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Show r 5$f- PEOPLE DESERET NEWS, WEEKEND OF SEPTEMBER 15, 1973 Victims of a fraud, Watergate Four sing WASHINGTON (UPI) Contending they were vie tims of a cruel fraud, four of the original Wate' ite defendants have asked a federal court to erase their convictions. picture-boo- k Reynolds, whose marriage to singer Eddie Fisher ended in divorce in 1958, filed suit Friday in Hollywood to end her second marriage of nearly 13 years to shoe tycoon Harry Karl. Debbie Papers filed four Debbie, Harry in happier days. The suit cited unspecified irreconcilable differences, the sole grounds for divorce in California, but was understood that financial problems were a contributing factor. Karl, 59. chairman of the board of the Karls shoe store chain, had been married four times before he wed the actress in November, 1980. The couple had no children and Miss Reynolds did not seek alimony. Miss Reynolds marriage to Fisher ended after the singer became involved with Elizabeth Taylor, whom he married soon after. Miami-are- in behalf of the men in U.S. a District Court Friday contended that they had toen misled into believing the Watergate bugging was sponsored and approved by a legitimate federal government intelligence The conspirators agency. said they presented no defense for fear of exposing secret, confidential and sensitive national security operations of which they were a part. The four men, Bernard L. o Barker, Frank A. Sturgis, R. Gonzalez and Eugenio R. Martinez, were arrested June 17, 1972, inside Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate complex along with James W. McCord Jr., then security chief for President Nixons campaign. Vir-gili- Leaves FCC when ? . . . Dean Burch, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, says hell leave the FCC before his term expires but doesn't know right now when hell resign. I dont have any idea of being there in 1976 at all, Burch said Friday in New York, referring to the year his seven-yea- r term expires. I will leave before then, but I dont know exactly when. Betty Field dies Private funeral services were being planned today at Hyannis, Mass., for actress Betty Field, best known as the star of the play Dream Girl and the film Of Mice and Men. ' Louis Nordbye ; -- Miss Field, 55, died Thursday of a cerebral hemorrhage at Cape Cod Hospital. She collapsed while vacationing in Provincetown before she was to leave for Hollywood to film Day of the Locust and to act in an ABC-TMovie of the Week. shows off pig he saved from marauding bear near Nine Mile, Mont. All thats left to know is whos the biggest ham? , v fi J ' King near death f u i HlA L Hels-ingbor- K I I rnmhiiipd wire services bemused Anne Jackson sees the kindest cut of all made by husband Eli WaU-ac- h A d Belfast on their 25th anniversary in the lobby of the New York theatre in which d catch landed by Haku Baldin of Maui on Aug. 9, 1964. It took Mrs. Marvin 50 minutes to land her giant fish Tuesday. they are performing. Overtime is workers decision , , i ' f ; 4 i : t -- :The to get only way into housing is to make it mandatory. Andrew Biemiller, legislathe for director tive AFL-CIurging Congress money i I direct the Federal Reserve System to allocate at least some bank credit to priority areas such as housing and community facilito ties. force cap stop the current of history which No The heroic death of Dr. Salvador Allende, president of Chile, will unfailingly bring about an even more energetic struggle by the Chilean Chinese Premier people. Chou En-lin a toast to flows on ceaselessly. French President Georges Pompidou at a banquet in Peking. Police searched Northern Ireland today for militant Protestant leader Tommy Herron, who disappeared Friday in Belfas'' after a meeting with other hardline chieftains. Sources said the former vice chairman of the Ulster Defense Association, a Prctestant paramilitary force, last was seen at noon on the eastern outskirts of the city. Phnom Penh I believe that he Communist-le- commit- ted suicide with the machine gun presented to him by He had Fidel Castro told me before he would. He said he would never leave La Modeda (the palace) as president and that he preferred to commit suicide." Mrs. Salvador Allende on the death of her husband, Chiles Marxist president. ... d insurgents encircled two government villages across the Mekong River northeast of Phnom Penh, according to Cambodian navy officers. The officers said the insurgents had surrounded the provincial capital of Vihear Suor, 13 miles from Phnom Penh, and Kroch Soucn village, four miles from the capital. , today Peking After dashing Chinese hope ! Lease a Dali for a day - A genHONOLULU (AP) uine Picasso for $23! Its possible, but at that price you wont get to keep it too long. But it will be available through a Hawaii company that has devised a pan for leasing genuine, expensive art If a person has the stature and credibility, that person could rent the Mona Lisa, said Homer F. Jacobsmeyer of the Pacific Lighting Leasing Co. The idea of leasing works by great artists .such as Marc Chagall, Salvador Dali and Pablo Picasso was originated by William D. Mett, owner of the Center Art Gallery in Honolulu. was thinking one day that could lease my desk, my typewriter, why shouldnt I be able to lease fine art, Mett 1 if I said. He approached Jacobsmeyer with the concept, and they worked out the details. When a businessman w'ants a $10,000 Picasso for his office, the leasing company buys the P. y art work from the gallery, then enters into a leasing agreement with him. The leasing cost runs about $23 a of the month per $1, work. A $10,000 Picasso would cost about $230 per month. Mett says that someone who has a painting for five years has the option of purchasing it "at a fair market value. 000-val- Mett says initial response here has been favorable. He said doctors have decorated their offices with Picashave put sos, businessmen Chagalls in their suites, and hotels in Waikiki have asked him to decorate their hotels with fine art. "The concept simply makes fine art available to people, especially businessmen, for a small sum of money per month, said Mett. Jacobsmeyer said Pacific Co., which primarily leases industrial and office equipment, is looking into the possibilities of leasing other types of art Were checkmg out the feaLighting Leasing sibility of leasing ancient artifacts ... stone carvings and the like that are considered valuable," he said. that France would side with them in their wrangle with the Soviet Union, French President Georges Pompidou traveled to the famed Buddhist grottoes at Yung Gang today with Premier Chou En-La- i. Vienna The worlds major oil producing nations, which supply 85 percent of the petroleum that reaches Western countries, met today to decide how to get more money for their product Experts from the Orof Petroleum ganization Exporting Countries (OPEC) presented plans to ministers of its 11 member states to hit oil companies for more compensation for inflation. New Delhi Blood back in her arm NEW YORK (UPI) Doctors at Elmhurst Hospital say blood circulation has been restored in the right arm of a girl after it was severed in a bus accident and sewn back on by doctors three days ago. But, they added, it may be as long as three months before it is known if the nerves in the girls arm grow back together. If the nerves do not fuse, the arm will be useless. The victim, Janis Jackson, was riding on a bus Wedneswindow when day afternoon with her arm dangling out the the bus struck an elevated pillar of a subway line, severing her arm. r In other Watergate developments: Two reporters from the N.H., Manchester, w ere served subpoenas Friday from the Senate Watergate Committee. The subpoenas ask the two to turn over to investigators work material, including that regarding the Union-Lead- in lrtler, the campaigning for the New Hampshire presidential primary last year. The letter alleged that Sen. Edmund S. referred to Muskie, Americans of French-Canadia- n ancestry as Canucks. There are many such persons in New Hampshire. Some consider the term derogatory. The Committee for Fairness to ihe Presidency asked a federal court to block resumption of the Senates public Watergate hearings. The Rhode Island-basegroup also asked the court to revoke the come mittees authority to in the scandal. The hearings are set to resume Sept. 24. Atty. Gen. Elliot L Richardson said he would give Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox an FBI summary of national security wiretaps on 17 Nixon administration officials and newsmen. d esti-gat- news cnpULes Sky tab !! heads for homestretch HOUSTON (UPI) Skylabs history-makin- g astronauts y headed for the homestretch of their record flight today trying to collect more data for their already bulging scientific hope chest. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma, beginning their eighth week of orbital research, aim their battery of Earth survey cameras at the United States again for more information on their home planet. Cf A strict ethics law MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) requiring certain newsmen as well as public officials to reveal the sources of their income was challenged in court within hours of its signing. The class action suit brought by Jesse Lewis, owner and publisher of the Birmingham Tims, claims the new statute violates the U.S. Constitutions guarantees of freedom of the press and equal protection under the law. Make medical ban worldwide militant Pamela Marvin, wife of actor Lee Pacif-- . Marvin, has caught a ic blue marlin near Kailua-Kona- , Hawaii on test line, setting a world record. The old record was a The Big Three already said no voluntary overtime. A person should have the right to decide for himself. John Slavery is over! Warren, a member of the United Auto Workers leaving a' Detroit plant after the union struck Chrysler Corp. At the time the four pleaded guilty, their attorney. Henry B. Rothblatt, hinted they were under pressure to do so. When Rothblatt balked at entering their guilty pleas, they fired him. printed The complaint says it is arbitrary and unreasonable to treat reporters differently than anyone else who might attend a session of the Alabama legislature. The measure, siped Friday by Gov. George C. Wallace, goes into effect ethics commission is to in 45 days when a take office. missing - - WORLD Irish seek Lands big fish I guilty pleas of the four men eight months ago, provisionally sentenced them on March 23 to a maximum of 40 years in prison plus $50,000 in fines each. He stressed that their final sentences could be softened considerably if they cooperated with authorities. Final sentencing was expected by the end of the month. - DOTELIflES v i Canuck tergate case and accepted the Alabama ethics law challenged Swedens King Gustaf VI Adolf was close to death early today as his kidneys and lungs endured new crises, his doctors said. Though the monarchs heart was reported still beat-- : ' ing strongly, doctors said he was in a deep coma. An announcement from the 31 specialists attending the king at g Hospital said his lung infection .. was spreading, his kidneys had "prac- tically ceased to function and his tem-- perature had. risen to 103 degrees. . Crown Prince Carl Gustaf, 27, the king's heir, stayed close to his bedside. With him was the kings daughter, Dowager T Queen Ingrid of Denmark, and the Marshal of the Realm. i During their January trial, the four pleaded innocent to charges of conspiracy, burglary, bugging and wiretapping, but abruptly changed their plpas to guilty after the trial began. The motion filed Friday asked that Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica vacate the judgments of conviction and let them withdraw their guilty pleas. The motion said their guilty pleas were the product of a blind and ignorant loyalty fostered in these defendants minds by deceptions practiced on them by others who purported to act under color of a higher law. Sirica, who handled the Wa i 1 Session opens Monday ? a Debbie files for divorce Troops went on llert today Mysore state in southern lr.Jia as food riots, arson and grain looting continued to be reported. Four persons reportedly were shot to death by police in disturbances Thursday and Friday. A mob attacked a police party at Maddur, 50 miles from the Mysore capital of Bangalore and snatched a rifle and 40 rounds of ammunition. in f. - WASHINGTON (AP) Ineffective or unsafe medical devils banned in the United States sometimes turn up in foreign couuliies where regulations are weak or dont exist, a witness has told a Senate committee. Dr. Joel J. Nobel of the EmergencyyCare Research Institute of Philadelphia, said Firday that proposed legislation to tighten government replatory power in the United States should also prohibit a manufacturer from selling banned equipment overseas. 7 Utahn appointed N. U. to delegate Mark Evans Austad. who was appointed today by President Richard M. Nixon to be one of three public members of the U.S. delegation ot the 28th General Assembly of the United Nations, is a native Utahn with a distinguished care jr of church and public service. The General Assembly will convene Monday in U.N. headquarters ir. New York City. Austad, better known by his Maik name, professional Evans, is vice president for public affairs of Metromedia Inc was bom in Ogder attended he later College, now Weber State College. He served as president of the student body and won the National Collegiate Oratorical Contest and the national extemporaneous speaking contest. As a young man he served a three-yea- r mission to Norway for the Church of Jesus Christ Saints. In Norof Latter-daunusual dishad he the way tinction of serving as president of the Relief Society, the Churchs auxiliary organization for women, because there was no qualified woman to serve. he where Weber Mark Evans Austad . . . WSC alurr.nus Columbias celebration of the the birth 200th anniversary of of the United States. y In 1969 he was chairman of the Presidential Iuugural Ball Committee. He also serves on the Citizens Advisory Board of the Peace Corps, appointed by President NLxon; is on the executive board, Washington, D.C., chapter, American Red Cross; is a trustee, American Automobile Association Fou- He has long been active in church affairs in Washington, D.C., where he has been as one of the best of Sunday School teachers. In 1970 Mark Evans was honored as Scouter of the year by the National Capital Area Council, Boy Scouts of America. He received earlier the Silver Beaver for distinguished service to boyhood and has served more than 25 years in the National Capital Area Council. des-tirbe- d ndation; For two years he was chairman of the Cherry Blossom Festival. His wife is the former Lcla Brown whom he met at Weber College. They are parents of three daughters. n He began his career in Salt Lake City. During World War II, he managed the radio station at Walter Reed Hospital where he appeared on a weekly program with Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Following the war he apnews peared on broadcasts daily over CBS. Washington: for 10 years over CBS-Tand five years on a weekly program on radio-televisio- Volcano shapes doughnut island - An underTOKYO (AP) sea volcano is hurling massive rocks 100 feet in the air and a doughnut-shape- d forming island 600 miles south of Tokyo, the Maritime Safety Agency reported today. The volcano was discovered months ago and erupting 3 since has built an island more than 120 feet above sea level. coast-to-coa- Metromedia, Washington. Even now, he occasionally news inserts pears on 5, WTTB-Chann- member, Public Committee, National Chamber of Commerce. Affairs ap- on operated by Metromedia. The agency said the island has a oianieter and is growing rapidlv. 200-fo- Evans was recently named as chairman of the District of Nixon signs blackout ban WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon, like millions of other professional football fans, will be able to watch his favorite team play this weekend from the comfort of an armchair. line seats, via television, Nixon paranteed the for the next three years Friday when he siped int" law a ban on local TV blackout1! of sold-ou- t games. Trip September November 17 School For Scandal November 30 Narcotic agents plead innocent January Twelve narcotics agents crowd(UPI) judges bench Friday and individually pleaded innocent to charges they violated the constitutional in southwestern Illirights of 11 persons during drug nois last April. 111. ed, around a federal The agents appeared before U.S. District Judge Omer Poos for their arraignment on the federal charges. Poos notified each of his constitutional rights and gave the defendants 60 days to file motions. The eight federal agents and four St. Louis police officers and one East St. Louuis officer were named in a indictment returned Aug. 24 by a grand jury after a lengthy investigation. Teachers end strike United Press International Teachers in Bradford, Pa., and Oak Creek, Wis., went back to work Friday, but in Michigan, more than 500,000 students were still out of school because tf strikes. In Rochester, N.Y. a state mediator, met with representatives of the teachers union and school board ifficials in an effort to avert a threatened walkout by the city's 2,100 school teachers. The union membership will take a strike vote Sunday night. Strikes continued in Harrison and Green-burgN.Y. 3 A newspaper. The Dispatcher, the International Longshoremens and Warehousemen's Union newspaper, said in Fridays edition that the Chinese Peoples Association for Friendship with Foreip Countries sent a letter complaining ibout the articles. ALTON, 3 28-Qcto- Playhouse Guild Production trip by longshore leader Harry Bridges to China has been delayed because the Peking government is miffed over two articles in his unions (UPI) Season Of Eight Great Shows An Enemy of the People A to China delayed SAN FRANCISCO Playhouse DESERET NEWS A BYL" University Theater Prc tui tion December 13 Miracle on 34th Street A Playhouse Guild Production 26 Witness for the Prosecution A Playhouse Guild Production 23 February Hello Dolly A BYT lnicrity IValrf March ProriutlK n 30 13-Ma- Blithe Spirit Theater BYT A limcrsity April 12-Ap- Production 27 ni Rally Round the Flag, Boys! A Playhouse Guild Production SAIT LAKE CITY, UTAH Editoriol Office, 34 6. 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