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Northwest Arkansas Times from Fayetteville, Arkansas • Page 2

Location:
Fayetteville, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Northwest Arkantas TIMES, Friday, October 24, 1975 Authorities Baffled By Refugee Defector Obituary CAMP PENDLETON, Cal (AP) A North Vietnamc defector is being held in speci quarters while American of cials decide whether to let hi stay in DIG United Slates, San Diego Union reports in day's edition. The defector, using the alia Nguyen Thanh Cong, said 1 was an administrator tor a 10 man North Vietnamese arrr unit until he jumped to tt South Vietnamese side la year. Cong. 33, said he knows i least two other defectors wl have been placed with spoi sors. But his case may be i ent, he said, because he tol American official: that would never take up arn: against his former homeland.

"I do not want to hold a gu Hart, Hantz Participate At Honors Council Dr. David W. Hart, coor dinator of the honors prograr in the University of Arkansa College of Arts and Sciences and Dr. Harold D. Hant; professor of philosophy, ar taking part in the lOlh annua meeting of the Nationa Collegiate Honors Council a Washington State University Pullman, this week.

Hantz, a founder of th national council and a membe of its executive committee, serve as chairman of a pane discussion on "Honor Student as Teachers, Tutors. Adviser and Participants in Institutiona Decision Making." He also wi: direct a discussion session planning the next annua meeting of the group, whic! will be held here. Hantz was instrumental ii organizing the honors progran at the UA in trip mid-1950s ani served as its coordinator fo several years. Hantz and Hart will serve a a i of a pane discussion entitled a Should Honors Be?" Thei presentation derives from a honors program colloquim the UA College of Arts an Sconces that was given as a honors course during the las spring semester. DECA Officers Are Installed Distributive Educatibl Laboratory at Fayetteville Hig! School was the scene Wed nesday evening for the in stallation of officers of th' Fayetteville Chapter of th Distributive Education Clubs America (DECA).

The elected officer were installed by the presiden of the high school division Phil Hall. Hall ad ministered the oath of office Janice Fuller, president; Jet England, vice president; Ann secretary; Denni Dahler, treasurer: Sherri Starr reporter; and Diane Foster historian. Following the installation officers, the new officer conducted the initiation of members. The initiation is inform the members of symbolism of the blem and colors. DECA em I Discrimination Suit Filed At University TULSA, OkUa.

(AP)--The University of Tulsa has been hit with a suit alleging dis crimination against women on iti staff. Attorneys representing the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed the suit hen in U.S. District Court Thursday The suit, filed under the Civi Rights Act, accused university officials with "refusing to gran tenture to females because their to reinstate females because of their paying female em ployes less than males for com parable The suit s.eeks an injunction against employment practices which discriminate because ol sex, requests an affirmative ac tion policy to hire women and asks back pay for women ad versely affected by the allegec discrimination. Founded I860 212 N. Bast Fayeltevne, Art 72701 and SundaT except January 1, July 4, Thankjtfving iDd Crlilmas.

Second clajf Fosltgt Paid FanlUvflle, MEMBER ASSOCIATED THEM Tha Associated Trtts entitled exclusively lo the use for republication of all loeaT rews printed fn Ihlr newapaper welF All AP SUBSCRIPTION RATE! Elective October 1, 1971 Per by carrier J3.2» Kafll copy daily IDC, Sunday 25a Mat! la Wathlfton, Bentoa, Madlxon CMn- tttt, Adalr OUa.r I B.M Irjlonlhf 18.00 1 VEAR 30.00 City fection Oatftdl abovt eounUeai I 11M IlKntlu UM ItaVR MM Alt, MAIL 8CMCRITTIOMS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE said through a 'I do not want to he translator. kill." Camp Pendleton officials referred all questions about Cong to immigration officials in Washington, the paper said. Cong, using the alias to protect his wife and 14-year-old son, said hewas drafted into, the army and went via the Ho Chi Minli Trail into South Vietnam's Binh Duong province in stayed there in civilian 195G. He disguise until March 25, 1974. when he walked into a South Vietnamese army camp.

After questioning by South Vietnamese and American intelligence officers, he was resettled in the fishing village of Phuoc Tinh, 70 miles northeast of Saigon. When the South Vietnamese government fell to the Communists in April, Cong said he and 22 other villagers fled to sea in a boat. An American merchant ship picked them up and took ihem to Guam, where they joined the "refugee pipeline" to the U.S. Cong said he showed authorities on Guam his South Vietnamese identification with a special number indicating he was a defector. "I never tried to hide my past," he said.

He said he defected out of disillusionment with the war. Unregulated (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONB) Standard Oil of California and Standard of Indiana. OTHER AREAS In other energy-related developments Thursday: --Exxon Corp. said its profits during the third quarter were )ff 31 per cent from the heady heights of one year ago, chiefly to tax changes and the Impact of recession on sales. --A Treasury Department official predicted oil-producing nations would increase their spending in the United States despit an investment slowdown during the i half, of 1975.

Assistant Secretary Gerald Parsky said the oil nation's invested about $11 billion in the United States I'ast year, but only S2 billion through June, 1975. --A group of governors cau- ioned that research into new energy areas be funded only after consultation with the state involved. MRS. GRACE LEACH Prairie Grove--Mrs. Grace Leach.

78, of Prairie Grove, died Wednesday in a Fayot- leville nursing home. She was born Oct. 1. 1897 in Prairie Grove, the daughter of B. B.

and Louisa Graham Hart, Survivors are four sons, Isaac Jenkins of Burney, Thomas Jenkins of Anderson. Hughey Jenkins of Wichita, and Norman Jenkins of Eureka, one step-son, Jesse Jenkins of Houston. three daughters, Mrs. Alma Spencer of Prairie Grove. Mrs.

Bill Hall of Susanville. and Mrs. Lou Beebe of Chico, Calif, one stepdaughter, Mrs. Lilly Thompson of Clarksville, one brother. Toye Hart of True-key.

two sisters. Mrs. Dora Anagost and Mrs. Goldic Pulscn both of Eureka. Calif.

Funeral service will he 2 D.m. Saturday at the First Baptist Church with burial in Prairie Grove Cemetery under the direction of Luginbucl Funeral Home. Funeral Chapel with burial in Benton County Memorial Park. MRS. KATE JOHNSOM Huntsville Mrs.

Kate Johnson, 76, of Route Huntsville, died Tuesday in the Huntsville hospital. Born Aug. 12, 1899 in Japlon. the daughter of Andrew D. and Polly Ann Dennis Ncal.

she was a member of Church of Christ. Survivors arc her husband, Bruce Johnson of the home: one san, Warren of Brea, one daughter. Mrs. Norma Rill of Fullei'lon. one brother.

George Ncal of Omak. two sisters, Mrs. Ola Mix of Bethany, Okla. and Mrs. Edyth Ward of LaHarbra, five grandchildren and three great- grandchildren.

Funeral service will be at 2 a.m. Monday at the Japton Church of Christ with burial i Drakes Creek Cemetery under direction of Funeral Home. Portuguese Put On Alert LISBON. Portugal (AP) Portugal's armed forces we put on full nationwide alert I day and armored cars took strategic positions in 180 miles north of Oporl Ltsbo MRS. LEXIE TUCKER Rogers--Mrs.

Lexie Tucker, 78, of Rogers, died in Fayell.eville hospital Thursday. Born Nov. 29, in Texas, daughter of Houston anct Louella Pebble Brooks, she was a Methodist. i a three daughters. Mrs.

Don Chaffee of Rogers, Mrs. Alton Patrick of Clinton. Okla. and Mrs. Don Wafceman of Gainesville, nne brother.

Clinton nf Duncan, sister. Mrs. Krnest Camnbell of Maude, nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will rip af. in a.m.

Monday at Callison Tax (CONTINUro FROM PAGE ONE) income groups. The committee's plan would: --Make permanent the 1975 aw's temporary hikes in -the minimum and maximum standard deductions. The i i one is called a low-income al- owance, the maximum one is used by taxpayers who do not temize deductions on their tax returns. --Only for 1976. create new system to replace year's $30 across-the-board 1975 tax credit for every tax- layer or dependent for whom he taxpayer claims the current $750 personal exemptions.

That $30 credit would be replaced by credit of 2 per cent of the first $12,000 of a tax- layer's taxable annual income. Taxable income is the amount eft after a taxpayer chaims all deductions and exemptions. Under the new system, for most taxpayers there would be a maximum tax credit of $240 per return. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) In Vienna, police have been mable to find the assailants or letermine the motives in the laying of the Turkish am- 'assador. Danis Tunaligil.

Conflicting; reports at the ime of the Vienna shooting in- icated the gumen could be Jreeks, Greek Cypriots or Armenians. Greece and Turkey have long een at odds over the Mediter- anean island of Cyprus, which as a minority population of urkish ancestry and a Greek majority. Turkish forces have Hosiery (CONTINUED FltOM PAGE ONE) years." To illustrate the plight of the industry. Brown said that in the past two years the number of hosiery -manufacturers has declined from some 700 to less than 100. "Our finacial advisors have told us," Brown said," that this situation should not last more than six weeks at the most." He said stores normally do not have stockpiles of hosiery and that with the Christmas buying season nearing, hosiery suppliers will have to begin purchases from manufactures shortly or they will not be able to resupply retail demands for Christmas.

Bear Brand, now one of the nation's larger hosiery manufacturers, closed its Siloani Springs plant in January as part of the overall "tightening of the industry," Brown said. University COONTINirED FHOM PAGE ONE) the University. A conventional reactor uses only the isotope LEMUEL, A A Springdale, Lemuel A. McGarrah, 81. of Route 2, Lowell, died Thursday in the Springdale hospital.

Born Jan. 23. 1834 in Lowell, the son of Marion and Izora Payton McGarrah, he was a retired farmer and a member of the Free Holiness Church. Survivors are one daughter. Mrs.

Agnes Holloway of Lowell; four foster sons, Joe and Joel Anderson of Springdale and Solomon and Robert Anderson of Lowell; two brothers, Coloy of Cave Springs and Edgar of Siloam Springs; one sister, Mrs. Otie McGarrah of Cave Springs and nine grandchildren. Funeral service will be at 2 p.m. Monday Chapel with Cemetery. MRS.

EDITH Huntsville at Sisco Funeral burial in Bluff THATCHER Mrs. Edith Thatcher, 52, died Tuesday in Francisco, I She was born Aug. 16, 1923 in Pettigrew, the daughter of Walter and Belle Seals Bulls. Survivors are one son, Archie of El Dorado, two daughters, Mrs. Judic Hogie of Hock- port, lud.

and Mrs. Geneva Greetnvell of A a Her parents of Pettigrew; three brothers. Doyle Butts of Francisco, L.W. Butts of Pettigrew and Robert Butts of Everett, two sisters, Mrs. Velma Johnson of Pettigrew and Mrs.

Dcie Pianalto of La Harbra, Calif, and seven grandchildren. Graveside services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Boston Cemetery under direction of Brashears Funeral Home. where far-left military office scheduled a meeting despite government The moves followed a seri of bombings in Lisbon aimed moderate left-wing officers ai civilians and because of "i crrasing reports of planm sabotage within the barracks a spokesman for the milita security forces said. There were no injuries in tl bombings.

Gen. Olelo Saraiva de Ca valho, chief of the Continont Operational Command CO CON and head of public curily forces, conferred emergency session with othi military commanders. Tile alert order was given Carvalho's office as was warning that right-wing forci may "possibly" be planning nationwide terror wave. Thi warning was greeted with son skepticism by civilian polit cians, however. Scheduled for later in the da in the northern city of Oporl was a meeting of represent! lives of the radical left militar movement "United Soldic Victorious" SUV whic seeks a reformation of tl armed forces and an.

allianc with the working classes. It was to held at tho sain artillery barracks where earlie this month SUV members mut nied against the regional mil lary commander. The army chief of staff ranged a compromise to the mutiny but it was seen many officers as a sellout the rebels. The alert and the urgci meeting at COPCON followe the explosion of six sma bombs in different parts of Lis bon early today, three in th cars of naval officers. A seventh bomb went off- a about the same i at the Bu reau of Agrarian Reform in A cacer do Sal, in the Alenlejo gion southeast of the capital.

Communist stronghold ai recently the scene of agitatio by Communist-led farmers anx ious over the slow pace of agi arian reform. Eureka U-235 to reaction, set off Cogburn a critical explained, ecupied the northern part yprus since July 1974. of A man claiming to represent ie "Armenian Liberation Or- anization" telephoned the As- ociated Press in New York on Vednesday and said, "I wish to nform you that we take credit or the Vienna action." Police nd a number of A i a roups in New York said they ad ever heard of the organ- The Armenian region formed large part of the old Ottoman irnpire and is now divided mong Turkey, Iran and the oviet Union. Americans were widespread per- icution at Turkish hands early this century. HISSED YOUR PAPER? WE'RE SORRY! If you cannot reach your TI1ES carrier PHONE 442-6242 Dally 5 to 8:30 p.m.

Saturday 3 to 8 p.m. Sunday to 8:30 a.m. adding that U-235. makes up only about 0.7 per cent of uranium. A much more abunant isotope in natural a i accounting for 99.3 per cent, is U-238.

A fast breeder reactor can convert U-238 to the manmade Plutorium 239, which is fissionable and can slart a critical reaction. A fast breeder reactor. Dr. Cogburn said, will convert enough of its fuel to fissionable material so that, in a typical situation, it make as much as it uses in about 20 years' time. ALSO PARTfCIPATES In addition to the private- power companies, participants in the SEFOR program were the AEC; GFK.

a West German research organization, and General 1 i Company, which designed, constructed and operated the facility. The members of the SAEA are the Arkansas Missoouri Power Company, the Arkansas Power and Light Company, the Central Kansas Power Company, the Central Louisiana Electric Company. the Empire District Electric Company, the Gulf States Utilities Company, the Kansas Gas and Electric Company, the Kansas and Light Company, the Louisiana Power and Light Company, the Mississippi Power and Light Company, the Missouri Public Service Com pany, the Missouri Utilities Company, the New Orleans Public Service, the Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company, the Public Service Company of Oklahoma, the Southwestern Electric Power Company, and the Western Power Division of Central Telephone and Utilities Corporation. Other representatives of the SAEA at the ceremony were Balfour S. Jeffrey of Topeka, Kansas, president of Kansas Power and Light Company, SAEA secretary; B.

Earl White of Beaumont, vice president of Gulf States Utilities Company and assistant to the president of SAEA, and Leonard Greenhaw of Fayetteville, an attorney for the SAEA. GEORGE LEDBETTEFl George Roberts Ledbetter, 62. of Fayetteville. died Thursday at Gentry. Born Sept.

23, 1913 at War Eagle Mills, the son of Hughey and Joetla Roberts Ledbetter he was a teacher and a mcmbpr of the Church of Christ and the Masonic bodies. Survivors are the widow. Mrs. Gwendolyn Hacker Ledbetter nf the home; two brothers Carl and Elwood of Tulsa: three sisters, Mrs. Ruby Cannon of Pryor, Mrs.

"Edna Burks of Tulsa and Mrs. Blance Cooper of San Bemadino, Calif. Funeral 3:30 p.m. servic.e will he at Saturday at the Huntsville Church of Christ with burial in Aurnra CenrHerv under direction of Brashears Funeral Home. Peliiion Asks Dismissal Of Decafur Marshal DECATUR Townspeople are circulating petitions calling for the dismissal of Randy Car- rnack, 26, from his post as city marshal.

City Councilman Bob Beaman said Thursday. petitions allego that Carmack is mistreating teenagers in his role as a law enforcement officer. Mayor Dennis Massey had been requested to call a special meeting on the subject of Carmack's dismissal but he refused. "They don't really have any charges." he said. Beaman said residents are dissatisfied with the way Carmack "They some of the kids he's picking up," Beaman said.

However Massey said that much of tha discontent was because Carmack "issues a ticket when one should be issued." He added, "There are some folks who think that their sons and daughters shouldn't be ar- restfd," is a i the jph. feel he is mistreating Illegal Siren Washington County i office said today that a Lincoln area man has apparently been impersonating an emergency vehicle by driving a green Cadillac which has a loud siren. Deputies said they received a report from a Lincoln fnan wf)p said he had pultecl his car lo the side of County Road 13 upon hearing a siren behind him. The man told deputies he was then passed by a man driving a green car. A sheriff's office spokesman said the matter is being investigated.

Furniture Stolen Mrs. V. Poindcxtcr Fiser of 1155 Rolling Hills Drive told the Fayetteville police Thursday afternoon that someone had stolen two antique wicker chairs and a table valued at $350 from her front porch. Mrs. Fiscr said the furniture had painted yellow and was about 50 years old.

MEN--WOMEN The jobs are big and the pay is getting bigger. We have over SOU good, steady jobs. Jobs in just about any field you can think of. If you qualify, well give you your choice of Iraining. And star! you out a( over $360 a month (before deductions).

highest starling pay ever. Join the people who've joined the Army. Equal Call. Army Recruiting 442-5081 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) sodation. That group is study ing allegations a police ma he using taw enforce mcnt" against long-rmircd res dents.

Judge Enfield told City Atloi ney Ed Buice Iliat "half th trouble of this country today (hat public officials feel the have a right to govern in secrc cy and to impose their wi. upon the people without tellinp them why." He added. "I thin people have the right lo intor mation." Buice said he would appeal th case and would ask the Ai lianas Supreme Court to stoj anyone from looking at th records until the appeal wa decided. Doug Wilson of Ro gers, attorney for the assoc ation, said he would ask Judg Enfield to order the city to le the group see the records im mediately. Jim Diggs, the association', president, said the arres records 1 would epable his grouf to get in touch with visitor who had had contact with loca police and determine how they had been treated.

He said th blood -alcohol test would certain person: frequently were slopped fo: driving while intoxicated al ihough tests later showed them .0 be sober. Buice told the judge lha slate law prohibits public ac cess to information that was stored in the state's' computer under the Criminal Justice and rlighway Safety Information System. Wilson said he didn't believe he act setting up the system applied to the dissiminalion public information at the loca level. Elkins Homecoming Activities Planned ELKINS Homecoming wll. be held nt Elkins High School Oct.

31 when the Elks play the Mounlainburg Dragons. Among the dulcd by file activities sche- Student Counei are a "purple and white day' a bonfire Thursday night before the game; a luncheon for players and cheerleaders anc Homecoming Dance after the game. Music will be providec by the A-M Band led by John Sugg. Gamo time is 7:30 p.m. and the cornation of (he Homecoming Queen will be held at half-time.

TO HOME OWNERS TO $15,000 II OILAHOMl Sill! IICUUIIO MKS Ho 8roVerage fees or Points Keep Your Good Tsl Motlgags Consolidate Debls Afiei Extra 6sh YourHometJeEdNDlBePaidFor You Can Owe Thousands ol Dollars Cul Monlhly lr Half Fasl, Confident! Service We Buy Existing Mortgage Do Anylning You Want The Money You Gel PIONEER FIANCE QF OKLAHOMA KSILOrW SPRINGS, OKLAHOMA CALL COIUCT (918) 2M-6185 Weather Forecast The National Weather Service forecasts rain in Hie north- western corner of the country and showers in a hand strelching from the Gulf Cnast to Ihe Great Lakes. (AP Wircphoto) West Fork School System Threatened With Tax Loss WEST FORK -With the transfer of (he SEFOR property and plant to the University of Arkansas, taxes which have leen paid by SEFOR owners will no longer go into the coffers of the West Fork School system. Just what effect this will have oil the system has not yet been determined. 1 Superintendent Frank Weracl is out of town, and principal Doyle Baker was unavailable to discuss tho situation. The TIMES talked with rVarren Little, president of the West Fork School Board, who said that "they are paying so iltle in taxes now that it won't do anything" to the school's budget.

school board member Mitch McCorkle disagrees. He said "it will mess us up real good." 11 was impossible to determine this morning just how much in taxes SEFOR has been laying. County School supervisor J. R. Kennan said he could lot provide the figures before ilonday; a spokesman for county Assessor Perry Rushing Plant Thieves Strike Again Plant burglars were active 'liursday and early today Fayptteville a umerous thefts were reported city police.

Mrs. Clyde Carman of 1036 Jlenn St. told police Thursday light a someone bad stolen swinging pot containing a 'pretty flower" from the front iorch of her residence. Mrs. Carman's neighbor, Mrs.

Crouch of 1030 Glenn old officers a hanging pot con- said those figures were no available in the assessor's fice, and a spokeswoman county Collector Sarah Walker said only Mrs. Walk coutd give- Ihose figures ai Mrs. Walker was busy ai "can't be interrupted." Controversy over the arnou. of taxes going into the schoo system from the facility raged since the plant deactivated several ycai's ago Kennari said he believed thu the school system and SEFOR has agreed on an amount I be paid in lieu, of taxes and Li tie said litigation over th a is still in the courts. aining a Swedish plant alued at $20 was stolen from er front porch.

She said she lad discovered the plant stolen she had gone to water A brown clay pot valued at 25 was stolen Thursday from he Mrs. Linda Bollinger esidencB in (he Lever ett Garens apartment complex, police aid. They also said three potted a were a from (he ront porch of the Mrs. Joe ook residence at 708 W. Stone t.

Fire SPRINGDALE A vacant ouse in which i was burned to the ground liursday night. Firemen said iiuse of the fire in the Tontitown a 'heeler, near the Arbor Acres oultry hatchery, is iinrlater- nined. The fire, which began in the ast bedroom section of the oiise. had spread through irce-fourlhs of the house by he linif the fire engines rrived. Owner of the house is Bell Bates Route Ii, ayelteville.

i esli- nalcd building losn at $15,000 nd contents loss al $5.000. Fire Officials Make Plans For Orlando Meeting Officials from the Fayeltevilli and Springdale city govern merits and fire department along with Northwest Arkansa Regional Planning Commissioi director Ken Riley will trave to Orlando. Sundaj morning for a National Fir Prevention and Control Ad ministration (NFPCA) con fcrai ce. The conference on masle planning for community fire protection will be held Oct. through 30 and is the NFPCA.

the newest agcnc; of the U.S. Department of Com icrce. Fire Chiefs Mickey Jacksoi of Springdalc and Charlc. McWhorter of Fayoltcvillc Springdale a Roy Hitter Springdalc alderman Jerry Clark, Fayetteville directo Ernest Lancaster, and Fayette vilfe administrative assistant David McWethy and Riley wi: a The group is leaving Sunday to attend a related one- day conference on fire pro tcclion on Monday, the day he fore the major conference be gins. NFPCA a i i a i Howard D.

Tiplon said more than 300 key planners in Ihc fire safety field are expeci.ed lo a "This three-day said. "will provide a dialogue of i a i on mas ter a i techniques among fire prevention and contro attendees. And it will give Ihc conferees a unique opportunity learn first-hand Ihc importance and of the how-to's developing master plans for fire pro'fldion." The Orlando conference plans vere developed following a WPCA-sponsorcd study to develop effective procedures for nslituling fire protection maser planning. Orlando was selected as the site for the planning conference allow attendees to take a ehind-trje-sccnes tour of Ihc Disney World i proteclion system. This syslem, one of the irst in tbp world to be designed and executed as pait of architectural and engineering plans of Disney World, is an outstanding example of how master planning can assure fire afety and fire loss reduction.

REMINGTON 1100 VENT-RIB SHOTGUN Featuring custom checkering. Highly polished finish. Available in 12 or 20 gauge. 168 Hwy. 7(8, North Rolling Hills Drive in Fayelfevilie, Ark.

NEW YORK STOCKS Optrtlng Prlcw rurnlshcd by A. Edwarot Ark Best Corp Amcr Tel Tel 49'A Ark I.a Gas Baldwin 93s Campbell Soup Central 1714 Del Monte 2K'i Dillarcls HVi Easo) A Edwards Kmerson ,.,35 1 Frontier Air 4 Gen Growth 1514 Gordon Jewelry Intl Harv I-T-E Imperial Levi Strauss 35 Marcor Penney 51 Pizza Hut 23 Ralston Purina 453s Raytheon Sambo's 18V4 Scott Paper I i i Sears 7H4 Shakespeare 5 Tri State 1114 Union Carbide Victor 4 1 Wal-Mart 14 Ark West Gas 161'i-16-Ti Kearney Natl Minute Man Pioneer Foods SWt Porter 34V4-3614 Sid Reg 15W-1614 Tyson Foods Averages Tnds down 2.7,i Trans down .33 Utils down .02 Volume 2.830,000 Commodity Openings Com 283 Soybeans Kggs B570 Pork Bellies 8650 Wheat 397 Cerates Birthday UNITED NATION'S. N.Y. P) The United Nations is 30 years old today, and one of its founders said i it hasn't boen a spectac.tlar success, it a been a dismal failure either. Foreign Secretary Carlos P.

Romulo of The Philippines said the U.N. Charter's principles of international cooperation are "unassailable" but some of its provisions need restndy. "We don't have the machinery for peacekeeping operations," he complained. Now 74, with a caroer as dip- omat, soldier, newspaperman and educator. Romulo was chairman of the Philippine delegation at the San Francisco conference that wrote the char- cr from April 'K to June 26, 1945.

It becamo effective the next Oct. 2l U.N. Day -when a a i of the 51, signers had ratified it. THEY'RE MOVING MEN, NOT MIRACLE MEN Export cure handling of your household posscssionsls everythingyoucan reasonably expect from the moving He can't put that old, familiar nfllghbornood In crate move tha coiner drug to your new home town bring along Johnny's old or Mary's favorite can your Welcomt Waeon ttnork miracles. But tan and will provide dken-iions to the community facilities you need, and bring with her a galaxy of 1mn Its leading Sfcij awaltsyourcBllat 'hone 443-5438 er 442-8111 Sl WELCOME NEWCOMERS) Uu this coupon to ut knew you'ret horo.

Adefmt Clly PIMM htvo wolettM Wagon call on I 1 I would like to lubtcrllM tho H.W. Ark. TIME! dy CMPOH amtf malt (o.

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About Northwest Arkansas Times Archive

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