Provo Daily Herald | 1976-08-06 | Page 14

Type issue
Date 1976-08-06
Paper Provo Daily Herald
Language eng
City Provo
County Utah
Rights In Copyright (InC)
Rights Holder Herald Communications, Provo, Utah
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
ARK ark:/87278/s65x6rn8
Reference URL https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s65x6rn8

Page Metadata

Type page
Date 1976-08-06
Paper Provo Daily Herald
Language eng
City Provo
County Utah
Page 14
OCR Text 1976 HERALD. Provo, Utah, Friday, August 6, age rter Doesn't Expect to exploit Pa As for Mondaie, he said he Asked whether Ford WASHINGTON (UPI) -Jhis reputation for interin said an damaged Carter immy view published Thursday that, high integrity by pardoning as president, he might well Nixcn when he did, Carter said have pardoned Richard Nixon he thought not. "I just think that President after a trial and "the inFord honestly felt that it was evitable conviction." But Carter also defended the best thing for the country President Ford's decision to to issue that pardon ... and end and pardon Nixon, before any trial, the Watergate debates as an honest attempt to do obsession once and for all," he for the said. "I give him credit for "the best thing country." For that reason, he said, he would not use the pardon as a presidential campaign issue, although his running mate, Sen. Walter Mondaie, remains free to do so. was "surprised" when the Minnesota senator hit the pardon issue in his nominating convention speech, and he hoped Mondaie would "decide on his own" to drop It. But he said they have never discussed it and he is reluctant to give Mondaie orders on the subject. "Sen. Mondaie may have a very strong feeling that Ford did it deliberately or that he traded beforehand with Nixon to do it," Carter said. that." Fire Continues Apart from the pardon, however, Carter said he would use the Watergate scandals generally as a campaign issue and would argue that Ford, as a is little different from Nixon. At Yellowstone Ford because of the pardon," YELLOWSTONE PARK, - interview with the A natural fire (UPI) which started July 11 in Yel- lowstone National Park tinues to burn and has spread over 1,400 acres, park officials Washington Star. "I don't know what I would have done had I been there. "I think I would have proceeded through the trial and the inevitable conviction and then exercised the right to said today. The fire, ignited by lightn- ing, is being allowed to burn under the park's natural fire management program. It is the largest natural fire since the program was begun in pardon." 1972. presidential nominee, said in response an to persistent on the issue during Wyo. policy-make- cent occupant ff "is predic"He's just been there table." occupying the White House In another interview, with with no demonstration even of the editorial board of Scripps-Howar- d interest in putting forward Newspapers, Carter proposals Congress might accalled Ford "a dormant, quies cept or reject." r HOUSTON (UPI) -- Persons struck by lightning receive a severe electrical shock and may be burned, but they carry no electrical charge and can be handled safely, according to X TT of the White House ... said, while Ford LIGHTNING VICTIMS Enjoy fl ftSft J KiMF III I 1 mkm-fdie- d pirate mfel 1 1 km NEIL the National Weather Service. A person "killed" by lightning can often be revived by prompt IT "People are not sure what I'll do if I'm president," he SIMONS mouth-to-mout- h resuscitation, cardiac massage and prolonged artificial respiration. In a group struck by lightn"Well, Richard Nixon is ing, the apparently dead around his neck," he said in should be treated first; those who show vital signs will response to a question. "I can't think of a single probably recover spontaneousthing that President Ford has ly, although burns and other injuries may require treatproposed on his own initiative ment. which is a substantive deparRecovery from lightning ture from what Richard Nixon and his administration was strikes is usually complete except for possible impairment doing," or loss of sight or hearing. He said his own "major han "I have never criticized Carter, the Democratic dicap" for the campaign is "the uncertainty about my character, my possible performance as a leader of this country ... 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Reference URL https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s65x6rn8/23878734