Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - September 16, 1973, Winona, Minnesota Winona Sunday News 1 Uth of Publication WINONA MINNESOTA 55987 SUNDAY SEPTEMBER Thirty Per Copy Allende joins Latin heroes By WILLIAM F NICHOLSON BUENOS AIRES Argentina AP Salvador ex- periment in democratic ism in Chile has been scuttled by a military coup but his death places him in the pan- theon of Latin American heroes News that his body was found in Santiago's Moneda Palace touched off a wave of protests and eulogies The military ta said he committed suicide during the takeover wife said in a telephone interview with a Mexican television channel that she spoke with her husband just before he died He committed suicide be- cause he told me before he helmet and was fighting the would do she said His I rebel troops last words to me on the phone Stay at home is cause things have become Patch hlm A1 grave They are bombarding lende ls a the palace He committed suicide with a submachine gun presented to him by Castro He told me before that he would never leave the palace as president and preferred to kill himself Presidential Adviser Jaime Barrios according to a dis- patch by the Cuban news cy Prensa Latina telephoned the agency correspondent in i Santiago during the last ments as air force jets roared over the palace firing rockets He said Allende had put on a gun it's infernal the smoke is choking us It was Allende a class physician by education and a Marxist by conviction who opened a hopeful new road toward social justice in the in American continent three years ago He became the Western first Marxist president with a pledge to construct socialism while respecting Chile's cratic and constitutional tions He aimed to give the poor a bigger share of his lende for hs personal courage lion's wealth j and in nis to He called his experiment the working man a break the revolution of meat pies and red wine and promised to carry it out at a low social cost The experiment went off course during his first Below the picture were the The day after he died black and white posters were splashed on walls of Buenos Aires showing his photograph due in part to intransigent op- position from many upper and middle-class Chileans who felt their positions threatened and to constant violations of the constitution by hard-line leftists in his regime who wanted to speed up the process But to the end there were few Chileans including cians in the sition who did not respect Salvador tim and martyr of the and imperialism Thousands demonstrated against the military junta that wrested power from leftist Popular Unity coalition and Socialists Marches took place in Mexico City Havana and Buenos Aires with smaller demonstrations in other Latin American cities CHRYSLER WORKERS SET UP ET LINES Chrysler workers at the Mack Avenue plant in Detroit begin picketing after it was announced that the United Automobile Workers were striking the Chrysler tion in the United States and Canada United Auto Workers president Leonard Woodcock an- the strike had been called about an hour before midnight Friday AP King Gustaf VI of Sweden dead By IAN WESTERGREN STOCKHOLM King Gustaf VI Adolf loved and respected by both monarchists and republicans died Saturday the court announced He was 90 The king a scholarly mild mannered man who enjoyed a unique popularity with his eight million subjects had been ill with a bleeding ulcer for the last four weeks His struggle with death in the city hospital in Helsingborg in southern Sweden had been followed by the whole nation in daily medical bulletins The king survived a number of crises including an cy stomach operation and two bouts of pneumonia A third attack of pneumonia apparently ended his life Crown Prince Carl Gustaf the heir to the throne who will automatically succeed his grandfather as King of the Swedes the Goths and the was at the death bed The Crown Prince became the new king the moment King Gustaf VI Adolf's heart stopped beating The Swedish Broadcasting Corp interrupted its radio and TV programs to broadcast the announcement of the king's death followed by mourning music Outside the red brick hospital building in Helsingborg dreds of Swedes had gathered on the lawn waiting for news Some in the hushed crowd wept openly when they heard the news Carl Gustaf became first In line to the throne in 1047 when his father Crown Prince Gustaf VI Adolf's eldest in an air crash King Carl XVI Gustaf as the new king will be named will assume his duties at a special cabinet meeting expected to be held shortly government said At the cabinet meeting the new king will preside for the first time over his council of state He will announce his royal name and his royal motto Prime Minister Olof Palme and his Social Democrat cabinet will offer their tions and will be asked by the new king to remain in office the officials said The cabinet will also decide details of the funeral and the official period of mourning There will be no coronation ceremony The last Swedish king to be crowned was Oscar II who succeeded to the throne in 1872 When Carl XVI sits on his golden throne in the majestic hall of state to open the 1973 Riksdag Parliament the crown the apple and the royal symbols will rest on a velvet cushion beside him On radio and television an announcer broke into the programs and announced We have a message of mourning for the people of Sweden His Majesty King Gustaf VI Adolf has died The official communique His Majesty King Gustaf VI Adolf has quietly and peacefully died on Saturday September 15 1973 at p.m p.m Signed by the High Chamberlain of the court WILL GIVE INFORMATION TO GRAND JURY Atty Gen Elliot L Richardson gestures as he talks with newsmen after swearing in Russell Train as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency Friday in ton Later Friday night sources said Richardson has decided that information gathered in an investigation of Vice dent Spiro T Agnew should be turned over to a federal grand jury probing corruption in Maryland The sources emphasized that Richardson still had not decided whether to seek an in- against Agnew AP GASOLINE PROTEST About 75 members of the Tennessee Retail Gasoline Association of Memphis picketed the Exxon Co U.S.A terminal during the first day of a four-day strike protesting Phase IV price controls AP Chrysler UAW meet Auto strike talks resume By EDWARD S LECHTZIN DETROIT UPI Labor negotiators returned to the bargaining table at ler Corp Saturday eleven hours after the United Auto Workers struck the nation's third largest automaker for the first time in 23 years Top bargainers for the union and company no statements to newsmen continuing the total news blackout that began day night It was lifted for one hour Friday for the an- that the strike was beginning in the United States and Canada We just literally ran out of UAW President Leonard Wood cock told newsmen packed into a crowded pressroom at Chrysler's world ters in nearby Highland Park Negotiations that began July 18 failed to resolve a variety of issues Woodcock said including union de- mands for voluntary over- time health and safety measures special provisions for skilled trade and ried workers and a wage increase A new lapel button on union members during the first day of the strike The green button said We Can Work It Out has ers in the United States and Canada represented by the UAW Some lar workers were told by Strike summary THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Here is a comparison of assets of the United Auto ers and Chrysler Corp and the issues that led to today's CHRYSLER Eighty five plants and installations covered by the AUW agreement in 21 states and Canada Net sales in billion on sales of 2.11 million cars and trucks in the United States and Canada Shareholders U.S payroll billion UNITED AUTO WORKERS Union 1.5 million in auto aerospace and agricultural implement industries Represented Chrysler in the United States in Canada Strike fund million with ability to borrow from other unions Strike weekly to single worker to married workers with children MAJOR ISSUES Voluntary Chrysler contends its operations would be crippled if workers could not be made to work overtime Thirty and The UAW wanted any worker with 30 years in he plants to be eligible for retirement regardless of age Currently a worker must be at least 56 to retire and receive full pension Plant safety Labeled by union officials as essential this year dental The least discussed but also wanted on the new contract the union to stay on the Job and another hourly workers were allowed to continue at various plants that supply other ers in farm implement It was the first time since 1950 that Chrysler has been shut in a national strike That walkout lasted 104 days Chrysler has been struck three times by the UAW since the organizing drives of the late In 1937 the UAW staged a strike to win for the union In 1948 a strike won union workers 13 cents an hour more in pay and improved vacation pay The strike in 1950 the second longest in UAW history won workers better pension benefits This year the major was voluntary overtime a factor that put the second largest union and the automotive industry on a collision course The union says workers should have the right to refuse overtime assignments and the com- panies say they won't ba able to meet production schedules if they don't con- trol the work schedules U.S subsidy School milk cut WASHINGTON UPI The amount of milk sold to school children under special federal subsidy programs will be cut back by about 18 per cent this year it was learned Saturday Agriculture Department provided the after a reporter inquired about o department news release on school milk which proved but incomplete Assistant Agriculture tary Clayton Yeutter was quoted in the release as estimating that more Ihan jillion half pints of milk would e served in the nation's schools this year and ng an increase of some II per cent in the amount of milk that ill be served In children who ake part in the national school unch program and the special program Thp release dirt not mention a projected decrease of 1.721 billion half pints in the milk to be provided under the mental special program in which children get milk at cut rates Figures provided by the department showed that during the last school year 2.533 billion half pints of milk were sold to children at reduced j prices under the special j gram whereas plans this year call for subsidizing only 812 million half pints The release there would be an increase of about 11 per cent in the amount of milk provided I under Hie breakfast and lunch j program billion half pints to billion i On a volume basis the reduction the special milk program be from 6.759 billion half pints last year to 5.507 this year Beef prices drop Consumers have their fingers crossed By LOUISE COOK days ahead of schedule after Press Writer I more than five months of Consumers In balance controls At the same the food budget new regulations on other their fingers crossed took effect allowing rnt in nn following a week of scattered and de- creases in I lie price of beef This was a snid Hill Marshall a Department of Agriculture analyst at Kansas stockyards Instead f Ihc in- crease ur large fluctuation in beef prices ninny expected there was only in I he beef industry Everyone was watching esc lull primarily they watching I ho wife And enough I much ol n possible The rolling nn prices wan lifted last Monday two wasn't Inlying slow sternly drop mid snid lint essors and retailers to pass on increases in operating costs to the consumer An Associated Press survey showed that beef prices re- mained stable or declined in many areas mainly because of consumer resistance which also was credited with bringing down the price of pork and poultry last month Clarence 0 donl of the National Association of Food Chains Mint muni prices would begin a hamburger might be down to IK or cents n pound next your Noting withhold livestock from market during the freeze he said there was a backlog of a million cattle ready for ter They have to come to market in the near he said adding thai increased ply coupled with consumers j refusal to pay high prices will help cut the family fond Shoppers found sales on a riety of items William Gross public affairs manager for the northern California division of Safeway Stores snid prices for chuck roast round steak cross rib roast dropped Inst week by ns much ns 20 per cenl Food Pride Ihp nation's fourth largest food chain announced on Friday thai it culling beef pork mid poultry prices by ns 20 per cent The o store in Atlanta said Prices are stable Things are just about normal 1 see the law of supply and demand selling in and 1 think the situation will work itself out when it comes lo beef prices in the next couple of weeks Harold the manager of First National Stores in the VI area agreed He snid beef prices have dropped about five per cent since the ceiling was ended due lo an In supply nnd n decline in sale costs If people would bold back on buying beef for another two or three weeks like they have in I ho past few ho snid they'd see n drop in the price At retailer pre- profits would drop Oil Falls president of Con- Food Marls of Ar- and would keep going up until kansas Inc said that super- the situation is more settled markets which are used to He said pork nnd poultry prices making per cent profit on were down but i beef will have to based items will continue lo go settle for only about 10 per j up Supplies are very cenl profit They can raise on many items Flour i prices but I think the j also is i buying public will stand for it Noil director of the i for long New York Stale Food Some smaller stores Association said Milk Ibey already had been hurl by is going In In: one of the big declining meat sales problems In fall milk is in is slow very said a j short supply but there is a at Gail's Meat demand for it like for in Cleveland Ohio People school milk programs just ain't buying meal They're The vice president nf Roys trying to pay their taxes Markets a The news fur the said ho wasn't sure what wasn't all good A few would in the next did increase the price of or so but I've and there wore scattered hikes beard price nf mayonnaise mi other is going sky high The price dairy and wheat products fund in jars will probably go i official in because of the high cost of I Wash snid beef prices were upi the jars On the Daily record 2a Youth calendar Opinion page Television Women's Sports Business New court term Winona County District Court Judge Glenn E Kelley Monday morning will open the September term of district court here and face a docket of 85 cases stories pages 2a and Area cheese festival The annual Blair Wis Cheese Festival today will feature an afternoon grand parade and an evening country western and tures page J aconite shutdown Reserve Mining Co has been asked to say what effect a plant shutdown would have on employes page No tax The Nixon administration is not actively ing a 10 percent income tnx surcharge despite a suggestion to Uie contrary a top aide to sury Secretary Shultz page Teacher of year Minnesota's 1973 Teacher of the Year Thomas F reviews his leaching career and discusses his educational philosophies story pictures pages Ib 2b Asia traveler A Winona woman who attended the University of Singapore and across Asia gives her impressions of her year and tures page Temper This week's FAMILY Hollywood editor Peer J ihas transcribed n nire interview will one of tin movie's most elusive stars lames Garner Among other things larner discusses what ho refers In ns my lent temper