Newspaper Page Text
Draft Numbers Set
By Defense Department
Selective Service officials
announced today that
registrants in the 1971 First
Priority Selection Group with
Random Sequence Numbers
100 and below would be eligible
for induction in January of 1971
and that RSN 100 is expected to
remain the ceiling for several
months. The Department of
Defense today set the January
draft call at 17,000 men.
The First Priority Selection
Group of 1971 is made up of
those young men who reached
the age of 19 during 1970,
received lottery (RSN) num
bers at the July 1970 drawing,
and have not received defer
ments or exemptions from
service. This group becomes
eligible for induction beginning
in January of 1971, but after the
induction of those men in the
Extended Priority Selection
Group of 1970.
Selective Service officials
pointed out that the RSN 100
ceiling applies only to the 1971
group and does not affect the
liability of those young men in
the 1970 prime group whose
numbers have been “reached”,
but have not been called. These
youngmen, members of the
Extended Priority Selection
Group, are eligible for induction
for the first three months of
1971. Under Selective Service
policy, these men must be or
dered for induction ahead of
those in the 1971 pool.
The Extended Priority Group
is made up of young men born
between 1944 and 1950 who have
not reached their 26th birthday,
were classified 1-A or 1-A-O at
the end of 1970, and had a RSN
that has been “ reached” -that
is, a RSN lower than the highest
number called by their local
board during 1970. The highest
number “reached” in 1970 was
RSN 195. While no local board
exceeded this RSN in issuing
induction orders to young men
during 1970, many local boards
did not “reach" that limit in
meeting their calls.
Selective Service officials
said they set the RSN ceiling for
January at RSN 100 in order to
avoid the problems encountered
in 1970 of local boards being
unable to deliver sufficient -
numbers of inductees during the
early months of the year
because not all young men with
low sequence numbers had been
f iKNOW VOI K'i ' 7 I
I FWNmrßE|ak I
I *r l
Dl \L PI RPOSE PIECES |
# CAME FROM COLONISTS il
M T 4
|V». Today’s eflicieucv apartments have nothing
on small callin' (lie earlv settlers called
liome. Isig pioneer families slept and ate hT,
in one room no larger
than a break fast. ,^r
&£ I'hen some poor bus- \ !j
\i jf-b bund probahlv came &v;
in from a hard dav’s fSh—
{Jt wood chopping, lis- M -—jtfj'
tened to hi> w ife fry W''
NT nagging because there ” X£-
wasn't enough elbow
& room, and decided to Hutch tahlo . chnir
j&s do something about
it. So we have the ?}^V
$v 11 ii leh I'able-ehair.
h/' serving a dual purpose as armchair and
dining table. New adaptations include stor- jiS
age space underneath.
Charles Malone
|| Consultant ||
| &
Lasseter s p
|| jm Furniture Co. ||
1 ii
P hi
I h
■ M
I . II
I Perry Ga.
(This !s the I ueni\'Kifihth in n Senes)
s fully examined and were
t available for induction, or had
t fully completed the delays
* inherent in exercising their
s legs! appeal rights. In 1970,
i Selective Service set a RSN
1 ceiling of 30 for January, moved
9 this up to 60 for February, 90 for
1 March and 115 for April. The
f RSN ceiling reached 195 in
y August and remained there for
the remainder of 1970.
i .
' Farmers Urged
: To Check Corn
i
5
; For Leaf Blight
i
i
Producers who have obtained
j price-support loans on 1970-crop
I corn stored on their farms are
being urged to check on the
. condition of the corn at frequent
[ intervals, particularly in areas
, affected by the com leaf blight.
F. W. Langston Jr., Chairman
of the Houston County
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation (ASC) Com
mittee, said the storability of
blightrdamaged com is still an
unanswered question.
“We just don’t know whether
the blight will affect com in
storage or, if it does, to what
degree or in what way,” he said.
He pointed out that if the com
should be delivered to the
Commodity Credit Corporation
in liquidation of the loan, the
farmer is responsible for the
quantity and quality designated
when the loan was made.
The ASC Committee Chair
man also reported that in
spections of blight-damaged
corn-under-loan are being made
by ASCS loan inspectors within
60 days from the date of the
loan, in addition to regular
inspections of farm-stored
commodities under price
support loan. These inspections
however, do not relieve the
producer of his basic respon
sibilities for quantity and
quality of the com.
GEORGIA IS THE LARGEST
STATE EAST OF THE
MISSISSIPPI RIVER.
926 Carroll St. Perry, Georgia
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PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GA., 31069, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31 19 *