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Show r Page 1972 Sunday, September 24, THE HERALD, Provo, Utah 34 PPAU, Davis 1 County In Accord ' ! 4 ''wwaiisS f - - f tr ' ' I. 111 A I 1 By WILBUR G. LANDREY One 90 tions. They expect it to Tail militarily, if not politically. They believe that the best will chance for any cease-fir- e come after the elections and of a cease-fir- e. The scenario for the Vietnam war could be, these officials believe, that with or without a the North Vietnamese cease-fir-e will revert to a war of attrition and try to achieve a military knockout again in two or three years time. These officials, who have been deeply involved in carry-in- g out American policy here, do not share the view that the Communists will gradually take oyer. Nor do they believe that the South Vietnamese themselves were as disturbed by the tactics of President Thieu in getting elected and his regulathe South tions controlling Vietnamese press as are Americans. South Vietnamese institutions and practices are their own, not what others believed they should be, these sources said. two-tim- Academy Award winner for film editing while his brother, Charles, was the youngest member ever to have served in the California legislature at that time. "This health (the department's) type of services puts Davis County way ahead of a lot of other counties in Utah," V"T These officials are not certain that there is much of a chance even then. But they note that seem to sides both be manuevering for position in preparation for the contingency miles northeast of the capital), The American military as- rocket Saigon." The officer, who has access sessment is that North Vietnamese Defense Minister Vo to the best available allied said that he Nguyen Giap failed in the intelligence, continue major offensive which he believed Giap would launched across the Demilitatrying to interdict Route 4, the rized Zone separating the two rice road from the Mekong Vietnams March 30, taking as Delta to the capital, for varying many as 100,000 men ki'led in periods. The Communists already had the failure. A qualified American officer tried and failed to seize about here said that, nevertheless, the 10 miles of the road, he said. If Giap could do what he next two months "nre going to be very difficult." wanted, in American military "Giap still has hopes of view, he would knock out the pulling things out on the U.S. Military Assistance compsychological or political side," mand headquarters, radio stahe said. "The time is now. He tions, police stations anything will do everything he can that he could do to cause fear and will have some political or confusion, He will, as one officer psychological impact blow up it in basketball Bien Hoa (the big allied base 14 described terms, order a "full court press", hoping to get international headlines and discredit Distinguished both President Nguyen Van FREEVILLE, N.Y.(UPI) -T- Thieu and the program of wo brothers who were former Vietnamization. citizens of the George Junior With all those possibilities, the Republic, American however, military teen-ag- e located men believe that the rurrent community here about 10 miles from Communist offensive has failed themIthaca, distinguished to achieve anything significant selves in later life. Ralph and that the expected CommuDawson became s e nist blows will fail as well. offensive. UPI Foreigi Editor SAIGON (UPD-U- .S. military and civilian officials here expect the North Vietnamese to attempt a spectacular blow, perhaps against Saigon, before the American presidential elec- not before. and South Both American Department. to Commission Vietnamese officials appear Davis County is a if feel even there that said Chairman Stanley Smoot the struggle will go the agreement was reached after cease-fir- e on for yeais, even after correlaa meeting between the that tion committee and the PPAU. American withdrawal, and must the South Vietnamese A spokesman for the associaon their tion said the Clearfield clinic eventually stand or fall will be phased out by Oct. 31, own. They caution, however, that and the 200 patients taken over American military and economthe health by department. be ic aid will probably Richard Scott, interim executo South Vietnam for tive director of the PPAU, said necessary to come. the health department estimates years As a date, the American it can provide clinical services to to as many as 600 patients in presidential elections appear dominate the predictions of its first year of operation. both Americans and South He said the PPAU is not interested in functioning as the Vietnamese. That is the impression after sole agency providing planned several days of conversations services. parenthood both in Saigon and further The organization's programs where the South Vietnanorth, in Davis County acted as a catamese have just had a notable in lyst bringing the community in recapturing Quang to realize the need for family victory whose fall was the high Tri, said. planning services, Scott mark in the Communist Easter tured most of the town located on Highway miles south of Da Nang. Bottom, a legless South Vietnamese war veteran becomes a refugee as he is forced to leave Song Ve, South Vietnam, before advancing North Vietnamese units. THE GRIM FACE OF WAR is seen in these two United Press International photos taken in Vietnam. Top, a South Vietnamese soldier in Mo cautiously explores a destroyed house Due, searching for remains of North Vietnamese army units who infiltrated and cap - X, FARMINGTON, Utah ( UFI) -The Planned Parenthood Association of Utah and the communities of Davis County have made their peace. Under terms of an agreement between the PPAU and the Davis County Correlation Committee, the PPAU will continue to operate educational and informational programs in the county, but will cease clinical operations. Clinical care will be provided by the Davis County Health Big N. Vietnam Attack Seen Prior to American Elections Missouri, on Aug. 2, 1956, became the first state in the nation to let contracts for work on the Interstate Highway System. On the diplomatic side, American civilian officials believe that the best chance for a will come only after cease-fir- e the U.S. elections. he said. The funds the PPAU had allocated for providing clinical services in the county are now released, Scott added, and will be used in expanding programs in other areas of the state. Three Plead xlL INSmn Can-fil- l aiiil fiiniilun- our Guilty to iON DH.IXKKV ..f of all - fiirnitiirr il wurrhiniM- In al ik ur CiHiijilHi- hoiiH- rlmrf-i- fiirnitiirr - - Ml no SH I in vnur Iiomh- - i rharjjr ixl. iihmI iiiiMrtanl. ton can DKl'KMtON lo mi lluil toil oilli ymr iin Imx-- alai S'lir inlcrior Hi vmr I' of al mi liarpi- - . Drug Charges CASCADE, Idaho (UPI) -Tyoung persons including a Utahn have pleaded guilty to various felony charges for possession of drugs. Entering guilty pleas were Randolph Guy Balice, 23, Salt Lake City, for possession of cocaine with intent to deliver; Michael E. LeRue, 18, Tjmpe, Ariz., for possession of peyote; and Tamara Sue Taylor, 19, Paco, Wash., for possession of hree Two Scientists Predict: Earth's Atmosphere to Become Steam in a Few Billion Years By AL ROSSITER JR. UPI Space Writer CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)-T- he sun is getting hotter and two scientists predict it will turn earth's atmosphere into thick steam a few billion years from now. Drs. Carl Sagan and George Mullen, of Cornell University's Laboratory for Planetary Stu- dies, also believe Mars will warm up and become more like earth in 3 billion to present-da4.5 billion years. "If there are any organisms left on our planet in that remote epoch, they may wish to take advantage of this coincidence," the two scientists suggested in a recent issue of the magazine "Science." Sagan and Mullen based their calculations on studies that show the sun has become about 40 per cent brighter during the past 4.5 billion years and will to generate more continue energy as it evolves during the next several billion years. Earth's present temperatures represent a balance between the sunlight that falls on the planet, the heat radiation that leaves and the heat that is kept from escaping by the atmosphere acting somewhat like a greenhouse. Sagan and Mullen plotted the effects of varying solar energy on atmospheric conditions backward as well as forward. the primitive earth receiving less sunlight from a cooler sun, they found in their initial calculations that the global temperature would have dropped to below the freezing point of seawater 2.3 billion years ago. This disagrees with geologic evidence that shows there was abundant liquid water on earth much earlier than that. But if earth's early atmosphere had a little ammonia in it, Sagan and Mullen concluded the greenhouse effect would have been stronger and earth would not have frozen despite the lower amount of sunlight reaching it. More Heat Looking into the future, the scientists said that as the sun continues to evolve, the surface temperatures of earth will increase. More water vapor will thus be put into the atmosphere which in turn will absorb more heat. The result will be what is With called a "runaway greenhouse effect," eventually raising the global temperature above the boiling point of water. This kind of runaway is what scientists believe has happened to Venus, which is shrouded in a dense blanket of carbon dioxide. Space probes have found that the atmospheric pressure on the Venusian surface is about 90 times that of earth with temperatures of 800 degrees Fahrenheit. "Earth will then resemble contemporary Venus, but with ' nlo Vonnrt k One aiH bar represents earth's average surface air pressure. "It is difficult to imagine what could be done to prevent this runaway, even with a very advanced technology, but at the same epoch the global temperature of Mars will become very similar to that of present-da- y earth." peyote. Sentencing was continued until Oct. 30 in Ada County Fourth District Court. The three were arrested in McCall July 5. golden.go!deneye duck b commonly called the "whistler" because of the loud, high-pitched noise made by its wings. if Water Heaters Water Softeners FASTEST Sprinkling Systems SERVICE IN TOWN Save "80 to 160 IVERY DE a set INSTALL NOW CALL Sears Best Bedding At The Lowest Prices Ever "SEARS-O-PEDI- C SUPREME" THE EXPERTS E?QUG5 CRAGIIEAD DEPENDABLE PRESCRIPTION SERVICE PROVO DIAL 373-100- 3 Phone 56 North 2nd West 373-267- 2 FreelTelivery 19.99 "Sears-O-PedTwin or Full Mattress or Foundation ('Immim- - fount or a full f'-'-luiixImU of i liaiifUj AEC Blast Study Released US (UPI) - 1 Regular In in iiiiM-rriii- (hick. Im-i" KSWOiimiSrl r rim or full miiimii1h liiiM-iirin- coiU. Roth ioi-pra- l- YOUR CHOICE ic ha- - latt-- tour Saniliw-!- 77TY 0DOD mattn-x- ith Iwick 9Q "a message indicating where structural damage might occur from the proposed Project Wagon Wheel experiment in southwest Wyo- A structural study done by Dames and Moore Consulting Engineers for El Paso Natural Gas Co., and a review of it by John A. Blume and Associates were released this week. The review was contracted by the AEC. In the Wagon Wheel project, five sequential nuclear blasts are planned to release gas trapped underground near Pinedale. The AEC says the project is still in the design stage and no execution has been authorized as yet. It says the blasts would not occur before the fal! of 1974. MONDAY SEPT. WEDNESDAY SEPT. 27th Ribbon Cutting Mon. 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