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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 4
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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 4

Publication:
The Capital Timesi
Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Indians Protest (Continued from Page Whereas Senate Bill 765 does members from each county "af- not limit the numbers of non-In-fected by Indian questions. dian committee members in The Inter-Tribal Council reso-jthat the Bill fails to define what lution pointed out that the pro-jis a county affected by Wiscon- 1 THE CAPITAL 11MES, Tuesday. Dec. 23, 10 Colder Weather Forecast Four-Inch Snowfall Clogs Area Roads (Continued from Page 1 eies. Highway officials reported and probable ending of thi posed committee does not limit the number of non-Indian committee members and fails to consider that many Wisconsin tribes and band also have a substantial number of Indians in more than one county.

Representative of eight of the ten tribes and bands still under federal supervision voted ini broad a spectrum of problems, favor of the resolution. Repre- Whereas it is the privilege sentatives of Red Cliff and Mole and prerogative of the Wiscon-Lake Indians were absent. sin Indian represented by the storm Schools still open before the Christmas holidays were pre- Highway 80-81, were reported that highways were being blown carrying one-way traffic. closed almost as soon as they An estimated 8 to 10 inches of were plowed. Winds estimated snow was reported on the at 20 to 25 miles per hour were1 maturely closed.

Those closed ground in Grant. Iowa. Lafay- causing drifting throughout the today included Middleton. Min-ctte, Crawford. Sauk, Vernon area.

eral Point, Lancaster, Platte- and Richland Counties. ville, Potosi, Iowa -Grant Authorities were warning' It was predicted that two to schools. Cassville, West Grant, against driving on the highways three more inches would fall in, Bloomington, Shullsburg and except for extreme emergen- the Platteville area before noon' Benton. Northern Illinois schools pre- yw 1 1 maturely closed included Stock- Money Bill UK cl i- The Southwestern Wisconsin (Continued from Page 1 1 holding his signature for 10 Bookmobile canceled scheduled ered the $1.6 billion added bydas If Congress were in ses-'visits to Wauzeka and Lake! Voting in opposition to the La Fave bill were representatives of the Potawatomi, St. Croix.

Oneida, Stockbridge-Munsee, Lac Court Oreilles, Bad River, Lac du Flambeau and Winne-bago. The full text of the resolution follows: Great Lakes Inter-Tribal Council to petition the legislation when it is necessary. Whereas all state and federal services now available can be obtained through the legal entity of the Great Lakes Inter-Tribal Council. Therefore be it resolved that the Great Lakes Inter-Tribal Whereas Senate Bill 765 has been introduced in the Wiscon-lCouncl1-tbe representative gov-sin Legislature by a siermn? ot tbe ten non-ter-LaFave, Cirilli, Terry, Krueger, rnated 'V'SCOnSin tribes and Chi 1 sen and Johnson. bands fPPses1 Scn' ate Bill 76d as drafted and pro- Mills.

Area the area lyzed. In Green County, the Sheriff's office said roads open were hazardous and slippery. along to the Dane County Home at Verona, where the picture was taken. Miss Omen was in charge of medical records at Madison General Hospital for 20 years, while Steinauer served as the University of Wisconsin trainer for football, baseball and track teams, for almost 41 years, in addition to being swimming coach. He will be 90 years old Jan.

1. Hebl also gave checks to the Empty Stocking fund, Roundys fund, and the March of Dimes. (Capital Times Statf Photo by Bruce M. Fritz) Whereas Great Lakes Inter-Tribal Council, Inc. represents the ten existing non-terminated merel licate the m0.

tribes and bands of Indians failures of the Dane County Clerk Jack Hebl used to send more than $100 worth of Christmas cards to his friends during the holiday season. Then he decided the money could be put to better use by purchasing fruit to be distributed to patients at local hospitals and homes, and giving the remainder to charities. Here Hebl turns over a check for $25 to The Capital Times Kiddie Camp fund to Irv Kreisman. left, courthouse reporter. Catherine Cie Omen and Joe Steinauer.

right, meanwhile eye a half-dozen crates of apples aud tangerines that Hebl brought Congress inflationary. e-sion when he made his decision Senate conferees later trimmed the President would be forced to $500 million from the bill, but return the bill to Congress with the White House clearly indi-ia statement explaining why he eated Monday that that was not 'was vetoing it. enough to protect it from veto. I Mansfield said Congress Republican congressional should be in session so it could leaders met with the President 'vote to override the veto. The Monday and were told that thejHouse passed the bill.

261 to 110, bill still is not acceptable. That was more than Administration officials said; the two-thirds required to over-Ihat while Congress had cut thelride a veto. There is considera-HEW bill back to about thelble sentiment among House President's figure, it had done'Democrats to send the bill to a so by adding more than SI bil-j White House confrontation now lion in items he considered ofnd repass it in January if the low priority and cutting about.President lets it die. the same amount from his re- The filial supplemental money quests. One increase specified 'bill, which contains $278 million was $398 million for federally-1 for various agencies and the impacted area school aid whichjPhiladelphia plan controversy, goes to rich and poor school dis- was considered a must because tricts alike.

lit also contained stop-gap, ave been S'ven a jury trial Assuming Congress would ad-spending authority for foreign: were be culd have fought the Asks Sll 5,000, Continued from Puge I) through the efforts of a brother, George, who was convinced he was sane. The biggest sentence Dennison could have received for the $5 theft was 10 years. His lawyers contend the additional 24 years were imposed unconstitutionally, that Dennison should Least Temporarily mentous existing Menominee study committee in Whereas The Menominee ter-4hat the Wisconsin Indian Com-mination procedure which has niittoe as proposed would be too been guided and assisted by the large, making it unworkable, Menominee study committeeald indefinite in size, and indef-has proved to be a momentous jjnjte jn which counties would adure- and could be represented and Whereas the committee estab-1 indefinite in the scope of prob-lished by Senate Bill 765 would lems to be studied, operate similarly to the Menom-I Be it further resolved that inee study committee in that thelwhen and if a Wisconsin Indian committee created by S. 765 Committee is deemed necessary would develop specific the Great Lakes Inter-Tribal ommendations and legislative, Council, the Wisconsin Indians proposals relating to the transi- represented by the Great Lakes will help Man- ton of the Wisconsin Indians Inter-Tribal Council, would and Mcuison Lets Judge Name Lawyer to Defend Him in the world who can represent finally decided. By DIAL TORGERSON (L.A Times Capital Times Service) from Federal control self-government.

to locahcould so petition the Wisconsin iLegislature. doctors conclusions. They told the Supreme Court during all those years Dennison was detained among criminals joum until January 19. Mans-aid and HEW. If the President field said he intended to hold vetoed that bill with Congress the HEW bill in the Senate to out of session, all the federal prevent the President from let-social welfare programs would LOS ANGELES Hippie clanj But Los Angeles County Supe-leader Charles M.

Manson, rior Court Judge William B. fighting for permission to de- Keene, over vociferous protests fend himself in court, reluc-1 of three lawyers who want to within two and degenerates of the worst son evaluate his plan to represent himself. Throughout Mondays court, hearing Manson insisted, again and again, that he wanted to represent himself with attor-pointed neys to advise him if he needed in-' help. And Judge Keene insisted. ting the bill die while Congress out of money was adjourned simply by with-lweeks.

State Dem Group Will Study Party Operations tantly agreed Monday to accept help Manson defend himself, ap-what he didnt want: a court-appointed attorney. But only tern- one of the nations top attorneys to serve as his Wisconsin Democratic Party Les Aspin, and Mrs. again and again, that he could Chairman James W. Wimmer Helen Sigmund, Stevens Point, appoint an attorney to discuss lday announced the appoint- will serve as deputy chairmen. terim counsel.

Atty. Joseph A. Ball, past president of the state bar asso-son, ciation and a legal counsel to Warren Commission, it was sort and was on many occasions assaulted physically and sexually by his co-inmates and the attendants at Dannemora State Hospital. They added: The money that would be awarded to Dennison I is not a fine or a penalty im-security boost and an $800 per-' posed upon the peop of New snnai income tax exemption l- in 1Q7I -1 1 is merely a small confer 5 comPensation toj 1- OtllClS I II I II 10(1 comer him for the loss that he 9 Passes secur sonal effective in 1971. But a House-Senate porarily.

I have no other chance but to represent myself, said Man- charged with murder for seven Tate and La Bianca kill-) the ings. There is no other person Aspin is First District chairman. Mrs. Sigmund is Portage County Democratic chairman and member at large of the ment of a top-drawer Party Development Commission to study the operation and organization of the party at all levels. Tax Bill (Continued from Page 1 publicans who considered the bill too inflationary and too costly If Congress adjourns this ence committee then put more week as planned and returns1 muscle in the bill's tax reforms Jan.

19. Nixon has 10 days from an(j toned down the tax cut so when the bill actually reaches that the exemption rises only to David Carley. Madison busi- stale administrative committee. members include of the com-Arthur De- nessman, will head the commis-i Other sion. Wimmer said the commission will recommend plans for broadening participation, devel- Bardeleben.

Johnson, Wyman, the idea with him before he makes his final decision. Finally Manson agreed to I Judge Keenes plan. I'll accept i his offer, he said. The judge released the public defender as Mansons attorney of record -and later appointed Ball, who to confer with the defend-! ant today. I Manson is to return to Judge Keenes court at 11 a m.

(Wednesday for a further hearing on his motion to be permitted to represent himself. tained. The award, until it was re. versed, brought Dennison nu merous proposals of marriage. Park Falls; C.

P. Darien: Prof. Walker River Falls, Ted Kinoping issues, and increasing theamon, Janesville, state NDC scope and distribution of party chairman; McKay Gilchrist, Madison, Young Democratic representative on the state administrative committee, r-tram McNamara, Milwaukee: Laurence C. Gram West Allis, Milwaukee County Demo- funds. While prospective candidates for top state offices are absent from the commission panel, it contains the name of represent atives of nearly all segments of a small room, a lawyer told a reporter, and was recently laid off from his janitors job at the Glens Falls community The three attorneys who had 11 Killed as Navy Jet Hits Hangar By RAYMOND C.

MEANS followed by people hollering. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) Then people started coming out A pilotless F8 Crusader jet the hangar with giant flame? smashed into a hangar at Mira-iand smoke immediately follow-mar Naval Air Station Monday, ng. killing 11 men and injuring 14 Multiple explosions followed others as it exploded in a ball of the fire in the hangar, one of fjre three repair facilities at the air Navy Lt. Cyrus M.

Riddell. jbae' 1 Richard Haight, editor of the 27, of San Diego, was bringing nothing, the bill would die, the1 does not reach $750 until 1973. victim of a pocket veto. Nothing in the bill affects the It would require a two-thirds taxes the average individual vote by each House to enact the wjll pay next April 15 on income bill into law over a veto. Mon- he earned this year.

day votes were big enough to guj taxpayers would start override a veto, but the Presi- seejng the bills effects reflected dent could convert some Repub-I jn their first paychecks in Janu-licans to his side if he rejects ary when the income tax bla- charge, now 10 per cent, falls to Jn his last news conference, per cent. After six months at Nixon said he would veto thej that rate, it expires for good. bill if it came to him the way it I first emerged from the Senate Clears Dodd the party, including the New Democratic Coalition. cratic chairman; State Sen. Henry Dorman (D -R a i e): State Rep.

Lloyd Barbee and Rep. Raymond Tobiasz, both of Milwaukee. (Continued from Page Justice Department had held the Internal Revenue investigation over his head during the vote on Jadke 1 F. hoped to be allowed to assist Manson in his defense were infuriated with Keenes action. One, George Shibley, told the judge Manson had heard Keene wants to become district attor-afraid a person the trial judge convict him.

Luke McKissack, outside the court uutotuc iiit vuun the jet in for a landing when he lost oil pressure. He radioed with the 15 per cent social The surtax would die Jan. 1 if j1 Nixon does not sign the bill (Havnsworth nomination to the factor likely to influence Supreme Court likely Miramar base newspaper, was ney be 8 a block from the structure by the crash occurred. There was lots of heroism," might want to Another, told newsmen 1 flcl Wda llllS Ul MclUISiM, lUtu licwaiuvil for emergency fire standby and few moments later ejected a In appointing the member-; ship of this commission, I have, sought to insure representation of all areas of the state and allj Wimmer noted that the Ad-segments of thc liberal move-jministrative Committee had au-ment, Wimmer said. thorized the creation of the I am particularly grateful commission at its August mect-that Dave Carley has agreed toiing in Baileys Harbor.

He said direct the commission's ef- the action stemmed from a reforts, Wimmer said, pointing quest by National Party Chair-to Carleys experience as aman Fred Harris that state par-state director of Resource De- ties create parallel groups to velopment, and his academic the national party's McGovern background in political science. Commission. i Lif fnm Viiirro he said. There was plenty of what he thought of Keene's in him to sign the bill. His new budget is based on the assumption that the surtax will continue for the first half of next Dodd said there scintilla of truth that he would have voted for Haynsworth if his vote had been wasn't a reports, OUou Aoks Action on Air Pollution 1 i 1 1 h3T he 3m 1 1 lio i cr a ft travel-smoke blowing from both ends terim-attorney plan: inlaUbout 225 miles an the ban8ar- but thare was U's lllega1 unconstitutional, ploughed through the north Panic; 1 sa rushlng to the doors of the repair hangar and assistance of squadron mates with no fear whatsoever.

and damnable! He (Manson) has this run down his throat! He added: year. The surcharge was first nec2ssary to win him confirma-enacted during the Johnson ad-bon- As turned out. Dodd's was nt needed and he op-against posed the nomination. hurtled halfway down the han Lt Gov. Jack Olson today is-, sued a plea to members of thej Assembly Conservation m-1 mittee for prompt action on Senate Bill 747 to beef up the rocoups $3.3 billion a year for ministration as a weapon inflation.

Moreover, the bill ultimately gars length through a tangle of Even when there were more ex- plosions lt didn stop them, workers and aircraft. The Navy said at least $25 Williams said he does not The court has been playing with this mans mind. One of the former members of Mansons hippie clan, Susan Denise Atkins, 21, claimed that he maintained an almost hypnotic dominance over her and others in the group. The legal issue now revolves around Mansons mind and whether he is capable of defending himself. Mate's air pollution control government by killing the know whether the Internal miiiion damage was done to the gram.

investment tax credit a 7 pw, Revenue Service has any planlgiant structure and six jets in- I Pont lav cnnciHv fnr Iho ovrtann. In The air pollution bill was in cent tax subsidy for the expend- to proceedings slde Haight said. All of the injured and killed were men and all but one of the victims was believed to be Navy personnel. O. 3C Gary R.

Miller, whol Ridde" Picked UP in an is0 itures by businesses and farmers on expansion, equipment and modernization. The admin- of against Dodd, or whether the agency will seek an adjustment his income tax returns. P. THE TOBACCO BARFeafures For the KjlttSmi SMOKER dated near the base, was was servicing a jet at the south, We know of no civil ot the hangar, watched thelakc" tbe base dispcnsary 1 UMlinrYw coisl Dm V. 'onH latpr rPlPSKSPfl area Williams said.

But he and later released. troduccd in the Senate at Olson's request, and passed unanimously in November. The bill ion non istration is eager to end the tax appropriates $120,000 for the credl( 1969-71 biennium for environ-l 1 Privately, members of both mental protection by the De- partment of Natural Resources. would be used to parties thought Nixon would sign the bill but warn he may money would be used to I The law says he can do so if pres-, he is mentally competent. jet slam through the doors.

Somebody said Look, and a F. Zm, almost down and hit the hangar. I feel OK, he told newsmen had it X-rayed. I lost oil t0 ask to hire professional experts needed, dwn lhe bj al ex. to collect air quality data and on beforebit fu int0 Judge Keene in deciding whether to grant MansonsJ wish, has in mind conflicting The SAMPLER tion, said the tax years involved in the inquiry, 1961 to 1965, are still open for action if the IRS chooses.

Williams said he did not know whether the IRS had recommended to the Justice Department that Dodd be prosecuted. Dodd said the department action has not altered his political plans for 1970: They're the set up high standards. In some cities around effect. He could save considers ble money, for example, by ask- world, people are dying daily that it kept at $700 in because of the poisoned atmos-l m2 instead of t0 $750 thc phere around them, said folowing year. sure and had to eject.

A Navy spokesman said Riddell ejected from the plane over Interstate 395, which runs about legal decisions, one-half mile from the bases! Recent cases have been re-Paul Hagel. 32, 6705 Spring runway. The spokesman said 'versed by higher courts both Grove, Middleton, has beenlthere was a flame out and I when judges have permitted de-named as associate member of1 the jet lost power, 1 a to represent them- the Madison architectural firm The plane veered to the right selves and when they have re-of Weiler, Strang, McMullin and of the runway and crashed into fused to honor such requests. Associates, He has been with the hangar, civilian Fire Chief Manson adamantly demanded the firm for three years. Bill Knight said.

such permission. same as they've been. I plan to run." if inflation proves stubborn, he could ask for yet another i of the sur- Olson. Fortunately, we don't have as severe a problem here in Wisconsin, but we need constant vigilance to keep it from charge' getting worse. Olson told the Conservation Committee members that this particular bill was an important step in the fight to protect our environment.

Or, Besides security taxes poor What mor could a pipe smoker oik for bosides his favorit pipe and Th Tobacco Bar's fivo best selling blends. Two aromatics, two non-aromatics ond a stroight burley with each tobocco separately packod in r-usobl, airtight, poly-zip pouch. Thc toboccos may be smoked individually or mixed to suit ony mon's tostc. Th SAMPLER it ottroctivcly pockogtd nd gift wrapped for tho holiday Macon. $05 Otlly Mm (pbs tei) Double Sampler with Ten Blends Only $4.75 hooM add 60 for mail ardors Mail Orders Filled Promptly His Senate term is expiring with the current For time to trim the tree MADISON'S AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ITJDD.IL SB.5E both sales service AT 12 NOON WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 24th, 1969 A Merry Christmas To All the tax cut and social provisions, the bill cuts for the poor, the near and the unmarried; continues the 7 per cent excise tax on new cars and the 10 per cent tax on telephone service; liberalizes moving expense deduction rules; imposes a minimum Thc Main Office, East Side, tax on investment income which Ililldale, Brookwood and Uni-! now escapes all taxation; cuts versity Stations.

Monona the 27.5 per cent oil depletion Branch, East Side Annex and allowance to 22 per cent, the both parcel post annexes will be 1 first cut ever, dosed Christmas Day. The! 11 also raises eaPtal 8ains collection of mail will also be taxes for persons with gams of suspended for the holiday, ac- more than narrows real cording to Postmaster John F. estate, banking and hobby Whitmore. farming" loopholes; subjects There will be no regular win- foundations to a tax of 7.5 per dow, city, or rural delivery cent of their income from in-service and only special deliv- vestments and requires them to cry service will be available, pay out to charity at least 6 per Perishable mail will be deliv- cent of their net worth each ered. Letters deposited in thej year and subjects businesses ence terminated later today and collection box al the Main Of-1 operated by churches to thc 48jhe will report on lhe work of lice or in the lobby drop will be per cent corporation tax, among the conference disoatched.

s-id Wnilmoie. nth. things. Congress. Dodd wrily added that he will not use the fund raising dinner system to finance his re-election bid.

I wish Id never had any, he added. Dodd faces at least one rival for the Democratic nomination. Joseph Duffy, national chair- man of the Americans for Democratic Action, has declared he plans to run. Another entrant is likely to go into thc campaign with backing of the Connecticut Democratic organization. Stalks Out (Continued from Page 1 1 nations Syria, Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan.

A diplomatic source said King Ha.ssan will declare the confer- at a news brief- Vt A.

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