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Show A in. THE Wednesdjy. August IS. Resume Proposal Urged Peace Talks Deadlocked For North, South Koreans longest Air War in History' for the immediate future When they are withdrawn, officials a. the fYoUgon say. tt will be very otr, forred to a close by a Congress slowly The total withdrawal grown sick of I'.S involvement mijft take a ?ar to complete Defense officials hope mainin Indochina It began secret the day after taining this force will dissuaae Communist ith a kud of Christmax 1961. insurgents from bombs dropped on South attacking the flights Vietnam by an American adviser dk.il) by unarmed U S Cl3fc, still war with hii Vietnamese flying delivering arms and supplies to Most the almost 600 Cambodia, and the unamed U S counterpart in an old, propellor-dnve- n wxmrv usance planes still flying T 28 that bore South warplanes in the U S Indochina armada will remain at their periodical! over Cambodia letnamese markings. It became official in late 1964. bases in Thailand and on Guam Even if these planes are when the U S. Air Force brought its own jet warplanes into the fray It endd at midnight EDT Tuesday, quite publicly, in the final dust and thunder of bombs rained on Cambodia by some 4! U.S. and more than 200 ntNOM PENH (ITI; -C- be a big job. The B52 car. carry Anierican up to X.0U0 pounds of bombs and By order of Congress, it cannot ompared with the awesome the of the F4 and Fill up to 11.000 American air power, begin again. night Air Force is a pounds. The air war 's toll on the ground CambMian The T28 can only carry four in North and South Vietnam. rraniscule air wing whose most bombs. Laos, and Cambodia may never potent weapon is the propeller-drive- n In the past two months, the T28 fighter bomber. be fully known. The cost to the The air war will now be k ft to United Stares has tried to boost United Statu in men, money, munitions and machines was the Cambodians, who can hardly the Cambodian Air Force by deliver the punch of the U.S. giving the government more staggering It included: -- More than 308 000 B52 warplanes that have dumped T28 s, as well as the eight C123 strikes and some 18 million thousands of tons of bombs on transports. Cambodian pilots fighter bomber raids, costing an suspected rebel positions over have been taken tc Thailand for estimated $21 training, but even so there are billion, in the the past -' years. All told, there are about 100 new only about 400 trained pilots 1? years almost following aircraft in the Cambodian Air in Cambodia. America's official involvement. Can the Cambodian Air Force 9 million tons of Force, including about 40 T28 s, More than dropped a total 36 helicopters, eight CI23 troop even begin to replace the waves almost four times the size of all traasports and a variety of small of American bombers that are no longer flying? munitions dropped by the allies observation planes. One highly placed U.S. source The T28 is faced with the during World War II. More than 800 fliers dead monumental task of replacing says he doubts the T28's will have from hostile action, more than the American B52's. swmgwing much effect, although they might 800 others killed in accidents not Fill's. F4 Phantoms and A7 do a creditable job in providing s that have a air cover for road and river attributable to hostile action, and some 860 missing in action since plastered rebel positions. It will convoys. B EDWARD K. DELONG WASHINGTON ilPI The r in history is longest air - Vietnam prevent that country 's iir force from picking up where America left off And Cambodia s air force is judged too weak to keep up the air war alone. Yet tne Pentagon is keepinj alive a faint threat if not the likelihood H might ask Conthe gress for authority to half-oW- n J Cambodian Air Force Left On its Own... fighter-bomber- d i 4- 1 1 theirevacuation. IVnta;;on officials say this would be done by commercial airliner if at all possible Past history shows, however, that if the fighting were intense the U.S. Marines might be ordered into Cambodia to secure the airport at Phnom Penh and the road leading to it from the city. Premiere Set U.S. bombing persons were arrested at the White House after they knelt to pray in a war. The amendment approved by both houses of Congress in June read: "Notwithstanding any other provisions of the law, on or after Aug. 15. 1973. no funds herein or heretofore appropriated may be obligated or extended to finance directly combat activities by United States military forces in or over or from ofjlhe shores of North Vietnam. South Vietnam, demonstration that against bombing. Among them were antiwar priest Daniel Berrigan, whose parole for destroying draft records ended Saturday, and his brother, Jerome, a teacher at Col- Community Onondaga Pickpockets Ber-riga- That took America out of the air war in Cambodia, which had dragged on six months past the cease-fire- . Vietnam Strings attached to U. S. aid to South - Press stormed the Carthage. III., jail where they were being held. Mrs. Lynn E. Smith said today the reunion is not a meeting of factions of the two churches as such, but of descendents of the parents of the founder of both, utilizing their common interests and heritage. The INDEPENDENCE. Mo. of second 'annual reunion descendents of Joseph and Lucy Mack Smith will begin here Thursday for three days. Joseph and Lucy Mack Smith were the parents of Joseph Smith Jr.. who in 1830 founded the Mormon Church, formally known as the Church of Jesus Chrsit of letter day Saints. The reunion was held last year and voted an annual affair. It draws members of both the Mormon Church, headquartered in Salt Lake City, and the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of latter-daSaints, headquartered in Independence. GRAM Gerald Secretary Warren White Itmuma -P- .t.tnpt ii by 3 oooooooooooooeooooooo o Entertainment Services o O 1" w 1 ft M Phone i 785-348- SO rzr--T- r I - i i onuvy ar )1 S:r.crl:tr.3th!ny CS3 6mT3 They Call Lie I J Trinity tiiiLU i.m back in the saddle 1 STARTS T0.'3TE AT 2 TCHTKES JoeeDh CLevlne Preeenu Trinity Is Still LSyKamo" SHOW FROM 9:00 PM MANN THEATRES OF YOUR SANITY, PRAY IT ISNT TRUE! I ) " '- ., - 0 Tonite gcu::dzq PL Grove tvJkfli&j KM m 1 I am I i rs INTERMOUNTAIN lfflW'7. ;WiiiW!fr Lr:::z:-i8ZLS pte it vm m i i:js Mil 1 - INC HWTV3 - nnTtrrsi7i rainwn uuisscni PAMEU FRANKLIN RODDY McDOWaLL VT.mm ni.nnM r CUVE REMLLamiGAYLE hUNMCHTTas E rathe "ViAKcr JA MRS H. MQK ALBIJtTFEM:U&IRVtAN also! a creat s?i:.e-ti:;gli:- ;g N Si -- r IWo b, M It I HI MAX co-k- it Ann 1 t k KidPnidiictdhy StrccnrAr h RJCHARDMATHLSOM both theatres J JAMES COBURN I 1 M s rt "VALDE2 IS C0MI."G" Vl :30 t:4S 22, flCflDEMy 373 4470 mm Ac 4 Mtxax. SHOW 16 West 1230 North I i1 r iiil i BADGE 373 M fffS 3:30 - 5.30 7i30 MANX TMEATOf J II inomtn Ml KO I 374 i j is. - Ion Beit v, Mirtt. DaRy 1:30 J vim. ANV t MS I UiO$ jMt i 6vi2i St itlMC TIME IS TACOTIME" 1 ii20 w!nMt7Tes MtUW I I I I f I I BURT LANCASTER If E03 i)(iI!JII PIDGEON CO'HIT DOTH THZATRZS 1 pQk VifA J VrALTER MICHAEL SARRAZIN thriller a psychological horror film! i I I w TACOTSMl Completely Air Conditioned Every Thur. Night S PM To Cloting ir r GO-T- a cux ix kis sock a mi rcost n kis celt tke kest ex - cop akouks tt m THEATRES, Keep Cool At Uh (viwSSSl Joaeph CLevtnc Pmtents again and a Proto, 0 'TWe i rajc:rsi!lvJ V tomcouwtiv I onoo 0 i u i 3 0 C.UMeTrUlli" 7:30 4 11:00 TrUfe h Stl MT 9;20 IAT. MAT. 2:00 Mo. Family Jitc A rrii2? f United Artists Children ' I IW ' 7 Adults 1.S0 inclu. BYU Student -- IJ 224-123- FORTHESAKE 1.75 . $1 7S remily.SlQOO Under ooooooooooooooooooooo m Il'l I OT.FRCM7:0QPM C02AL TCIATRE nm kJk.At. e 8:15 p.m. o riicrnnr nirmnno tpcatdc o OVMUVflUL. VUllUUll IIILniUL A q q sou srart i. urem y The Reorganized Church resulted from followers of Joseph Smith. Jr. who did not follow Brigham Young to Utah. Before the two factions split, the church founded by Joseph Smith Jr. had its beginnings in New York state and moved its to headquarters successively Kirtiand. O.. Missouri and Nauvoo. 111., before Joseph Smith Jr. and his brother. Hyrum. were murdered by a mob which TKurtoov-Saturd- D and REDUCED PRICES 1 rKrSei. Ticket! Lwoilabie ol 2CMI Ori Kiont 664 2221 oHw 2 p et. O wAsjioATEs CONTINUOUS -- lfr Peanen, IPM, ScTo) li 1, lUura'll,- III j 1 PERFORMANCES pg Cai . v I VilSk L. business." a 'THE ORDER IS LOVE" i-- Hftn i railed in the administration of Vientiane Tuesday lor b.h sides aa and the iwal capital of Luans to break a deadlock over Praoaiig iVutirs mm said only that. "The House is open for American Fork, Utah Open 7: 00 Show 7: IS ITI - Asked about the administr-tion'- s policy toward the demonstrations. Deputy White House Joseph Smith Sr. Descendants Schedule Reunion in Missouri Is V1KNT1ANK. mm "Harry in Your Pocket." starring James Coburn. Michael iV'-J-Sarrazin. Trish Van Devere and Walter Pidgeon, will have an area premiere in Provo 158 the bombing, Wednesday at the Academy and 6. the number Pioneer Theaters. In most cases, the demonstra"Harry in Your Pocket," the tors stepped out of the White story of a gang of pickpockets, House tourist line and knelt in was filmed on locations in Salt prayer. All were charged with Lake City, Seattle and British "unlawful entry." a charge Columbia, Canada. Producer-directo- r Bruce which their lawyer. Philip Hirschkop. said didn't make Geller is the creator of two sense because all had entered in popular television series, i1 the normal way with other "Mission: Impossible" and llV tourists. Charges against some of "Mannix." "Harry in Your those arrested in the early weeks Pocket" is his first movie. of the protests have been dismissed in court. Other cases Now are pending. lege. Sjvacuse, N.Y. "I came to pray. My friends are here." said Daniel "They can arrest me if Many of the demonstrators they want." The protests ended five weeks were sponsored by a group called of prayer demonstrations at the Community for Creative NonWhite House, directed against violence. LaosorCambodia.- "- - On Movie of Demonstration on Last Day Results in Arrests and brought to tUPIl arrested since July the On m R 19S4. WASHINGTON the last day of of Cambodia 60 i i fighter-bomber- 3.705 fixed Some wing aircraft, worth an estimated $6 billion or more, lost from combat causes. and The congressional decree that banned U S combat activity in Indochina from today forward marked the first time in history Congress had forced the end to a n I Fighting Breaks Out in Laos South krean SKUl i however. attacked, Pentagon Park Chung Hee eac taiks between the Lao-tu- n offitiats say Caere will be no U. S President officials and pnvCoianiu-nis- t retaliation unless Congress called on Vrth Korea t xUy la I h e i I.o were P his proposal that the two accept approves. deadlocked Koreas todjy and governseek simultaneous Given the mood of Congress. M ment sourer said fighting had membership in the I'mted tuoken out in southern U ajipers possible Congress might Nations bar flights of any kind of Tie smirves Mid Communist Park made the call in a pVlh amencan aircraft brfot it at a ceremony trxm had launched attai ks on would approve retaliatory sta- delixered nernnuiit piKMtums around kes marking the i.th annnerviry U from Hung Hene. on Route I in south-;ttra- l The only possibility for even Korea s liberation Laos, and at Pak &ig. brief U. S military involvement Japanese rule at the end of Wot Id lurthtT siRith near the Holovens in Cambodia that is now readily HarlunW45 myself of this Il.iteau "Availing apparent lies in the approxi1 also 500 occasion, urge North still Americans or in mately The sources said several around Itmom Penh, including Korean aiflhorities to ctept were positions 3UQ attached to the U. S wnlvM reserve our assertion government m the Pak S.wg fighting oivrrun shtmld that iht North Smith arJ Embassy. s.nd the Pat net The State Department has apply together for membership Thi atfurvtitly was earning out the refused to evacuate nonessential m the I'nited Nations." he said "The entry of both South and assaults in an attempt to get the American civilians despite pleas from Congressmen and the North into the I'nited Nations Vientiane government to agree will by no rnrans pfrpetuate the to their terms for a coalition reported recommendation of the nafional division rr interfere government. U.S. ambassador to Cambodia. Premier Prince Souvanna Phnom Penh is surrounded, but with efforts for uiuf K'at km U S officials see no immediate threat that a will fall If Phnom Penh did appear about to fall and the lives of American civilians seemed in danger, it would be up to the Defense Department to carry out . l ut-p- jje HERALD, Provx, 55J51 ii n |