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Northwest Arkansas Times from Fayetteville, Arkansas • Page 3

Location:
Fayetteville, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Faulkner Building New Base British Program. For Irish Peace Upset BELFAST, Northern Ireland Britain's program for in Northern Ireland has CAP) peace run into another setback less than two weeks after it seemed to start getting off the ground. Brian Faulkner, the Protestant chief of Ulster's first Protestant-Roman Catholic coalition government, has been repudiated by a small majority of the leaders of his Unionist party. He is going to the rank and file for support, a move that could split the Protestant faction that ruled the province for 50 years. Ratification of the agreement for a Council of Ireland bringing the North and the Irish Republic together for very limited cooperation is likely to be post- poned.

Faulkner, 52, quit Monday as leader of the Unionists after the party council voted 457 to 374 against the Council of Ireland. The outcome was a victory for hardliners who oppose sharing power with the Catholics. Faulkner moved into new of fices on Belfast's bomb-bat tered Victoria Street and said Time Slips Away When You're Growing Older NEW YORK (AP) You may feel like a colt, but your years are showing if-You're getting along nicely with the new bifocals you fought against wearing for so long. The world is getting far too regimented, you conclude, whenever you have to fill out a printed form. You can't offhand recall the birthday of anyone under 35 and, furthermore, you don't see any reason why you should.

Every day it is difficult for you to decide whether to have two martinis for lunch--or none at all. But you never have just one. Your shirtfront keeps creep ing out of your pants band, and you spend most of the day trying to tuck it back in. Your wife takes the family dog for a walk twice a day and if the weather isn't too bad, you take your wife for a walk once every week or so. If baseball was good enougl for your lather, it's goo( enough for you, and you can' see how or why pro football basketball and hockey have he come so popular to say noth ing of tennis.

If you get up to dance with a lady, you automatically start slip your arm around her back no matter what style of musi the hand is playing. You'd rather walk two block out of the way than climb small hill. Office gossip isn't half as teresting as it used to be, be cause so much of it now about new members on th staff you don't really know. You are too smart anymor to advance a new idea during staff conference, because yo oss will assign you the job of making it work out. Anyway, who wants anything ew in his life when he already ave learned wrience that from long if you do, the has too many old troubles to cope with? But if these signs all point to you, you may not just begetting older.

You may already have become a fossil. Oil Shortage Seen As Threat To Nixon's Detente With Reds By WILLIAM L. RYAN A News Analysis For Western leaders curious about whether, or how much, he Kremlin meant what it said about the virtues of peace, the burgeoning energy crisis may provide a sort of yardstick. Evidently Moscow and its Communist allies find the iVest's oil troubles just about irresistible, too good to let pass without at least an old school try at gaining significant global political advantage of it. Moscow has a growing interest in Middle East oil itself, since it will have to import a great deal more of it in the next half-dozen years.

Logic might even suggest Soviet interest in a condominium of industrial nations to assure sta bility in the oil-rich dese-1 areas. But Communist ambitions of ten clash with logic. The way the picture was pre sented to a meeting of ranking representatives of C' Communist parties in Prague this week would see to justif; sharp questioning of the sincer ity of Leonid I. Brezhnev's de tente offensive. One could dc tect a background note reminis jent of P.

T. Barnum's "Neve give a sucker an even break." As Kremlin veteran Boris Po nomarev laid it down, thuu ook good for the world Coin munist movement because 'general crisis" of capitalist he dream of Bolshevik dog matists for generations, a ready in progress. He said energy crisis underscores cial-economic contradictions the world capitalist cams With evident satisfaction. 1 spoke of a widespread "crii of bourgeois society" being co. siderably deepened by "oil nil' ger." Ponomarev quoted Brezhne warning that the "onths peace" are not simple.

Til was an admonition to Comm nist parties around the world be patient while he works the detente policies Ponomarev suggested th the big thing the internation movement has to guard again now will be a Western attem to "drive a wedge" between Kremlin-led world "socialis camp and the world "workin class." He-noted, "present cumstances demand of Comm nists a special concern for servance of the principle proletarian internationalism." would build a new political se among the moderate embers of the party. He vow- to remain at the head of the ew coalition government, icwn as the Northern Irish xecutive, which began oper- ting Jan. 1. Faulkner kept the support of 8 of his original 20 Unionist upporters in the new provin- al Assembly, which resumes essions Jan. 22.

With the sup- ort of 27 members of the Cathie-based Social Democratic nd Labor party and the non- ectarian Alliance party, the oalition will have a majority 14 seats over 32 other Union- ts. The minority is united by dis- ke of Faulkner and opposition sharing power with the Cath- lics. But it is split into several actions over where to go from lere. The Rev. Ian Paisley wants ull integration with Britain, lis election running mate, Bill raig, wants independence.

Others want to return to things they were before the Proets- ant-Catholic civil war started our and a half years ago, with he Protestants ruling alone and without the restraints the iritish government now exercises. Meanwhile, the underground guerrilla armies keep at work the Catholics of the Irish Republican Army demanding a united Ireland, the Ulster Volunteer Force pledged to maintaining Protestant rule. Their battling and the operations of smaller gangs that have sprung up have resulted in more than 900 deaths since August 1969. Belfast remains a city under siege, with gates across shopping streets so everyone can be searched for weapons, and constant British army patrols. Londonderry is a wreck.

The main streets in dozens of smaller towns have been ruined. In some districts, there is nothing left for the IRA to bomb. Ten persons were injured Thursday night in a terrorist attack on A hotel in the sleepy- coastal village of Ballintoy. Au thorities believed it was the work of the IRA. Police said the terrorists loosed a fusillade of rifle shot: into the Carrick-a-Rede Hole and then set off a bomb in the rear hall.

All the injuries were caused by the bomb. It was the first terrorist in cident in Ballintoy, a tourist re sort before the communal war. Three bombs Thursday dam aged the Belfast Magistrates a warehouse and the Belfast-Dublin railroad line. N- KGTO Is AwaHing Approval Of Sale George Hernrelch; Fort Imith businessman who has mrchased KGTO television in fayetteville. says the station will be back on the air within 24 hours after receiving approval of the sale from the Federal Jommunications Commission- but that he is still awaiting that approval.

The FCC must approve the sale of broadcast stations am transfer the stations' licenses to operate. NorrhwMt ArkanMs TIMES, Friday, Jon. 11, 1974 AVCTTKVILLI. ateaefDThciwotsOn KGTO went off the "if'Dec 23, according to Paul Milan! of. Fayetteville, one oper ators of the station.

Hernreich said the station may not be operating at ful capacity when it returns to the air, because of needed repair to equipment and fasility. However, the station wil Without Psychosis MORRILTON, Ark. (AP) -Theodis and Lee Otis iarris have been declared to without psychosis after undergoing mental examinations at the State Hospital, Sheriff tfarlin Hawkins said Thursday. The two have been charged with i degree murder in connection with the Dec. 3 death of Ellis Robbs, a grocery store owner.

No trial date has been set. broadcast CBS television net work shows and local program from 1 a.m. to midnight. Hern reich added that there will be news operation to provid local coverage. "People need local news, not news from For Smith or Tulsa," he noted.

Cleveland Son Dies BALTIMORE. Md. (AP) -Richard F. Cleveland. 76.

the eldest son of President Grover leveland, died Thursday. He retired as a senior partner of a Baltimore law firm in 1969. GOLD Top Prices Paid For Old Gold and Jewelry. Underwood's 611 W. Dickson, BRIGHT WHITE SALE non Roval Family EXPERT SHIRT SERVICE OZARK CLEANERS LAUNDRY 101 N.

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About Northwest Arkansas Times Archive

Pages Available:
145,059
Years Available:
1937-1977