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103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
39,
2,
36
] | More Gas Price
Hikes May Curb
Buying: Simon
| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) — Fed-
eral energy chief William E. Si-
mon says further gasoline price
increases may help discourage
purchases’ enough to reduce
gasoline shortages across the
nation to as little as 1.5 per
cent. ,
Lifting of the Arab oil embar-
go will leave the United States
with estimated gasoline short-
‘ages of 5 to 8 per cent during
the rest of this year, President
Nixon said. at a news confer-
‘ence Tuesday. . ‘
Nixon ended’ the voluntary
ban on Sunday gasoline sales
but said the energy squeeze
would ‘still have to be offset by
conservation measures such as
carpools and- lowered speed
limits.
Simon told a House Appro-
priations subcommittee
Wednesday: that: drawing down
on gasoline inventories could
reduce the shortages to about 4
to 7:per cent. -.--
He added that gasoline ‘prices
possibly rising as high as 70
cents a gallon could help dis-
courage consumption and thus
shrink the shortages to the
range of 1.5 to 3 per cent.
Last week the average price
for regular gasoline was about
53 cents a gallon, up from an
average of 39 cents in 1973.
Gasoline shortages in Febru-
ary and March have been fig-
ured at about 17 per-cent —
sulting in long lines at service
(See ‘B’ on Page 2)'
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13,
1,
0,
25
] | Study Reveals Alcoholic. Beverage
Consumption Heavy Among Tar Heels
| RALEIGH (AP) — More than
half of all North Carolinians
above 14 years old drink alco-
holic beverages and some 240,-
00 Tar Heels are heavy drink-
ers, according to a study con-
ducted for the North Carolina
Drug Authority.
The study also said that at
least 143,000 people in the state
have smoked marijuana in the
last six months. Just over 100,-
00 have done so in the last
month, the study said,
Alcohol is the most abused
drug in the state and mari-
juana is the most abused illegal
drug, the report said. °
The four-month study, pre-
pared by a Washington con-
sulting firm and directed by
Dr. Car] D. Chambers, cost
$66,000 and was paid for with
federal funds.
Tn addition to the findings on
the extent of drinking and
marijuana use, the study, out-.
lined by Chambers at a news
conference here Wednesday,
made these other major. points:
~-Most marijuana users are
between 18 and 24 years old
and are fully employed. High
school students using miari-
juana outnumber college users
by 2-1,
Neither race nor sociceco-
nomic status was an indicator
of marijuana use.
-~-There are about 20,000 cur-
rent users of LSD and 20,000
users of methedrine (speed) in
the state. White males under 25
are the major abusers.
—There are fewer than 8,000
current heroin users in the
state. Most are employed and
middle class.
—There are 16,000 current
users of cocaine and 5,300 cur-
rent users of solvents and in-
halants.. |
—The -.use of . amphetamine
pep pills. ison ‘the. decline, but
-over half ‘the users obtain pep
pills without a prescription.
“Smoking among adolescents
is the greatest predictor of fu.
ture illegal drug use,’’ Cham-
bers said in explanatory re-
marks before the presentation.
The study was drawn from 2,-
007 face-to-face interviews . be-
gun last November with per-
sons 14 years ofd and above. In
addition, 250 interviews were
_conducted with active drug
users in nine major North
Carolina cities, “hamherg said.
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|
103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/103757969-robesonian-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
5,
30,
38,
18
] | More Documents
Are Subpoenaed
At White House
| WASHINGTON {AP) — The
special Watergate prosecutor’s
office has subpoenaed addition-
al documents from the White
House, it was disclosed today.
A spokesman for special
prosecutor Leon Jaworski said
the subpeena directed to Presi-
dent’ Nixon was served on the
White House last Friday, Dead-
line for compliance is Monday.
The spokesman declined to
say what the subpoena de-
manded.
’ Earlier, James D. St. Clair,
President Nixon's chief Water-
gate lawyer, acknowledged in a
television interview that a sub-
poena had been received from
the special prosecutor.
St. Clair appeared on the
NBC “Today’s show.
Jaworski disclosed on Feb. 14
in a letter to Sen. James 0.
Eastland, D-Miss., chairman of
the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee, that Nixon had refused
to give him material he consid-
ered vital to his investigation.
Jaworski told Eastland that
the material Nixon had refused
to supply included 27 tapes
sought for the investigation of
the Watergate cover-up as well
as evidence relating to investi-
gations of contributions from
the dairy industry and the ac
tivities of the so-called White
House plumbers unit. __
The President has contended
{See ‘F’ on Page 2|
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225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
2,
5,
21,
36
] | Wyatt Earp’s cousin
was a soldier here
| Wyatt Earp’s first cousin was a
soldier at Fort Walla Walla when it was a
cavalry post
D. D. Earp later quit the Army and
sold real estate between Walla Walla and
Pendleton, according to George
Gradwohl, of 118 Newell St.
He died in the early 1930's when he
was in his 90's at the home of Gradwohl’'s
parents here in Walla Walla. Gradwohl
still has his black coat and cane.
Gradwohl, 77, and Carl Jacky. 80,
last week visited the fort, now the site of
the Veterans Hospital, to reminisce
about Earp and about Old Fort Walla
Walla, their favorite childhood
playground between 1907 and 1911.
Jacky, who co-owns Jacky and
Fiedler Florists, 2 E. Alder St., delivered
newspapers mornings and evenings by
bicycle to the cavalry post when he was a
y.
One foggy morning he bicycled full-
tilt into a cavalry captain on his way to
the parade grounds to take the morning
salute from his men
“I don’t remember if it was Captain
Pope or Captain Converse, but I hit that
guy and knocked him over. Papers flew
everywhere,”’ Jacky said. “It was six
o'clock in the morning and foggy as the
devil. He said, Boy, are you hurt?’ and |
said, ‘‘No, I'm not hurt.’ So he turned
around and ran like hell out there to take
the salute.
That was 67 years ago.
As boys, Gradwohl and Jacky often
prowled through the fort's dump for
brass buttons and discarded canvas,
cavalry leggings.
The knee-length leggings were issued’
to the soldiers for use as ‘‘chaps’’ when
they were riding. The boys liked to wear
them and pretend they were soldiers.
“They (the leggings) cost the
government four bits, and the soldiers
threw them away if they had a scratch on
them,’’ Jacky said. Officers wore leather
leggings, which were less often
discarded, he said.
Fort Walla Walla was established in
1850 and deactivated in 1910. When Jacky
and Gradwohl played there, it
encompassed 640 acres and housed a
regiment, some 1,000-1,200 troopers and
800 horses.
Its population alternated between
white and black soldiers every four years.
White soldiers were stationed in Walla
Walla for a tour and then sent to the
Phillipine Islands and a regiment of
black troopers was transferred here.
“The majority of them were really
gentlemen,’ Jacky said. “They were
pretty nice people.”’
And they were tolerant of small boys
who got underfoot, he said.
As in most Army towns, the citizens
didn’t particularly like soldiers, but in
Walla Walla, the attitude softened
because many of the white troopers
married local girls and settled here,
Gradwohl said.
“The feeling in town was a little
better than in most towns,”’ he said.
“The decendents of those soldiers are the
best citizens of Walla Walla today. They
were the people who built Walla Walla.
They were the pioneers,”’ he said.
There was no lack of entertainment
for off-duty soldiers in those days. Walla
Walla had 37 saloons and an opera house.
And there was a bawdy house, popularly
known as ‘‘The Idle Hour”’ at Fourth and
continued on page 5 _s.
| By Dick Cockle
of the LU nion-Bulletin
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225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
35,
33
] | In today’s
Union-Bulletin
| Living on a curtailed income causes
difficulties for senior citizens. See
family forum ............. pages 6-7
John Ehrlichman says oil firms
should not be blamed for not using
complete candor in release of oil
supply figures .............. page 11
Vance Orchard writes about outdoor
recreation .............. pages 19-20
Golden anniversary high school bas-
ketball tournament salutes Wa-Hi.
ae pages 21-23
Comics, TV schedules ...... page 24
Obituaries, markets. ....... page 25
| [
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|
225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
15,
13,
28
] | Billy goes back to school
| HOUSTON (AP) — US. District
Court Judge Woodrow Seals ordered
Wednesday that Billy Epperson. 5. be
readmitted to kindergarten pending a
hearing on the youngster’s suspension for
having long hair.
Billy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Epperson, contend the long hair is
necessary to prevent the boy from being
embarrassed because of an ear
deformity.
Billy was suspended from Golden
Acres Elementary in Pasadena on Feb.
22. A state district court suggested a com-
promise and a new hair cut but this was
rejected by the Golden Acres principal.
the superintendent of schools in
Pasadena, and by the Pasadena school
board.
The Eppersons then filed suit in
federal court.
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|
225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
6,
10,
14,
29
] | $1 million in contributions ?
Demos said stallino reform
| WASHINGTON (AP) — Common
Cause, the self-styled citizens’ lobby,
said today that Democratic congressional
candidates received more than $1
million from special interest groups in
1972 and accused the Democrats of
Stalling electoral reform.
The foot-dragging charge was
contained in a full-page advertisement in
today’s editions of The Washington Post.
appearing on the same day the party
holds its annual fund-raising dinner.
The figures on 1972 Democratic
receipts from special interest groups
were contained in a report to be
published by Common Cause next week
on the role of special interest money
during the presidential year campaigns.
Common Cause said various political
committees gave Democratic House
candidates a total of $667,226 while
senatorial candidates received $550,947.
The largest single donor on the list
was the National Committee for the Re-
Election of a Democratic Congress. a
quasi-official fund-raising committee
headed by Robert Strauss. who later
became chairman of the party.
The Strauss committee was listed as
having raised $376,507 for House
candidates and $260.802 for senatorial
hopefuls under the party banner.
The largest giver among business and
professional ranks was the Committee
for Thorough Agricultural Political
Education. the political wing of the
Associated Milk Producers Inc. It gave
$87.500 for Democratic House cam-
paigners and $72,000 for senatorial
candidates.
The biggest labor union gifts came
from the national AFLCIO Committee
on Political Education. which gave over
$43.000 to Democratic congressional
candidates.
Common Cause has been active in
electoral reform and is a chief advocate
of public financing for federal elections.
It was a Common Cause lawsuit that
forced President Nixon's re-election
committee to disclose the sources of his
early campaign receipts. including
money that figured in the Watergate
scandal.
However. Common Cause
contends that it is Democratic leadership
in Congress. particularly Chairman
Wayne Hays of the House Administration
Committee. which is holding up elec-
toral reform.
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26,
12,
22,
11,
24,
23,
27
] | Cost-of-living jump second biggest since 195]
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The pace of
inflation quickened in February with
food and fuel prices pushing the cost of
living up 1.3 per cent, the second biggest
menthly jump since 1951, the
government said today.
The Labor Depa:tment said last
month's rise sent consumer prices 10 per
cent higher than a year ago and marked
the first time since 1948 that the United
States experienced double figure
inflation.
It was the highest 12-month increase
in the cost of living since consumer
prices rose by 10.2 per cent in the 12
months ending January 1948.
Nearly half the February increase
was attributed to higher food prices with
the price of beef raising 7.5 per cent, the
Sharpest jump since a 9.6 per cent
increase in June 1947. Gasoline and other
energy items were responsible for about
a fifth of last month's increase in prices.
The Consumer Price Index climbed
last month to 141.5 of its 1967 average.
meaning that it cost consumers $141.50 to
buy the same amount of retail goods and
services that $100 bought in 1967.
While consumer prices continued their
rise, real spendable earnings of
workers dropped another six-tenths of
one per cent in February and were down
4.5 per cent from a year ago. This was the
largest decline over a year since the
government began keeping that statistic
in 1964.
The February price report showed
inflation holding a firm grip across the
economy. Food prices rose 2.5 per cent:
non-food commodities, 1 per cent, and
services seven-tenths of 1 per cent.
The Nixon administration has said it
expects inflation to continue its sharp
pace throughout the first half of the year
before beginning to ease during the final
six months. Director John T. Dunlop of
the Cost of Living Council said
Wednesday that February's surge in food
prices would be followed by more
moderate increases in March, April and
May.
“Our own estimate is that it will be
the last month with a really poor
record,” Dunlop said.
Soaring gasoline and motcr oil prices
played a large part in the over-all
increase in consumer prices last month,
rising 5.3 per cent to a level 30.9 per cent
above last February. Fuel oil and coal
jumped 3.8 per cent, the smallest
increase in five months to a level 58.8 per
cent higher than a year ago.
Average prices for gasoline alone
increased 5.5 per cent. The average price
for regular jumped to 49.1 cents per
gallon and for premium to 52.7 cents per
gallon.
Prices of regular gasoline have now
risen 22 per cent and premium gasoline
19.8 per cent since the Labor Department
began publishing average prices four
months ago after the start of the Arab oil
embargo.
Grocery prices — the major portion of
the food index — jumped three per cent
in February, substantially more than
usual for the month. The price of
restaurant meals and snacks — food
away from home — was up seven-tenths
of one per cent
The big increase in beef prices
followed a smaller increase in January
and declines in the last three months of
1973. Fresh vegetable prices also were up
last month instead of declining as they
usually do. About the only decline in food
prices was that for poultry,
The Agriculture Department has
forecast record crops of wheat and corn
this year, but the full impact of those
crops will not reach consumers for many
months, They are, however, counted on
heavily by the administration for a boost
in livestock production through mid-1975.
Meanwhile. Agriculture Secretary
Earl L. Butz said his department's
earlier prediction that grocery store food
prices are ‘most likely” to rise 12 per
cent this year still is sound. In 1973, food
Store prices jumped 16 per cent,
according to the USA method of
averaging them.
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|
225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
8,
9,
17,
31
] | Gas savers begin to organize
| Spurred by gasoline shortages and
approaching warmer weather, Walla
Walla’s bicycle enthusiasts are beginning
to organize.
At the same time, more action is
expected on a proposal to establish a
network of bicycle paths in this area.
The Walla Walla Wheelmen, a new
club for the two-wheel set, will hold its
first meeting at 7:30 p.m. March 28 at
Cascade Natural Gas Corp., 324 W. Rose
St.
The club is geared to anyone who
wants to participate in bicycle touring,
racing, or who “just wants to get
together as a community of bicycle
riders,”’ according to Bryan Hendrickson,
1067 Boyer St., one of the organizers.
‘‘Myself and some of the other fellows
are more interested in racing, but that’s
our little off shoot,’’ Hendrickson said.
The club will help novice bicyclers get
started in group touring, recreational
riding or racing, he said.
It is open to everyone and all ages.
Hendrickson expects about 30 persons to
attend, he said.
Within two weeks, John Lang, city
engineer, will ask the Walla Walla City
Council to appoint a committee to assess
this area's bicycle needs, he said.
It probably will be divided into three
or four subcommittees with instructions
to study bicycling safety in the urban
areas and the transportation needs for
those using their two-wheelers to take
them to work and school, Lang said. The
community's recreational desires also
will be examined, he said.
The committee also may be asked to
recommend when thoroughfares should
be striped to seperate bike riders and
traffic, and under what conditions, if any,
separate asphalt paths for bicycles are
necessary.
Lang met with Walla Walla city school
principals yesterday to learn their views
on bicycle safety, he said.
I thought that (safety) would be their
biggest concern . . . but a lot of them
were interested in recreational riding,”’
he said.
A bicycle network map for the Walla
Walla area has been under design by
Lang and Dennis Skeate, Walla Walla
County engineer, for several months.
Lang plans to meet with the College
Place City Council Monday to request its
approval of a resolution for a joint appeal
with Walla Walla City and County for
state Urban Arterial Board money for
bievele paths.
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14208
] |
|
225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
0,
7
] | House ok’s
minimum
wave increase
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The House
has passed legislation raising the
minimum wage from $1.60 an hour to $2
this vear for most workers covered and to
$2.30 for all by 1978.
The bill. approved Wednesday 375 to
37. also would increase by 7 million to
56.5 million the number of workers cov-
ered by the minimum wage laws.
The bill is a modified version of one
President Nixon vetoed last year.
However. he is expected to sign this one
if it is finally approved after adjustment
with a similar Senate-passed measure.
although it does not meet all of his
earlier objections.
For most workers covered by the
minimum wage. the minimum would
increase to $2 this year and then in two
Steps to $2.30 in 1976.
| [
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|
225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/225016726-walla-walla-union-bulletin-Mar-21-1974-p-1.jpg | [
3,
18,
4,
25,
30,
1
] | K-Mart gets
building
permit
Appellate court considers
blocking grand jury report
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The US.
Court of Appeals today studied requests
that it block transmission of a grand jury
report on President Nixon’s alleged role
in Watergate to the House Judiciary
Committee for its impeachment inquiry.
The report was scheduled to go to the
committee at 1 p.m. PDT unless the
appeals court intervenes.
Attorneys for two of the seven
defendants in the Watergate cover-up
case urged the court to withhold the
report from the House on the grounds it
would prevent their clients from
receiving a fair trial.
But counsel for the special
prosecutor’s office told the court during
oral argument today the focus of the
secret report was President Nixon, not
tne seven defendants.
“They are not the focus of this report,”
said Philip Lacovara. ‘The references to
them do not go beyond the allegations in
the indictment.”’
John J. Wilson and Frank Strickler.
attorneys for former presidential aide H.
R. Haldeman, and John Bray, counsel for
former White House aide Gordon
Strachan, asked the appeals court to
direct U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica
not to send the report to the Judiciary
Committee.
Wilson argued that “It is a moral
certainty that this material is going to be
made public’ if it is sent to the
committee.
The grand jury gave the sealed report
and a satchel filled with evidence to
Sirica March 1, the same day it indicted
Haldeman, Strachan. and five other
former administration or campaign
officials in the Watergate cover-up.
On Monday. Sirica ordered the report
sent to the House.
Meanwhile, the special Watergate
prosecutors office has subpoenaed
additional documents from the White
House.
A spokesman for special prosecutor
Leon Jaworski said the subpoena
directed to President Richard Nixon was
served on the White House last Friday.
The deadline for compliance is Monday.
News of the subpoena was disclosed
today.
The spokesman would not say what the
subpoena demanded.
At the White House. Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the
subpoena was under consideration and
as for the likely response declared. “I
don't have any guidance to give you on
that.”
Responding to another question.
Warren said no consideration was being
given to firing Jaworski because of his
move to subpoena White House mate-
rials.
Told that Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler had flatly denied Wednesday
that any subpoena had been received.
Warren said he could not explain that
and felt any attempt to do sc in Ziegler’s
absence would be unfair. Ziegler was at
his White House desk but did not conduct
the day’s news briefing.
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