OCR Text |
Show K . : v T1.-- SW . I Sunday. May 24, 1970 Way Clear For Huge Merger Imported Radicals Blamed HARTFORD, By Uilterf Presi Intenuttoul School officials and the police Saturday took the spotlight away from antiwar protesters by giving their reasons for the recent violence on college campuses across the country. . The Southern Illinois Univer- At Columbus, Ohio, Police Chief Dwight Joseph said professional agitators, some from California, have been imported onto the Ohio State University campus by hard-cor- e radicals intent upon closing the bullet-riddle- Y v ' -L- AST Provo High School graduates will have an evening of farewell activities Thursday, May social together after 28 graduation. Graduation exercises will be at 7 p jn. that night in the George Albert Smith fieldhouse. Afterward, the grads will follow tradition at PHS by attending entertainment events sponsored by the PTA and the school. They will first attend a dance honoring the seniors in the Provo High gymnasium, shortly after At midnight the seniors, under the direction of Provo PTA, are scheduled to attend a midnight show which will be followed by an early morning breakfast. All activities will be chaperoned. Tickets will be on sale at Provo High May 25, 26, and 27 during lunch period. In charge of plans for the various events are Anagene Meecham, Ethel Bullock and Bonnie Stubbs. CHANCE TO UOHN WAYNE' B.OCK HUDSON JLp Some lucky girl in Utah Valley will have the experience of meeting James Stewart and Henry Fonda and joining in a round of glamor publicity with Gene Kelly in connection with the world premiere of National General "Hie Pictures' Cheyenne Social Club." The film will have its world premiere June 10 at the Uinta and Pioneer Drive-i-n Theatres locally and at the Utah Theatre in Salt Lake City. Stewart and Fonda star in the picture which was produced and directed by Mr. Kelly. The three stars will come to Nixon Nudges Congress on Crime Bills WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pr-esident Nixon has asked the American Baf" Association to help pressure Congress to pass his anticrime bills. lir a letter to ABA President Bernard G. Segal, released Saturday by the White House Nixon complained that his Go ahead-meas- if i II i km 1)1 MOTEL CO-HI- Salt Lake in person June 8 to take part in promotional activities for the film. One girl will be chosen from eight cities in Utah and Colorado to act as "World Premiere Hostess" for the three stars. The winning girl will spend in Salt Lake taking June part in the various activities with the stars. The winning entry -- will be chosen on the basis of a photograph which should be sent to KOVO, in Provo. Name, address and measurements should be included on back of the Single photograph; girls 21 and over are invited to enter. The deadline for entries is June 2. 1230 N M 2nd UntMnK) Am. N017 SHOWING rtoon Comedies cwU 374 W. iili LAST 3 DAYS! (daily ROBERT at "TOLL THEM WILLIE COY IS HERE" I yanAe'i PA McOenoM'i D i Sambo's n l Fox . ThMht : Wtt,12rt FU,' FOU THE .vj f " an AnoeieTf m 3rd rcoD ) North. Pfow FAGLY 1 rnEEtULc::is FizzA-c:r- j) i 8-- - jt- - V" Blazing guns rip Kansas in an action- packed adventure. Hi "ihjWYIOERS" also-heigh- t. JEFF CHANDLER CC'TE AS YOU ARE . . . FESS PARKER ' - 99 44, COLOR TECHNICOLOR ) EKZ -L-eftist (UPI) demonstrators hurled bottles, stones and bags of paint Saturday at American tanks in West Berlin but failed to deter the annual Western Allied administration is seriously , military parade. Police responded with tear hamstrung in its fight against crime because of congressional gas and dubs to break up a demonstration protesting UJS. delay. He asked for ABA support policy in Southeast Asia. "in urging the Congress to act More than 100 demonstrators speedily on toe crime legisla- were arrested for disorders tion which lies before it" that began during the parade Several of the Nixon adminis- and lasted for hours after it tration crime proposals have ended. An unknown number of been criticized by some con- demonstrators and police were gressmen and civil liberties injured in clashes. groups as repressive measures Police fenced the Technologiincluding provisions that would cal University with barbed wire 1 allow, potentially dangerous and frustrated extremist plans suspects to be held in jail until to use the university for raids their trial and that would allow on the Armed Forces Day policemen to break into homes with a special warrant to parade. search for drugs. A I 111 oo 00 iu (fj AIIH r Mrs .s IL5 i FRANKIEMMION ' ' 5p1 n n ri ovu .MMUflMtaillMM Jta J COBB ANlHinkARBI REDGRAVE HvVEL BENNETT the first American film to win the Grand Prize of the is Cannes Film Festival since 1957. COLOR J&LHAW0RTH lit A? T170 TiIJAVLiLiii nr' ilk -rJHUIM k; 1:30.3:30.5: 7:5O.f0tO0lJt AN titi Af 1 TObAYAf 1 a WILUAKs WYLER film MIV TVt mil niiiiiiiimimra BiiimmciiiiiiiM BERLIN Program Ratod(R) inoar atcvana ircno l NOW PLAYING SHOW 8:45 thnw comnwcillt in thil Iu length movit 8:00 PM GENERAL PICTURES PRESENTATION A NATIONAL Allied Parade 1 KENNECOTT THEATER Only Marred by Demonstrators I p.m.) 5-- 8 PEDFORD 111 II Jy J JII k RESTAURANT gnaanaoaDaDOOQaDODnii the man. v U Iff II ncii n iwt n u U M LIMITED 11)11 hot krr.M T- in!, a W&mf yfr b $15D rClJULEtfi ENGAGEMENT! r I . enormous." SUIS I ANNGCTNfATM More men than women died of cancer in 1969. ure He acknowledged security forces overreacted in some campus disturbances "because the provocations which they have had to endure have been BARON ROUND ((J SHOWING TODAY AT 2:00 3:55 - 6:00 - 8:05 -- 10:10 Girls Eligible for Contest To Pick Premiere Hostess "And certainly the gutlessness of some college headz is a factor," Byrd added. Ltmck and Dumex, TOGETHE- R- umteieated $ Word PARAGONAH UPI has been received here of the death of Army Spec. 4 Curtis Boardman, 21 while serving near Quang Tri, Vietnam. Boardman, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Boardman of Paragonah, died May 20th, the Defense Department said. He was serving with Battery B, 1st Battalion, 39th Artillery. MED 27 sAfio -O- UTSTANDING N the graduation rites. i on college left-win- ra lnrnnirt? SEE THEM "steve McQueen ituicccotI" m iii uldii - ly ticut core of campuses. Agnew spoke at Houston, Tex. Byrd said revolutionary leaders on campuses preach a "doctrine of destruction" and draw encouragement from factors within the university system, including "the iron-cla-d g guarantees of tenure for instructors, who might not SHOW AT 8:50 TWO OF THE GREATEST! Provo High Seniors Await Utahn Killed In Vietnam Dak DMiw .MiMiiAM rui rudi-viuuuuii- uii (UPI)-Connec- Commis- Senate Democratic leadership followed Vice President Spiro T. Agnew Saturday night in criticizing news media, and said the "gutkssness" of some college presidents has contributed to campus violence. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-Va., a member of the powerful Senate Appropirations Committee, said Congress and federal agencies "should review very carefully the federal appropriations now being made for higher education." Deg Byrd, the mocrat in the Senate leadership, made the comments in a speech prepared for delivery at hell-raiser- third-rankin- I? Larry Phillips, Linda Gonrley, Radene Rackele, and Erik Larsen (left to right) trade books for caps and gowns whfle discussing the big party. SCHOOL BOOKS and even caps and gowns will be only a memory wbea seniors at Prevt High frolic at their annual party Thursday night. Here, Max Warner, right, dean of students, looks on as seniors Utah-P- age Byrd Raps Media, College Chiefs gSgETJE1 i. ii y: 3Brtj? fij 5ssS R. sioner William Cotter cleared the way Saturday for the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT) and the Hartford Fire Insurance Co. to combine in the largest merger in U.S. corporate history. The commissioner gave permission to ITT to make a $1.5 billion offer to holders of Hartford Fire stock. Cotter had vetoed a previous attempt to merge the two Bluefield, W. Va. companies last December. Holders of 22 million shares His criticism of both college of Hartford Fire stock stand to faculty and news media came a gain $12 a share day after Agnew's latest attack i ll III -s Xs- V Vm school on the school administration. Assistant U.S. Attorney General Jerris Leonard headed off a possible new confrontation at Jackson State College where two young blacks were killed last week. Leonard, recently appointed to head tne Justice Department's investigation into the violence at the school, rushed to the women's dormitory where the shooting recurred and persuaded young blacks to allow the dismantling of the d wall panels and windows at the school. Prosecutor Ronald Kane said he will reconvene the Portage (Ohio) County grand jury during the second week in June to investigate the fatal shootings of four Kent State University students. was reThe investigation by Portage County quested Corner Robert Sybert who said the grand jury should determine if the shootings were "homicidal or accidental." u vSVVl5Tlt sity faculty members blamed the violent student rampages and eventual closing of the school. Conn. Insurance THE HERALD, Provo, mm, .MiMaiaMiimU cversecnl "TflASH'IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SINCE SOUND CAME S : fU IIIM t"-'''"'- "' "'. I) M M M Newrofker MASH Love Prastntt DONALD SljTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT Inspired by JULES VERNE whetif least V " K' - mm ?P r, expectf I P.M. P.M. HURRY! ENDS TUESDAYI NOW! TWO GIANT HITS TOGETHER! it. T OPEN START 9 mw WTHOM BERGMAN rmuK Q(MN, If MLumAjrT mii in the i. 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45, 9:50 fViawM nc muniaa CH CONNORS-NANETT- E NBlUn fxaoswE utah count? showing tunntMlar ISJbi .an. STARTS WEDNESDAY i U j WAYKE rim. CAMrCai trill DAR3Y KBSu-.sbs- ' LI TIMP DRIVE IN ' J UfiL LS3 Minnel (tabs a J ECHOED I2GE2I3 ca rrnAnnnw.nrrt-r- r' Also Starring DAME JUDITH ANDERSON CoStarring JEAN GASCON MANUTUPOU Introducing CORINNA TSOPEI Pradixad to SANDY HGWARO SawnilurtoMCKDEWrrr DinowdbyELIalOTSIIVERSrEIM SANDY HOWARD Praduetioc Mum to LEONARD R06CNMAN RUWYISIOhTTNICOLOr! b n A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES KELEASS A CINEMA CXNTER FTIJ48 PRS8SNTC10N S.tPKNQ P. ; Igchnicolor'A Porpmount Picture ii Y |