OCR Text |
Show EXPOSING THE PUBLIC TO JUSTtGE ... The outcome of the Senate vote to confirm or deny Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court was never in doubt as far as the Clipper was concerned. Whichever way it went, the American public was the loser for having to view and listen to the most vite details and language ever broadcast over network airwaves. The process "damaged the moral fiber of America," we said. i H ISWEAR-TEW'RE Y''' h J f TAKING OVER 1 . jKECTERI The headline, "Mystery pests baffle officials," read like a promotion for a horror movie, but that was the situation last spring when hordes of mosquitoes terrorized county residents and abatement officials could not determine where they were coming from. egS3 g3- ega (mK TfKjE abawoied c ALL NAW f) DOtfiORICALW.- )' FAST "L BEINC S OF GOD.,, TV- 2 toJ'E ALL V H Is David Duke, the race-baiting, ex-Nazi, ex-wizard of the Ku j Klux Klan..., really just saying what you're thinking? Will he be the next governor of Louisiana or U.S. president? Those were the questions the Clipper asked during the Louisiana gubernatorial race. Duke was defeated in that election, but the question of how Duke will fare in the '92 presidential race still stands. PMu GWE WfA vi" "Confusing" was the best word to describe the watering schedules adopted by county cities and water districts during dur-ing the draught last spring. But it was not the adjective many county residents chose to describe them. Many were so angry about the situation that their responses to the schedules could not be printed in the Clipper without the words "expletive deleted." .THERE'S WW FEROCIOUS I K!l ,mJ FREEDOfA OF EXPRESSION I ; f- c- cat cue W II Despite the overwhelming opposition, the Kern River Pipeline was built through Davis County. Kern River officials assured federal, state and local officials the project would have no lasting impact on the watershed or environment. Now the U.S. Forest Service is saying pipeline has irreparably ir-reparably scarred the mountains and foothills east of Bountiful Boun-tiful for years to come. - - - - J The adoption of a new sex education manual for schools' touched off a big brouhaha among critics who contended it , went too far or didn't go far enough. The "Clipper" thought the manual's total lack of information on contraception did a disservice to Utah youth. Rock and roll is here to stay, but not in Farmington, where the city fathers decided the music was evil and not suited to be played in Woodland Park lest it undermine the moral fabric of the community. Others thought rock music would lead fifth columnists of undesirables to visit their fair city in ever-increasing ever-increasing numbers. w i |