Newspaper Page Text
Wed., March 9, 1966
Senate Forces Trying
To Block Tax Additions
WASHINGTON (UFI) —Admi
nistration forces in the 8 enate,
reeling from a surprise drub
bing by a lone Republican,
rallied today to try to stave oft
further election year additions
to President Johnson’s $6 billion
V-et Nam tax program.
In two narrow votes Tuesday
—45 to 40 and 44 to 43—the
Senate approved an amendment
to the big tax package that
would extend Social Security
benefits to an additional 1.8
million Americans 70 and over
not now covered.
Ignoring shouted pleas from
their leaders, Democrats Joined
With Republicans to give Sen.
Winston L. Prouty, R - Vt., a
long-sought victory for his
Social Security "rider.” The
leaders had expected his
STEER SPEAKER
CASPER, Wyo. (UPI) -At a
Wyoming Farm Bureau confer
ence, Stanley Steer spoke on
the cattle Industry.
Want Ads Pay
SAVE QUANTITY
RIGHTS WIN UP
RESERVED BREAD TO *1000 CASH ■ ■ ■ ■ a
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Griffin Daily News
amendment to be defeated as
eaaily as it was when he
proposed it last year.
Up for a vote today was
another sure-fire vote-getter:
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoffs
amendment to give parents of
college students a tax break.
The Connecticut Democrat’s
plan—also rejected last year—
would permit a taxpayer to
subtract from his tax bill up to
$325 in college costs.
The administration bill, as
passed by the House, also
would bring in $4.8 billion
through a speedup lr. corporate
tax collection and a graduated
income tax withholding system.
But Prouty’s plan would cost
an estimated $3.4 billion over
the next five years, cancelling
out some of the immediate
revenue-raising effects of the
bill.
Prouty argued that his
proposal would lift from
poverty the elderly who had not
paid Into the Social Security
fund during their working
years. Among them would be
retired farmers, government
employes, policemen, firefight
ers and teachers.
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WEIGHT PROBLEM—Keeping “Baron Von Der Lust,”
25-foot-high Winter Carnival snow sculpture, up to
proper weight has been a problem for students at Han
over, N.H. The Baron quickly shed 1,500 pounds during
a warm spell and it took some 300 snow-packing students
to get him back in shape.
FCC Issues Formal
CATV Regulations
WASHINGTON (TJPI) —The
Federal Communicatons com
mission Tuesday issued formal
regulations governing the na
tion’s 1,600 community antenna
television (CATV) systems.
The new rules, most of them
effective April 18, bach up the
FCC’s controversial order of
Feb. 15 placing virtually a of
the booming CAT industry
under federal regulation.
The House Commerce Com
mittee plans full hearings into
the entire issue and what role
the FCC should play.
CATV picks up teevision
signas from the air and reays
them by cable into homes,
where viewers pay an average
$5 a month for the privilege of
getting a generally clearer
signal and greater variety of
programs.
One FCC regulation issued
Tuesday would affect burgeon
ing CATV operations in big
population areas already served
by one or more network
stations.
It imposed a temporary
freeze on CATV expansion into
the 100 biggest television
markets in the country, where
the industry believes 90 per
cent of its potential revenues is
located.
T 0 enter such an area, or to
extend its signal if already
operating ther, a CATV
system would have to apply for
an FCC hearing. Subscribers as
of Feb. 15 would not be
affected.
In an elaboration of its
earlier decision, the FCC ruled
that a local television station
must give a CATV system at
least eight days’ notice of a
program it does not want
duplicated the same day by a
CATV-relayed signal from a
distant area.
CATV systems are forbidden
to show the same program the
same day as one broadcast by
a local station, unless it is a
color program that the home
town station chooses to broad
cast in black and white.
Another rule published Tues
day requires a CATV system on
request to carry all local
station signals of "grade B or
better’’ in its area or ask the
FCC to waive the rule if
technical limitations prevent
compliance.
Other regulations cover in
structions to CATV owners for
filing ownership information
with the FCC, including a list
of subscribers, television sta
tions carried, and “the extent
of any existing or proposed
program origination.”
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rejected when he tried to get back in. He has two sons
ine S there himself. Fields is
Viet Nam and he wants to go a
veteran of Guadalcanal, Bougainville and Guam. He earned
a Purple Heart at Bougainville.
'£v.
"
Three ladies were sleeping. the
Then as he turned in
other direction he saw
another person, head nod
ding, about to sleep. It was
astonishing to the man who
told of it, for Dr. Theodore
Ferris was attending a con
cert in Boston where he was
hearing the eminent cellist
Rostropovich. The music was
of such crystalline purity that
he could imagine -the artist
had plumbed the depths and
soared to the heights of the
Haydn Concerto. But these
ladies were sleeping. wwider
It caused him to as
to their preoccupation, their
own worries or their lack of
understanding. Why did they
sleep? The music was not
dead. It was just that they,
were not attuned to it.
In the discussions concern
ing the life or death of God
one can ask the same ques
tion. There is the danger that
we shall judge the reality of
the fact by our own situation.
Our and preoccupations, our wor
ries anxieties or our own
insecurities can cause us to
lose any sense of a living
presence. As matter of fact, *of
a one
the “death of God” theologi
ans found in the mundane
processional of events, such as
smoking, growing older that he or giving up
had to con
front some new realities. It
was at that moment that he
discovered that he wasn’t
hearing is the that old music. The
moment danger he might at just that
decide
there was no music at alL
The point of all of this is
that we are in a season caller
Lent Once upon a time it
meant certain disciplines such
as giving up some luxury,
some sweetmeat or some
pleasure. It was a time to
meditate, oneself; to consider, to deny
to be disciplined .
Some of these aspects have
been sloughed from the ex
perience, but the form of it is
h*- Travel Set
by Gossard-Artemis,
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finding the way
A Time to Be Awake
BY RALPH W. LOEW, DJ).
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
0
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m
still in our midst. Men torn to
listen in these weeks. It’s a
time to be awake, not to It’s.a sleep
through the concerto.
time to cleanse the mind of
the worries and not to miss
the music.
There is an ancient legend
of a man who watched a man
carrying his cross in a proces
sional. He saw the crowds; he
actually saw the man who car*
ried the cross. But he missed
the crucifixion because he had
a toothache. When he was
asked about it later, all he
could remember was bis own
discomfort
Halford Luccock once com*
mented about that Rip the Van interesting Winkle
thing that when he went to
was
sleep he HI had the the wall. picture When , of
he George woke on the picture of
Washington up
the George wall. Old had was slept on
through revolution. Rip
a
tion There’s .of the no better situation descrip*
than “revolution.” present time
It’s a
when all of the accepted
values are tested and when
the familiar landmarks are
shaken. In such a time there’s
music to he heard and sights
to be seen and truth to be
pondered. It’s a time to re«
consider and to think through,
That’s the discipline of Lent'
This is the time to remember
Jesus’ question of his own
sleeping followers: “Could
you not watch with me one
hour?”