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Idaho State Journal from Pocatello, Idaho • Page 11

Location:
Pocatello, Idaho
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

People in The News JOHN GOCHENOUR Supports City Manager Form of Government Basically, the difference belween the two forms of government in question ore whether you want a one man rule in the form ot Mayor type government or a seven man rule in Ihe City-Manager type government. VOTE NO! APRIl 7 Ston Day, Chairman BOSTON (Al') Hicham Cardinal Gushing, who has been under hospital treatment since March 19 for what his doctor describes as a "resistant infection," is expected 0 go omi! i i the next few days. Dr. Richard Wright said Ihe 74-year-old archbishop of the Boston Roman Catholic arcli- ittocese "has improved and is regaining his strength." WASHINGTON (Al) David Eisenhower, President Nixon's son-in-law, says he is trying to give up smoking "and get in shape for Ihe Navy." Eisenhower, 32, has joined the U.S. Naval Reserve and will report to officer candidate school at Newport, after his graduation from Amherst, HOLLYWOOD (AP) Liza Minnelli, nominated for an Academy Award as besl actress, says stie will be able to attend the 42nd annual awards ceremony Tuesday night despite injuries from a motorcycle accident.

The 23-year-old daughter ol the lale Judy Garland was released from St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica Sunday after being treated for a shoulder fracture" and facial cuts and bruises. Miss Minnelli, who was noini- Mkil for her lule in "Tlie Ster- MeCuckoo," was injured Friday nigh! when a motorcycle in which she was a passenger hit an oil slick. The driver, Tony Dill, a friend, suffered minor injuries. 1'OKTO ALIiGHE.

lirazil (AP)- The U.S. consul in 1'or- to Alogre was recovering today from a slight wound suffered in thwarting a kidnap attempt. He used his car to run down one of his would-be kidnapers, awl they let loose a hail of bullets as he escaped. CurtisC.Cutter, a 41-year-old Korean War veteran, becamo the first diplomat in Latin America Io personally defy a kidnap attempt since the wave of political abductions started last September. There have been eight previous kiduapiugs or attempted kulnapings in Latin American countries.

Cutter was driving home late Saturday night with his wife, Catherine, and a former State Department official, Hovey Clark, when a gang in a cur intercepted them. Several men wearing dark glasses and carrying machine guns jumped out and headed toward Cutler's station wagon. Women Irked About Image On Television PACi: CKNTKIi, HOUSTON, NEW YOKK (Al)- There is minority of women in this country who would like to slap a onto every television set ux. (AI')-. The world's most saying: i commercial UIH experienced space pilot will be (air to woii.TM a( coll(l ols fw man 1 ho ladies onhewomen's lib- and most dangerous, landing on oration movement are incensed mool about commercials that extol A Luvcl a Iliu virtues of housewifery cr year-old Navy captain wlio has east as sex symbols.

Donna Keck, writing IDAHO, MONDAY, AI'HII, 0, 1970 WoHo Slale Journal Section 6 page 3 Lovell to Head Apollo 13 For Third Moon Landing WIZARD OF ID His TEY1M To I UT A WAY 4 I SHORT 'V in "Wumt'ii, a Journal of Liberation," says, "Tlie dual image of women is projected by television ads, Tlic 'housewife- ilruiige' is urged to buy detergent, floor wax, lurniturc polish, food products and other items make liouseliold tasks easier. "The 'suxniate' on Hie other hand needs feminine deodorant soap and spray, hair colorinir, cosmetics, padded bras and fir- tiles." Miss Keek's conclusion is Iliat the whole thing is designed Io keep women in un inferior position- and to entice them into buying more products. Some of (lie commercials are glaringly inane. Even a male is aware a women don't stand around admiring a whiter wash and that there is more to happiness than using the mouth- wasli for lovers. Incidentally, many commercials have become quite hip, setting standards for the movies and Ihe rest of television, But the detergent commercials still plod along as ttiey did 20 years ago.

One commercial those women say is antifeminiiie is dial for SilvaThindgarellcs. The is always grabbing bis cigarette package away from an admiring girl and shoving her into a cable car or a taxi. Once lie spent more timu in space than BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH BALLS O'FIRES! WHflT OW fllRTH IS TH 1 PPiRSON COMIN OVER HERE PER? TH 1 MEW ROOF DRIUE STORTS TOMORROW, SNUFFY-TODfW'S I and LOIS Conservative America Has Its Day WASHINGTON (AP) Whatever oilier purpose if may have sewed, Ihe March for Victory gave thousands of middle-aged and conservatively dressed Americans a (o be heard. "This is our day," said The Hov. Carl Mclnlire, the fundamentalist preacher and chief organizer of the event, who led (he March Saturday down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Washington Monument.

There, a loud speaker blared "at last, Americans have had their day in Washington." Crowd estimates varied. Washington 1'olice chief Jerry V. Wilson set Ihe number at 10,000 (o 15,000. Federal Park Police, estimated about 40,000, while Mclntire said 50,000 persons marched. About 250,000 persons were estimated to tiave walked the same route in the November Moratorium Day protest against the Vietnam war.

Unlike last fall's youthful demonstrators with their long dumped her out in the middle of hair and unorthodox clothes, Ihe nowhere. weekend crowd was mostly over Admitted one advertising rep- 30, had above-the-ear hair cuts rescnlative: "1 think lhat would and wore their Sunday-best out- upset me if 1 were a It's not at al! chivalrous." Lately, however, the guy lias shown a lilfle manners. first saw Ihe new commercial for Tab without cyclamates 1 thought it was a great lake-off on the "Guys and Dolls" type Broadway review. But one feminist demanded, "What do they mean, 'Tab is good enough for guys Another commercial lhat gets their dander up is Virginia Slims. They ask, "Is this what we've come a long way for? To have our own cigarette?" Besides the commercials, tils.

Some held Bibles, American and Confederate flags. They sang hymns, "America," "Dixie" and "God Bless America." Tlie event was billed by Mc- lntire as a demonstration for military victory in Vietnam- an answer to last fall's antiwar marches. However, a number of conservative themes shared Ihe spotlight, witli speakers and banners culling for prayer and Bible reading in school, an end Io desegregation, sex education, legalized abortion and "Godless Communism." To some it was a religious re- anybody, will guide the Apollo 13 lunar module to Ihe first manned landing in the rugged highlands of the moon. Apollo 13 is Ihe fourth space flight in eight years for Lovell. No other man has made as many flights into space or stayed there as long.

The moon mission also is the finale for Luvell's space career. He lias announced he'll retire space i after Apollo 13. "I feel that I've hail more than my share of spaccllighl," says Lovell. "I i in my career I've touched on every aspect of space night thai we have done." Apollo 13 will be Lovell's second moon trip. He was the command module pilot on Apollo 8, which orbited Hie moon for the first lime.

lie was also aboard for the longest space voyage, Ihe flight of Gemini 7 in 1065. Lovell and Frank Borman orbited the earth 14 days to test man's ability to live in space. Lovell was commander of Gemini 12, Ihe last of Hie Gemini missions. The four-day flight included the first rendezvous using on-uoard compulsions. After Hie two Gemini flights and the Apollo 8 lunar orbit, Lovell was asked if he had hail enough.

"It'll be hard for an encore after going around the moon for 10 limes and coming home," he said. But later he added: want to command a moon landing mission." Apollo 13 is that mission and Lovell believes it i quiet what he calls his "addiction to space flight." Where once he talked oxciled- ly of more space adventure, Love II, now peaks of I rips with his family and of working with ttie space agency from behind a desk. "It seems like ever since 19G2 I've been either going on a flight or off one," lie says. "My wife is predy happy that I can slow down a litlle bit and not either be training or debriefing and going into a i i again." Lovell grew up in Milwaukee where lie showed an early, and almost disastrous, fascination with aviation and rockets. He recalls Dial he and a high school friend once constructed model rockets using packing casings with gunpowder and glue.

One of the home built mis-- siles exploded on launch, he says and he and the friend narrowly escaped i Lovell tried for the U.S. Naval Academy after high school graduation but was rejected. Instead, tie enrolled in the University of Wisconsin and joined Ihe Naval Air Cadet pro- grain. He dropped out of college after his sophomore year and liegaii naval flight training al Pensacola, Fla. Bill within two months he received an appointment to the Naval Academy, left flight training and headed for Annapolis.

As a midshipman, Lovell "was far from a bookworm," says a classmate, but he still managed grades well above average. He married a i Gerlach of Milwaukee, three hours attains graduation. Lovell and Marilyn had dated since their high school days. Tlie newlyweds went to Pensacola, where Lovell started his night training again. Lovell was a test pilot al the Naval Air Test Center in Palux- ent River, when Ihe space agency asked for applications for America's first group of as- tronauls.

He was among the first in line, but was passed over. Wheli second selection was announced, tie again applied and was in the astronaut group chosen in 1902. Six years later, Loveii, Borman and William A Anders stunned the world by orbiting the moon 10 times on Cliristmas Eve. They beamed earthward a television view of the moon from GO miles above its surface. In a Christmas time gesture, the three spacemen read the first 10 verses of the Bible, the story of creation.

Quits 10th lunar orbil, Apollo 8 disappeared around the lack- side of the moon as Lovell was preparing to fire the rocket engine to start homeward. If the rocket failed, (lie astronauts would be stranded about the moon. DAD DOESNT HAVE TO WORK TDDAV- CAN YOU CHILDREN PUV QUIETLY AND HOW ABOUT PLAV1NS COWBOVS OR OUR SUP-QUICK SAME OR LISTENING TO ROCK RECORDS i i was a religious re- Miss Keck complains about (lie viva i as 1G fl image of that is perpe- souls ot th( ae mul in a i a i pro- throng. The devout who encoun- grains. She is a housewife.

She -is ucauliful. She is not very smart; or she is clever anil ma KERRY DRAKE NICE HAUL, SWEETHEART; LOOKS AS IF LEFT NOTHING IN THAT WALL DOWNSTAIRS BUT BUT WHY DID YOU BRING THE LOOT UP WHY WERE YOU PUTTING SOME OF IT INTO MY BAG? UMMM BLUES, CHUM'BEFORE I HAND YOU OVER TO THE LAW, I WANT SOME FAST BEFORE THE BURGLAR CAN DRAW HIS GUN, LEFTY HURLS THE RADIO AMP KNOCK'S HIM OUT. ICfP 7HA! IStAHU KM6W I'PSEEN THAT BEFORE-) "OW I'M I A i you PIP? i MEAN PIP yOU KURT I AWFUL you PIP? PIP you KURT STEVE ROPER THAT'S JUST BUT THERE'S TOO BAD, ('THIS HATCHET JOB OW 1 "VENU50L IF YOU PRIWT IT I'LL END UP IN THE RIVER, WEARING CEMENT VITO MARCELLE OWNS HE-OFFERED TO FORGET THE $1500 I STILL OWE HIM-IF I'D 6ET YOU TO I A PLUS FOR HIS FIRM IMTO "FASHION nipulates her husband. In the meantime, the feminists also are very mail, LBJ Revisits White House WASHINGTON (AP) "We have been thinking of you in these services. We want you to know are very happy you have returned in good health.

You have been in our thoughts and prayers." With these words President Nixon welcomed former President Lyndon Johnson back to the White House for Sunday worship services. ThelonnerPresident, looting fit with a color, stood with Nixon after the service to receive Ihe 300 guests. He and Ladybird smiled, chatted, and appeared Io be thoroughly enjoying themselves. Johnson attended the wedding of columnist William S. While's daughter Saturday and had dinner that night at the homo of his former White House assistant, Jack Valcnti.

Johnson was scheduled to to the White House (his morning for breakfast wilh Nixon ami an informal talk about national affairs. Intlie service ilself, John Cardinal Krol, archbishop of Philadelphia, attacked crime and communism, "As we seek more and more to cure the ills of society with merely material remedies," Krol said, "we run (lie danger of adopting, certainly not by design but by default, the false principles of the totalitarian so cieties whose actions we abhor government cannot exist without God and absolute power will result in absolute corruption." tered unbelievers proclaimed, "you got Io hit 'em with the word." The radio evangelist had declared before the march that it was a challenge to President Nixon's program of gradual withdrawal from Vietnam as well as the get-out-now demands of Hie peace demonstrators. "It constitutes an uprising and breakthrough from the so- called silent majority to tell the President thai Die silent majority is not really with him," Mc- lntire said, At the rally, speaker after speaker called for military triumph in Vietnam and a "holy war against Communism." "It is lime for our nation to lake off its mantle of sackcloth and assume the leadership the world expects of us," said Georgia's Gov. Lester Maddox. Hep.

John li. Larick, D-La, told (lie cheering mass military leaders claim they can win the war in six to eight weeks "if the hands of the fighting men were untied," MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YTJUNG PEOPIE ol tfit tttings it to inJwm tonrtnl 'o AIL AGli ADUI1ICD Central Auditrvrt! rttf Pirtfl! Of Adult MO QhE UNDER IS A I I (Age lirri! miyviry Closed tonight! STARTS WEDNESDAY NOMINATED FOR 7 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST PICTURE BLfTCHCASSIBYflNC THE SUNDANCE KID SEE THE 11 APRIL 7 7:00 P.M. IN COlOS 'ASEXMXTASV AT 6:35 "WHERE IT'S AT" STARTS WEDNESDAY PHIL BURKHART SUPPORTS CJTY MANAGER FORM OF GOVERNMENT! VOTE "NO" APR. 7th "PROGRESS NOT POWER" Think It Pol. Adv.

paid lor by PNP Commillee, Slun Ooy, Chairman HOW PLAYING! Only Walt Disney could tell this incredible Jules Verne's Adventure! Wall DisiH'X I III Castaways.

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About Idaho State Journal Archive

Pages Available:
178,548
Years Available:
1949-1977