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Show Page 12-- THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Wednesday, November 7, 1973 Published Reports Disputed ORLEANS (UPI) -NMarion M. Johnson has disputed published he said that reports believed disclosure" of secret Warren Commission evidence would give fresh ammunition to those who claim conspirators killed President John F. KenNEW ational archivist j nedy. si ' t "I simply did not say that there for the any support in that records conspiracy theory are withheld," Johnson said. He was contacted in his office at the National Archives in Washington, D. C, following a New Orleans news conference earlier by The conducted National Tattler, a Chicago-base- d weekly publication. The Tattler called the news conference to announce publication this week of its special edition on the 10th anniversary of the Nov. 22, 1963 assassination of Kennedy. said, The Tattler article has viewed who "Johnson, almost all the classified docucontain thev ments,, said nothing to support commission claims that Kennedy was killed by Lee Harvey Oswald acting alone." , According to Johnson, nowe-vethe release of the remaining 2C per cent of the Warren Commission's still sequestered file, "shouldn't disprove all the because theories conspiracy those are going to go on and on - rv e x was Wi 1 . 1 Ml C 1 - LI 'I l : TjkpsN s - i '! r, I Mr, J III 'M'.' WU---, regardless of any material made public." The files, said Johnson, "just don't deal with the conspiracy theories that have been advanced. They wouldn't lend any support to those theories. They just don't deal with them." Asked if he had seen anything in tiie startling he has handled, segments Johnson said, "I don't recall seeing anything that would support the conspiracy theories. I don't know of e single case where there is factual support for - ; still-secr- comtcsT B0II1LESS EOilLiSS ifiiil RiiOCil Li POT QOAST conspiracy theories." .v Kissinger To Miss Oslo Event i 1 DAG B10W1S 2 L0S POO wm ''Mrf , Sj w VJ ' !l : . 1M ,; J I'itili iLt iJt m I I M 1 mm i1 X I 1 12' si M " lK IB 3 EiMll - (jflir-.- nrv-ofoF- rri 13 customarily given by laureates of the Nobel Peace Prize." Kissinger and Le Due Tho, senior North Vietnam's diplomat, were awarded the Peace Prize jointly because of their success m negotiating the Paris agreement for peace in Vietnam. Tho subsequently refused to accept the award because he said there still was no peace in Vietnam. the Kissinger interpreted award as being given for achieving the end of the actual fighting by the United States there and the establishment of a truce. OMJB Miiiti!! 4 .1 1 eoii-i- i 60Z. J SUM 1IM if (IK , I , mi IM 111 F -SWASHINGTON (UPI) ecretary of State Henry A. Kissinger will not attend the Dec. 10 ceremony in Oslo to receive his Nobel Peace prize "because of the press of business in a world beset by recurrent crisis." The State Department made public Tuesday a letter by Kissinger dated Nov. 2 to the Nobel Committee in which he designated the U.S. ambassador to Norway, Thomas Byrne, to represent him. Saying he was "deeply moved by the award," Kissinger said that he "would hope and consider it a privilege, should you so wish, to visit Oslo at a future appropriate date to deliver the lecture which I understand is MINUTE MAID - r - t ; - i f li i I it n mwtmi c:ii:i':itiC2 Basebaff f w j Card 'Nuts' Await Meet ifihr i m ' 1 ! 'Ui JKJ , aBJ 100 BOiiUS STAMPS 100 BOHUS STAMPS WITH Till PU1C1IAS1 WITH Till PURCHASE OF ANY 3 LEGGED OR DOUBLE tVI GIVE 100 BOiiUS Till PURCHASE Of AIIY Vi GALLON ROUHD 0911 UAOOn I .,Uj i.m L.i..iiL-iii-- 'rr .1 " """ CAI1 ""-"- " PUiCfiASi! COLD S87KUI BS?( BEATS P07 ROAST 3 3 LI. a'wfaMir 171713 TI WITH Ti! OF AIIY LrLi y ljlA "And we're encouraging the general public to search through iheir attics and shoe boxes for ' f AA BAMIIC CTAflUe k A ft tlfltJflS: STAMPS WITH J iiwir PURCHASE OF AIIY BUEASTiD d ril, 9 js gum-scente- Rathgeber began collecting cards when he was seven and considered himself lucky to have a few nickels to spenJ on cards. Fen m t f By RICK VAN SANT CINCINNATI (UPI) -B- aseball cards are not kid stuff to some SO enthusiastic adults who are expected to bring some of their bubble d 100,000 treasures to a baseball card collectors convention here this weekend. is being The convention organized by Bob Rathgeber, 27, a Cincinnati Reds publicity man and admitted "baseball card nut." Rathgeber has a 30,000-carcollection. "For the past five years Detroit has had a baseball card collectors convention in the summer," Rathgeber said. "We hope to make Cincinnati the winter convention center. if I J 1 I f . - in not to cards bring necessarily to part with, but just to show around." 1 VJHIT I III06 GflOilfJP ICIIG SHE 10 LB. BAG CAHS 46 OZ. Ill-- C GOLD MEDAL unci 1FD |