Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - May 29, 1969, Winona, Minnesota More Public School Integration Expected for South in September NEW ORLEANS AP More public school integration in September for the Deep South is expected in the wake of eral appeals court directive that school boards act ly to abolish all vestiges of segregation of the races Integration of faculty is of equal added the 5th U.S Circuit Court of peals in a decision Wednesday emphasizing that the method of school de- segregation must show results now or be replaced by another method Some lower federal courts in the 5th Georgia Alabama Mississippi Texas and the Canal have told school Wards to don in favor ot more workable plans to end their dual school systems The ruling by the New 5th Circuit came a year after he May 28 1968 U.S Supreme decision saying school boards must come ward with a plan promises realistically to work and ises realistically to work now Guidelines for school tion cases laid down by the 5th Circuit are usually embraced by other circuit courts The court Wednesday told 37 Louisiana districts where plans had been approved by lower federal courts thai new plans shall be completed and approved by July 25 as now con- administered and ating in these districts is not said the appeals court Freedom ot choce lets a pupil decide which school to Dodd the slate education superintendent said the deci- sion will have a very very bad effect on public schools Educators not lawyers and judges should decide the best methods of achieving unitary systems said Dodd Here is a rundown tfn the ation in other states in the un- der Slh Circuit jurisdiction the support Gov Albert Brewer all schools operate under plans Dr Raymond Christian Alabama Education Association president and Birmingham school superintendent said the latest doesn't look good for cases on appeal to the 5th Circuit District Court judges have not approved any plans er Lee County school Supl Ray Williams said thai county would fight for its plan clear to the top court some instances federal courts have upheld but there is no pattern for school gration 5th Circuit has been asked Id overturn a ruling by three federal district judges that was permissable for 33 school districts in south Mississippi Partly Cloudy Chance of Rain On Friday WINONA DAILY NEWS TOMORROW SUN RISES SETS FULL MOON MAY 31 of Publication WINONA MINNESOTA 55987 THURSDAY MAY TEN CENTS PER COPY Bittersweet Tree Classified Section 2 SECTIONS 22 PAGES Deny Anthrax Area in Utah Is Harmful SALT LAKE CITY AP The Deseret test center com- mander says it is true a plot ol ground in Utah was stim with deadly anthrax germs in a 1954 biochemical warfare test but denies the site is hazardous to animals or men A statement that the area is a continuing peril by a New York congressman was described by the commander Brig Gen John G Appel as a case of making a big thing out of ing The only way a person could possibly contract pulmonary an- thrax at the site would be to dig into the dirt and eat said Appel Anthrax most commonly found in cattle or sheep is caused by a persistent rium which reproduces through the development of spores The disease may be contracted by human beings who handle parts of infected animals fK breathe in spores from the animals hair and can attack the lungs with fatal effect Appel said anthrax germs cause the fatal lung disease pnl when a massive dose is and this is very rare He said the test site at the Dugway Proving Ground ii Western Utah was contaminated 15 years ago b spreading about a teacup full o bacteria over an area 100 yards Rep Richard D McCarthy asserted this area ii Utah poses hazards td and to humans moving in anc out of the area McCarthy said British bioch experts planted germs on the Scottish island o early in World War 1 and In 1966 reported the islan was still contaminated an probably will remain for 100 years Appel said tests show the or penetrate deeper int ground each year and whil the soil remains the danger of contracting thrax from it decreases TAKES THE SPOTLIGHT Tricia Nixon with her President father beaming greets the after the President his wife and Tricia arrived at Homestead Ai Force Base Fla Wednesday night en route to Key Biscayne Fla to spend the Memorial Day weekend at his bayside home AP 50 REDS KILLED Enemy Strategy Meeting Crashed SAIGON AP U.S forces crashed an enemy strategy meeting 28 miles northwest of Saigon today during a cease-fire the Viet Cong had proclaimed in honor of birthday The enemy cease-fire began at 7 Allied forces were lo start a 24-hour truce period at 6 Friday 5 p.m CST Meanwhile mote than 50 allied operations of battalion size or larger continued without letup At least 50 Viet Cong were re- ported killed in the action west of Saigon Initial reports said one American was killed and seven wounded They were congregating in there for heir stand-down said a U.S military spokesman We had gence information they were going to be in there for a ing to plan actions for their summer campaign next month We weren't slanding down It was a sparsely settled farm area of scattered houses rice paddies and bamboo hedgerows Military spokesmen said an American plane with a speaker Slew over urging the Viet Cong o surrender and call ing on the rest of the people lo move out The spokesmen said about 200 women and children moved out but the Viet Cong started ing with machine guns and rocket grenades The enemy troops were entrenched in ing holes Mote than 700 infantrymen Violent Protests BOGOTA Columbia CAP Violent student ued to dog Gov Nelson A mission to Latin ca as he prepared to move on to Ecuador today Police used clubs and tear gas Wednesday to quell disorders here and in four provincial ies At least 95 persons were in- jured during the of demonstrations that triggered the visit of President Nixon's special envoy Bogota police drove student demonstrators from one sity campus after officials of the school called them in At the National University about 100 students threw rocks and blocked streets but university authorities did not call the lice in of students also clashed with police in Colombia's second largest city and in Barranquilla Call and Pereira The students blocked downtown streets stoned cars and broke store windows While helmeted police patrolled the streets of the capital Rockefeller met with President Carlos as Restrepo Foreign Minister Alfonso Lopez Michelsen and with business and labor leaders by newsmen about the disturbances in the streets Arms Control Talks May Beat Debate on ABM WASHINGTON AP Sen Albert Gore says it is possible U.S arms control talks with the Soviet Union will begin before the Senate opens debate on the hotly contested Safeguard missile defense gram The Senate showdown is ex- to start late in it could run most of the mer Gore the Tennessean crat who heads the Senate dis- armament subcommittee in an interview he had heard new reports on tration plans for the ed arms talks But he said there was nothing he could publicly disclose There's no reason that I know of why the talks shouldn't get said Senate ity Leader Mike Mansfield D- Mont Gore like other critics of President Nixon's Safeguard missile defense plan wants it dropped while the United States seeks to negotiate an arms con- trol agreement with the Soviet Union While the administration in- sists missile would not impede arms control efforts Senate foes of the plan insist it would Our goal is to defeat this Gore said Intrinsically this one is important but it's even more tant Military officials have been reported urging a delay in the start of arms controls talks so much because of the guard issue but due to their hopes lo have tests first of siles capable of carrying multi- warheads Mansfield also an ABM ic said debate and decision on the administration plan could dominate the Senate calendar from late June until Aug 13 when Congress is to begin a three-week recess Mansfield said in an interview he still hopes some compromise can avert a long bitter Senate But he acknowledged he does not know what its terms might be Sen Everett M Dirksen the Republican leader has edly declared the adminis I tion has no intention of altering its program Another major foreign policy issue is due up before guard A resolution which have the Senate declare that Congress as well as the tive branch of government must act on any U.S commit ment to a foreign government The Nixon administration while promising frequent am full consultation with Congress is opposed to the resolution The measure is due before the Senate on June 16 Dirksen the admin will win Senate approv al of a start on the ABM sys tern Mansfield acknowledges porter of the system may win a narrow victory no more than three votes This is hing that has been happening everywhere in the world ng the United States The governor told a news conference that cuts in U.S aid o Latin America are necessary because the budget has a very arge deficit and there is an in- trend which is very dangerous Informants said Lleras told Rockefeller that Colombia needs nore U.S aid with longer erms and less difficult Lleras has complained in the past about the ment that the bulk of U.S aid money be spent in United States Rockefeller is on the second of four survey tours in Latin America From Ecuador he faes to Bolivia Venezuela ant WEATHER LOCAL WEATHER Official observations for the 24 hours ending at 12 m today Maximum 92 minimum 66 noon 81 precipitation none FEDERAL FORECAST WINONA AND VICINITY Fair to partly cloudy and cool er tonight Increasing ness not much temperatur change Friday slight chance o showers or thundershowers late Friday Low tonight High Friday 8048 Outlook Sat Temperatures a littl above normal little or no pre HEAT KILLS TWO NEW DELHI AP A hea wave sweeping northern Indi claimed two lives in Delh Wednesday bringing the to during the last five days lo The mercury hovered aroun 114 degrees in several places JETTING ALONG A test pilot soars in a jet flying bell developed for the Defense Department by Bell Co The jet belt can fly for minutes and miles but the exact time and distance are a secret AP Deferments Get Military Check WASHINGTON AP The armed services are putting into effect a Defense Department policy providing that reservists or National Guardsmen who goldbrick can be called to active duty for up to two years Affected by the cy are young men who were de- ferred from the draft by joining the National Guard or reserves In the past the penalty for failing to meet drill and training obligations was a active duly tour This apparently wasn't stiff enough to wipe out malingering so the Defense Department de- creed a tougher policy earlier this year Now any man found factory in carrying out his re- serve obligations may be called to active duty for up to two years Each of the services is putting the policy into effect with the Air Force the latest lo move Under the law young men may enlist in the guard or re serves receive from four to 10 months of training and then re- turn home However they are lo drill regularly with units The overall lasts six years counting the ini tial training time In this way a young man ca escape being drafted for tw years of fulltime service unles there is an emergency callup as happened to some guardsmen and reservists las year after the North Korean se zure of the intelligence shi Pueblo and the enemy winter fensive in Vietnam The emphasis used to be o faithful attendance at drills which normally are held o weekends But the stress has been wit ened to cover the way a ma performs rom U.S ome riding tanks and armored carriers maneuvered o seal otf the enemy force Two carriers were d damaged Air Force gunships and ery pummelled the Viet Cong until dusk when the ng tapered off Twenty-seven assault rifles and launchers were captured One prisoner was taken and old interrogators the Viet Cong icard the loudspeaker warning But he said they figured only a mall a platoon of 40 going to be sent in and the Viet Cong to ambush them South Vietnamese said it had received no re- orts of major Viet Cong ions of their cease-fire by mid- afternoon but a spokesman em- that he expected Inert would be some During the last cease-fire for Buddha's birthday n 1967 the U.S Command the Viet Cong of 17 tions in which 12 Americana were killed and 57 wounded There was no cease-fire in 1968 because the Communist Com- mand was waging an offensive The allied command also an- that casualties last week receded from the high el the week before with 265 Americans 413 South government troops and Viet Cong and North reported killed in tion The totals the week were 430 Americans 527 South Vietnamese and enemy A total of Americans were reported wounded last week compared with tht week before The U.S Command reported 11 enemy rocket and mortar at- tacks that caused casualties or damage during the night prior to the start of the Viet Cong cease-fire The command said casualties and damage were light over-all NO PAPER FRIDAY As has been its tom for many years the Daily News will omit publication day Memo rial Day Regular p u b 1 i cation will be resumed day Enjoy the holiday and if you must drive DRIVE CAREFULLY ON USE OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS Laird NATO Colleagues Discuss Arms Guidelines LONDON AP U.S De- fense Secretary Melvin R Laird and six NATO colleagues opened talks today on guidelines for he use of nuclear weapons in Europe to protect the North Atlantic allies The defense ministers of the United States Britain West Germany Italy Belgium key and Denmark had before them a lop secret study by Brit- ain and West Germany on how the NATO nuclear might in Europe can be used best to deter a Soviet attack Earlier British research showed that use of NATO's nuclear weapons on a Eu- ropean battlefield and the Soviet retaliation that would probably follow would devastate the area Friend They Knew to Have Flowers Boys Give That Soldier Will Not Be Forgotten BIRMINGHAM Ala AP Memorial Day flowers placed on the grave of Sgt Richard T Campos will be paid for by part of the of young Mark and David Huey who never heard of the soldier until his death Each week for two years Mark and David 12 have put some of their money in a lillle jar we call Richard's Flower their mother Mrs Lucian C Huey said Then early in the ing of each Memorial Day Veterans Day the birthday anniversary and anniversary of his death in Vietnam a floral com- pany in San Bruno Calif puts a wreath on the grave in Golden Gate National Cemetery in San Francisco The goes to Mr and Mrs Huey of Birmingham I usually have to add something to the boys ey to pay the Mrs Huey said Mr and Mrs Huey adopted Campos in after reading that his body lay unclaimed for two weeks in Oakland Army Terminal in late 1966 Campos was reared as an orphan and was a ward of court when he enlisted in the Army at age 17 His body finally was claimed by an uncle who had not seen him in 15 years My family was touched when we read that all his life he wanted to belong to have a Mrs Huey said They tried to adopt him posthumously so he would have a family o re- member him But they found this was legally im- possible Mark said at the If no one else wants him he can be a member of our family Huey 3 machine company superintendent and his wife have made entries in the family Bible making os a member of their ily They sponsor a lag in his honor in the Avenue of Flags in nearby Irondale Mrs Huey Both of our sons are adopted and they know what it means to belong and to be loved When accounts of plan for flowers in West Coast papers she said several people in California sent pictures of grave to her and wrote that they were putting flowers there also And others sent her maps of the city and the tery pointing out where the grave is located Mrs Norate DeSa of San Leandro Calif whose band is in the Canal Zone with the Army places ers at the grave ly and corresponds with the The possibility West many would be the battlefield spurred the search for tactics that might deter the Russians from an attack One suggestion was explosion of a demonstration bomb in an area where it could do little harm The idea would be to warn the Soviets the West was prepared o use nuclear ons if necessary Other proposals included use of maritime nuclear explo- sions and atomic land mines on possible Soviet invasion routes British Defense Minister is Healey who the study has said thai in the event of a major viet attack NATO would to surrender or use nuclear weapons within a few days be- cause of the superior tional striking force of the viet bloc He says ty is more than to 1 in infantry formations nearly 2 to 1 in air craft and nearly 3 to 1 in ar- mored units has called for an In- crease in conventional NATO striking forces But Canada is planning to bring home two- thirds of its force in Europe by 1972 and U.S fear other allies will re- duce commitments to NATO