Show h?tt 6A jattfiarii-Examttt- fr OGDEN E UTAH D THURSDAY T I O HOLMES ALEXANDER EVENING JANUARY 18 1973 RIALS Richard Nixon Begins Second Term The elaborate stage in Washington is set for President Richard M Nixon to begin officially his second term in the White House The actual inaugural ceremony will begin at 11:30 am EST (9:30 am AIST) on Saturday on a $750000 wooden stand erected over the parking lot east of the Capitol Air Nixon will as he did in 1969 take his oath of office with one hand raised and the other on Bibles that belonged to his mother’s family The President’s wife Nevada-borThelma Riley Nixon — better known simply as Pat — will hold the Bibles Then the chief executive will deliver an inaugural address that aides promise will be short and simple If it is it will be the only plain part of the inaugural ceremonies Such an elaborate four-daprogram has been arranged that Democrats and other political foes of Air Nixon are calling it a “coronation” rather than an inn y auguration The Democrats are already spoiling for a fight with the President over his continued practice of freezing the spending of funds already appropriated by the Congress for rural betterment highways recreation facilities and public housing Two Weber County natives are playing leading roles in the inaugural J AVillard Alarriott Sr for whose Industrial Bonds The “new” Weber County Commission has given an appreciated vote of confidence to the Weber Industrial Park by reaffirming support of a program to issue industrial bonds The county had put its credit rating behind a $600000 bond issue being used by the Bradley Corp for construction of its new plant the first to be located in the industrial park This action was taken at no expense to taxpayers by George T Frost and outgoing Commissioners Wil'iam Moves and Charles Story Bonding attorneys suggested the commission that took office on Jan 1 — new Commissioners Keith Jensen and Boyd Storey and Air Frost as a holdover — should reconfirm the county’s endorsement So the commission did this week This was no surprise since Commissioner Storey during a previous term in office had been an effective force in starting the industrial park It also had the then-Chairma- n endorsement of Air Jensen now chairman of the commission The Weber Industrial Park is our campaign-tim- e area’s most promising hope to provide needed employment It deserves all the support it can get Vice President Should Blow Democracy took another step wards in Asia Wednesday when President Ferdinand E Alarcos of the Philippines assumed what amounts to dictatornation ial control of his strife-torThe Philippines president insisted he was following the “peoples’ will” in signing into law a new constitution Under the new charter Air Alarcos will be president prime minister AND legislature until some vague time in the future when a parliament is to be formed He is continuing his rigid martial law — one opponent has already been executed upon direct Marcos orders — “to protect the people and the republic” In South Korea President Chung Hee Park declared martial law on Oct 17 and susneuded many constitutional guarantees He can now be president “for n ld life” In South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu shows all evidence of wantdictator any time ing to be a he thinks he can get away with it Thousands of Americans have given their lives in wars involving the Philippines Korea and Vietnam “to have delife-lon- mocracy” Question: g Do the people in those three countries really want “democracy” ALSOP China Fears Perventive Attack by Soviet Russia In Nanking the least impressive factory 1 w in China there was still nettling to see that was nost horribly impressive The ice was a railroad car plant get to it we had to cross the st new bridge over the -- ingtze River "ar far below the bridge ne of the old ferries were 11 steaming back and forth er the wide turbid waters t they were almost entirely lpty An inquiry produced the rly chilling response: “We op them going because the idge could be so easily broken bombs in wartime” rhe factory itself was built at hill j foot of a considerable re was the main exhibit icl doors opened inside of the A concrete tunnel 14 feet de and nearly 12 feet high In the revealed is thus rrows of the hill the tunnel d satellite-tunnel- s d its for rather more than two “Enough to make an jes shelter for 20000 raid 1 ex-ide- -- proved in the long display data you can the most immediately important lesson of my experience in China Neither at that factory nor crossing the bridge over the Yangtze nor at any other stage on this journey did anyone make any bones about the nature of the threat the Chinese now perceive The threat the Chinese perceive is nothing more or less than a preventive war waged by To most the Soviet Union this is a highly Americans From such deduce d shelters all the hunge Chinese enterprises have been required to build and the underground cities that extend beneath every major Chinese urban center and the militia that have been companies formed by every kind of organization in China The real story is that the whole remarkable development of the Chinese economy is being deformed for the present by the absolute and urgent priority now accorded to national The rule that “agriculture must come first” is not being broken to be sure Probably it cannot be safely broken because of China’s population problem MILITARY PRIORITY But all that I saw — most of it previously unseen by any defense foreigner — suggested that Chinese industry would now be long past the takeoff stage except for one thing First call all industrial resources from steel to machine tools has been given to aircraft production to distasteful fact Prof John K missile production to to ordnance everything for instance production and Fairbc nk else with connected China’s pleasanter armed promulgated the strength doctrine that the chief Chinese The political evidence confear was nonexistent Japanese the industrial evidence firmed — and this was militarism In a series of frank and long gratefully believed until China exhaustive talks in Peking — clasped hands with Japan! TAKE YOUR CHOICE It is no wonder either that true fact should be the distasteful for you must take choice most Either you American liberal intellectuals are now living in a totally unreal world — for the w'orld as they see it certainly leaves no particle of room for anything like a Soviet preventive nuclear attack on China Or else Mao g Prime Minister Chou En-land the entire Chinese government are mainly guided almost inby considerations 4000 VOLUNTEERS was hardly surprising then the factory’s output seemed larkably low for the 4000 This kers it employed rmous fortification inside the had in fact been built with Iunteer” labor of those same kers And the factory also sanely unreal For it must be understood ained no less than 18 militia the story only begins with that as trained well they ipanies - Tse-tun- ai secular communication” decree by the satisfied” Rev Jon Marr Stark rector of SPECIAL RULES St Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Denver Dr Stark declared ?ark c'almd addlt0"aI his decree under that his church door “will be the 9rder bolted against all political and ?e rlies group Boly rell§d0Us FamIya who are personages military ls Paris‘ aiding in the perpetuation of rufs Episcopal Church Annual 1971 this hideous war” T does not list this order INVOLVED (said the church dicating Not only is the vice president spokesman here) that the group an Episcopalian he is also a was quite small and without political “personage” in support special authority In any event of the Vietnam War and by Dr Stark would be hard put to with the Supreme some extension could be rated a it to deny the sacrament to any coordinated Court and that’s a closed door military person a stand-i- n for Christian on the argument that commander-in-chie- f A support of the war amounted to Considering the circumstances the I don’t think any further effort spokesman for Air Agnew said evil living and was offensive to that he did not feel involved the congregation will be productive” Nevertheless For my part I am sorry that Ayres finally since he was a nonmember of found one government building Dr Stark’s congregation at St the vice president declined the that didn’t come under Burger’s Andrew’s but an Episcopal challenge "of this priest I would convinced The this of priest sway producer city gave the be pleased to see another officials at the National Ar- - reporter a different viewpoint suitably minded Episcopalian Church policy for several step to the St Andrew’s altar chives that his intentions were innocent and last week was able years has stressed the and force the issue If Dr Stark e to film the ecumenical trend of “open persisted in the business and segment that took three months communion” for all Christians “advertised” the person as to arrange in all Christian churches Mr excommunicated church law Footnote: The eminent chief Agnew is as much as “mem- - allows appeal to the reigning justice is not one to be trifled ber” of St Andrew’s in Denver bishop with When a fellow passenger as of his home parish just as But Air Agnew ought to carry blew cigar smoke in his face he is a citizen cf the United out this mission on his own It aboard the Washington-NeStates as well as of Alaryland was never intended bv the York Metroliner Burger wrote The prevailing assumption is American Constitution that an aa indignant letter to Tran- - that “communion takes place at officer of any church should sportation Secretary John Volpe the Lord’s table not our table” threatened the spiritual life of and Put a stop to cigar smoking according to the scholar-prieany officer of the United States the Another a train time °n kte caller at Burger’s heme was startled to be greeted at VIRGINIA PAYETTE the door by the white-haire- d f jurist with a drawn pistol f vr i in-NO- By JACK ANDERSON WASHINGTON — From his flowing wnite mane to the gold carpet he insists upon trodding when he enters the Supreme Court chamber Warren Burger is a distinguished chief justice who will suffer no indignities to the institution for which he stands He a rejected therefore from Pictures producer Gerald Ayres to shoot a three- minute segment showing drunken sailors cavorting on the front steps of the Supreme solemnly request Columbia Court assigned with another sailor to accompany a prisoner from the Norfolk Naval Station to a naval prison in New Hampshire ZANY TRIO on with officials of the foreign office with leaders of the Chinese press and finally with Prime Minister Chou En-lhimself — there was always the same central theme That theme was the danger of a Soviet preventive attack on ai China as betokened by the huge unceasing Soviet military buildup on China’s long nor- thern frontier Prime Minister Chou En-l- ai w st -- --- Nor was the chief justice SuDreme Court appeased by an offer to change advised Although he was the script and sober up the there would be “no problem” sailors A press spokesman the gallery a week later wouldno srespectfuMo the Supreme Court Ayles team tlal the star of the picture Jack Chief “justice" Burger was Nicholson ?halr”a": t0? of th galIerysof Burger’s ?S?rULnl°"e performers board of trustees Nicholson has had the ef- mdeed a friend inside frontery to call for the im- tried to hSp t dVsUe fcM President N ixon Burger to the minutes of filming wrote to him Of court course on Nov 10: “It appears that a nign Nicho son’s role in the movie is to bmTdings that He plays a fun- nonpolitical nm lovmg Navy petty officer who is would be suitable is going to be JIXfgaS ££ - °S u?5 gTfr LETTERS Standard-Examine- m r KTi'mS “t THE O EDITOR CaDCel S34 1)16 Equal Oppdrtmuties Act of 1964 Box 951 OgEditor the Equal Rights Act Of 1972 ceed 300 woVdrandLiiTetters° a'?e sublet It is so vague that it can be mS"wi?f 'ir U pTnr:d'Tr"omn''T misconstrued in any way de- dividual Letters violating rules of good sired by those set to enforce it and' included tor ‘vertti- - You will ask if I would infer Aimustbsigned cation writer's address and telephone that our officials would deliber- ujmDer‘ ately or in imorance pass such a bill ’ It has passed Congress endorsed by Governor Fditnr ad the women libbers After SShSltaiSSSi of rB®d anTd George Sant who criticized my statements to regards to the rightore“a°4TSentI0Nk® senseless bombing of North brgMm“ world come 'fn Vietnam I can’t help but pon V” t well do der the question women s rights so brazenly! you read George? Not once in my writing did I what will be next where the defend or refer to the actions (More letters on Page 7A) of the Communists in Vietnam But for your information I will state that I oppose communism all the way and this goes beyond just mere words My ac20 YEARS AGO tions in the past and also at in the present time are John Arthur Houston 73 opposigent a'"1? Ereral communism is to Railway opposing Agency died strike at the heart (the leader-- at the family home He was ship in USSR and China) and with the Express Agency 47 not in bombing defenseless civil- - years serving in Ogden from 1928 until his Aug ians in North Vielnam ' 1 ’ 1949 ’ ac- - retirement tions of the United States rD M Moore has been Indochina have done more to named “ ') damage the image of this conn- with Dr L stall R of Hospital m world the the eyes try and and also in the hearts of the £raPr as president-elec- t as secretary- American -r-ole who abhor alt treasurer suffering of humanity the and evil applaud Oppose etty Manager E J Allison good is still a good motto to cauti0ned Ogden officials not to live by and I hope that we auow tbe commercial area of Washington Boulevard to extend its limits present beca s' “if the downtown high vaIu® a begins to die it Rights Stealing would to raise the neces Editor Standard-Examineto tax offset the levy general The Equal Rights Amend- - ioss"” ment to be brought up for rati- An outbreak of a mild variety fication at this legislative ses- sion has been grossly misrepre- - of flu which has spread across bene- - many parts of the nation has hit sen ted as to the fits to be assured women It the Ogden area causing the will void the rights assured by absentee rate to climb in local state and federal laws schools and business firms Standard-Examin- “!“ Js “gh b-v- ond so-call- ' To is union Ol0 l OllcCf Materialize in '72 - ht'te'rsS X £££ S “V “t & thS “ tUmS °U‘' m perfectly — o- he is going to run the country “ Aftp?—all the hntlmfy for the next four years the way after the frantic scrambling’ to he believes it should be run and iure the kids to the polls he isn’t going to be deterred by after all the fantasies of the WS critics potential power in the 25 million new ballots — nothing SECRET NUMBERS No overwhelming turnout by The FBI has been busily not one secret eager telephone distributing d numbers to street people who politician swept m tum for a suitable reward into national office on an might be willing to confide what idealistic surge of votes from radicals are planning during new adults in short Not a single the presidential inaugural The dramatic change in American are informers potentialcash educational politics Promised oven petnanent JUST UKE OLDSTERS status informant paid when all the smoke had taTo''ow“ handrand”' we cleaed: tov£? aeted couldn’t tbV!l didn't 'uIotnd’urfkinn more than half of them ‘fi? youth-oriente- P‘7 fan with Agent Harry Willis who dismayed to hear from us I “I a“ not at liberty to com- ment” he barked ONLY YESTERDAY - on OUTT) V inaugural state It’s a little early to dwell on youth” just itching to have their and other messages He writes what new pohtlcaI razzle‘dazzIe sa-- v m natlonal P°Jltlcs?°W hjs lde?s a1bori°vUs1 °n but one And every so often (usually l0in?and It831'!8?’ S”1 wiU P°P fn-UP- in 1976 nondirlofo r c A really Ses’ to" T--: money on SSLro Rose Mare Wool ’ we were brought up: posters ?id free or’elMnarv notes ac- - Phedelic some signmcant ' rock concerts to lure the Youth l0iaLe th6 1S‘024' Vote survey to? ££ V Tha n DlGf NIXON'S NOTES is spending NoV be r: even spoke grimly of the Soviets as already “seeking to organize support” for such an &il?ck the other Western among Communist countries Here in sum is the hidden mainspring of China’s policy three-minut- The odyssey takes the zany trio through Washington where the script calls for them to get lost and drunk among the im- posing government buildings The chief justice however would have no part of Nicholson drunk or sober Producer Avres therefore tobegan making shoot the arrangements segment in front of the National Art Gallery whose architecture is as stateiy as that of the saved? JOSEPH - WASHINGTON — Men don’t who gave the interview On what grounds then could bite dogs much oftener than Vice President Agnew says “no Dr Stark deny the sacrament to comment” to a personal query Mr Agnew if the vice president on a public event But he did so should approach the St An-t- o this reporter in a matter drew’s altar? The priest could where he was uniquely qualified do so under a canon which most to blow a trumpet for God and often applies to small parishes where the doings of Com- country Spiro Agnew an immigrant’s municants are well known to son was raised by his Virginia- - one another The Book of Common Prayer bom mother in the Episcopal Church His close friends know says that the rector may take that after mature years of excommunication action against devoutness he has expressed “an open and notorious evil disapproval of permissive and liver” or a person known “to antipatriotic attitudes by upper- - have done any wrong to his echelon clergy He hasn’t kept it neighbor by word or deed so be the a secret that he has found that congregation such In offended” like thereby organizations Young Americans For Freedom instance the priest “shall ad-t-o be sometimes a better moral vertise him not to come to the conduit than his church table until he have openly On the day he presided at the declared himself to have truly his opening session of the 93rd repented and amended that the Senate the vice president’s former evil life notice was called to an “ex- - Congregation may thereby be Asian Democracy Fades back- air-rai- WASHINGTON Trumpet for God Country family our community of Alarriott is named is the general chairman of the inaugural committee The multi millionaire motel and restaurant owner has Alark Austad Evans former Ogden radio announcer who now heads Merto Media’s Washington setup as one of his principal lieutenants The inaugural committee’s program is costing $4 million to present with expenses defrayed — hopefully —by sale of souvenir programs license plates medallions and tickets to the special events A seat on the reviewing stand close to the President’s own box costs $50 Utah will be represented in the inaugural parade by a float mainly sponsored by the Southern Pacific that tells our area’s most famous story— the driving of the Golden Spike US News and World Report estimates that as many as 250000 people will gather in the nation’s capital for the festivities that begin this evening with a reception for Vice President Spiro Agnew Closing event will be a worship service Sunday at the White House for the President Vice President and their invited guests No President of the United States has ever faced more challenges at the beginning of any term than Richard AI Nixon does this week ATold1 'dUhSethat6 “? Send(ip CBSo f t4 were the un weets Stkin that thinking Vietnam war rmissiv?" Pot c” etc” etc” WHAT KIDS WANTED Lots of people bulletins seriously took these Candidates d back and forth on their promises depending ori what the kids seemed to want Hard-ha- t that week hawks in streets the with grappled d loves Establish- ment-type- s at tha quaked of Youth prospect Taking Over i of our finest shilly-shallie- long-haire- p0fal hours' now we YtoVoteh know The no more a block-tha- n is Labor buster threat or the Farm bloc or the or even the Forgotten Aged (48 per American to only six per °mnch tor the ballyhooed Xorif aPP® on ‘7 hJido£ them slaY “2 see how tae UU'ihalt Youth Vote And politicians on 5Tto both sides will spend the next three yearning to 50 YEARS AGO it probaby went figurejut Urey State Sen A B Irvine in-- 7ere wro1g' optimisticT'to flat' next around thing? will be more ‘reduced a bill in the Utah “me °imon 5l votes 25 is after t5 hriaht pr 10 regul£te airPIane ’ election the in And nobody Lesafure candidates won't in Utah It would restrict racket can be blamed for 'orCgd slaD a j k d fegl flights over cities and crowds considering them worth going b gn sideburns and and prohibit the dropping of after Squeeze middteaged J objects from airplanes “except sand and ballast the election and the boys in the President John Watson of the ?m°7tffled 1”° m s s‘“ted kids even before hustling Weber B d t f was ink dlY on tne 26tb school would tbe “ Amendment Promoted rock concerts after Weber High closes in May of fnsbee demonstrations and concentrate entirely on so many and college work This confirmed throwing appearances the co speculation that had been campus fused candidates nuist have rampant for weeks they were back in Rush Week Ra1f R US Woolley Every Presidential hopeful consulted his “youth adviser’ geological survey engineer entertained the Ogden Rotary Senator McGovern had kids the Club Wlth a st0IY of traveling ringing doorbells by the Green River from Green thousands And even Candidate River Wyo to Green River Nixon tossed in an extra $1 condition Utah in a rowboat The river million to young 400 to the in 2000 feet miles drops right lever pull people An Ogdenite was fined $300 The pollsters were busy votoTbteofwtogtog “ j JS’I Q — Who was the first Pope to visit the United States? A — Paul VI who addressed the UN m 1965 What is the fame of Q Commodore Matthew Perry? A He opened Japan to world trade by sailing a U S ship into Tokyo Bay on July 8 - 1853 Q — What honor is bestowed a nation on its first day of upon U N membership? for keeping a supply of illegal too There were they told us A — Its flag is displayed in voters hidden in chicken a new six million liquor college centrally and higher than the coop in his yard and 18 million more “invisible others on that day |