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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 15

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

vasningfon Window 3Th lliMifri I Ill i mi A Dedksf 4ft to tht frogri And Orewtfc Central Ueh Monday, SIsy 1. THE KER.UP. Pfsvo. Utab-P'ge jr ctTit 'iLh'Sit'1" ijtirfei r-ftn't Kutvitt r-ir iv-U Cilt VJp brii'ij! Anieras consr5sstTvn ihat iKi, to tv'n Sha 't-rjiiirfy WrirtH vxit work "ti WiTi: IS n-r it--rt of 'v 1 fipr plea-geth-raily to rcsunj ill sffiiiPnt Ci3t tiS'V ijCit tu lid ji'iVc'JllU) ihe k's furtuiirtie, she is tijtftuig I ih tlie at isyns in 'he wdUNtrtal "l-cek." on a mvnt kids out Uiere are eying "Vihy fanlws 4ith sr. PWioie a ctti.an le.r! frri-sr a voliiiitarv tw.Mi-iim -in food sav '0 per got io he family used to sav.

"est ire -Jjildrm sUning wef SftaS' It tumej ui it Adstit a Thcusands, p'sKibiy hiR-areSs of tnouvuxKi. children fawstwvs'wc- Th? gftvenmpnts sf the rich questHSje-d mxnUy by Assaa OWE! Sb pWajWCtS 'ft fatties fii 1 --f is immediate dire "Tth" sre very liixtrd stacks JKilWlf'istsMtt the wrM food sustjsx1-, scud "ths st-r man in the less drveK.pt! countries tats better than his father ti.d In the jst. tiire wrsf djnl law tZ this wwwnic-iiiVi," ise aft- SstJUyvi SipiT5. C-f the 6tTs hmir thai Mvn SibKKt fshn awilrthfity bZL Rather than -idvg. "dtn yesjr Tims giTsy haired 'a Jy i miiliws of Witrld iiKEft wsr.

have probably neu--. IflW irs public urn no Youngkeit, and Bruce Har.jrerter. oit." ttn your $UU': thtve are star.mj IS Incumbent Rep. Guim togwamtrifstotheresi a is Dor, woncsnisi Democrst to file far U.S. I' oimg Reveille Sort Of With the genera! candidate uling date now past, it's time for the voters themselves to tha IS74 A good place to start is in getting acqua Ir.tcd with the list of candidates who'll be viewing for county and state offices plus U.S.

Senate and A list o' the 73 candidates in th rare for pel! tie-0! offices tiusn Utah "County appeared in the Sunday Herald, lined up according tc if tf 1 1 i 0 8 :ii.fii: representative in the First Congressional District which covers Utah County, ReDubUcan candidates are Mrs. Doromy C. Clark, Joe H. Ferguion, and Jwfiaiil Tnkley. Daniel Worthing and L.S.

Bro-'n are in the race for f1s Amfltirsft Port if In the Second District, 12 candidates (six Republicans. Ymith rfUUittWwii i I nartv artili-sf inn It wnniti ho a ii A i good idea to clip that list new and use for reference from time to time. A story also appeared on the front page reJssprt en fovcrsng prsigrsms sad proji-vis sftrt'tiiiji the jsiiSi.i.1 om-maaijy of Use They sir based on dt-t'usisiif mil Insders. Kwctninrni oiiu'ifM, CPurs'h tid sftckennen to New Mexico and ArititRR during ihrei vrars sid miles oi travel it ihe Yjitril(nft itii irr? sitH tise vsoii'tue of Wounded Koet ia IP mutt sot ever-badow the significant pirn ing fiwle within the American tnd'an the high level roopem-Uan being eip'Tit Hfvts has ihe irtj umn jo a concerted niiticn.l auitis-nce. "You have ih ir-n have we.

We a in to rr om fhildren, well ac' i vn lo heip us in doing so. Red Cioud, thief wf Ihe bum American Party members, and one from the Libertarian Party) are in the race for the congressional post being vacated by Vayse Owens. Now, early in the game, is the best time to iearn the names of candidates for all offices, including the local ones. Then as the campaign moves ahead you'll be better informed and qualified to vote in the primary and the general election too. High public interest is one of the best tools for making the svstem work.

an fiUdlcuCr at Cuijci in fin ii months with an vu-uaiii on-t-job rvcorxiice, So far more than 3fl Indian high si hauler have worked in hosrisu's. pnnt. shopt, radio and televisor stations, garages, photographic studios and uper- as, WCli 3- ftty nnd ct-tc The r-ograiri is a dynamic mixture of what pubiic schools, dations an. government aaetifits can acromillsh when has a caring vision (or people in need. George president of the l' hi of New Mf i br rn i active and tl MiUsuisi huns nf th or nn Tl.ese people i io hive the pal opportunities of solid eoijilihietn.

Giayi.v Ihorrson Tj sou ut on the and t1 for Concludi 1 Mi T'ompson. the new ix-buvct these students exr-iiensenl of Hoinj a job th" pi it ipi -Vance and at icmft he t-tivg of pa i Jl t')ses for a very; new experience. The r.iiis? s'uoiitiiig h. at rd-d kn it t' future v'-t'-f "Tig people 't'i-g ard vtoikg in two cu'tj'-es and prving they can get a hope expressed by Chief Red Cloud a cmury ago. Thoughts To inspire "Now persons we command and ehort in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work in quietness and to earn their own living.

Brethren, do not be wearv in well-doing. II Thess. i.n. "Thank God every morning when you get up that you have to do that d.vy which must he done, whether you like it or not." ifi So They Soy Paul Harvey si A 1 Billy; Listen to Your Wife li'uni use siaie ior u.a senate ana the congressional races in the First and Second Districts. Another forthcoming political activity which merits the immediate interest of the citizenry will be the political mass meetings scheduled May 20 at 8 p.m.

the various voting districts. The mass meetings represent political action right at the grass roots. The meetings, held by the respective political parties, are open to everyone of that particular party. District officers and delegates are elected at these meetings. Traditionally, too much apathy has been shown toward the mass meetings.

It is hoped that this situation can be reversed by intelligent efforts on the part of the political parties and alert interest by the citizens. At deadline Friday, nine candidate had filed for the U.S. Senate post being vacated by Republican Wallace F. Bennett. The nine include two Democrats, Wayne Owens and Donald Holbrook; Republicans Jake Garn, Byron Rampton, Dale R.

Hawkins and Paul S. Knowlton; and three from the American Party, Ken Larsen, Louie America and one of the most admired men in the world and, the Lord willing, you will still be around many administrations from now teaching us, inspiring By PALX HARVEY Good morning. Billy You almost blew it. You didn't quite. Yon are still the most admired man in Letters to Editor us and leading us with God's words and your persona! example to become the more that can be than the mud of which we are made.

So that your transcendent purpose might not abort, may this admiring friend remind you of a precept carefully prescribed 'It's not right for a little old bitty state like New Jersey to have the same clout that Texas does." Texas legislator Dan Kubiak, suggesting that Texas split itself into five states, a right it retained when it joined the Union in 1845, to gain more regional representation in Washington. "I don't know of anything that motorists can attach that will improve their mileage a significant amount." Automotive engineer Bob Knoll charging most commercial "gas-saving" devices currently on the market are ineffective. by the authors of our Constitut ion separation of relating to the church ant! stste Recalls Lake's Former Beaufv and Enchantment The seige of Wounded Knie an Feb. 27, 1973, and for more than six weeks the community cf the Oglala Sioux Iiiiliaus was torn by gunfire ana violence. Members of the American Indian Movement erupted the tiny hamlet and turned the local church and trading post into a fortress con-frontation with the U.S.

government. The militants demanded a hearing with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and some argued for intervention by the United Nations. Today, the trial of "enrds banKs and otiser Indian militants reaches for a conclusion at SI. Paul, Minn. Even as this is being written, new violence by angry yoimg indians, as well as non-Indian sympathizers, has broken out in Sioux Fails, S.D.

While public focus is centered on these incidents of violence and civic disruption, outstanding program for young Navajo high school students hns been pioneered in albuquerque. N.M, Facing the that overwhelm Indian young people career planning and job opportunities the Canoncito Career Vocational Program was created by Grayce Thompson and heartily endorsed by the Canonrito Ttibal Council, a segment of the Navajo Reservation some 40 miles west of Albuquerque. Operating out of Vtet M-sa HijJli School, Miss states ompiy, "uur goal is to provide a student with at least sixteen different coreer-vocaiional options before graduation. Here they have the opportunity to spend actual time on the job with persons who are the various trudes. professions, and posts, these yoting people work Km.sicv, En Ig.MM! novelist.

Inside Washington was there before me. Ihe pines that hsd f'rown down tc water's edge with tiieir feet wet were gone. The stumps were there. Why did the trees have to go? Sunps dOiYt mirror io water togivealafce its There was a lone outboard motor boat tearing around. Gone was the murmur of the pines and hemlocks and their fragrance.

Gone was the bird song and Ihe plop of jumping fish. The ripples aiong the shore were not quite dear and their sound Everything was gone. Whst docs ecology rncsn to YCtJJDcarkr? We came sadly home and have ever beii back. Huth Louise Partiidge A Year Later, Khartoum Killers Still Untried "No one cm serve two masters; lor either he will hate the one and love the other, or he wiii be devoted to the one and despise the other. Yo-i cannot serve God and mammon." Matthew "The universe is centered o.l neither the earth nor the sun.

ceiiiert'd on A If fed Noye.s, Englbh "But when Ihey av S-im walking on the sea Ihey thought il was a ghot, and tried out; for they saw him, and were terrified. But immediately he spoke to them and said, "Take hart, it is have no f'-ar." Mark Editor Herald: I'm hearing and reading that there are ecologists who are saying straight faced, that outboard motor boats on lakes are not harmful. I mistrust these people. Years ago I visited Mirror Lake up high Lo the Uintas In those days it had everything. A delightful ride to get there, to start with, that was before Provo Canyon became Desolation Gulch.

Arriving, there was. first of all, the wild lake itself with all the attributes of a wild lake. "The murmuring pines and the hemlocks." or whatever. The fragrance of ihem. The murmur that always comes with wild water, the soft nipple along the shore.

There was the song of binds, multitudes of birds with the occasional call of wild water fowl which has a charm of its own. in a while the deep silence was accented by the sharp plop oi a fish jumping Tim plaih-ptosh of dipping oars only deepened the deep silence which is tlie greatest joy of a mountain lake. Clearwater. Well, I went back, years later to take my visiting sister and her husband from arid was so proud and so filled with ajiiieipation but alas, "progress" Quirks In The News Dear Biliy. through five administrations some r' os including your wife Hulh counseled you to "stay out of politics." Billy Graham's ministry vili survive many administrations must not be diminished by identification with any one.

Before the KctinCuy-Nsxon fate in 13wS we had to plead with you to stay out of it. You did. Your personal friend lost by the margin you could have delivered. So in 18 your friend was elected by the margin which your endorsement delivered. Your personal endorsement on the eve cf that election was issued over the protests of your wife, your perceptive father-in-law and by ethers of us wpu care more about you and voor ministry than about any of these mon-of -one-season.

I'm writing this without having talked to you since release of the Oval Office transcripts, so I am imagining rather than revealing your second thoughts. Whatever the degree of legal responsibility, there is that damning language You are remembering that the tVesirient never once taikH like that around you. But the times you were invited aboard the Williamsburg there were clues tiie President's martini which you excused And you remember the OiribUdii outing to which you were not invited and you realize now how much more "relaxed" the President must have been when you were not around Aid! from the mail I am getting I can imagine the mail you are getting: "So this is the man to whom you were spiritual adviser!" It hurts. Billy, but you asked tor ii. And now.

Billy, this is even more pei There were years when another friend of yours wore a facade of reiigiousity without any meaningful commitment to God's laws. One night on the roof garden of Greenbrier Hotel you gave hirn a top-sergeant talk which turned his whole mismanaged life right sidonagain.Myllfp. Mr Nixon, driven to his knees, really needs you now. 1 know you will help him personally however you can, But for God's sake and I use the expression as you would in the future stay cut of poli'iV BtKHT'S WUHLU BARBS OAKLAND, Calif. UPJi -The pain in Mrs.

Lup-: Fraf.so's back turned out to be a gearshift knob, and she has the automotive part to prove it. Two years ago, Mrs Fragoso was involved in a minor traffic accid'" and treated for a puncture wound. Iist September, she began complaining about a pain below her left snoulder blade. She went to Dr Anderson of San Ixandro. Calif wik at first thought Mrs.

Fragoso had a tumor. He found the plastic knob after an operation Mrs Fragoso was released from the hospital this week She was given the knob for a souvenir. WASHINGTON The silence about it is as extraordinary as what hsppeacd. Throughout Secretary Kissinger's flitting about the Middle East: not once did he lift, a finger or say a word about the protracted failure of the Sundanese government to bring to justice the eight Black September murderers of two U.S. diplomats Cleo Noel and Charge d-Affaires George Moore.

Although the peregrinating State Department head found time to visit ancient Roman and other ruins, he somehow was unable to hop over to Khar, where the cold-blooded slayings were committed March 2, 1S73. Similarly, the swarm of newsmen who accompanied Kissinger were remarkably uncoiiihiunioative about this sirguiar omission. They recounted frequently and at length his comings aid goings, but never once did they report anything about his ignoring Khartoum tragedy. This shocking temporizing is nothing npw, it ha characterized the State Department's course almost from the start, as follows: Three times in the past eight months. Senate Democratic Whip Robert Byrd.

has sharply prodded Kissinger about this strange procrastination and demanded an explanation. In Byrd'sjast letter several monthi ago he said; "The cold-blooded murders of Ambassador Noel and Charge d'Affaires Moore shocked the worirt, but what imd almost equally shocking is that, as of this date, the slayers have nt been brought to trial. I have been deeply disturbed by the fact that, ever since accounts of the brutal slaymjs vanished from the front pages of the newspapers, very little official information the legal proceedings has been made public, "It is important that we not consign this case to the 'out of sight, out of mind' category. We must do everything diplomatically feasible to assure that the slayers answer for their vicious cime. to do less would be to dishonor Messrs.

Noel and Moore, two Americans who very literally gave their lives in the service of their country." Kissinger's answer to this pointed reminder was the same Byrd got in response to his two previous inquiries. An Assistant Secretary wrote a mollifying reply saying. "There is every indication the Sudanese judicial authorities are handling this sensitive case a careful and deliberate manner." Deliberate, they certainly are! The atrocity occuirea more than 14 months ago, and nothing has happened yet. On March 20 of this year, according to Khartoum officials, a so-called "court of inquiry" had several weeks earlier "indicted" the eight Palestinian terrorists on five counts, including murder. Also that they woull be tried by a "special three'man superior court." When? Nothing aboslute silence.

Presumably, they wil! be tried but when, your guess is as good as anyone else's. No one at the State Department seems to know; and if thej know in Khartoum, they are giving no hint of it. Meanwhile, the U.S. is continuing to dish out millions in foreign aid to Sudan. Up to 1S72, that amounted to 1116 6 million.

Last year it totaled 115 3 million, and this year Sudan ii jar-marked for another $10 million and the inside world is the regime of President Gaafar al-Nimeiry is quietly seeking to increase that. His reason is that he made peace un the rebellious biacxs in the southern half of Sudan by granting them semi-autonomy, and they need a lot of agricultural and other assistance. During the long and gory insurrection, in which thousands of blacks were siain and an estimated one million driven from their homes by the northern- Arabic Sudanese, hundreds of villages and othv." dwellings were destroyed and vast farmlands laii Why Ntmeiry appealed to his cil-rich fellow Arabs for aid is not known. They have in idle reserves, fcst have Sudan nothing. ml By PJIJL PASTOiilT! "Springtime" is when your lawyer bungs the bail money to get you out of the slammer Add to your dictionary of collective nouns: a hoot of derisions.

tM-y zA TEL AVIV iUPIt "In Denmark," Avigdor Levi told the judge, "pornographic films are permitted and are even ediicational to a certain extent." But magistrate Arie Even Prd -'0 and confiscated thefilmsanyvvay. Authorities said Levi had smuggled 188 films worth $3,700 into hrael by switching suitcases with a enish girlfriend. For those who Inst a Monday ovur Jsist weekend Now is the time tor ai. k.k,.: to come to. A.

bw TV be NfcA, 'M Home-made "bread" ca.i get a fellow iO-to-'i(l in the snerier. "Gentlemen, why aren't Wf making obscene promts like Vq on companies?".

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About The Daily Herald Archive

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