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Show Grem-Geneva Times Thursday, May 2, 1968 Archie Moore-Fighter -Speaks On Problems l NOTE - Former light heavy-veight heavy-veight boxing champion Archie Moore, who made one of his title defenses in Ogden and is well iknown to Utahns, has spoken out jagainst rioting and violence. Like the vast majority of Negroes iri I America, he supports law and order. He believes that the practice prac-tice of some old-fashioned virtues vir-tues is the real answer to many of our problems today. Archie Moore is a man worth listening to. Laurence J. Burton ( R-Utal takes the following report from a recent statement by Mr. Moore. "The devil is at work in America, Amer-ica, and it is up to us to drive him out. Snipers and looters,! white or black, deserve no mercy.: Those who would profit from their' brother's misfortunes deserve no mercy, and those who would set fellow Americans upon each other deserve no mercy. "I'll fight the man who calls me an 'Uncle Tom.' I have broken brok-en bread with heads of state, chatted with presidents and trav el in . J ' " LOOK TO CHUCK PETERSON MOTORS 1963 CHEVROLET Impala Sedan, radio and heater, V8, auto, trans. $995 1966 CHEVROLET Impala 6 passenger Station - Wagon, V8, radio and heater, heat-er, automatic, power stear-ing stear-ing and factory air cond. : $2495 1966 FORD Fairlane 4 door sedan, radio ra-dio and heater, auto, trans. $1495 1965 OLDSMOBILE Jet Star 4 door Sedan, V8 radio and heater, automatic transmission. $1495 1967 FORD Mustang, V8, radio and heater, auto, trans., red finish, like new. $2495 1963 CHEVROLET Nova 6 passenger Station Wagon, radio and heater, auto, trans, and factory air conditioning. $995 1966 MERCURY Conver table, radio and heater, heat-er, power steering, low mileage, like new. $2195 1965 VOLKSWAGEN Sedan, radio 4 speed. and heater, $1245 All Cars Have a 1968 Safety Inspection Chuck Peterson Motors , m WEST 300 SOUTH PROVO 373-633? Doug Hancey - Glen Tipton - Bob McGee. . Dale Whitlock - Leroy: Harris - Frank Morgan - Don Jensen CONNIE LOWRY, left, and Kathy Hamson apply hand-rubbing techniques to furniture being refinished in interior decorating class offered for the first time this year at Orem High School. Given only to juniors and seniors the two classes have a total of fifty students including two boys. They learn principals of decorating, use of color, design, architectural styles and furniture furni-ture periods. Later they will study selective buying, renovating, refinishing, upholstering and textiles used in decorating. ANTIQUE CHAIR gets a new look with the artistic touch of Diane Mitchell, OHS student studying interior decorating. Working on other projects are Tina Gardner, left and Louise Cameron. The class is taught by Corwin Ogburn, a BYU graduate from Moss Point, Miss., who has been at OHS for four years. He also teaches arts and crafts to girls only but will include boys next year. Lapidary, silver smithing and casting (lost wax method),'Silk screen, ceramics, hooked rugs;, clay sculputring, feather stone and needle point are some of the crafts taught. eled all over the world. I was 'guaranteed national income.' Any born in a ghetto, but I refused fool knows that this is insanity, to stay there. I am a Negro, and Do we bring those who worked to proud to be one. I am also an get ahead down to the level of American, and I'm proud of that, those who never gave a damn? "The young people of today The world owes NOBODY black think they have a hard lot. They or whitea living. God helps the should have been around in the man who helps himself! 30s when I was coming up in St. 'Now then, don't get the idea Louis. We had no way to go, but that I didn't grow up hating the a lot of us made it. I became injustices of this world. I am a light heavyweight champion of the staunch advocate of the Negro world. A neighbor kid down the. revolution for the good of man-block, man-block, Clark Terry, became one kind. I've seen almost unbeliev-. unbeliev-. of the most famous, jaz? musicians able progress made in the last 'in ' the world. There were doc-'1 handful of years. Do "we want to tors. " lawyers and chiefs who become wild beasts bent only on out of that ghetto. One of revenge, looting and killing and laying America bare? Hate is bait, bait for the simple-minded. "Sure, I despised the whites who cheated me, but I used that . feeling to make me push on. If listen to the professional Orem Wins Tennis Team Matches Orem High's racketeers are still enjoying their winning ways, as again the young team atTiger-ville atTiger-ville scored victories over BY High and Lehi in Northern Division Divi-sion play. The Tigers won from Lehi 6-0 and Y Wildcats by a score of 4-1. Orem 4, BY 1 Singles Dave Porter, BY High, def. Mark Taylor, Orem, 3-6, 8-8, 6-3. Kevin Kirk, Orem, def. Jeff Fisher, BY High, 6-1, 6-1. Larry Lew, 0., def., Dave Barrus, BYH, 8-6, 2-6, 6-1. Doubles Branin and Berry, 0., def. Harman an Beckham, BY, 6-0, 6-1. Ostler-Stratton, O., def. Huish-Oldroyd, Huish-Oldroyd, BY, 6-3, 6-0. have been doing something for the past several years. I have been running a program which I call ABC Any Bay Can. By teaching our youth, black, white, yellow, and red, what dignity is, what self respect is, what honor is, I have been able to obliterate juvenile delinquency in several areas. I would now expand my program, prog-ram, change scope. If any boy can, surely any man can. I want to take teams of qualified people, top men in their fields, to the troubled areas of our cities. 1 know that the people who participated par-ticipated in the recent riots, who are participating and who will participate, are misguided rather than mad. "If some bigot can misguide, then I can guide. I've spent too much of my life building what I've got to put it to torch just to satisfy some ancient hatred of a man who beat my grandfather. Those men are long dead. Do we have to choke what could be a beautiful garden with weeds of hate? I say NO! And I stand ready to start 'Operation Gardner. I invite .the respected Negro leaders of our country to join me." ,ir!i f'lT'p came the top policemen in St. Louis came from our neighborhood. "We made it because we had a goal, and we were willing to work for it. Don't talk to me of your Be Ready t FOR THE 1 ountain Tops '64 Jeep Wagoneer Station Wagon tti AQC 4 Wheel Drive A Nice Wagon 3IJ '64 Scout Pick-Up n 4 Wheel Drive IZ7J '64 Volkswagen Combination Bus 10 Pass. Camper To Sleep the Family In $1)95 '62 GMC Pickup 4-Speed ftK Plenty of Power In The Mountains 0 J '64 Studebaker Pickup 4-Speed V8 ZQr Not The Sharpest, But Plenty of Go 073 '60 Chevrolet Pickup Long Box 4 70 c Original Paint J 7 J '64 Chevrolet Pickup, Utility Bed $1295 Someone Needs This Unit $1495 '64 Olds Station Wagon Powed Steering, Power Brakes, Automatic Transmission This One Will Take The Family Camping Morris Motors 1131 NORTH 500 WEST - PROVO 373-2114 ifwfin fiinr--rnTT r?:n Tf-m tin? rrmrr i rsXA A '. : Mr . ' i I it 11 L I J . m Mil i, i . I 1 0 you rabble-rousers, adhere to this idea of giving up everything you've gained in order to revenge re-venge yourself for the wrongs that were done to you in the past-then past-then you'd better watch your neighbor, because he'll be looting loot-ing your house next. Law and order is the only edge we have. No man is an island. "Granted, the Negro still has a long way to go to gain a fair shake with the white man in this country. But believe this: if we resort to lawlessness, the only thing we can hope for is civil war, untold bloodshed, and the end of our dreams. "We have to have a meeting of qualified men of both races. Mind you, I said qualified men, not some punk kid, ranting the catch phrases put in his mouth by some paid hate-monger. "There are members of the black community who call for separate nation within America. Well, I do not intend to give up one square inch of America. I'm not going to be told I must live in a restricted area. Isn't that what we've all been fighting to overcome? And then there is the . element that calls for a return to Africa. "For my part, Africa is a great place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there. If the Irishmen Irish-men want to go back to the Emerald Isle, let them. If the Slavs want to return to the Iron Curtain area, OK by me. But I'm not going to go to any part of Africa to live. I'm proud of ancestry, and of the country that spawned my forefathers, but I'm not giving up my country. I fought all my life to give my children what I'm able to give them today; a chance for development as citizens in the greatest country in the world. "I do not for a moment think that any truly responsible Negro wants anarchy. I don't think you'll find intelligent no, let's rephrase re-phrase that mature Negroes running wild in the streets or sniping at total strangers. God made the white man as well as the black. True, we haven't acted as brothers in the past, but we are brothers. If we're to be so many Cains and Abels, that's our choice, We can't blame God for it. "Something must be done to reach the Negroes and the whites in the ghettos of this country, and I propose to do something. "As a matter rsf nloln ttft T Orem 6 Lehi Singles Larry Lew, O., def. Tony Godfrey, Lehi, 6-2, 6-0. Ray Tuckett, O., def. Brown, Lehi, 64, 6-1. Barry Mervis, Orem, def. Carter, Lehi, 6-3, 6-2. Doubles Taylor-Kirk, O., def. Evans-Holcomb, Evans-Holcomb, L., 6-0, 6-1. Berry-Branin, O., def. Miner-Smith, Miner-Smith, L., 6-3, 6-3. Orem grabbed urst place in the Northern Division tennis meet Tuesday at Orem. The Tigers number one singles player, Mark Taylor, will play for second place in Wednesday's playoffs. Tuesday results-no. results-no. 1 singles, Porter def. Taylor, 6-4-6-0. Taylor to play Wednesday Wed-nesday for 2nd. No. 2 singles, Kevin Virk Orem, def Jeff Fisher, BY High, 6-3 6-0. Fisher will play again for 2nd. No. 3 singles, Larry Lew, Orem def Dave Barrus, 8-6-6-1. Barrus Bar-rus will play Tuesday for 2nd. No. 1 doubles, John Barry and Malin Brannin, Orem def Rick Beckham and Mark Harmon 6-0-6-1 No. 2 doubles, Brian Ostler and Ken Stratton, Orem def Mike Evans and Roy Carter of Lehi 6-0-6-1. Evans andCarter will play for 2nd. Wednesday. EASY DOES IT, BOB. Bob Simmons, Emcee for the 1968 Strawberry Days Queen Pageant in Pleasant Grove, Saturday night, gets modeling instructions fr6m CarolynKirkham Smith, chairman of judges and modeling. Stage manager DavidLarsen leads moral support. Bob Simmons To Emcee Queen Pageant PLEASANT GROVE Orem's own Bob Simmons, host of KSL radio's "Morning Show', will act as Master of Ceremonies for the Strawberry Days Queen Pageant Saturday night. The May 4th affair is scheduled for 8 p.m. at the Pleasant Grove High School Auditorium. Aud-itorium. A veteran broadcaster, Mr. Simmons began his announcing career while attending BYU. He obtained his B.S. Degree from BYU in 1958, his Masters Mast-ers in Science Education in 1965, and is presently working for his Doctorate inPsychologicalCoun-seling inPsychologicalCoun-seling at the U. of U. Having taught at Springville and Lehi High Schools, Mr. Simmons is now half-day psychological Counselor Counsel-or fortheGraniteSchoolDistrict. A native of Ogden, Bob and his wife Anita have lived in .Orem since 1960. They have four children: Mark, Stephen Judith Ann, and Jill, more affectionately known as Punkin Head, Teebee, Teensy Beans and Tuffy.' As Master of Ceremonies, Mr. Simmons will introduce the 13 Queen Contestants and provide continuity in the three divisions of outlined competition. Pleasant Grove's Strawberry Days Queen Pageant has existed in one form or another since 1921. The StrawberryDaysCele-bration, StrawberryDaysCele-bration, set for June 20j21, and 22, is listed by the American Automobile Association is one of twelve world-wide tourist attractions attrac-tions for the month 6i June. P If you own an outboard motor mo-tor sufficiently portable to carry car-ry in the trunk of your tar, it will pay to take it alonfrfon vacation. va-cation. According to figurejS from the authorities, you'll have to pay up to $15 per day for the privilege priv-ilege of renting a fishing motor-when motor-when you can find one. Boats, on the other hand, are plentiful and 'normally rent for about'$5 per day. MEW DEALER From now on... you'll find him on every car we sell! Meet the Little Profit. ! He's the best reason to buy your next car from us. You can bargain hunt all you want but our Little Profit will save ytiu more than anything you ever bargained for. J Because he's so little, he's helped us sella lot of cars. (Hes also helped us make a lot of friends by saving a lot of money for a lot of people.) Thanks to him, we've become the Little Profit volume dealer. Thdt's our reward. If you've wondered why we changed our slogan to "The Little Profit Dealer" it's because we decided to give credit where credit is due. This is true. The Little Profit Dealer P.E. ASHTON 175 North 100 West - Provo - 373-9500 |