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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 9

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'aosday, August IS. iSS: THE KZRALD. Pnm. Court Support of Truce Sought campaign Appealed Reform law To Angola major const ittitknal issue's involved, Ite Said briefs an behalf jf lumsclf, Bui-kieyand iwtMhm brought the gtrai csss would I filed with she SuruMTve Owirt stouth. He said he anticipated tlw case would be one of the first taken up by the court in Ue all term McCarthy said Uie nr law discriminates against independent cariidates by lifTjjting federal funding to ossiv nsjiir party candidates "Tfcs comes ai a time when a LUANDA, Angola (IT!) Sporadic mortar bombings and gunfire echoed today acres Lobito.

Angola largest harbor sows, wber the country's three warring mw-fHrfiGWrt movemcnu eave ought for cuouw low days, Portuguese army sources said. the a'd I Porte'w fore of 4tlG mea was at the town trying to arrange a truce. A spokesman for the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola which forced its two rivals out of the capital, said its soldiers had captured Lotuto. la a radio broadcast over the weekend, Portugii'i acting high commissioner in Angola, Gea. Ernests Ferreira do Mace-jo, said the Popular Movement forced it rivals to surrender Surdity in the town which is 432 miles south of Luanda, ii'Huty themselves as hi dependefas and the Republican fxiny by ts own pidi saj it has only IS per afj of th vsj v.Hrrs," he sid.

NkOrthy also said the hmits of Use favor "Historically the oftiy way a (teilenger isvnmes an incumbent is to outspeud him," he said. Tlw Court of Appeals ruled that bad the power to svgulate campaign spending and to provide public funds for presidential csndidatw I i-a --v Va, r- Urges Judge to Cancel Subpoenas for Two Hearst Case Witnesses WASHINGTON dPis -Former Se. Eugene McCarthy, sad today-he and Sen, Jaaes Buckley hvc filed notc thev will appeal to the Supreme Court a ruling uphidduig ths 1374 campaign reiorm iaw. The U.S. Court of Appeals Friday upheld the constitutionality of the law which provides public funding of elections ami limits campaign eunli ibutions and spending McCarthy, an indt'ndenl candidate for president, said he was confident the Supreme Court would overturn the imer court ruling because of the Even Pumps Rebel at Price of Gas ST.

JOHN'S, Canada (LTIi Tin? pnee of gasoline has soared nght off the pump meters. With prices jumping past a lot of motorists and station owners are confused now since the maximum price the computer in the pump can show the customer is 99 9 cents a gallon. The solution: The pumps are reset to indicate the half-gallon price and the customer pays double the amount shown. niiwi.iri ta- jI QnB I Four A Locations SnrinavtiU American Fork JAPANESE HOUSES in Tosa City, Japan are adrift in a flood caused by Typhoon Phyllis which battered the country's southwestern region Sunday, leaving 15 persons dead and 24 others missing. (UPI Telephoto) affidavit denying the wiretapping charges He said he has already searched all government wiretapping records as iCUU tV Mi MM VC0fcH Industry Faces Shortage ru'LSAUPl)-TheOil and Gas Journal reported today the petroleum industry in the United Slates faces a severe shortage of capital unless the government allows restoration of the depletion allowance and improvement of profits.

The result of a severe capital shortage, according to the weekly industry magazine, would be slower energy development at home and a fast rise in imports to fill the gap. The Journal said some companies already are short of capital and are either passing up energy investments or borrowing to meet obligations of big projects. The tight money situation comes at a time when the industry faces its greatest demand for capital, the Journal said. At the same time, costs are climbing rapidly and profits are being eroded by higher taxes and government regulations. RARRISBURG, Pa.

DPI I -Claiming there were significaU political overtones, attorney William Kunstler askrt a teaerai judge tooay dismiss subpoenas for two key witnesses in the government's search for missing newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst. Kunstler told S. District Court Judge R. Dixon Herman that the government is not really interested in hearing from Jack and Micki Scott, but wants to use them in its utile search for Miss Hearst. "Of course this case has political overtones," Kuntsler said.

"This is a We are dealing with relatively minor charges that have become a Washington-orchestrated performance. This is not a treason investigation. It's a harboring charge." The Seotis are suspected of renting a northeastern Pennsylvania farmhouse, where Miss Hearst and fugitive Symbionese Liberation Army members William and Emily Harris allegedly stayed for a time last summer, KuasOer and Margaret Rat-ner, who represent the Scotts, nave Hied affidavits from 16 people who claim the government has conducted a widespread wiretapping and harassment campaign in the case. But Brandon Alvey, the U.S. attorney in charge of the investigation, filed his own WM WKTT Western Regions of Japan Battered by Fierce Typhoon DAILY AT t2iOO-2i3-S40 IS HI tH tUU.

TOKYO (UPI) Typhoon Phyllis swept away frorn Japan today, leaving a toll of death and destruction that mounted hourly as police probed wreckage of homes in the western part of the country. The National Police Agency said 35 persons are known dead and 23 others missing in the wake of the storm's progress Sunday across Western Japan. ft i The Agency also reported that 93 persons were injured, and that 326 houses were either destroyed or heavily damaged. The storm Sunday crossed over Shikoku, the smallest of Japan's foui main islands, and then traversed the Western part of the main island of Honshu. Late today the weakened typhoon was in the northwest Pacific off the Soviet island of Sakhalin.

Kochi province on Shikoku was the hardest hit, with a known death toll of 21, and 22 other persons missing. WM EM II i I "Bf if VJ I i 1 1 Interim Pact Wouldn't Guarantee Enduring Peace, Notes Kissinger OUTDOOR SUMMER THEATRE NIGHTLY EXCEPT SUNDAY JAMBCAAN a NORMAN JEWiSON nimTOLLEMAIT ONCE UPON A MATTRESS" 9 WEEXBA7S i-M 9:30 and "DAMES AT SEA" agreement. But diplomatic sources in Cairo said during the weekend the two countries had agreed on basic provisions for an Israeli troop withdrawal and Egyptian military advancements in the Sinai. Administration sources said the. administration will ask Congress to approve a S3 billion aid package for Israel, part of it as compensation for the loss of Israeli airfields and oil revenues.

WCCXCX3S: 16 Ail the parties "agree that this will not be the end of the process" and that "we will only have traveled part of the road," Kissinger said, "Nevertheless, if it succeeds, it will be a very big step," he said, because it would be the first accord between an Arab state and Israel that was "not under the immediate impact of militeU hotliiities," Asked to assess the prospects, Kissinger said, "We think there is now a good chance cf success or the President would not have authorized my return." The secretary declined to speil out details of an "if" 7:28 i 8:00 P.M. FOR DINNER OR SHOW RESERVATIONS CALL Provo: 225-4100 Salt Lake City 531-6414 VAIL, Colo. (UPI) Even if he succeeds in arranging an interim Middle East agreement in the next two weeks, there still would not be an enduring peace, says Henry Kissinger. But the Secretary of State said Sunday "there is now a good chance of success" of reaching an interim Egyptian-Israeli pact and there is a possibility "a small number" of American civilian volunteers might be used in the Sinai desert to monitor the boundaries. At a news conference at President Ford's vacation resort, Kissinger said "some details remain to be negotiated" before the agreement is signed.

Ford announced Kissinger would leave Washington for Tel Aviv at midnight Wednesday on a "critically important 1 1 4 '4 IT TAKES A RARE AND SPEQAL MOVIE Amtrkon fork Opwi 7: 00 Shew 7: 1 5 A iierdiidb" toeach week attract larger audiences than each preceding week. Mountain" is such a -and every where it is playing. When you see it, we think you'l! agree wirh every wonderful word you've heard about it. oooooQoeoM. ft fsJlU 1 JTMI.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
864,343
Years Available:
1909-2009