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Show M.uvh 25. H til ? jrzr 1 I i i t i 1 WALTER LaFEBER HELMUT SONNENFELDT ROBERT SCALAF1N0 VS 1 IlJ JOHN L. GADDIS Speakers at History Week Events Announced by BYU "The Cold War: Yesterday and Today" will be the theme of the Sixth Annual History Week at Brigham Young University, which will bring to campus four nationally recognized scholars in international affairs for lectures and discussion Tuesday and COMMON WAYS to house is when people waste water outside the water lawns and gardens, and when they wash cars. The important thing to remember as shown in the cartoon is to water In the evening to avoid above evaporation, and to never overwater. While cars, (see upper right cartoon), washing just remember to use a bucket of soapy water, then use the hose only for rinshlng off. At right is a cartoon advising women to fill up the washing machines to capacity instead of running a few things through. specialist in American-Sovie- t policy and a Kissinger aide, and Dr. John Lewis Gaddis of Ohio University and the U.S. Naval War College. A main feature of the program will be a panel discussion with all four guests particpating on Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Varsity Theater of the Wilkinson Center. The topic will be "What Is Left of the Cold War." A question and answer session will Wednesday. The week is sponsored by the BYU History Department with the assistance of the College of Social Sciences, the World Affairs Center, and the Student Academics Office. The opening event of History Week will be the forum assembly at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, at which the speaker will be Dr. Robert Scalapino of the University of California at Berkeley. An internationally respected authority on Asia and n relations, Dr. Scalapino will speak on "The Cold War and Asia: The Past Revisited." He is the author of more than 80 articles and books, and in 1972 he won the Woodrow Wilson Prize for the best book on government. He has made 27 trips to Asia and Africa and is founder of the National Committee on Relations. Other experts on the cold war and detente who will speak during the event are Dr. Walter LaFeber of follow. Dr. LaFeber, author of a dozen books, will lecture Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in the Varsity Theater on "Containing the Russians with Detente: From FDR to Carter," followed by a question and answer period. He delivered the Commonwealth Lecture at the University of London in 1973 and was awarded the Clark Distinguished Teaching Award at Cornell. Dr. LaFeber is a former member of the advisory committee to the U.S. State Department Historical Division. U.S.-Asia- Final in Series Outside Water Wasting Cited Editor's Note: This is the last in a series of articles about water conservation. Outside water uses are considered in this final article. Dr. Sonnenfeldt will lecture Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in 396 Wilkinson Center on "From Cold War to Detente." From 1974 to 1977 he was the Counselor of the U.S. Department of State and as such was the senior advisor of the Secretary of State on U.S. relations with Europe and East-Werelations. U.S.-Chi- Overwatering of lawns and gardens probably is the most common waste of water outside. "A person should consult with nurseries, Extension Srvice agents or any other expert to understand how much water lawns and shrubbery and gardens should be receiving," advised Provo water director Merril Bingham. Never leave the water running while gone from the home shopping or running an errand, Mr. Bingham said. "A sprinkler putting out five gallons per minute can waste a tremendous amount of water," he added. Watering should be done during other than daylight hours. 7 "In excess of 25 percent of the water can be wasted to evaporation if we sprinkle during the heat of the Smallwood says that Florida patrolmen were day," Mr. Bingham explained. startled when the program first started, because just He said car washing also can waste a lot of water if a handful of unmarked cars in the Jacksonville area the hose is allowed to run while the car is being gave our over 1,000 tickets in just four days. soaped. In Michigan, despite experiments with unmarked "We should fill a bucket with warm water, scrub cars, the highway patrol still leans toward the car down and use the hose only to rinse the car "exposure" of radar units, and patrol brass have off," he said. taken a more positive attitude toward CBers. In addition, water can be watered by hosing off The state police, for instance, publish a monthly patios, driveways, porches or sidewalks, Mr. newsletter, "CB FEEDBACK," which tells Bingham said. "These can be adequately swept, and washing Michigan CBers and their clubs how much help they've been. The newsletter gives a total for calls them off with the hose represents a tremendous made by CBers to patrolmen, with a breakdown of waste of water," he concluded. the nature of the calls. Included are the number of calls about crime, accidents, drunk drivers, dangerous road conditions, along with what types of action the lawmen took in the cases reported by CBers. "We want to work with CBers," says Michigan patrol Lt. Rod LaMore. "They help us out every day, and we want that to continue." Students and Utah Valley residents will have a Both LaMore and Florida's Smallwood believe to see the best films produced by Brigham chance One is CBers. of two are basicallv that there groups rtudents during Film Festival IV, University Young made up of CBers who have a CB for the sake of the Departments of Communications by sponsored to the a stick speed limit, generally, having CB; they as a feature of the and have the radio for passing time, obtaining and Theater and Cinematic Arts, Arts Festival. Mormon information about road conditions and reporting The films will be shown to the public twice, next emergencies. The other group is made up of people and Thursday from 2 to 5 p m. in the Nelke Monday who bought their CBs only as a way of beating Theater on the BYU campus. There is Experimental speeding tickets. no CB to "Even though they (the speeders) have a charge. "The quality of films these students produce is beat the radar, these people will also on occasion Irwin Goodman, faculty sponsor report something to us," says LaMore, "and we amazing," observed for the film festival. "Several of those in the want to receive their information." is the Festival have won national and international ) (EDITOR'S NOTE: Ink Dipper awards," he added. editor of The CB Cornell University, an American diplomatic historian; Dr. Helmut Sonnenfeldt of the U.S. State Department and Johns Hopkins University, a Radio Convac CBers and Smokies Tell Their love-HateAffair By Ink Dipper If you ask a highway patrolman what he thinks about CBers, you can get a pretty good idea about the intensity of the love - hate relationship that has developed between CBers and Smokey. On one hand, the patrolman will tell you, CBers are an invluable source of information. They're everywhere. On the superslab, the state highways and the side roads. They tip off the cops about drunk drivers, accidents and crime. But on the other hand, the same patrolman explains, many CBers are out to beat every radar trap in the country. Truckers and pass "Smokey reports" up and down the road. The only speeders the radar will catch, it often seems, are the ones who don't have CB. In at least half a dozen states the highway patrols have launched concerted campaigns aimed at nailing CBers at the radar trap. By using simple, unmarked cars, law enforcement officers have been able to catch hundreds, of CBers And those ticketed, in turn, spread the word of the unmarked cars to thousands of other CBers. The theory is that if CBers are never sure where the unmarked car will be next, they'll make an effort to four-wheele- rs - tUsI Boating Class Announced J contacted for additional on the boating conducted in the course. The classes will state during the latter be held at 7 p.m. part of March and first of The class will be April will be taught in Orem by Flotilla of offered free, with only a the U.S. Coast Guard small charge for textbooks. Additional inAuxiliary. It wiil be a formation also may be class in boating skills and obtained by contacting seamanship, starting the office of Assistant April 4 at the Orem City Director of the Auxiliary, Center. Farren Hardy, U.S. Coast Guard, 135 S. Orem, and Woodrow State St., Salt Lake Citv, Wilson, Payson. may be 84111. &RAFFITI J3 1, classes on information r Ha-ha-ha-haa-- IS A Grade A Knudswi in Itroten, Ww thm 2S 10 cini, tfwrwlei inside ttcittti Special PKkiffd bj one of Anwnci I food ttofije procmirt kdefil md Stor " idm ncwdi wl h"M rtjulitwn ititi mti Pcbjin iM ' or P" u" ow 4th BIG 224-542- 0 y Tfi I W we will load your car for you. Please Cash, or Checks only. 298 OREM, N. 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