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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 7
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The Missoulian du lieu suivant : Missoula, Montana • 7

Publication:
The Missouliani
Lieu:
Missoula, Montana
Date de parution:
Page:
7
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

The Sunday Miwwli.in. September 22. I8 7 Driver Exam Schedule Released I OP The Montana Highway Patrol has set up the driver licensing schedule fiir October, November am) December. Tunes ami locations for local communities are as 1 1 rek city ball, 10 a.m. -5 p.m., Tuesday; Hamilton, court-house annex.

9 a.m. -5 p.m., Monday and Tuesday; Kalispell. Lakcwood Shopping Center. 8 a. m.

-5 p.m.. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday; Lib- by, old county library, 8 a in Monday, Thursday and Friday; Missoula, courthouse, 8 m. -5 p.m., Monday through Friday; I'hilipsburfi, courthouse, 10 a.m. -5 p.m., first and third Thursday; Poison, city hall, 9 a.m. -5 p.m..

Tuesday; Superior, courthouse. 10 a -5 p.m., second, fourth and fifth Thursday; Thompson Falls, courthouse. 9 a.m. -5 in Wednesday. "71 MCA Group is Seeking 350,000 'Members' Www? By CLARKE WILLIAMSON How would viewers schedule reruns'' Hy their voting, a majority of TOP VIEWers say they would keep them as they 48 Keep reruns as now isame day and timet.

31.5: Have on different day different time. 10.8: Have on different day but at same time. And what about the new season programs from the ads the netwoiks have run0 Voters decided. 28.2: New season will be about the same 23 2: lt will be far better 21 9: There will be slight improvement READERS SPEAK Dear TOP VIEW: Each year I look forward to new season programs and movie nights If only one turns out to be a success the season was at least not a total loss. Many movies are made but few are worth seeing.

So why complain if the TV industry docs not create a super-perfect season" As one of the cheaper forms of entertainment, we get more than our money's worth and then some Sandra Lewis. Omaha, Neb. o-O-o In today's ballot, please vote on each network's documentaries and reports as a whole: AISCs were: DIEPPE RAID. DEVIL'S BRIGADE, GRAMHI.ING COLLEGE, MEXICAN SPECIAL, and TIME FOR AMERICANS series. CBS's weie HILL 943.

YOUTH IN POLITICS, BUSINESS OF RELIGION. THE CITIES, CHARLES KURALT ON THE ROAD, and OF BLACK AMERICA series. NBC's were; THE ART GAME. NEW AMERICAN CATHOLIC, FEEDING THE BILLIONS, and WHAT'S HAPPENING TO AMERICA HOW DO YOU RATE THESE TV SUMMER SPECIALS? Circle only one opinion on each line: MISS UNIVERSE PAGEANT Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don't see SOUNDS OF '68 Awful Poor Fair Good Superb Don't see NATIONAL COLLEGE QUEEN PAGEANT Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don't see UP WITH PEOPLE Awful Poor Fair Good Superb Don't see FALL FASHION PREVIEW Awful Fair Good Superb Don't see GILBERT BECAUD Awful Poor Fair Good Sunerb Don't see WORLD OF ANIMALS CATS AND DOGS Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don 't see ABC DOCUMENTARIES AND REPORTS Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don't see CBS DOCUMENTARIES AND REPORTS Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don't see NBC DOCUMENTARIES AND REPORTS Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don't see ABC DOCUMENTARIES AND REPORTS Awful-Poor-Fair-Good-Superb-Don 't see Circle your age bracket: Under 21; 21-49; 50 or over. Clip box and mail promptly to TOP VIEW BALLOT 160, The Missoulian.

P.O.Box 1535. Missoula, 59801. sidered inappropriate for use in mixed company. And Miles said he strongly objected to derogatory references to God. He pointed to page 2 of the essay, where the words "goddamn school" appealed.

"I walk with the Lord but am in no way a self-righteous person." he said. He noted the recent U. S. Supreme Court decision concerning prayer in schools: "If the Supreme Court can tike from the public schools a book with tremendous value as a guide for children and aflults alike (the Bible), why does the Supreme Court not take like action on obscenity and Our purpose, he said, is to show state officials, the University Board of Regents, University presidents and faculty members "that we, the people of Montana, are absolutely opposed most forecefully to material of filth being used in classrooms to demoralize the minds of our youth." Miles objects to other reading material used in the same course, "Rebellion in Newark" by Tom Hayden and "The Warrior" by Sol Yurick, and he objects to the fact that students were compelled to buy them, not at the UM Book Store, but "under the counter" at a local newstand. "If you think my tax dollars are going to support this kind of thing, you're wrong," he said.

He emphasized again that the ultimate goal of the group is to provide Montana with quality education and a University System that each Montanan can be proud of. GUN DUMP VERACRUZ, Mexico (AP) Thirty thousand guns valued at about $1 million will be dumped into the harbor Nov. 20, the government announced, They were collected throughout Veracruz state over a six-year period. When the proposed Montana University System six mill tax levy comes to a vote Nov. 5, a loosely organized group called Montanans for Constitutional Action hopes to have a big say.

Montanans for Constitutional Action hopes that Referendum 65, the proposal to continue the annual six mill levy for another 10 years, will be defeated. "We are urging defeat at the ballot box not for the purpose of destroying the University System but rather we are adhering to our rights to defeat the mill levy and to be heard as a people," says Herbert M. Miles, a spokesman for the group. So far Miles, a Missoula businessman, has been identified as the head of the group, and he has been its lone spokesman, but he disavowed being the chairman or leader. Everybody who votes against Referendum 65 is a member of Montanans for Constitutional Action, he says.

"After Nov. 5 when the ballots are counted, we will know the actual count by the number of people that vote against the levy," he said, adding that he expects 350,000 people to vote against the proposal. In terms of practicalities he said that there are hundreds of people actively working under 40 team captains in Missoula alone, including civic and religious groups. The people actively working in the group plan to distribute 114,000 copies of "The Student As i the essay that prompted considerable controversy this summer. Miles became involved after reading of the essay's use in a University of Montana English composition course this summer.

He met with Lt. Col. Keith Angwin, a UM military science professor who first brought the essay to public attention, and read the essay. He said he took violent exception to the language of the essay, which contains several words which are normally con Stripping of overburden for the pit started 13 Vz years ago and the first ore was removed in December 1955. 428,000,000 TONS of material at a ratio of about four tons of waste and leach material to each ton of low-grade copper ore have been removed from Butte Berkeley Pit to date.

500 Millionth Ton Coming Up Berkeley Pit Still Expanding MOTEL MANAGER WANTED We need a friendly, businesslike couple to run a 35 unit motel plus 15 apts. Unit is located at Shelby, Mont. It is one of Montana's finer motels doing about art 80 occupancy. Living quarters furnished, plus sakry, plus percent of earnings. Should you desire to invest, your earnings would be increased in proportion to your investment with option to buy full ownership after your accumulated investments have reached a small down payment.

Write or phone ED O'HAIRE O'HAIRE MANOR MOTELS, GREAT FALLS, MONTANA, 406-454-2141. smaller components. Watching so much big equipment at work in a relatively small area is what makes the Berkeley Pit observation platform a popular stopping place each year for thousands of flEW 93-22 921 19 Dollars p.m. SAKK WELCOME STUDENTS Some day next summer the Aanconda Berkeley Pit will reach a major milestone. On that particular day the date cannot be projected right bucket of a huge shovel will rattle another load into a $160,000 truck and the 500 millionth ton of material will be removed from the Pit.

The Berkeley Pit is an evergrowing operation. It now employs 1,000 men, produces six days a week and accounts for more than 75 per cent of 1 1 's copper output. More than 270i 000 tons of material are removed daily at a ratio of about four tons of waste and leach material to each ton of low-grade ore. The original plan for pit mining in Butte covered about 150,000,000 tons of ore and encompassed the general size and depth of the present Berkely excavation. Construction of the new Weed Concentrator here called for revised plans for a longer-range mining operation.

Anaconda Co. officials expect the plans to supply the present Butte concentrator for about 20 years with most of the pit enlargement being to the northwest, both in scope and in depth. However, present plans may be altered by additional drill sampling now under way. The company's projections now are for the Berkeley to grow to a depth of about 1.800 feet from the elevation of the observation platform, i a perimeter at the top of about 8,000 by 6.000 feet. This compares with the present depth of 550 feet and a perimeter of some 7,000 by 4.500 feet.

To achieve this goal, probably in the late 1980s, about three times as much material will have to be removed as the 428,000,000 tons which have already been taken out of the pit. The company's old heating plant is being dismantled to make way for expansion to the northwest. Construction of a new heating plant has started in the vicinity of the Kelley Mine. The old central heating-plant, the double-stack landmark halfway up Anaconda Road dates from 1904 when it was constructed as a steam-generating plant of the Missouri river substation. It was taken over by the Anaconda Co.

in the '20s to also supply heat and steam for its various operations and offices on the hill. It was deactivated July 25. On that date partial replacement of the plant's output was provided for by spotting railroad heater cars in the Kelley mine yard. Rented from the Great Northern Railroad, the cars were hooked up to an existing pipe system. The east expansion of the pit also is continuing and additional Stripping of overburden for the Berkeley Pit started 13 Vz year ago and the first ore was removed in December 1955.

When the pitstarted 22-ton trucks were used. In 1957, 34-tonners became available. The truck capacity has since gone up to the 100-ton units now in use. Ore from the Berkeley Pit is lower in grade than many copper pits in the world. It averages less than one per cent copper.

Presently four tons of other material must be removed for each ton of ore, which means that only 10 to 12 pounds of copper are recovered for every five tons of material moved. Material of .4 per cent or more copper is classified as ore and sent to the concentrator. Leach material is from .1 to .4 per cent and some its copper content is recovered by a leach-ing-precipitation process. Waste is below .1 per cent. It takes a lot of equipment to operate the pit.

There are 89 haulage trucks, most of them of 100-ton capacity; 13 big shovels, 11 rotary drills and numerous Zachmeier Files Another Appeal BILLINGS (AP) Kenneth Zachmeier, 32, Billings, convicted Sept. 11 for manslaughter in connection with the Oct. 16, 1966, death of his wife, Arlene, Thursday filed for a third trial on two counts. Hearing on the new trial request was set for Wednesday. James Sinclair, attorney for Zachmeier, alleged that permitting the testimony of a prosecution witness, Margie Hysinger, to be read to the jury was in violation of the defendant's constitutional rights.

Sinclair also disagreed with Dist. Judge E. E. Fenton on what credit Zacheier should receive under a 10-year sentence for time spent in Yellowstone County Jail and the State Prison at Deer Lodge. Zachmeier originally was tiiarged with first-degree murder for the strangulation death of his wife and found guilty of second-degree murder March 27, 1967.

He appealed to the Montana Supreme Court which ordered a new trial. MATTER OF ETHICS Ethics forbid vaccines against human disease being produced in human subjects unless it is a human tissue culture obtained by biopsy, from 'terminal' medical cases, corpses and still-born babies. pumps are being installed to cope with a water problem encountered in that area. Company officials say it will be about 10 years before the pit reaches Hayes Street on the east. Hayes is just west of the Harrison School which is on Fir Street.

Fir is on U.S. 91 north toward Helena on the outskirts of Butte. The Berkely Pit, started in March 1955, is a graphic exam-ple of the development and ever-changing evolution of mining methods. Twenty years ago copper contained within the earth where the Berkeley Pit now exists was not even considered ore. The major veings had been worked out in many years of conven-tional stope mining and the small veinlets and disseminated copper minerals remaining in the wall rock could only be removed as a low-grade product.

This low-grade ore was impossible to mine profitably until the necessary techniques and equipment had been developed. Anaconda geologists and. engineers made extensive tests of that ore body and in 1953 began open pit mining with the Skyrme, (an old mine). Pit, and in 1955 with the East Colusa Pit. Both were vein type open pit mines and were mined to completion in a short time.

Season Opens Monday for Mendelssohn First meeting of the Missoula Mendelssohn Club will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday in room 218 of the Music Building at the University of Montana. Army Maj. Jerome L. Haupt, who is membership chairman for the Mendelssohn group, said that all interested men in Missoula and vicinity are invited and encouraged to participate in the club's music season, which ends in March.

The Mendelssohn Club will be under the direction of Dr. Joseph Mussulman, associate professor of music at UM. The group meets weekly. Maj. Haupt said main purpose of the Mendelssohn organization is to provide "enjoyment through song" for members of the group, which will give three public performances next spring, one on campus and two in adjoining communities.

A Christmas television special has been scheduled and the group also will perform at local rest homes and hospitals. Maj. Haupt said he expects about 50 men to participate in the singing club this season. i i YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS IMPRINTED HERE No. MISSOULA.

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À propos de la collection The Missoulian

Pages disponibles:
1 235 400
Années disponibles:
1892-2024