OCR Text |
Show Sees Danger In African Policy U. lEconomist White supremacy in several African nations could lead to a reenactment of the bloody Mau Mau revolution that swept through Kenya in 1953, according to Dr. George Puller, University of Utah economics professor. Dr. Fuller recently returned from an eignt-wee- k tour of a half-doze- n South African countries. He reports that white supremacy governments "have created virtual police states the Union of South Africa it is illegal for the highest-pai- d black in any field to earn more than any white to maintain their dictatorial control over the black majority." As the Western world moves toward racial equality, discriminattion against bkcra in Africa is mounting, Fuller observed. The dehumanizing social discrimination practiced for decades in Africa is being perpetuated by increasingly unjust economic discrimination, the economist said. In n n Art Show On Craft uj i m L u The blacks outnumber their white neighbors 10 to 1 in many regions, but they have no political power and minimal economic influence. In frustration and despair, they are becoming increasingly militant, Fisher said. The militancy of many of the n rr 'w revolutionaries is expressed in socialist, Maoist and Marxist sympathies, he added. This could pose grave implications for future relations between South Africa and the United States, Fisher said. He said massive American investment and the free world gold and diamond supply in South Africa could be jeopardized by a revolutionary takeover. A change in government, he said, could produce o c) vd? fr nrr- li m vrd a sudden reversal of longpolistanding cies in Africa. Fisher said many yuurig blacks are educated by white missionaries in Africa, then sent to Europe and the U.S. for college training, and return to join in terrorist opposition to the white governments. Those engaged in terrorist activity are summarily executed in the Union of South Africa, he claimed. The re - ' u Hi ,o d Thursday, October 1, 1970 I Gains Honor U.S.A.F. St. Sgt. Michael F. Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Frank Lee, 1900 Wyoming St., has been named outstanding noncommissioned officer of the quarter in his unit at Tro-vAFB, Calif. Lee, a 1963 graduate of Highland High School, is an illustrator with the Strategic Air Command. He attended the University of Utah and Art Center College of Design at Los Angeles. ported 500 executions a year in that country of 20 million would lie euuivalent to 5,000 death sentences a year in America where capital punishment has practically disappeared, Fisher said. Potential outside agitators are usually refused permission to enter Black Africa, white Fisher and said, missionaries who teach rea-ciequality ate subtly being forced to leave. is al aNIM 'n ; D7 DESERET NEWS, S.L. Sergeant $ 1 I l Featured pi pi o By CLINT BARBER it News Art Writer Utah crafts exhibit, and C.C.A. Christensen Pirneer Panorama headline thife weeks Deseret News Art Calendar. The annual Utah Craftsmans Council Awards exhibit will be presented beginning Mdnday at the Pioneer Craft 3 the East 3271-5t- h House, Crafts in metal and jewelry, rugs, pottery, leather, weaving and stitchery, in both amateur and professional categories will be shown through rj n , m .MM h k J i t Jls. : ' WGEZYMMISI 0 SeatcoRi-- , lees in Sofa-lov- e teaimfin ijyigdfiarrsnffs?; styles, Traditional? is ftSt 9m I many stipe? . j ' tSs&ra. ffcis set is similar fa thi picturewlfli win sscob froas Hmy qpilted covers, full decksdr Soft Ffssf, Safari Castors. 96 inch sofa, 54 inch loss sset. 5i d,- , Oct. 31. S e Several awards, including Utah Crafts Instructor of the Year Awards ara being presented in connection with the show, which is sponsored by Sears Roebuck Foundation, and the Craft House. PIONEER STORY The Historical Mormon Panorama exhibit by Utah Pioneer artist C.C.A. Christensen, back from an eight-wee- k showing at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, will be exhibited beginning Saturday in the new University of Utah Fine Arts tffW7R i lyi-utS- : Ml0; of sofa Carload Purchase TABUS Museum. Further details on the exare presented in other stories in this weeks Deseret hibit WITH THAT News. The Associated Utah Artists membership exhibit at the Utah Historical Society gal- lery will travel to Blinding High School for showing beginning Oct. 8. It will be one of two AUA exhibits traveling to various locations throughout the state. A new gallery, the House of Fine Arts, will open Friday at 400 W. 209, Provo, featuring local and American artists. Featured in the opening show are between 15 and 20 prominent Utah Srtists. Paintings by Kund Edsberg and Melchior Hansen, of Denmark, are being exhibited through Oct. 10 at the Speed h Limit 40 Gallery, East. The paintings were brought to Salt Lake City by a Danish member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints who is attending the annual conference of The Church. Several artist receptions have been set for the coming week. Artists in the current Artists Collect exhibit will be honored at the Salt Lake Art Center, 54 Finch Lane, Tuesday from 8 to 10 p.m. 1502-15t- OTHER SHOWS LeParisienne, beginning E. Aday, Reg. $59.95 each nw A CiciSkd Collection Cocktail tables. Octagonal Commode. square end outside. Non-m- ar r Commode, wood grain finish inside tZcrcs Prcaf! ' Two-doo- Stjo gJ HC.,0!by q;i 0 Willey! u uuvjiiijuuviu eE.n o'JDii 1 ?G1LG7DS1IM . A r tf t ? Tvo-cctnon-jiT- ca-' fTiSO AT tCTTTST FES! 1 Automatic dafrorting In Refrigerator Section. Full width hydrator stores op to 25 quarts of fruits and sera zone freezer. The vegetables. Giant 120-lpower capsule Is the Swat of this refrigerator has only 3 noting pari. Oiled for life,., no main' f . tenance. Model FD 123 TN. , b. x - , - ' - 'i 1 X '- i ' - pi be- 1 - 't ' - -- Tesr tiehg is CiH l ,s -- t Enjoy perfectly tuned pictures on every chon- eel, every time with model 6910. Also offer CHSOMATOMI for added picture depth. Quicken pictures and sound, Color Furifier to automatically keep ail pictures pure. See a demonstration at R. C WILLEY'S MAGNAVOlf, HOME INTERTAiNMENT CENTER. OVER 5,000 square feet of Magnavox products beautifully displayed. J ginning Sunday. A reception for Miss Cutler, who was winner of the First Gold Award in the watercolor division at the Utah State Fair 1970, will be held Sunday from 3 to. 5 p.m. - HI 7 oils, William CONTINUING EXHIBITS Dean Fauselt, Utah Slat University Merrill L'brary Gallery, Richard shap-parJohn Andrew, Nancy Lake, Fred PhilBrayman, and Kent Farnsworth, Art lips' Gal'ery, 44. F 2nd Sooth, Peui Grimm and Eugene Gar,n Intermoun-tal- n Art Co, 1192 S. Slate. Robert Rumel, Tower Theas', 826 E. 9;h South, Don Brady, The Movie, 3r!h Sooth and Wasatch Blvd ; American masters and locai artists, Dewey Moore Galleries Ltd , 4 W. 2nd South- - Eleca 21 --G Highland Pyan, Buchanan-cvan- , Dr.i Frank Erickson, Williams Gallery, 1007 E. 9th South, Dr. riomer Clark, Barnes Bank, Keysvl'le Jerald Frederic Ehlers, Tivoli Gallery, 34 W 3rd South; Kerry Matt and Don Thorpe, Gallery 263, 268 $. Mam Data Gibbs, Dave Chaplin, John Stagg, Ink Paint Clay Park City; Gallery, Eslle Koda, ZCMI Ti'fm Room Utah, California and European Artists, Midtown Gallery, 247 S State; 8523 S Gerald McNeai, the Gallery State; Elayne Bradshaw Spring Lavne 1660 Gahery, Spring Lane, European and American eit, Egon Fano Gallery 1924 E. 21st South, European and area artists, Wohler Art Gal'ery, 4337 S State EXHIBIT FINALES Beth Deurmg, American Savings and Loan Build-n2157 Highland Dr., ends Oct 5 Intermountain Society of Arts Cottonwood a"3 Fast, .al, Oct 1, 2, 3, and 5, French Print, and exhibit by Lori Schlmker, Brigham Young University B F Larsen Galleries, ends Oct 8 Associated Utah Artists travellrg exHigh School, hibit, Judge Memorial 3 ends CjM. 9 C. Covered in heavy naugahyde for years of wear! Deep tufis with a tuxedo look to make this an elegant addition to any home. Buy a new sofa for less than the cost of recovering an old one! While stocks last. d Giayce Eccles Art Center, Ogden, Here's Proof! Only at R. MEDITERRANEAN SOFA SALE East, Monday; and Cutler, Bertha 417-3r- W fade. Other new exhibits include: Paintings by Spnngville artist Paul Forster, Springville Art Gallery, beginning Sunday; Ethel Chapman, Salt Lake watercolor and oil painter, Studio Arts, 2263 E. 4S00 Shirley $100 LOOK Won't crack, chip, peel, or Museum-Galler- South; p Exciting Spanish Classic Design. Finished inside and outl Sculptor Fred J. Myeis will be honored Sunday from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the Salt Lake Central Public Library; and Prof. Emeritus H. Reuben Reynolds and Prof. Jesse Larson will be honored Saturday from 3 to 5 at the Brigham City (o) ' ..i'' . J 7(0 f j f Uf f Other i iff c!sr TV sets $229 FRISiBAIRE lIPniCHT FSEEZER STORES IIP TO , 4 Door Shelves Juice Can Holder 433 LBS! Also sn : SYRACUSE 4 Roemy Shelves Magnetic Door Seal Model UF 1255 FREE STOHES8DE 6600 SOUTH 900 EAST Open dally until 7:39 a Friijny Hnfjj 9:0$ jutAn.jny Saturday until 6:00 PARKING! - 9 m LUL rtf: 5. 1 |