Download pdf - Document73

Transcript
Page 1: Document73

Questions for Prison ForumWith Evans Only Trickling In

n aim TTrtlia U111UI1

Newsmen planning to ask Donald Brocket! aren't havingquestions next week of Gov. much luck collecting questions.Dan Evans, Washington State The count of questionsPenitentiary Supt. B. J. Rhay submitted this week was: Tomand Spokane County Prosecutor Baker, 1; Ken Brooks, 4- and

ObituariesC. Blanchey Jr. John Sontner

demon Blanchey Jr., 38, aninmate at the Washington StatePenitentiary, died there Friday.He was born March 21, 1935, inOklahoma City, Okla.

Survivors include his mother,Mrs. Marie Battle, of SariFrancisco; his father; ClemonBlanchey, of Los Angeles: and abrother, Philbert Blanchey ofSeattle.

j • Obituary Notices j

TAYLOR — April 6. 1973 at a localhospital Mrs Ina Mae Taylor of 171 S.Park aged 84 years Survived by herhusband Oakley Taylor, at the home: ason. Kendall Brown." of Walla Walla, fivedaughters Mrs Roy (Gladys) Anderson

John Sontner, 77, of Yakimadied Friday at a local hospital.

Born Sept. 24, 1895, inAustria, he was a veteran ofWorld War I and a steelworkerby trade.

Sontner will be forwarded toYakima for funeral services andinterment.

Conley LeRoyConley LeRoy, 67, 312 N.

Spokane, died yesterday at alocal hospital.

Born Feb. 27,1906, he was theson of Edmond and FlorenceLeRoy and attended localschools. He married BerthaArnoldt in Walla Walla Nov. 4,1934.

LeRoy worked as a butcherfor Walla Walla Meat and Cold

divisionIn 1960

ofhe

of Portland Ore.. Edne Hams of Joshua storage and was also employedTrw> Pallf Mre Miirlol Proctrtn anrf , J5. . _, .. . ." J

by Birds EyeGeneral Foods,retired.

He was a member of GraceUnited Methodist Church andAmalgamated Meat CuttersLocal No. 494.

Survivors include his wife,Bertha, at the home: a son, RonLeRoy of Walla Walla: and abrother. Kenneth LeRoy ofCrestline, Calif. He is also

Tree. Calif. Mrs. Muriel Preston andMrs Fred (Berniecei Mitchell, both ofWalla Walla, and Mrs. Conrad (GwenethiTerpack of Riverside. Calif: threesisters. Mrs. Olga Gehl and Mrs. OrlaHerr. both of Chula Vista. Calif . andMrs Bessie Martinson of Ventura. Calif.Also survived by ten grandchildren, ninegreat-grandchildren- one great-great-grandchild, and several nieces andnephews Born April 2. 1889 in VanForks. B.C.. Canada. GROSECLOSEGARDEN CHAPEL. Larry Krivoshein.funeral director Funeral"notice later,i Paid notice i

waBs^gtConEsme"peX,ia6rv c.eJn s'u^ived'byTwo gr'andchildTenBlanchey Jr. (an inmate at the and several nieces and nephewspenitentiary! aged 38 years Survivorsinclude his mother. Mrs. Marie Battle, ofSan Francisco, his father. ClemonBlanchey, of Los Angeles: and a brother.Philbert" Blanchey. of Seattle BornMarch 21. 1935 m'Oklahoma City, OklaCOLONIAL FUNERAL HOME. BillWatson, funeral director Funeral noticelater (Paid noticei

SONTN'ER — April 6. 1973 at a WallaWalla hospital John Sontner of 1107 S.Second, Yakima, Wash . aged 77 yearsBom Sept. 24.1895 in Austria. Veteran ofWorld War I Remains will be forwardedto Yakima by DeWitt Funeral Home forfuneral services and interment DEWITTFUXERAL HOME in charge of localarrangements I Paid noticei

LEROY — April 7.. 1973 at a localhospital Conley LeRoy of 312 N Spokaneaged 67 years. Survived by his wife.Bertha LeRoy at the home, one son.Ron LeRoy of Walla Walla: and onebrother. Kenneth LeRoy of Crestline.California. Also survived by twograndchildren and several nieces andnephews Born February 27. 1906 inWalla Walla. Member of" Grace UnitedMethodist Church and AmalgamatedMeat Cut te rs Local No 494Arrangements have been entrusted to thecare of the HERRING FUNERALHOME NORMAN S. HERRING.Funeral director. Funeral notice later,i Paid notice i

• Card-of-Thanks

WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK ALLOUR friends, relatives and neighbors forthe cards, food, flowers, kindnesses andprayers during the loss of our belovedhusband and father. We would like toalso express our appreciation to thedoctors and nurses at the VeteransHospital for their wonderful care.

MRS ROSSUMPHRESMR. & MRS. OTIS L. UMPHFRESAND FAMILY

WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANYfriends and neighbors for their manykindnesses, flowers and messages ofsympathy during our recent sad loss.Your thoughtfulness will be longremembered.THE FAMILY OF ROSS W CASS

MasonicNotice

Members of Blue Mt. Lodge No.13 and W.W. Lodge No. 7 arerequested to meet at theMasonic Temple Monday, April9 at 10 a.m.. to conduct the

Ina Mae TaylorMrs. Ina Mae Taylor, 84. 171

S. Park, died Friday at a localhospital.

She was born April 2,1889, inVan Forks, B.C., Canada. Shelived for a time in Republic,Wash., and from there moved toWalla Walla. On Jan. 8, 1971.she married Oakley Taylor inWalla Walla.

Mrs. Taylor is survived by herhusband. Oakley Taylor, at thehome: a son, Rondall Brown ofWalla Walla; five daughters:Mrs. Roy (Gladys) Anderson ofPortland. Ore.: Edrie Harris ofJoshua Tree, Calif.; Mrs. MurielPreston and Mrs. Fred(Berniece) Mitchell, both ofWalla Walla: and Mrs. Conrad( G w e n e t h ) T e r p a c k o fRiverside. Calif.: three sisters:Mrs. Olga Gehl and Mrs. OrlaHerr, both of Chula Vista,Calif.: and Mrs. BessieMartinson of Ventura. Calif.She is also survived by tengrandchildren; nine great-grandchildren: one great-great-grandchild: and several niecesand nephews.

• Funeral Notices

WINKLE — Funeral services for thelate Mathias Winkle of Milton-Free-water. Ore. will be at 11 a.m. Tuesdav.Apnl 10. 1973 at the Colonial FuneralHome Chapel with Elder J D Bolejackofficiating Interment in the Mt. HopeCemetery in College Place Friends whowish may contribute to the Voice ofProphecy in memory of Mr. Winkle.COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME. BillWatson. Funeral Director. (Paid noticei

ZACHARIAS — Funeral services forthe late Franklin P Zachanas ofPendleton. Ore. will be at 2 p mMonday. April 9. 1973 at DeWittMemorial Chapel with Chaplain L ECousins officiating. Interment will followat Greenwood Cemetery. Kellogg. IdahoFriends who wish may makecontributions to the heart fund 'DEWITTFUNERAL HOME in charge of thearrangements 'Paid noticei

GAUB — Funeral services for the lateBen Gaub of 609 N. Eighth will be at 2p.m. Monday. April 9, 1973 in the Chapel

graveside services for the late of the HERRING ̂ FUNERAL HOMEBrother McKinley Jackson. """"*" " * ---••—' r " 'Funeral services at the HerringChapel, Monday at 11 a.m. AllSojourners are welcome toattend.

E. W. ARBUCKLEW.M.

MasonicNotice

Attention MasonsBlue ML Lodge No. 13. WallaWalla Lodge No. 7, will attendchurch in a body Sunday, April8, meet at the Temple 9:30,sojoumers welcome.

EdArb«cklc,W.M.Max W. Barber, W.M.

with Rev. James Sutherlin of CentralChristian Church officiating. Concluding•services and interment in Mt ViewCemetery. NORMAN S HERRING,funeral director <Paid notice*

JACKSON — Funeral services for thelate McKinley Jackson of 1250 MilitaryRd will be at 11 a m Mondav. Apnl 919T3 in the chapel of the HERRINGFUNERAL HOME with Chaplain Jamc-Dennis of the Veterans AdministrationHospital officiating Concluding service*,and interment will follow at the MasonirCemetery. Ritualistic gratcside <*mcf<-will be conducted by the Blue MountainLodge No. S3. F. &- A M. Mr Jackson willJic in Mate in the chapel of She HernngFuneral Home until 10 a rn Monday, as

the MTvice NORMAN S HERRINGFuneral Director.

William Asbury, y.Newspapermen Baker and

Asbury and radio newsmenBrooks will ask questions aboutt h e W a s h i n g t o n S t a t ePenitentiary at 8 p.m. April 16at Cordiner Hall.

Evans, Rhay and Brocket!have agreed to answer. WallaWalla Police Chief A. L. "Bert"Watts and County Sheriff ArtKlundt rejected offers to appearon the program.

Asbury and Baker, in theirweekly columns, have invitedreaders to submit questions tobe asked. Brooks said his radiostation has been invi t ingq u e s t i o n s i n s p o tadvertisements eight times aday.

All three said questions thathave come in have been frompeople who have more or lessmade up their minds on theprison.

Baker, who said he hasreceived one question, a verbalone, said he has been getting"street corner philosophy"when he invites questions.

"Most of the people havesomething to tell, not somethingto ask," said Baker. "Nobodyknows as much about it as thenormal guy in the tavern."

Brooks said he has not beengetting a "flood of mail" aboutthe forum. He said, however,that he received one questionfor Rhay. Most questions havebeen for the governor.

Asbury said he did notconsider his nine responses toobad. "One response means 100are thinking about it."

He said he has receivedq u e s t i o n s c o n c e r n i n gpenitentiary costs and theirrelationship to the costs ofpublic education, the fact that_

Walla Walla County bears thecost of p rosecu t ion forpenitentiary crimes, relation ofcrime to biochemical imbalanceand the governor's master planfor prisons.

Asbury said he has receivedquestions from a prisoner and apenitentiary employe and willreceive them from the inmates'resident governmental council.

He said some legitimatequestions have been "veiled" ina long statement, which is"typical of something like this."

Brooks. Asbury, Baker andforum moderator John Reesewill meet with their questions inhand and decide which ones willbe used in the forum.

No questions will be takenfrom the floor.

Questioning will be split intothree areas. Baker will askabout philosophy of prisonr e f o r m . B r o o k s a b o u tcommuni ty relations andAsbury about mechanics ofrunning the prison.

In a letter to the participants,Reese explained the format ofthe forum.

He said questions will beasked only by the threenewsmen, no questions willcome from the floor, asking ofquestions will be rotated,"more or less," but onequestioner will be allowed todevelop particular subjectareas.

He said response from theperson asked the questions will"hopefully" be limited to threeminutes, but that it will not be astrict time limit.

Then.- each of the otherpanelists will be allowed aminute to a minute and a half tocomment

Festival Fund DriveOne-Third to GoalMILTON-FREEWATER -

Everything is shaping up for thePea Festival May 6-12. the PeaFestival Board learned at itsmeeting Thursday night.

Fund drive chairman HerbSaager reported the drive morethan one-third of the way to itsgoal, with SI .012 collected outof the 83,000 needed.

Tickets for the four mainevents (the cornation. gospelconcert, broilerque and adultdance) will go on sale Monday.They can be purchased atSeaquist Realty, Saager's ShoeShop, The Leader. First FederalSavings and Loan, the banks,and possibly other locations.Events are $2.50 each, or $6 fora ticket book that admits aperson to all four events.

The parade is rolling, with 50entries, and 10 bands lined up.

The queen and her court willbe crowned May 6. but they arealready busy. Today theyofficiate at the Carnival ofSpeed at McLoughlin HighSchool, beginning at 1 p.m.:Saturday they appear at theMasonic Temple for a styleshow sponsored by the Order ofthe Rainbow.

Tuesday they will be guests ofthe Walla Walla Chamber ofCommerce at the .MarcusWhi tman Hote: and theP e n d l e t o n C h a m b e r ofCommerce has also put in a bidfor their presence, according toPea Festival Chairman GaleLong.

On April 17. the trio will visitthe Milton-Freewater RotaryClub. And on April 27, they'reoff to the Asotin County Fair.nearLewiston and Clarkston.

Two changes were announcedin the schedule of events for thefestival. The talent showschedule for Monday will bedropped, and a square dancingprogram will be added onThursday night.

As the festival approaches,meetings of the Pea FestivalBoard get more frequent.Chairman Long gave thefollowing schedule of Boardmeetings: April 19, April 25,and May 3.

Rep fo HitTax PlanAt Meeting

MILTON-FREEWATER -State Rep. Ed Patterson plansto strongly criticize GovernorTom McCall's tax reformpackage at tomorrow's Cham-ber of Commerce meeting atnoon at the Tepee Cafe.

Patterson, who has beenstumping the state in oppositionto the plan, is treasurer of alegislative group opposing themeasure. The group calls itself"Legislator^ for ResponsibleTax Relief."

The title of Patterson'sspeech is. "The Tom. Dick andJason Plan will do it for you —or to you."

The tax reform-school financepackage comes up for a vote ofthe people on May 1.

Council to TreatPermits, Bills

ATHENA — Two buildingpermits and the monthly billswill be presented to AthenaCouncil tomorrow night. FredKaup will be requestingpermission to add to his officespace on Main Street next toFred's Market. Arthur Cowgerwill ask to place a mobile homeon Darwin St.

First Aid ClassOpens Tuesday

A Red Cross standard first aidcourse will open Tuesday andwill continue through April 1112 and 19.

The sessions are scheduled 7to 9:30 p.m. at the Walla WallaValley Academy. College Place,and will be taught by WarrenHockley.

The course is open to anyoneover the age of 14. Thoseinterested are asked to call theRed Cross office to register.

The Weather iHKUIONAL KKI'UltTS

/ity-Oiunlv Anpy i t 53 2t>.VhiUildii Mission 57 11)A'wis Hiclgc :)7 22'endletoii Ai ipu i t 54 26A-wiston 5:! 2<j5-ikei 5(1 2til .mfyid (11 2«

TTTTTT

Sunset Sundiiv G :)1 Sunrise Monda\5 11

TEMI'KKATIMKSMax Temp Frid.iy 54 Mm Temp

S,iturd.i\ 30Temp 1 p m S;ituiday55Highest Temp this "djte. 82 in 1880

Lowest. 30 in 1901PRECIPITATION

Last 24 hours to 10 ,i in tiacePrecip total since first of month tiaecNormal foi month to d.ite 38Total Precip since Jan 1 3 GO Normal

538Since March 1 90 Normal 1 97Since Sept 1 8 35 Normal 11 2(>No days this date u i th Precip since

188633Relative humiditv. 1 p m Saturday 35

per cent

PACIFIC NORTHWESTBellmghamBoiseHoquiamOlympiaOmakPoitlandSeattleSpokaneVancouver. B CWalla WallaWenatcheeYakima

5456KO5755HO544054535760

3332392G2236362635273026

(Vi

AL\SKAAnchorage 38 33Fairbanks 44 33

WEATHER ELSEWHEREBj THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hi Low Pre536966386G64

AlbanyAlbuquerqueAmanlloAnchorageAshevilleAtlantaBismarck 37Boston 5bBrownsulle 69Buffalo 48Charleston 62Charolette 62Chicago 71Cincinnati 64Cleveland 64Denver 66Des Momes 70Duluth 50Fort Worth til)Green Bay 52Helena " 35Honolulu 78Houston 56Indianapolis 65Jacksonville 66Kansas City 70Little Rock 72Los Angeles 75Louisville 65Marquette 47Memphis 70Miami 81Milwaukee 50Mmneapolis-St Paul 50New Orleans 62New York 61Oklahoma Cit> 65Omaha 71Orlando 80Philadelphia 63Phoenix 81Pittsburgh 62Portland. Me. 52Rapid City 54Richmond 70St Louis 71Salt Lake 63San Diego 66San Francisco 60Tampa . 78Washington 67

18

3537353345482342574158484539412644295036196352445744505547314975.173657 3 004746

65424941392544533457506843

01143715

4'!

02

05

13

06

New BudgetFor UmapineOn Agenda

UMAPINE — Hearings onthe $184.746 school budget willbe held tomorrow night at 8:15p.m. The budget is up 13 percent or $21,684 over last year'sbudget of $163.062.

The increases include a $200base pay increase for teachers,maintenance work on theheating system, an increase inconsumable teaching suppliessuch as paper and someinstructional equipment.

Umapine voters on March 12rejected a lower budget of$158,220 that would have led tosending high school students outof the district.

No figure was given for theestimated tax rate. Last year'srate was $23.05 per $1.000 ofassessed valuation.

The budget election will beheld Mav 1.

Cadet PromotedAt EWSC

A Walla Walla ReserveOfficer Training Corps cadet atEastern Washington StateCollege. Kirby L. DeWayne. hasbeen promoted to cadetsergeant first class.

DeWayne. son of Mr. andMrs. Buckleigh E DeWayneJr.. Route 3. is a graduate ofWalla Walla High School and asophomore radio-televisionmajor at EWSC.

Michael Walker

ROTC ChiefMichael E. Walker of WallaWalla, a cadet major in theEastern Washington StateCollege Army ReserveOfficer Training Corpsprogram, has been assignedas brigade commander of theEWSC ROTC Corps ofCadets. A junior biologymajor at EWSC, Walker isthe son of Gilbert Walker,1221 E. Alder St., and is agraduate of Walla WallaHigh School where he wasactive in ROTC and was amember of the rifle team.

M-F BoardTo MullDISTAR

MILTON-FREEWATER -The DISTAR e lementaryreading program will bediscussed w h e n M i l t o n -Freewater Elementary SchoolDistrict meets tomorrow at 8p.m. a t the Freewate rElemenetary School. 17 N.W.Eighth St

A presentation concerning the4th grade field trip to Portlandand Astoria, and discussionswith the Freewater staff willalso be held.

Topping the agenda Tuesdayat 8 p.m. at the meeting ofUnion High School District N. 3school board wil l be adiscussion of future steps in theremodeling of McLoughlm HighSchool. The meeting will beheld in the superintendent'soffice.

Both boards will discuss theMcCall tax reform plan, and aforthcoming inspection by theOregon Board of Education(O.B.E.)

The O.B.E will visit theschools April 16-19, and willproduce a report on how wellthe schools meet s t a t estandards. The report can beused in planning upgrading ofschools.

Budget hearings for bothschool districts will be held thisThursday.

The High School district willbe asked to accept theresignation of English anddrama teacher Ron DeLay. Theelementary district will beasked to approve contracts fortwo newly-hired teachers —Greg Nelson, Grades 6-8physical education and grades 7and 8 social studies: and LarryRasmussen, Grade 3 The boardwill also be asked to approvethe superintendent's contract.

Art ExhibitionSet for Tomorrow

The F e r d i n a n d Ro lenGalleries exhibition and sale ofgraphic prints will be heldtomorrow from I I a.m. to 8p.m. in the student center atWhitman College.

InmateCommitsSuicide

A W a s h i n g t o n S t a t ePenitentiary inmate was founddead in his room P'riday.

Walla Walla County CoronerHenry Liebmann said the deathwas suicide.

demon B l a n c h e y J r . .resident of The Bridge, washanging by the neck from awater pipe by a sheet whenofficers forced open the door to1m room

The Bridge is an area of theprison housing inmates inrooms rather than cells. It wasthe women's quarters before aseparate women's facility wasbuilt at Purdy. Wash.

The coroner and police werecalled when officers wereunable to open the door toBlanchey's room and the prisoncount showed a man missing.

Police said the door was tiedfrom the inside.

The black inmate was servinga sentence from King County ona conviction of manslaughterOther inmates told officers hehad been depiessed.

Whitman DormsVandalized

Vandals smashed doors andcaused othei damage in twoWhitman College dormitoriesFriday n igh t , police saidyesterday

Six doors were kicked in atLyman Hall and at least one inJewett Hall, police said. Thedoors and cas ings wereextensively damaged.

Officers said students were onvacation last week and theycould not tell whether roomswere ransacked and itemsmissing.

WesfonBoard toOK Levy

WESTON - The Westonschool board will hold a budgethearing tomorrow at 8 p.m. inthe school cafeteria.

The 1973-74 budget is$322,093, of which $188,460 mustbe raised by local taxes afterstate payments.

Adding in an $18,412.50payment on a bond issue, thetotal levy to be approvedtomorrow night and voted onMay 7 will be $256.872.50.

This budget is up $33.129. or19 per cent, from last year'sbudget of $173,743. The biggestincrease is in fixed charges suchas Socia l S e c u r i t y andRetirement payments foremployes.

M-F CouncilDiscusses Streets

M1LTON-FREEWATER -Street policy tops the list ofitems for discussion at theMilton-Freewater City Councilmeeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m

Council will also discusslandfill, and will act on arequest by the Walla Walla AreaChamber of Commerce toendorse use of DDT against thetussock moth infestation.

Final action will be taken tovacate a section of Broadwayfor First Federal Bank. Thecouncil will also considerarrangements for easements forelectric lines with the UnionPacific Railroad.

Call

Collect

K Death

Occurs

Away

From

Home

We Understand..Bereavement usuallymeans decisions' madein haste. Look to us forprofessional guidancein the selection of a fine,personalized monu-ment, sensibly priced.Simply call us ... orstop in and see ourdisplay now . . . freeconsultation.

"For Thott Who Core The Most"

THOMPSONMONUMENT WORKS

Second & CemeteryJA 5-8453

FLAIRRedBLUE

greenOrange

PURPLEYELLOW

GreyturquoiseBROWN

OLIVEBLACK

GLUE STICK by PAPERb'MATE.

SWtt R» fiUfflit., .«£Af fM WB

Fun touse 59

CLARK'SBOOK STORE

1 8 West Main

JA 5-8373

Mlic«

Walla Walla Lodpc No 7

Monday. April S.1S737" ?,fl p Til

Rarbcr W M

MctAtJGHUN — Funeral ytmrcs 5mJhc lal? Car] E Mclaughlin of sviTrVJnttnaTi wjll be at 33 .am Monday,Aprrt 9. 1973 al lire DcWflt MemorialCJiapcl with Chaplain L E Oni«n<.offtoaljTie OwnalJOTi -wjll to>,o place «>the DcWitl rremalorrum Remain*, -ailllie m t.1a1e unlil 1he funeral hriur fmJhose -withing 1o pay iheir raspf'tit as tt/c

will not be ripened duringFnends -siho wiCh mav male?

cOT)1nbvtiom1r>1he heart fund DEWITTFVNERAL S'OME in rharj-p-3narigerr)ent<. Ample Mf-Mre"tBailable wa.1 erf 1benotice i

AT THE

MARCUS WHITMANCHEVRON SERVICE

SERVICE COUPON VOIDAFTER APRIL 15

2nd & Rose 525-9102

NOW THAT YOU'VE GOT CABLE

CHANNEL 13WALLA WALLA HAS ..

LOCAL NEWSLOCAL SPORTSLOCAL WEATHERLOCAL FACESLOCAL COVERAGE and George Davison

Program Director

ONLY A FEW LEFT!freight DamagedAPPLIANCES

AT BIG SAVINGS!DISHWASHERS

WASHERSREFRIGERATORS

HURRY! THESE WON'T LAST LOK

ALL WITH FRIGIDAIRE FACTORY WARRANTY!

feme Owned

Herb Himes|||JBMAIN A COLVILLE . JA5-15OO • • ^^F M^

KWSPAPERl iWSPAPfc.RI

Recommended