McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Jul 1969, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PG. 8 - PIAINDEA'.ER - TUES. JULY 1, 1969 W McCLORY REPORTS From Washington Thfc Jccision ol the United States Supreme Court in the Adam Clayton Powell case con­ firms that the head-on collis­ ion between the Court and the Copgress continues unabated. KB Service News Private Phillip R. Bucaro, 19^ son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam­ uel J. Bucaro, 1914 Eastern avenue, McHenry,' graduated recently from basic combat training at the U.S. Army Train­ ing Center (Air Defense), Fort Bliss, Texas, and was promoted to the rank of Private E-2. He was assigned to E Com­ pany, ?d Battalion, 2d Basic Combat Training Brigade. :Pvt. Bucaro is a 1968 grad­ uate of McHenry high school. He. entered the Army in April and completed basic training Juoe 20. -Seaman Apprentice Anthony Koza, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Koza of 3417 'Kiel- em" drive, McHenry, is serving aboard the USS Winston. Hie ton has been active in the jration Handclasp" pro­ gram on her latest Western Bicific cruise. r Winston carried approx­ imately 350 tons of Handclasp material from San Diego to Dan - ang, Vietnam. Working under a tight schedule, the crew un­ leaded everything in 12 hours. • About 3,500 pounds of the material was delivered to two orphanages for blind children. Items included clothing, food, soap, blankets and toys. Army Specialist Four Albert A. Jesky, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Jesky, 3017 West Virginia street, McHenry, was assigned to the 173rd Assault Helicopterr company near Phu Loi, Vietnam, June 6 as a hel­ icopter repairman. AJNIOR COLLEGE HAN HOST DURING NIU CONFERENCE ,/f Business educators St&te high schools and junii colleges will participate in a^ two-day Northern Illinois Un iversity sumjner conference J}ily 1 and 2 The NIU summer education conference business will fea­ ture panelists and speakers from throughout the state. Spon­ sor of the sessions is the de­ partment of business education in Northern's College of Bus­ iness. ; • Andrew DeCraene erf McHen­ ry Community College will act as host for group 1 on July 1. It was scarcely two years ago that the United Suites House of Representatives, in reliance on its constitutional right to judge the qualification of its members, "excluded" veteran Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., of New York's 18th Congressional district (Har­ lem) from taking his seat-- although he had just been re­ elected by an overwhelming majority. The United States House action was based on find­ ings that Powell had failed to ..» account for committee travel expenditures and had placed his estranged wife on his payroll ° although she lived in Puerto Rico-- and performed no ser­ vices. The Supreme Court found that Powell met the constitutional requirements of Article 1 Sec­ tion 2 of the Constitution; name­ ly, (a) age (at least 25 years old), (b) United States citizen­ ship and (c) residence in the State of New York. The Court went on to decide that any per­ son who meets these consti­ tutional prerequisites and re­ ceives the largest number of votes in a Congressional dis­ trict is entitled to be seated as a member of the Housftll^ Representatives -- not­ withstanding any prior offenses committed against the Congress or society. The House action was reflected in a vote of 307 to 116 ( a better than two- thirds majority) td "exclude" Powell. However, the Supreme Court ruled that even though the Congress was entitled to expel one of its members by a two-thirds vote (after seat­ ing him) it could not "exclude" a person who has been lawfully elected. „. Indeed, the Court appears to have gone further than it need­ ed to go by admonishing the House of Representatives that acts of misconduct committed during a prior session (such as those with which Powell was charged) could not be the basis for Powell's exclusion --or ex­ pulsion. In evaluating the Supreme Court's opinion, it should be recalled that a select commit­ tee of lawyer members of the House was appointed in 1967 when the issue erf seating Rep­ resentative Powell as a mem­ ber of Congress arose. Hie se­ lect committee found (as the Su­ preme Court did) that Powell had met the constitutional re­ quirements which entitled him to take his seat. In addition, the committee also recommen­ ded that Powell should be pun­ ished by (a) a fine of $40,000, (b) the stripping of his senior­ ity, and (c) his removal as Chairman of the House Com­ mittee on Education and Labor. However, in an atmosphere of righteous indignation, the House rejected the recom­ mendations of the select com­ mittee by a vote of 248 to 176, and thereipon proceeded to "exclude" Powell by a mar­ gin of more than two to one. . . \ Hie end of the Adajp Clay­ ton Powell case is not yet in sight. Powell's suit to recover the back salary of which he was deprived during the last Congress will be litigated dur­ ing the months to come. Nor is tee issue between the Su­ preme Court and the United States Congress finally resol­ ved. Many members of the Con­ gress would like to retaliate by depriving the Supreme Court of some of its authority or in some other manner. Indeed, if the United States should be or­ dered to pay Powell his back salary, it is a distinct possi­ bility that Congress would re­ fuse to appropriate the funds. it may be somewhat prophetic that the new Chief Justice of the Siqjreme Court, Warren E. Burger, as a member of the UJS. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, wrote the opinion which was reversed by the Supreme Court in an opinion written by retiring Chief Jus­ tice Earl Warren. r In tee original dismissal of Powell's case, District Judge George L. Hart wrote: "For this court to order any member of the House of Rep­ resentatives *** to do or not to do an act related to the or­ ganization of membership of that House, would be for the Court to crash through the po­ litical thicket into political quicksand." The Supreme Court is now deep in the political quicksand predicted by Judge Hart. It is to be hoped that out of the ex­ isting crisis both the Congress and the Supreme Court may re­ gain their separate and distinct, albeit coordinate status as co­ equal branches of government, • which together with the Exec­ utive branch, form the basis of our constitutional system. \ sniirntMin s Shamrock Beef Cattle corporation manager, Vernon Schiller, points out some of the 630 cattle in a special confinement barn to visitor on the farm. The barn was recently completed at a SHAMROCK FARM BOASTS LARGEST CONFINEMENT BARN Shamrock Beef Corporation, 533 N. Draper road, McHenry, uses the largest beef confine­ ment barn in Illinois. Recently completed, the barn is capable of holding 650 head of cattle and measures 60 feet by 240 feet by 12 feet. According to Vernon Schiller, manager of the farm, tee first yearlings placed in the new barn gained 3.2 pounds per day during the first thirty days of con­ finement. This, claims Schiller, is a 10 per cent increase in feeding efficiency over open pen conditions. The cattle gain their weight by eating from a 235-feet-long belt feeder, the largest of its type in the state. Hie floor is made of reenforced slats over concrete pits to dispose of man­ ure. To ventilate the builtfng, a fan jet system was installed., the first fan jet ventilator to be used in a beef cattle barn. The system consists of large tubes through which 183,000 cubic feet of air is pumped per minute. Completely changing the barn's air every 45 sec­ onds, the ventilator reduces the odor in the building and dis­ courages flies from gathering. Costing approximately $100,- 000, construction on tee bam McHenry Market Place BLASTING PRICE THIS WEEK ONLY! 1966 THTTNDEHJBIRD, Full power. Maroon. Black vinyl roof. Parchment inter- ior. Beautiful condition. $1696.00 REGULARLY *24. Try our two-way stretch wig of modacrylic fiber. Just shampoo, dry and brush -- it keeps its curl without resetting! Pick any shade from light blonde to deep dark in eluding gray and rich frosted shades. You'll be ready to go, prettily, in this wig! 1967 CHEVROLET Impala Four door sedan. Full pow with factory air condition­ ing. Low mileage. Fawn color. $1795.00 1961 FORD Country Squire Station Wagon. Good fcrj; CHARGE WITH SPURGEON S Runner. |195.00 1968.CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe, Ash Gold V8, Full power and air conditioning. Was $2695.00 NOW $2195.00 OWN OR ANY MIDWEST BANK CARD cost of $100,000. Overhead is the long white tube used as an airduct for a fan jet ventilation .system, the first to be used in a beef cattle barn. >. PLAINDEALER PHOTO t started last tell, after Sham­ rock President Allen H. Cum- mings approved the idea. Now, the confinement building is ex­ pected to produce nearly a ton of beef per day. Approximate­ ly 2,100 head of cattle will go through the barn in a year. At an unspecified date in September, the farm will hold an open house to the general public. Hie new confinement building will be the main fea­ ture of the exhibition. paB. NDS Savings SKN U» WMRf M c H f i N T Y C O U N T Y ' N E W E S T NEW CAR DEALER Leading Hie t rend in automot ive sa les and TRENT Lincoln Mercury 461) V/ . Rte. 120 M c H e m y , I I I n o I s Phone 385 - 80 60 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan, Azure Turquoise V8, Full power. Was $2495.00 NOW $199540 . 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Coupe, Fathom Blue V8, Full power. Was $2496.00 NOW $19964)0 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA v Sport Sedan, Artesian Turquoise V8, Full Power. Was $2095.00. NOW $1595.00 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan. Butternut Yellow V8, Full NOW $1996.00 ) Turquoise, V8, Full NOW $1566.00 Full Power. Was NOW $15964)0 power. Was $2495.00 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan, Artesian Power. Was $2095.00 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Coupe, Biege V8, $2095.00 1966 DODGE MONOCO 500 Sport Coupe, Beautiful Pearl finish with white vinyl roof, V8, Full power. Was $1895.00 NOW $1796.00 1965 DODGE Monoco Sport Coupe V8 w/power. Was $1195.00 NOW $1095.00 Take it home. Install it yourself. Frigidaire air conditioner is compact, lightweight Real Comfort! Capacity to cool most bedrooms. Automatic! Set thermostat for cooling you want... and forget it. - Moisture Removal! Up to 1.6 pints per hour. Filtered-Clean Air! Screens out pollutants--dust-- dirt--pollen. 115 Volts--Installs in the window. Operates on 115- volt circuit. CHEAPIES -- 1961 PEUGOET TRUCKS -- 1963 INTERNATIONAL Dump $150.00 $1095.00 FRIGIDAIRE BOTHERS TO BUILD IN MORE HELP $144 75 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan, Fathom Blue, V-8. Full power equipment. Was $2395.00. NOW $1995.00 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Cpupe, Glacier Blue V8, full power. J. Was $2395.00. NOW $1995.00 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan, Roman Red V8, Full power. Was $2495.00 NOW $1995.00 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan, Ash Gold V8, Full-power. Was $2495.00 NOW $1995.00 1967 FORD GALAXIE 500 Sport Sedan. Midnight Green, V8, Full Power. \ Was $2095.00 NOW $1596.00 1967 FORD GALAXIE 500-r Sport Sedan. Biege *V8, Full Power. Was $2095.00 . NOW $1595.00 1967 FORD GALAXIE 500 Sport Sedan. Red, V8, Full Power. Was $2095 NOW $1595.00 (* Model AC-5LP, 5.000 BTU/hr.* 'Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers' Standards Lee & Ray Electriĉ 1005 N. FRONT ST. I Mc^ENRY DIAL 385-0882 I'fu "A Satisfied Customer Is Our Most Valuable Asset' 908 N. FRONT STREET McHENRY -21 So i ' I- v K

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy