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Show Faye 24--71 IE HERALD. Prwn; Utah Sunday, July 9: 1972 usAFBomber Crashes Into NAACP Official Charges: law's constitutionality, ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-N- ew Byrn York State's liberal abortion had aJied to be appointed law has been declared con- guardian of all unborn children stitutional Friday by the state's iii the state and for the court to AG ANA, Guam (UPI)-- A decide whether embryos should highest court. The Court of Appeals voted 2 be legally recognized as huU.S. Air Force B52 bomber to uphold the 1970 law, which mans. crashed into the sea today about 300 miles west of Guam is the nation's most liberal. It In thj majority opinion, while en rcute to a combat permits abortion for any reason Associate Justice Charles D. mission over Vietnam, the Air during the first 24 weeks of Breitel said, "The Constitution Force announced. pregnancy for boh residents does not confer or require legal and nonresidents of the state. personality for the unborn; the A spokesman said all six Robert M. Byrn, the legislature may, or it may do law professor at Frdham something less, as it did in the crewmen bailed out and were spotted on life rafts by U.S. University who filed the origin- abortion statute, and provide search planes despite heavy al court challenge, said he some protection far short of rains and seas. But he said would appeal "immediately" to conferring legal personality." there was no indication of their the U.S. Supreme Court. Breitel agreed that the condition. In his suit challenging the embryto is human "if oniy ixon Issues Declaration Of War Agains f Black Kids DETROIT (UPI)-R- oy executive director of the has charged that NAACP, President Nixon issued a of war against "declaration black children" by opposing busing as a tool to achieve racial balance in the nation's schools. "I'll never forgive Mr. Nixon of war for his declaration against black children," Wilkins told a news conference at the end NAACP National of a week-lon- g that seethed Convention n sentiment. with Wilk-in- anti-Nixo- "The cnly that thing would satisfy us would be for the President to withdraw his stand against busing. And I would be a hopeless optimist if I thought (he would do) mat." Wilkins stressed, nowever, that criticism of the President's actions to put a halt to busing s, y. Court Backs Abortion Law raid, was "whether a human entity, conceived but not yet born, is and must be recognized as a person in the law." This, he said, is a largely religious and philosophical argument and the answer cannot be found in law. The legislature, thus, has the power to rrake the decision, he concluded. "The issues are outside the law unless the legislature should provide oth- erwisa. anti-Nixo- n, achieve for the purpose of school desegregation should not be taken as opposition to Nixon's candida.7. "If there has been any n expectation of an resolution, it came from no one and ladies the else but gentlemen of the press," he told newsmen before mounting the rostrum to conclude the V- - anti-Nixo- ' ; ' June Rate OnJobless 1 I Goes Down WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The Labor Department says the unemployment rate has taken h its biggest drop in seven years as virtually every categcry of worker found jobs in a record June. The unemployment rate stood at 5.5 per cent, down from 5.9 per cent in May. It marked the lowest jobless percentage in 20 months. Although the number of workers reached a record 81.7 million, the number still looking ROY WILKINS, executive director of the NAACP, makes a for jobs also rose, by 1.1 million in June, to 5.4 million. point during a news conference in Detroit at the 83rd annual NAACP convention. He severely criticized President Nixon Another 91,000 persons for his stand on busing during the press conference. dropped out of the labor force in June. Thenumbers were not considered in computing the unemployment rate, announced Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The Labor Department also reported Friday that wholesale food prices climbed 1 per cent television community affairs in By KENNETH J. BRADDICK from May to June. Rising food SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -- college, admits a lot of the work prices, caused largely by a 4.7 Did you know what the first man on gathering information about per cent in livestock prices, arrested in Abilene in Wild blacks was made easier were foreshadowed by an West days was black? Or that by a New Deal program of the Agriculture Department report San Francisco's first hotel was 1930s. The federal government last week. built by a Negro? And the first at that time researched black man to die for independence of history in the United States to meet demands from a restive the United States was black? is he and population. knows, Diggs Larry Diggs said he's having much spreading the word. trouble finding material more months 24, Diggs, spent painstakingly researching the about other minority groups. One reason, he said, is because role blacks played in development of United States, some- many Mexicans, for example, he describes as "all in a have had to claim to be Spanish ZION NATIONAL PARK, thing work" as director of to make a success. day's Utah (UPI) Superintendent ethnic minorities at San FranBegins Project Robert I. Kerr says there was Diggs raid he began his a 10 per cent decrease in the cisco radio station KSFO. His research led to producproject when he got fed up with number of visitors to Zion Natapes on hearing people say, "The blacks tional Park this June compar- tion of 50 good and are compiaimng uus country ed to the same month a year black contributions bad which are played between hasn't done anything for them, ago. but what have they done for He said 161,766 visitors ogled records day and night. this country?" The station that reports the cliffs and canyons of the "The idea is to play over and from since listeners response this southern Utah park June over information in short shots the first broadcast was aired while 374,678 tourists have vishe said. ited the park so far this year. six months ago has been using simple words," two "You sandwich it between for overwhelming. Requests of a booklet records and listeners hardly 15,000 copies have notice it. Play it often enough containing transcripts and soon the image that the been received by the d NEW YORK (UPI) -P- aint black man is just a good station. makers must love merger dancer ... it doesn't actually get Many Write for Books washed out but it gets jumbled makers. Schools and community orgainto other things. It kind of The nation's longest railroad, nizations, as well as individual the 26,000 - mile Burlington listeners, have written for the washes the brain." Norther, sys it's spending books. The information has Diggs admits he didn't want more than $20 million to repaint been included in curricula for to challenge mistaken notions in its 1,200 locomotives and 113,000 some elementary schools in the the iittle messages because that freight cars cascade green. area. may just turn people off. He has a commentary and doThat was the new corporate is so with the Diggs pleased color selected when the Chica- results that he's started work cumentary program for that and Quincy, on a series about Mexican-American- side. go, Burlington Great Northern and Northern Rather, he said, he wants the Japanese, Chinese Pacific merged two vears aeo. and Filipinos all of whom information to be received in a He make up large segments of listener's subconscious. thinks he's been successful California's polyglot population. The Louisiana Territory was The young black, who has because of almost no adverse given to France by Spain under traveled extensively overseas reaction and a huge demand for the Treaty of Paris in 1763. and began working in radio and copies of his broadcasts. Hi it If month-to-mont- Research Uncovers Role Of Black Man in America June Tourists ToZionPark Show Decrease ' ' " : - 8 V V V V V Nr (1 GROUP) 45" ACETATE JERSEY PRINTS (DESIGNER CUTS) ,ri,lv ii. REG. TO $1.69 YD. ' I i I ft. V V V V Nc' ( 1 v ii i S v v" Sf1" ( 1 V ACRYLIC 88 $ REG. TO $4.00 YD. '1 V V V V HAWAIIAN PRINTS i 5 ' 1 ..... , f I GROUP) 45" 4it ', ' YD. YD. "V Jk. tv Jt. J-- GROUP) 40 DENIER te Giant Paint Job s NYLON TRICOT urn: REG. TO $2.00 YD. YD. v white-oriente- (LIMITED QUANTITIES) v v V v" V v' f' V r v v '"' w v v v rv 45" WINDORAH" f s WOVEN POLYESTER : t s, Pentagon Paper d By JACK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (UPI)-T- he d Pentagon Papers trial begins Monday. A federal judge has denied defense motions to dismiss charge against Daniel Ellsberg and Russo. The Anthony defense filed a series of pretrial much-delaye- motions, into which hearings have been held for weeks, several times postponing start of the trial itself. Ellsberg and Russo are charged with theft, espionage and conspiracy for actions they took in making public parts of the Pentagon Papers, a voluminous classified study of the war in Vietnam. They were rpsparvhprs at tn RsnH Com ' I I I IUI think tank in Santa Monica, Calif., from where the government maintains the papers were stolen. The Ne, York Times won a Pulitzer Prize for printing the material, and other newspapers also obtained parts of the papers. and Russo have and p blicly taken credit for the publication of the material, but deny that what they did was a crime. Ellsberg has said that the U.S role in Southeast Asia will be an important part of the trial. A panel of 100 prospective jurors has been ordered to appear at 10 a.m. Monday mnrnintf Attnicrv intfoL.nH Ellsberg repeatedly ! " $3.49 79 $ REG. YD. YD. J.l duied have said they expect the trial to last from 10 weeks to three months. Ellsberg said he was disappointed by the decision of U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne to reject the many motions for dismissal of charges. "I was hopeful right up to this afternoon that the judge would dismiss the charges against me," Ellsberg said. "I did not then and I do not now believe that I was in violation of the statutes espionage regarding the use of cassified documents. I feel this is another step in bringing about an airtight censorship in the fmmml 1 JkSjXaAAj in rv v kv UUL J Riverside Plaza PROVO, UTAH 1450 NORTH STATE STREET OPEN EVERY NITE XTIL 9 P.M. be and it is unquestionably alive." The real argument, Breitel 5-- an efforts, not only for our own 63rd annual national convention lowed in comparison of the largest and oldest civil emergency resolution passed by race, for the minority people the convention Tuesday in who will be circumscribed and rights organization. A resolution urging Nixon's support of racial busing. That picked off one by one, but for defeat had oeen discussed in a resolution assailed Nixon for our beloved country whose closed-doo- r session of the "arousing passions of hate and ideals are being distorted and convention's resolutions com- bitterness" with his busing whose life style, as envisoned by the founding fathers, is in mittee, but the resolution never stand. made it to the convention floor. The convention at Cobo Hall grave peril." NAACP leaders, including ended Friday night with an the group Wilkins, insisted pro - integration its stance by Wilkins. would not part with His closing speech called nonpartisan tradition by standing for or against a presidential Nixon "a Chief Executive who candidate. wants all American school Wilkins said Nixon's stand on children sent to school by bus, most issues has been "blurred. the sole exception being black While he has been generous children whom the courts find with the black business enter- can desegregation not been through busing. he has prise, "In such a situation we must sympathetic to the Negrc plight in the cities." act," said Wilkins. "We must Wilkins' comments were mel seek allies. We must unite our not may characterized as not human, Sea NearGuam to it because - |