconduct and illqpd racial en, fi]lis| three cells with d<
recting separation of church remarks to prisoners. smoke. A Fire DeparUr
complete teil of the document available at the office of lite » a "bigoted coach, blindly tnd stale and mandating strict '
*!»" alinsdtedthseepparroaptoeslaylsonthtahtewbiallllobte. VseoctreertaErdyuocfatsitoatne CaonmdmiftrtoemeDioef tsruupsptoerest,ed bebnyt huipsonbodaerndyinogf aeutrality and noninterference smoke ejector bad to be use>
the Constitutional Convention at mere students their fundamen- claxr the area.
as' weU as explanations, he without molestation, preference Meeks said the inmates
or discrimination by or on be
barricaded themsetva iriti
said the capllol building. tail constitutional rights." half of the state." portion of the jail and «

"threatening serious trout*
they didn't get iom« u(l>
tion." J?%,

AFL-CIO to study MOON1!6H|VII1|NLSS examines "IT WAS lucky I was a
state constitution office." said Meets. A cail«
SPRING ConCon out from the eighth floor I
DRESSES
there was trouble, and Mi
$5-$10-s15 west up to talk to the disgi
$20-$30
HELENA (APi - The Man- ;'A$ in collective bargaining
tana AFL-CIO Committee or with our cmplojreu. we real Values to *120
Politic*! Education will be ized then that there would be -Sizes 8Jx> 16
meeting May S in Helena to some thines we desired which
adopt a position on the new would be left oct. and some Billings bwyer Gerald Neely.
constitution. things we disliked injected into saying "I don't think we can rely
this new "contract1;11 he .said. on the pabGc relations arm (of
The special convention was Pertinent material -has been'
announced by James Murry. circulated to chipterj through the Conjtiwtioaal Coovcntioo")
executive secretary 0'tbe labor out the Mate. be. said', to help' for "an isdependentaad critical
i built organization. reach J decision,based on "jn look at the good and bad" points
Co. ol evaluation of the entire docu of the document fcai pubtuacda
At the same time. Murry re bookJd titled The New Moo
minded »U sUte AFL-C10 ment." --,*" . ■'
members thai they only tiai laba Coastitutiod*;-'A^'Cririca]'
Look

-TTo many people toeudm|
mysetr tbe good potea^of the

nbeiw adbocitttmerot -oVutwdch t^he

Easy Scan and Print

-Air could be
4y ROGER CtAWSON Alt" up-dsttd report on the
WeSUH Writer amounts of these gases will oon mespherc „„.
be lined by the local m pp|jn hU sa*>3
Air qtoLty in pirti of Man •wn control agency, he said there u lightly wbrse thiifbe
About Una u feiUng worse while at fore—-nore people more can
at employed In constructinc la the iira* tinwitingj ire gcttint P«rtica!«a isust and a lies luvecaused added problems
eHttes tor the herd ind educa better s»y« Ben %ake ita <• »r ■n the air have been reduced
pollution control director •aid Hake The open burning onWake ees even this as a net suc"hpaellamwetwoufctt
* .&Wwf.aKd'Tto"*cr*icr"det*l<o?r)il*hie°Ibeita?tf'[l&niblao">»rHnebmebrsrosolno rottrel program has done vciy
Wake, ill Billings Tuesday to wrilhtre and cn-t ois iratalled "THINGS ARE not niarty as roiriti won
suspended talk with peopie said the by industries simply have lo bad as they -would be ii ndhmc
quality of this cily's air is not vet make things belter had been tlor.c ' in Billing) are
known control." Wakesaid.
"HOWEVER. IN some areij rirlier talk of a Billings
"WE HAVE found there is things have goiter, worse while branch ol the suIe ,ijr quality "THERE'S A lot left w be
much more sBlphor osdes and they are getting better." otnceconlinues. done, but the work to djlclu
oxides of nitrogen'than we be been good."
lieved possible." he said He cited the Kalkpdl region
where control of open burninj

Heeks earned Had 1 not been there lo talk
*d~wert em- lo Uiem someone could hive
bxl personnel been hart uidMeeks
Korber was suspended uruac-
doldy folkwinj toe Thursday
ESTIGATKHS night confrooutlai Mecks said
Mlurt in office >t was due to Korber s alleged
•hen inmate* trotlmcat of pnsoocn and de
rotated rogatory language towards a
le tall varv as (Negro prisoner
tool place
This was not tbe case with
officials satd Coyne Meeks said He
lathing dishes (Coyncl was weJ liked by the
men bul I suspended him until I
looting
id that a nut have completed mv ureestiga
ire by prison- Jionol jail sect!nty
fls with dense
Department THERE HAVE been scveril
reports during the past months
to be used to o( alcohol and drags reaching

inmates had prisoners ON SALE 7 PM TO 10 PM
does into a MEN'S MATCHED SET SALE
ul and were Coyne said Tuesday noon that
xu trodbie U all be was told was to take a SKIRTS «,. $S3O $449 PANTS,.,. $«o._.
few days off He said that when
one utilise he came to work jl 4 p m Mon
day Meeks toll! him to take
some time off BATHROOM CARPET 100% Acrylic Pile

I was in my "] don t know anything aboul in Mony «iciling colors regular $15.98
i. Acsllwaii a suspension or bang withoul
lib Oaor that pay sild Coyne, bet Iro MEN'S COWBOY CUT JEANS $488 PRINT SOFA PILLOWS
goinj to talk to Hecks this after
t tflS Meds noon about it and then I will in No»y, Gold. Green, 'rag $6.50 11 only w.r« $2.29
o U>e disgrun know whit ■ going on

MEN'SJMHJBLI KNIT SLACKS $|388 BATES HEIRLOOM SPREADS

SoKds. Stripat, Printi, Situ 29 ta 40 7 only w>rt $S.SS

YOUNG MEN'S BUTTON FRONT „, $C44 GROUP Girls ond Pre-Teen DRESSES
inSii»7to U,valu«sto$)0 .".„ •.^X..:..:M
TWIU JEANS Sim. 30-36 tap. HO

GIRLS STRETCHINI SLACKS, Nylon Flare, $099 II MrtEgoNl'orS$9K.5N0ItoT$1D1.R95ESS SHIRTS
O
Novy, Uoe, Rod, Sli.i 7 to 14 regular J5.9t *.
$999 I BOY'S BUTTON FRONT JEANS
GIRLS STRETCHINI PULLOVERS Pf»p sixai 2S-J9, $9.50 Valu. .

8 to 14, r«g. M.9S

WOM|N'S NYLON BUTTERFLY ROBE I GIRL'S LONG SlEEYE>iWEA«Hh|fs|

oo. onry.'W.oa$26':

Easy Scan and Print

20

^^^^^on^jtli^

. Rehberg told the
oilmen, "and so you'd better be
fearful that it will be adopted
by the other western states."
As examples of whal he consi
ders to be "serious flaws" in the
'"anwn^iAKUiSiE. O«•F* tne emotional proposed constitution. Rehberg lwoiubspeedr *cehnitgho-f

mciillesd inIi"n0d*us*t*ri"al 'aocrcitdhenitntcpaasretsy
^btlhee*encoasMrutsao.elles.'sutcihhn"edidupidsestocrupiRsleeseshibodanear,rregen.tosontpaeaelnalodkyf rsrteeammtooev«wai"ldeofoltphreo<pI*ew<r'ot-ymiItlwtlaiS™mitwtoSoari• b"nocMTseO™"sEeIucM,oIne*s^™u^*mtep~(-aori'if aak■g_'e^n«c"""y-.m"—cr—°asteo finuBtdhe"*p—rosdt—ulct»-c
indiflerent I'm fearful that it
O'Hare's xproud of costs'
willpau "
Rrhberg. Montana represect-

ative lor the nine-state petrole

um group, expressed opposition
in the new document at an open
ing session of the association's By CH(USTENE MEYERS tional education statistics, spend assistant and chief negotiator
tw.o*-"d-a»,y cwuounrvueniutuiotin itsu oBilwliiinggas. Guette Stan Writer tour per cent on their adminis- with the Billings Education As-
tralion sedation for the school board.
The meeting was devoted to Administrative expenses ac-
reports by suit association rep- count for one and one-half per ^^TH^E J—_ElX« A^oir"LuT_1.67AMpeOrUi NT u J19.500.
rcsentatiies about actions of oral of the Dbt. 2 1972-7.1 budg- Clerical salaries for the ad
et. the'total
thar various legislatures affect- Of that amount. W7.fio "is fot ministration outstrip salaries of
in* Ine oil industry "And that." says Paul T. O- administrators' ubrie Thai the administrators thtrnsdves
Hare, superintendent, is way is .53 of one per cent, and consume .65 or one per cenl
TThhee aassssoocciialttiioonn aallssoo iinncclluuddeess below the national average." of the tout administrative budg
industry representatives iron:
the Oakotas. Wyoming. Ncfcras- O'Hare proudly notes that et.
most schools, according to nj
This includes about 20 secre
One ia a series taries, clerks, bookkeepers, and

Starting si tbe lop. the salary solteJn9o7g.r2aJpOhers, who make a total

smmcaa*i'k*aseh^q»:wi75,o:ooag. 'S^ITaii adjiunistra- t^a^nSe"AsL"wA"hRPoYemraBknResE|oA37XrSDyaOMnWdcN1r7e0i0s-'-

tive positions are on all-month cine general secretaries who
contract, rather than the nine- work for several different per-
mealh teacher contract. sons. »K 101425 each: five cler-

grOaHmaaripeesniassosrisstmaantkse:and pro- siecaclr.etapraiyersollwhaonsde bpoaoykkereapnigen!i
V,HmUJAM SERRETTE. as- cflre0r"k,WJ*ohtno MR7oSse:nabnedrgcearse c»hiheof
sistant superintendent. J21.CO0. nukes J15.000 per year
.-'..... _ ..Tiallest bchlnd-the-otr . Winston Weaver, assistant su Other administrative expense]
■■.... 1 _■-!-„-,J rmrlngaid.theWntwood«D".gives pertfitendent aad director of total S6S.500 - or .44 per cent of
you directional" hearing. And. if you find Inat much of secondary education. (22,403: the budget
tna sound coming from around you is realfy irritating back Charles Prank, assistant super- This category iscoudes dec-
ground noise, this aid may be just right toi you. The now intendent and director of ele- lion expenses of 17000' school
microphone in the Westwnd -D" tunes down distracting mentary education. J22,000: census numerators and jaintiiu
noise from Hw sxit and rear, letting you concentrate on and James Dutcfaer, assistant of W.S00: trustees detecle ex-
tha sound you want to hear and supenisor of physical edu- penses and dues and stttBCrip.
Come in for a tree demonstratio caBon. Cl.igo. tions to national publications
"**)»!*/son IntxKnm mm gon Otlicr salaries are: Edward I6.100; books, postage, office
-Heiser. federal projects direc- suppaes. conference travel ex-
MARION OPTICIANS tor. ttSM): Donald Black, penses aad computer-services"
Big "B" Shopping Center. Rocky Elementary School prin- mj300; adudUing. nx»: debt
—Pfton* 259-6786 ctpal and federal funds director, service (handling of the district's
515,703; "Roy Morin. director ol bonded indebtedness I - M 700-
transmutation SISfm> tnA tu>t.Tu _^.<- j .'.

Amy KauUmann looks down iron
seat on a high wheder'fhcyclewhll
men" from a kindergarten bt&TSt
left, and Boby BrowvandfguiclfcrtL-
Mis Karla Albes all kecplhe antique

xThere's too

By DAVID T.'EARLEY

GwxtteSunWriU*^
Yellovntane Hq> Thomas E
Towe said Wednesday he will
seek reflection ta the stato leg
islature C " i*" - "? *•

leave now,' lays^the^Bfllisgi^,*.

Easy Scan and Print

iiii't

HELENA (A P: — Montana's It indicated strongly, how- stiliilional provisions cr chance
£. Supreme Court ruled unani- eve-. Mat ir tie convention's or modify those proposed'■
>'tiiously Friday thai (he slate's Rctnlutioc No 14. which set up
. Constitutional Convention, al a ISmember Voter Education "We can «ee no difference in
Coismiuca. is found by (lie wlwi the convention was <toine
though presently adjourned, still before Marc.i 21. I9V2. and
: -is legally in eiistancc and its 100
delegate-members canm* hold court lo be valid then the com- what the committee was au-
mblic office. mittee "has cine blanche au- Ihoraed to do. other then mak-
tlwrity as lo the motuy. federal inf! proprsais fnr inclusion ir.
unanimous opinion by or thai left over from the ton- the tow lonstiltKian." theopin-
Castles said janticn.1 J ion sjjd.

ieally that Secretary of In Ihe stiU-ucdftidetl com- ex~plaining ib runnf thai Ailrotoj}1.1.
pauon case. Kvaalen dial- MahDney now holds a public ol- ThosteMB
State Frank Murray correctly
refused to let delegate Charles lenged the neht of the com- lice lor wh'Ch the Iwm tas not attuned
H. Mahoncy of Clancy file let mittec to spend Jil%2 in fedcr- expired and. thus, i> prohibited Chtreh news
Republican r.orrjru'.i-ci as stale al and slate (jnds for adver- from holding .mother public of-
Windy
treasurer. liutji ar.d publicity u^jng thr (ice. th« Sjprrane Court sad
citiier.s of Montana '.0 vole in "Delegate* *«r elected for a Windy with a chance ol
The l!-pa;e opinion handed fav«r of '.he constituUon as pro- showers Saturday, high X to
down just five business days powj by the constitution " term ending on repeal :f 55. low 30 to 35. Mitre wath
ahead ol next Thursday's dead act isrt by U* for June ih cronPaRe4.
line for filing for the June 6 pri Montana voters will ratify 1973': funds wi-re pro%idtd un-
mary election, put an ma lo til repeal of ;hc art: *e con- Eye opener
rejert the proposed docuntn:
the hopes of a number of dele on Jure 6 venlicn cujld remain in icv.nn ritative
gates that they could run this In i discussion oi the coir—33 long as necessary subject A 95 year-old mmi brake a
year for seats in the Montana tents of Resolution 14 adopted lo the repealer clause its\ mirror — he'i overjoyed
that He's joins '» ">v'
Legislature. by Ihe delegate on Mirer, 16. duties continue through suuiras seven .-ears ol bad luL.

The high court lias accepted the high coun noted Murray s sion cf i'-< proposal is the
original jurisdicior of Malm- argument that Ihe comn-Jttee 11 people at :n election in be held
neys protest of tl.i- mrctaiy o.<
stale's refusal lo let him Tile created "acts on behalf of the after 'aSjoummcnt' wiihir. j
for another office convention, in its place ;
stead, ft carries on until specified time . its mem-
The decision in the Mihoney procedural, administrative ;
case skirted a flat answer lo 3 voltr education affairs arc r tiers or delegates
challenge raised by veteran cludeu. and the meney appro-
legislator Oscar S. Kvailcn of pristed lo it has been spent treated in aU ulher repeeb in
the convention's right la spend
money following its Much 24 li would appear ilul the Ihe sane rr.anne.- as legisia-
adjournment sine die - without onij tiung that the committee
canzo'. do that the convention tors, paric-jbrly us House or
setting a date for another meet-
rising Keprc-ser.latives rrembvrs
The tribunal said its detc-.-rm-
{:-, -through Waters that had reached the crisis nation w:s based on Uie Eiubl-

h^ stage ing Act thut >« up Ihe 1972 con-

venlion — thi first in Montana
did is propose further cor.- sir.ee IMS. on ;he coulilution.

Bilbngs, Montana, Saturday Morning. April 22,1972

iscover

a thai flowed, -Wwiiy they test' he'sam
the moon 9 hl»--

porlaht'rocks. astrcuu
I)r lllrold Masursxy. abo of
the L S G S, Mid of ofle of Ihe Duke- and 'ApotU
while rocU Ttul's probably mandcr^Joho W V ou^ sleppeti-^aid
a pcrc lit one of Ihe Cayle) 01. tlii; moon from,par luoir ^
caused by^ meteorite impacts hv< flovn ' «tuch was a lugh
or, a rock 'eilled anorlhosite land volcaiue now^ver> early in dte shortly b
Iheida^lEfdacnp- the moonl|halor>' . They deployed aa^
whicht'iame scienltsts behevr eretl science
compoteS ^Ute a et oiit in Iktv tl
tar to gaiber" rocu,1

Easy Scan and Print

- > »"r .Vj.. ' " •
htftjvfl rfgjifj reilorrf by the criife cubonatonal nomination
govtrbor.' 'X . - A^anwKUo tbe other Demo
eratoc gubernatoru contender
Satiirdav morrang, Arpril 22.1W2?^9"
PTOO- lrom m^joui, _ Davl<j Burn
Ban on predator poisons
'"• hair - u apparently free 'n
run despite a felony eonvirlion

Ihe full faith and credit iLaw causing severe problems
of the US Constitution Mon
|*s, piish tana should ettesd full faith By ARTHUR HUTCK1NSON ithtaaSi flfedme'rfal!rhealipnheads fbceeelnf>c'u"t"lthitK."bie c05trol Prosram tow
and crccil to the Minnesota rul GzutieStiteBureaa
He said currently ci* positive identification of a rabid
ing KH.ANA -- President Nixon's order banning use of prai skunk was krawn cast of Ashlant Bet he said the severe ins-
Burnham also lost Ns right* sons for predator control n rausinj sevmc problems ir. con ttr in southeastern Montana had resulted in a high winter kill
"oytott when he was committed to trol of rabid skunks and voracious gophers
Warm Springs Sute Ho pilal. of skulks.
but thn were 'eitored aim his Farmers and ranchers »r« finding it difficult to obtain
v- A spokesman for the group release poisons and trained applicators to combat gophers, which ARTHUR
<-tn~<ggacuting the teach ir Donald Howard is askjig that Judge cause severe economic damage by eating grass and b-jrrowini HUrCrflNSON
w Schweuecn, said 40 sudcnis restore his rights over a three- into irrigation canals.
^rha**s«lM>;:pleagpd;to begin a year 1553 federal conviction for
ers :_ twchday .fssr&atvfHay mornine. interstate transportation of n The Bureau ol Sports Fisheries aad Wildlife, which lan
"<'He*«aW the pirilcipanti would stolen car. Howard, now 40. re-, ded the poisomtig cf stairJcs in areas where rabies was posi-
i*«~eit only rice ««1 liquids untU ceived a suspended sentence lively identified, has been put out of the poison business alto
16 - Sutiday evening, i • and he was placed on proba gether. Skunks are rlissified as preditors.
•:; v tW^ynt.JHoatjoinery. » for- tion, which he completed suc
v?&.:tnor"cajididite,f(or..the U.S. cessfully. ■BUREAU KMPLOYES at ths point car.not applv anv
However, he never received a class ol toncank to any class of land." said Norton Miner
'y/i4g6O*veehxiroiiorrjsHbip,'-:f 'Sbeegguu.-. ilsistiQngf presidential pardon for Ihe con Billings, ol the federal agency.
'.'Friday;aad satd he would con- viction. '
- Sit'^tfMirt'iga. consumingonly Deputy Atty. Gen. Jotin The executive order ilso closed down the bureau s pianl
./.lijuii'^ two weeks. ' Northey said that without the at Pocaletlo. Idaho, source for Montana agriculture for so
..'. i-iMeamhiie,. a student group pardon, or a restoration ol civil dium monofluoracriaie 11080; acd strychnine-treated =»ts plant to manufacture poiion baits and administer thar apoth
. ■ «;CarroUColltgt fin Helena rights, Howard is still a felon the most common control agents for gophers. caton by trained personce!. ""
under MonUnl law. Farmers and ranchers were relieved to fina only thallium
' our "mili- Northey said presidential par A hastily caOcd meeting of federal ind state otficiils. sullale has b«n banneo by the EPA for interstate shipment
dons could take up to a year farmers, ranchers, farm supply dealers, environmeetaiisls
because of lengthy court proce and extension agents in Helena ajreed Friday 03 a three- STRYCHNINE, cyanide ar.d !080 can be shipped so long
pronged attack an rodent ind rabies control. as they a:« regiitered.labtlfdar.d used only for rodert coolrol
§f«?it|^d>:CpBtt». inifr- soph- dures. on private land and nol on pubbc domain
■ odoce dais president, j»id that Howard, s student at the Uni RESPONSIBILITY FOR a short-nnge crash rodent con
i^ -tStetiiht »ft drink industry versity of Montana, said he Irol program was given to the Departments of Agriculture Houne- Ca^i Han^or of the EPA s Denver office said
i,^:has "taken upon itself torepre- feds that what be is doing at and Livestock. They were directed to determine within 10 if the allowable rodent pcuons are used on predators 'in my
ttr.'sent the Image of youth in the present, and plans for the days where commercial supplies of poison treated baits can opinion Ihe EPA wiU baa their use altogether the same a>
jop America, w« hope thn bmcotl future, Is more important than be obtained and determine which Montana farm suoply out thallium sulfate
. l0 :will open i ffimmsion to the un- hi) past. Concerning the car lets can distribute the basts to farmers.
•VTwiWgnwritidn that bas been. theft conviction, he said. "I The mccung was told ol a case .n Wyoming where a 7
£,;.- to^tKlJpant, lirBely ignored by vras just i kid then" The second prong will be for concerned departments— rancher killtd U animus oLt of season and laced their ear
lop ' induktry'advertlsing." public health, livestock and agricvhure-lo develop the re casses wilt enough thalLum skliate to kill everything in the
■^ef^-'J^^frtttp ;also"*.jatid thai quired environmental impact statement on rabies control and 14 western states He was brought to court but evidence wai ■•
«^,-,:.,.tsfifnoccetiavnetii-wosbjb-yigiruo^upns Whiaivheinnjo- Clerks win set up in emergency procedure for rsbies control.
suppressed in S3 of the 5* counts
"It we had a rabies outbreak, we'd be subject to ibe steei Live tock men were Jess than satisfied with the meeting.
trap, shotgun or rifle." Miner said.
iStpnV'Wt hope to adiit the lob- fee issue "WE VE DONE a 'ol about rodents " said DavcSmttlrar> ^
jji.jhe Boft'drihJr Industry in There is a provision for use of poisons by federal agents tlie MoiitjiL. Wuolcruwen Association We oaven xjiiae a - '
ticaOHiUMih; in emercer.cies including rabies outbreaks. But Miner agreed damn thingaboul coyotes 4' " ^"'*i£> j
SKgyf"'!*';'.'" "nyrnni -HELENA (AP) —"Atfy. Gen with critics thai this would be after the fact of an outbreak Mon Tcigcn of the Montana Stockcrowen AteociirijirJ-i."'
WiOedi ofiPre^dcnt Ntxi» Robert L; WooliW ruled Fri- and would bwBbjecl to review by the Secretaries of Interior said 1060 was uied to iin rats in urfcjn ateaj'jWe'rTiani&vS:^
-'•■"'•"■ v "' ' day Uuttuiunty clerks of court ...Agriculture and Health Education and Wdfire and tbe ad control lire rats in Baltimore but notiheground jquiirSin*^
ministrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPAp Montana he said Therei more danger to Human bchttli*-
may personally , retain the J2 (from IOMi in Baltimore than in Montana - <,
WILLIAM CHEKEV ol the livestock departmoit said he
■nr;ol^i.i.t.t,u.S„..'.^,tb« ; Tpea«ssptohrety.^collect, _for issuing a

at in tone County Ally. Harold Hah- ConCon
■' ■' -ser,.Billings, who asked If th«
*xlak';»if ^district court" ha'djto ■ plans semin
,.;,~.tati:-depart tuch fee in the-county
WThereJ geitcril iurti -■'■■ '.
. -:-.W6oiiiahlaid the issaahce of
_;.;pas«>MtiVis.not a duty:of the
^■..i;4«iM3f6r..wh>ch;«iurrtScla ".,
ooa-cd - are;/cguUrly compenstMl. ■' GtsctleSuta Sanaa - could Mo n«uu «
A"1rj^tfcibpm»nip«iaed>«il that : HELENA - The Coostitu propoted oxaUiuti
1-^all-Ajties conccrnbg:pa«porti
»Vi»i?cohtrbllediby |«leril?law. - lional .Convention is plaiuMig a tee cxmbcrs^duav
^SiS?on^^free-t^ljlfe-itiejd)atji^iabtl^^etiki/isgu,ccfou.r:t'v May 13 jeiianar to open i "du fioci ofjrjiDtTfo '!»Sla
!ogu«" with current ami, pro- ra
spective legislators and'state of . '(
|:fu«id.i ficUU;•••-.,: - ^ ~ ;■

The donvenuca'j Voter J3du< .
caUon-- J

Easy Scan and Print

'«*

Outs Yours Theirs Finally .. _.
|U».oqp hid been.
Signed artida oo Gsette opurioo paga are tbe author's vim and do act v»rwlri«T. tir4'm>
necessarily reflect opinions of The Gttctte.
— i ml' Bui,tetheSanDltgiSrSo«rTil«i' j
Checking a new model
ByWrLUAM^^tEV- ^ «£fg"1
Repuhucaa Partyi,6mio< tfie
three San Diego Shertioa^Ho-
lell. The —• ' ■ • ' •"

n-j WjikiU Hotel,; ^v

They're off an.d running at the As it is, you've got to weigh the . around in th. 1TT affair, but hypothesis, that a
-.rostrum, typewriter and printed package and determine if the pros that one should be very careful rtT.wottld rsk.so. much.in pbV,
make it better than the cons or the not to corne to the conciuston
page in the Montana Constitution cons overwhelm the good of the that the tnnMclitwi was in any lie disfavor by enteringioto-the.-
al .Convention Sweepstakes that sense different from the kind of
will be climaxed with a voter deci pros. kind ol deal described by Ma ,. ,^
sion June 6 ..thing (tat should be considered
True, there are three side is routine in a Democratic admin Beard is simply impiauiible. Bear thb in rdifid,' i
ConCon is circulating the pro sues, unicameral legislature, gam Ehen as it a'implausiblel&aC a mfiA^Wy leflJlilQsrtr:
posed 1972 Constitution's official bling and the death penalty. They istration. U.S. Attorney Geaeral would traditionally .
text with an explanation. It goes would only clutter up this intro risk tbe reputation of a political company' froa^
through the document chapter ductory dissertation. More of But as the fads selUed down. administration by comummjl- voeuci in fld(S^_
and verse telling what changes are them at a later date. Most of the I am drawn to the judgment that big a deal during a five-minute principal activity"1
proposed and listing what has arguments you will hear, both pro the Senate, in holding bick its cocktal coovtrution at the Ken- reawo:'
been taken out or added. and con. were those that arose confirmation of Richard Klein- lucky Derby when ail he stood to *'■'■,-
during the January-February-
Gerald J. Neely of Billings has March ConCon in Helena Consider. The legends thai inthamennclOiarniugtswlpalEaslcUer.aeaTadlrhleo,tpahevoaa^rUiabnNceitshaatlto
published a 26-page booklet called m had pledged HfflUW to the
"A Critical Look—Montana's Con- If not spoken on the ConCon Bepublican Party in return lor a spiracy.
sitution." He does much the same floor by one to the 100 official del ravorabledecb>on by the Justice
as the official text being sent to egates, they were words of wis Dement
each voter, with comments of his dom, self-interest, ignorance, fear
own. He differs only slightly with and enlightenment addressed to 'oh,
the ConCon version but does raise the various committees in hearing.
questions.
It is just as well that you hear
Other printed documents are them again. They need to be re
likely to be in circulation giving viewed by you, the voter, as you
views as to its pitfalls and in separate the wheat from the chaff,
praise. the fly specks from tbe pepper.

The speech making is but start As might be expected, the legal
ed. You'll hear more. fraternity is not in complete agree
ment over what the proposed con
Our advice is for you to study stitution will do or if it is even
the official text you will, be sent, "constitutional."
listen to the various arguments
and then come to a decision on Constitutional issues are still
what you think is better for you raised concerning the one adopted
and the state of Montana. in 1889. It is likely the same will
-':^Vou may-well,xU'ffer in your take place with tbe 1972 model
. opinions from those-advocated by should it pass.
others\For instance, the environ-
mental^section of the proposed This is as it is supposed to be.
constitutions is the strongest of The state constitution is a set of
^y^d^i^^lt^'co^Kitipiw--- guidelines, a base of operations
designed, to protect, rights and
yZ¥r^'ttiev^»ishfe?-bfisdine, m- property from actions not within
the due process of law.
.-cludrngius.; prevailed, you would
fhmnsMa-'thefpnvilege of voting . With this introduction, we'll
pause and in subsequent days go
into more detail on the issues in

volved.

By LEONARD SILK

lashiooable — but vague .to. budidary, __^ ti
■expJiiulion or ihe.Uemm- wanti to(«t"'[behi(jieit t*n<for..
■:' ~v^ByMARVMcGRORY • douic(atOTmunjbybaif;buii.-abuck.-IiaiMwi!dliietoieep"'

^•^^^Si^^heari

wimmmmzmm. Easy Scan and Print

It's your cq|

of First in series that may be way it will bVpainted
b> foes It would reqiiire^ two-1
Opinion m thirds vote of each hduse of the -
Legislature or a majority, of^the^
It doesn t take a seer to see the people voting, on the issue; The? S
side that certain segments of the present one gives only the eiecto?'*
state community are going to take rate that power. ■. -iff;
in regard to the proposed new
Montana Constitution You may ask, "Why should-?
they oppose worthwhile spending ;"
A sizable portion of the corpo for the state of Montana?" : 'r
rate community, a few of the big

ones anyway, are out to smash the There's the 64 centi, $6.40; $64 '
upstart new constitution that pro $6,400, $64,000 or $640,000 ques
BERRY'S WOULD poses such rash things as removal tion, all depending upon your size '
and worth. - -- ~:
-3 of the constitutional limit on debt,
the two-mill state levy ceiling on First off, the more difficult it is
property taxes and other slow to get authorization to spend mon- .
downs on potential spending at all ey the less of it is likely to be "
levels of government in Montana. spent. More roadblocks, less
spending. fear wilh-i __
They are only slow downs be lature asJiMnaaUy'strlSb
cause the present Montana Consti Second, since you can't get the past few-may dip" into
tution allows the voters by refer blood out of a turnip, those with growing^bonanza to pay othe
endum to sweep most of them property are going to pay the bill.
aside. Such is done decennially for Where a levy might cost the aver Another item', that seer
the Montana University System age homeowner $6 a year, the cost
and state custodial institutions. If could be hundreds of thousands bother a spoKesman for the fi
it wasn"t. they'd be worse off than for the larger outfits. is the new constitution s pro-
for a consumer representati
ever Third, there's usually a differ . Public Service Commission
ence of opinion as to what's worth
The new one doesn't exactly ings
turn the state loose on an un
checked spending spree—much as while. How much you have to pay The consumers' mans""
would be paid by. levying a I
the public utilities This
charged would be paid by th>
"Well, / ^ut%% you could toy ihe's leally en 'old-laib- Corporations—a must industries whose profits he'
ianrt) girt—you *now, preoccupied with maUtial initial,
oppose
axial ttand'mgt and facades!"
By VICTOR WILSON (orm'so well may make organi On a worker-managed economy,
Your files, sir zations and executives look like he lends to follow political sci
America's great corporations knights in shining armor. The entist Robert Dahl's argument
By WILLIAM F.HJCKLEV by you and which should be kepi have their faults, but the na truth is. he says, both organiza that today's workers—inywoete-
So I said to Jack Aodoson. secret? Surely if a tribunal is tion's economy and distribution tions znd eiecuUves lack either —don't want lo maiugc any
Mr Anderson, rd like to know system couldn't function with "polish" or "morality." Bui. he thing. Just give them high pay.
whethiT you beueve that 1 have appropriate to guard against out them, one of their persistent short hours and good working
the right to go through).™ liles seH-sesviag tendencies of public critics concedes goesoa: conditions. Dahl maintains.
officials, a tribunal is equally "... As things now stand, Ihe
appropriate la guard against Says Robert L. Heilbroner DOES ALL THIS mean. then,
stU-serving tendencies of news- economist, social commentator, corporation that binds men to that Heilbroner is about ready to
pi permen? and Norman Thomas professor gether ... and the state that pack up and drop long years of
of economics at New York City's binds them together by appeal corporate criticism? By no
Well, said Mr. Anderson, if highly respected New School for ing lo their patriotic natures, are means. The fact that man needs
Ihe government agrees to set up Social Research: the only means we have for en corporations, he declares, does
such a tribunal. I'd agree to go suring our survival, even if. by a not "render futile all efforts to
along. So said I: what is the rea "I do not wish to dishearten terrible irony, thev are also the achieve corporate rcsponsibili
son for waiting for the govern the crusader for corporate re ty"
ment? Isn't it an approach to sponsibility. May his cause pre if
wards what is desirable to set up vail. But WUe is gained when we On the contrary he sayt
a tribunal to pass on your own delude ourselves as to the ease ' The very persistence of the cor- <
disclosures? with which human society can
be restructured. The cause of ." which petition gj\es to the search for'
*H..An^denon.»(.W.t„.eeJly.« a reform, not to mention that of appeal chiefly to youthful
constructive revolution, is too would-be reformers, or by a (corporate) responsibility a
importaBt to be nurtured be deeper significance than the
anything but the truth." remedy of the abuses of the
moment."

as prevails in Yugoslavia, which In fact. tietlbnxtCT concludes
practices a non-Russian brand ". . The central problem ol
our age" is Ihe creaLoa of a

Halbfoocr btoshc .responsive and responsible cor
poratioo," which in turn he

(ic form of soVial or^nbCl feels, win help create a rapon
^ff siveaBdrespansiblcstate '

dhtlnrtwm- be- EVERYBODY WHO is run- device lo make their
public offieul and a ning for President at this very
cr rigure..-b)' thtre is oo moment is engaging in the kind lick.
UoQ-aboul a Ihat-you. Mr. ol rhetoric that in undtxKiucil-
Mii.-aie a public figure ed mule Would not take serious- Writing a commentary tin a
1'C) you are more isfluen ly. BuVit doa not follow from
lhB "■" * government official a new book In thi Name oi rf, -^ >» ~>
required tosend a copy ol all hu
Profit which contains sis rase
papers to J«k Andcr historic* by other writers of
_ When he dncteed Ibe mln almost unbelievable corporate
utet'of the special White House irresponsibility Ketlbruier
group that lacedThe problem ol
" —■ " Pakistan war the heavy w

power doing everything p
war ilidfwith massiv
computers and automobiles Vietnamese .and tri
even bread and water today AnxncauTair and*!
requires oo-ordlnauoa of enor
■nous numbers of men welded

a by rbnfptei processes
assembly and transporta-

From one nation to another
the legal fomui.the powers and
'immunities -ofitbe ofganszattoGs

Easy Scan and Print

> it doesn't takeatseer toseethe : ithat-lmay be;way it^llfe'painted ^^f^^ilM|J^f^^
side that-certain segments of the by fofes. It would ;irequ)rev4. two-
thirds'vote of each holise of the' wouldvallo^^velsmwthipi
stale community are going to take Legislature or a majority of the
in regard to the proposed new people voting on the issue. The. proval'of thr^ftHs-ofThe^enT
Montana Constitution^ bership of each house.
' A sizable portion of the corpo present one gives only the electo
rate that power. The highway-fund protectors -whalltdflfetbifitii^
rate community, a few of the big fear, with reason; that some Legis
You may -ask, "Why should lature as;-financially strapped as . . -He?;y6ted!rather^
ones anyway, are out to smash the they oppose Worthwhile spending the past few may dip into that for the,-call
-upstart new constitution that pro for the state of Montana?" growing bonanza to pay other bills Convention.
poses such rash things as removal than road building. UiaUlie .._. _ ...
of the constitutional limit on debt. There's the 64 cents, $6.40, $64. about the present ori&g
the two-mill state levy ceiling on $6,400, $64,000 or $640,000 ques Another item that seems to
property taxes and other stow tion, all depending upon your size bother a spokesman for the biggies '. Whether the;
downs on potential spending at all and worth. ' - is the new constitution's provision has "cured 'those vills'fc, .....
levels of government in Montana. for a' consumer representative in decide when he vpteMmie",?: -•}"'
First off, the more difficult it is . Public Service Commission hear
They are only slow downs be to get authorization to spend mon ings. Ihdoingthis).hel.-,_
cause the present Montana Consti ey the less of it is likely to be
tution allows the voters by refer spent. More roadblocks, less The consumers' man's salary advised to■make.upliis:o;
endum to sweep most of them spending would be paid by levying a tax on deterniine .in his;\ ow|il
aside. Such is done decennially for the public utilities. This it is what;he likes andrememrierithat
the Montana University System Second, since you can't get' charged would be paid by the very
and state custodial institutions. If blood out of a turnip, those with industries whose profits he would what's;, gSod. forXGeBeral|fiuIl-
it wasn't, they'd be worse off than property are going to pay the bill. moose may ndt aMays'b^thelbest
Where a levy might cost the aver oppose. for him and hlsistlle:.;'^^,^:^
ever. age homeowner $6 a year, the cost
could be hundreds of thousands
The new one doesn't exactly for the larger outfits.
turn the state loose on an un
checked spending spree—much as Third, there's usually a differ
ence of opinion as to what's worth
while. How much vou have to pay

Corporations—a must

By VICTOR WILSON iorm'so well may make organl- On a worker-nunaged tcooomy,
latioia and executives look like he tends to follow political sci-
America's great corporations kiughU in shining armor. The enlist Robert Dahl's argument
havt thtir faults, but the na- truth u. ho layi. both organiia- thai todayy's woAers-anywhere-
1 ym lion's economy and distribution tions and executives lack either —don't want to manage any
"polish" or "morality." Bui. he thing. Just give them high p»y
system couldn't function with soon hours and good working
uuldbekept out them, one of their persistent goes on: conditions. Dahl maintains.

i tribunal U critics concedes. "... As things now stand, the DOES ALL TUB mean, then,
lard against Says Robert L. Beilbroncr. corporation that btads men to that Holbroncr a about ready to
gether ... and the slate lhal pack up and drop losg years of
aes of public economist, social commentator, btoas them together by appeal corporate criticism? By no
ing to their patriotic natures, are means. The fad that man needs
il is equally and Normin Thomas professor (be only means we have for en corporations, he declares, does
lard against of economics it New York City's suring our survival, even il, by t not "render futile an efforts to
aes of news- highly respected New School for terrible irony, they arc also the achieve corporate raporaltUi-
institutions by which our surviv ty."
Social Research: al is moit seriously endang-
Anderson, if "1 do not wish to dishearten On the contrary, he says."...
At traeot Kcilbroner saysfil The
•ees to set up the crusader for corporate re
I agree to go sponsibility. Hay his came pre- mesl by "communes," which (corporate) respoasibility >
■at is the rea- -. vail. But little is gained when we appeal chiefly to youthful deeper signiGeance than the
•.tbe govern-- . delude ourselves as to the ease would-be reformers, or by a remedy of the abuses of the
approach to- "with' whfcft h'omin society" can worker-managed economy, toch moment."
able to set up be restructured. The cause ol hi prevails in Yugoslavia; which
oo your own reform, not to mention tbat.ol practices a non-Russian brand In fact, Helbroaer concludes:
of Cmiuuukur)- ". . . The central problem of
constructive revolution, is loo our age" hi the creation "of a
responsive and responsible cor-
important: to' be nurtured on ponllan," which in turn, be
Kfficulty, at a anything but the troth." feels, will help crate a "r
sive ind rapomiblpsUtr.
" corporite 'gadfly* Ralpa Nader's
t°'

Keilbron'er .„ ttrusho com-

iiaunej Bpjjj;; p
tic form" of social urgaoiatlon;
Wli.' even' to-callbd socialist not a turbemger of a new form."
state uiesomeibH of corporate
: "device?to.'Make their systems

A .WriUng a commentary on a The substance of
TneWibbok;, .•:in.ithe; Name of

;' Profil'".wKch ciiittini j'u case
;ch^tii'b'6th'l

beavy casualties of ground combat but it was
doing everything possible to perpetuate the
war itself with massive cqcippingorthe South
Vletnamcw^asd the .retention of formidable
AOxnctn *tr and.se*,pow« ai W*_<aHi oowj,
tee. tncretsindy VietnamliaUon ippetroi to i

^tbiciDkote'f«oBrailfta»„lri"erio^nc|ii"tiXiUo„ribuf*a*sSbt^ y„

Easy Scan and Print

on sued

forces

"Tb. ««H>bi>aei^Hi£^e«oeeItag Ihe scbedslcd Idem Gtrb
Wedneadaf says that -slab advertisement Mr uxi Mrs George CasUeton.
agreed to telecast Jfoftf1 .,—A temporary restruniag
at t JO p B'ApnljJF^grBer predudfng the defeodenta BCTStiroonAve.
ajreeraptlng the Umeslot Mr and Mrs Ronald Christy

pher IS46BroadwaterAve

-'. -THE- DrgST group th-to ad- ■.-h.«l■»oUiltapBtrttnhnefncaaryncldnljaunUcotoiooQf*ptrhoe- Boys ,

ft* —t--~T. verttoJthcfwotEne*pt<s.Tbc advertisement and a court order Mr and Mrs WiOttro Kacscr

nnT»SFoBifs<iMduied spftiftcHly'" ttlordng the Broadview
Mr tndMrs JotoD Andenon'
Tfie^sccoM. scheduled for terms of the contract.
TkovJay night mtaanag -Costs of the action. Acton
coori Tkuvoor »
KOOK was pdSed inBS tbt Two days before a was sched- judge Robot H wllson b
tray wben it agreed to tot tbe uled to be Broadcast, Vk Milter »cd in order forcing KOOK to FireCaBs Weather forecast ~J
Leooa Dem-backed group air its general manager ol KOOK >ppcU |n court at 4 p m Thurs 2 14 pm Wednesday (Cityi -
"point of view" recanting tbe told 4tti. Deta the second ^ to lhow emle wny ^ fa. The National Weatfier Service forecasts'nun
soaing ordinance on a l&raioute time slot Sad beta preempted:, junction should noc be iwsed JOItStbAve S RrstAid over the Northwest Thursday with showers
.."for the purpose of donating ind the contract not be specifi- over the southern plains and Texas Cool to
paid lime spot. plaintiirs time spot to persons diy enforced CTTV DEATHS
Mrs. Lillian E. SeheUh, II. IMS
politically opposed to plaintiff."
RirnrockRoad.
ih« complaint says. Mrs. Ruth Mary Gloudeman 77
fhe dispatcher o)51tS.55U)St. cold temperatures are forecast for thfr West-
Futher. the complaint says. Coast the northern plains and the Northeast11
.,r AREA DEATHS while warm temperatures are expected in the
Shelby man tbe eaaccilation was "designed. IS OfSO O OOef Oscar L. Kofford. 19. Cody Tiho
Gulf states lewbto
quits ConCon . . to undermine and interfere Two poems by Art Jostyn. Wyo.
with plaintiffs political efforts dhpalcher in tbe Yellowstone' WUliain C. Zappone, 4). former Basic B,<i
and perpetrated deliberately to Thunday Increasing dooxttnen AiafonwunBiiMTi Lcristowiv*
County sberifi'i office, have If of Lewistowa. in Silver ThursdayTUght with a chance of
Lake. Wash. ihowcn Friday Bga Thursday ."■»"** »y_"*!i-.*!g •" " kngUr^ffla*
VermiiBon of Shdby wrote Sec forum. been accepted by the World Mrs. Tina L. Busic, SZ. Lewis- Ws£a* Man sb*4rM'bi
retary of State Frank Murray Poetry Society International for town F54ridlaoyw mTihdudrlseda6y0inigPhrtoab.abhUiBgyh
Wednesday that be has resign Mrs. Ethel Hodge, 83. Bcacb- of sbowen near icro through !'^S£Sr^zwb?lHZhZ>S!JXS£t*t<f. ^ot"HSi.^^aaJd
EN HB COMPLAINT, Ste- possible inclusion in "Poet" Itnd.
ed from the Constitutional Con phens asked for: magazine as representative of Thundayy and 10 per cent Than-
vention. -A temporary restraining Western poetry and poett. DIVORCES ASKED Bfti?w*»i?ii_.'3>3>f>!.it*»s.ji<r>t-•'•**.LU "* waac,aVaTSwbh
VemtiiJion is one of four dele order to preclude KOC& from NoSrtohmweestSOwjploebmse'*infcrloudmedIhine Dorothy V. Jones vs. Charles W daymght
WEST YQJ.OWSTONE —
gates from Dist. IS. which cov Jones. She was
ers the counties of Glacier, Miiicnc CobcQ vs. Henry Con MosUy fair through Thursday
GlendJVe tCfhost Joslyn.wboliaisoaRepubU-Toole, Pondera and Teton. i bbsk June
di. Warmer Thunday Increasing nnu hMi»M Va Ttaeyn
Murray sent a special resig Spri• n 9 rLl.O.r.S«e Srn^O,.W.. pcacn-cpansduibdmaittetefodrpjouestmisceooofCmth'e. doudinets Thursday night wilh _. Mil aad be
nation form to Vermilion, not BILLINGS-HARD [N — Vana a chance of showen Friday Mays Benson £«£«
ble doodtnesa through Friday
ing that it must be notoriied u CLENDIVE-TheGlcndive ter and the transition of the with warmer daytime tempen- _nPPHril^ohgghhbVbtTbnhlUiut_hntyi_dgfo_ahfyFhsrShi5odwaleyorrwsnTindhedaulrn*td5ea0syn
be acceptable. Spring Eiposilior. Hone Show tsres. Rich Thursday GO to (S through Thunday and X) per
-In'hit letter, which Murray _ ,, , LowThursday night»to 40 and cent Thursday right WOliLAKft w"jo - Mays ricd
will be held in Glendive May 10- the kigb Friday «S to 79. Cbuxc B Bemoa, TT, lied it Us home. Meca
could not accept. Vcrmillion 14. ' rfOT TiOnOrea -'I of precipitation 10 per cent GREAT FALLS — Fan- and ooSooth rWi»«fcnday. bUa>i
said: "I am not running for MKSOULA — BaOa R. Eb1 through Thursday night. warmer through Thursday Fri-
The Paint and Arabian show td- prercuor of rouiic i&&i day panry cloudy gusty west He m born MayTO MS iaaraacbatl
any office, but I da not want will be May 10; the Quarter ddiirector off bbandds at thhe UUniver- HELENA - Mostly fair wiaeb and continued mild. Haja Taylor, Mo (he soa of John and until Mr 1
Horse show. Hay 11-13: and llw tuy of MooUna. has been through Thunday. Wanner Thursday ocar TO Low Tbun- EtU 3eaaon Kt Btntel Pha Sbe^aoved
any conOicU to develop be Appppatoosa show.. Hay 13-14. g^^ -ont ot m outsUndiEg Thursday. Increasing ctoudtsos day mjht«to« HlghPnday Coak'Dcc. 8 IM4, In- Taylor inf. the rai
cause ol my recent appoint BBrrttittoo are-ejpecttedd ttaan MMan- edoauonaj njujic dJrettoo In Ttawtay night with a chance of middle tOs Chance ol rata nor Tat/camfto^WjcBiSil ia UW Bdiiafi ra
ment to tbe Shelby School ^Nrthltakt Sth D stchheoUonliyteeadrS"ttbytoTofoer StctoeocoaIrMrehn-t. showers Pittaj. Hbjb Thursday xero per ceut through Thursday aad bV wat entploytd u a truck wbmtiMBi
Board." M, low Thunday night 34, high 10 per centThonday night.
New Meiico Pridiy middle 00). Probability
of showers near zero through SOLTTHEAST MONTANA - dnter a> tbe'timber. ladtutrr Sbe^waa
Thursday and 10 per cent Tburs- Partly cloudy through Thunday Liter he went to wart Car ha aMbod&t <
^CLUeLBgEion el-ectAsmok. &5££thTS^? W Dtrcctor * TdTiorasen of Cvlbertsoa wis ty anst, tan the ibow for *-H dayuigbt Ccbaainhxcne oMfcac.UUattnlae rbaoirndeQrCVPtahier soninUifte^enientbUKiieafin tneATntrig
Wortaa^dintilbiiretirccBCfll. ^Sunivun
BimE - MosUy fair High diSiiJuorft, Vm UnTKivl
through Thursday. Warmer Surftrors mclndrtwo sos sttowa, W
e£wWio-Bitttct,l com- dttSWmbetlieaftonooQofmaQdaatUMipriiawovenfen UtfU Thursday increuJcg doadrnrn JDoeuep^b^wcaflSahnefdfi;cida,ndAlas.evearnadl AVa»awl&eVeA«a'd'
in Glasgow Other offieen an MeOSleS CUrilCS Thursday night with a chaaee of Friday Warmer both days
Cr^Tfcecocnrn»a%3,Jtn» tBowen Friday Hlgb Thurstby Low* at night ia Ms- tUgta^i
Ctlaen JMplar iecood »»ce CULBERTSON - Ctiae. tor (0, low Thursday rights). Ugb
commaaiVr Wiffiam." Lad,' LEWBTOWN — Mrs. William measles vscdnttion wiU be giv- Prhby near 60 PrababfBtj of
(\entywood adjotiOi';Harold Cat ol Pcrat Grore has been sbonrs sear zero through to 75.
iiB&paaB o aappointed secretary of the East to under MicOfftOon of koos- Thaxday and 10 per cent Thurs MILES CITY - Low at mfht
rCJbtrtico n Dstrict NaUooal Farmers evett C^idj day njgnt
ViiS]/'ctBiaplaJuOfaJoe »to» High Tbursday Bear
-Sts|ow. 'Orjaniiatlc»{NFO) - cpoarrrUdunioat of^ BOZEMAN - Mosdy lair Hlhd^to^Ck
Sbe wffl replace Don Grlms througb Thursday. rWamier
ren age one to U years Clinics rdaaiyn .1l0sppercrcecnctntthTrhouugnbdT^huBruao-U.^
rod of Hasbua, who will now be are set for Culbertsoo Balnrille
a|so tsTtommiader of Post U in -diltf ^ MU

cent though Thonday eaccpt
60 pcrxccM aear the, caabxn
Montana border Coanoaofrala
ftidaylflpereem> .

CENTRiQ. M0MT
Pair

Easy Scan and Print

!^^®?^' Youirc " . • Theirs

new vs. the hid coBiejIhe old .suspicion .„_
some" Americans would Iike';'tt>
Second in series ordinance covering federal rela spread iround a rosier fictur$d[ avaibhletothem. .
tions. the situation than might be fully That might just prove thy
: "We the people of Montana justiGed-or than their own senior Americans here have ''For'example,'the North'Viet-
: gratefui to God for the quiet beau Tbe matter is covered in 1972 most realistic private assess more facts available than nonof- namese have,'captured the
with a statement "All provisions ments might warrant. itasl searchers. But the diligent northern part of tyungtri prov-
ty of our state, the grandeur of our of the enabling act of Congress searcher often has the feeling >>«*• much of Binhlonj prov-
- mountains, the vastness of our (approved Feb. 22, 1889, 25 Stat. ALL THOSE years ol luming that the; do nor. that maybe. lnx> P"1.9' Kohtum province
676), as amended and of Ordi earners to find light at the end they sometimes have less and Binhdinh and other places
rolling plains, and desiring to im nance No. 1 appended . .. contin ol the tunnel have left a skepti Or it might prove that some The> "e still attacidB| hard on
prove the quality of life, equality ue in full force and effect until cism about the officially dissem people tend lo pot a shinier gloss tm> 'fronts and miscellaneous
of opportunity and to secure the revoked by the consent of the inated American altitude here. os their facts than others. spots, have cut and kept cul >
. blessings of liberty for this and United States and the people of
' future generations do ordain and Montana." Ydlhat attitude continues to
: establish this constitution-." be important in influencing
The lawyers in the 1972 Con- many of the conclusions which
Pretty isn't it? That's the Con, and there were mure than 20, are drawn for the American
preamble to the proposed 1972 felt the simpler version covered public from the daily battle re
'' Montana Constitutions you'll be the matter sufficiently. ports.
' voting on June 6.
The North Vietnamese often
sive which began almost four
wteks ago has raised a number

' Those 55 words replace a less As to deletion of paragraphs on
eloquent 50-word preamble of tbe "religious toleration and free pub
present state constitution; It said, lic schools," the ConCon lawyers
and authors apparently deemed
.: quite simply, "We, the people of the two vital matters covered in
-Montana, grateful to Almighty other portions of the 1972 version,
. God for the blessings of liberty, in to wit: Article H, Sec. 5, Freedom
. order to secure tbe advantages'of a of Religion, and in Article X, Sec.
1, Educational Goals and Duties.
: state government, do, in accord-
.': ance with trie provisions of the The freedom of religion section
copies that of the U.S. Constitu- ■
enabling act of Congress, ap tion in stating "The state snail
proved the twenty-second day of make no law respecting an estab
February, A D 1889, ordain and lishment of religion or prohibiting
establish this constitution ' the free exercise thereof.
r There isn't ukel> to be muclr
l quarreling o\et the differences The free public schools ques

z between the new and the old tion appears ui Article X, Educa
preamble However one attorney,
tion and Public Lands under Sec
•^ who states he does "not agree that tion 1, Educational Goals and Du
""Tthe proposed draft has advantages ties "(3) The Legislature shall pro
vide a basic system of free quality
-'"over the existing constitution," public ' elementary -.and; public
takes exception to the preamble

" itself

3^ He believes that'll God was"M- - schools.". . _;. _-~

mighty'-when the 1889 preamble
p_ was written, he "Almighty" now
iT and the deletion of the adjective It can be argued that tbe differ west ajretment on. European yrind d^wn hVioniiil'jet Jic.':vn
, minimized the diety ences of opinion here are in a mat security, no cease-Bie between M-197J aa tht'cijl* certifn'fof^iei
ter of form, riot substance.
hij total wilh'dnwil inmAUi
- This same lawyer feels that a the Arab states and Israel in Ihe icin vpolitia, o«Ve>
MlddJe-Elst,'and no realistic chances;^^d'iSBiiS
-"number of items in tbe 1889 Arti This is not wholly tbe case negotiations for"world mooctary
^ cles I and U should have been in when you tome to consideration uidlnderefonh: " ' ^ ^d
_ clurJed«ui(.thev1972 model s Article of Article I], Declaration of Rights,
."I The^former .considers the in the 1972 model .,- ->Bj JAMESRJESTON-; : "^ C
^boundaries ofjthfeslale-references ;■.t.-h■e;■:-■ antiwar it. t-i■;t'je;o""t:'*.'m»"o■y■e-
We'll delve into that next '. roegt has reached anollier'irirlt)-
rfv' , - ^ *j tf'lo military ^reservations and an l;tn:Ui turbulentKitory

: ';■uihgoVlib^lbeg*ocirie;'(arfttiuiknt.haenrdnsaoJomjrelatyrye://;fcShma;rad:N-fVieibcroiti
iofp:atthhee"ttimciioerrTi(irtuyitsrtautd«tln,t.isoseUeiirii '-■^■I
Jf}aefe reality JiSrdJi t6k

stayed^get mired in today's situ-:-- ^

been threatened to the Bureau oi iaitaf policy sutcawnt-
tion t cumnl Uoij or water dvenfan /rora Utu
Big Horn Lake tatk southward to tbe CiUettt
agetopwJfKl^tettwrca
<Wvo , coal fldfe to the ral«e-m«rth powc

— ---—'--—— —— >•«■ >■■««# iv ««w SOB

•waywtthjoibeolthetnotcft- <£«

ofthe present MMfltutoft. ,,
Tbe new cotufiluUon pnw

for innuaUesjlora aeetittifcsi
«Dte(bUttvc days tatter than 60
..calendar says, Mn Bowman


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