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Show Page HERALD, Provo, Utah, Sunday, November 23, 1S76 HE If R H V If iS St ii T "w i , News Disfnoufion f led s tM 4W i4 Jfe ma es mm M 5 3 Ufe Wife, - The (UPI) BEIRUT, Palestine Liberation Organization, under pressure from Syria to curb its guerrilla operations in south Lebanon, is resisting an order for it to turn over its heavy weapons, Palestinian sources said Saturday. The PLO declared the turnover to the Syrian dominated Arab peacekeeping force of heavy weaponry should apply only to the Moslem leftist and Christian rightist groups in Lebanon, the sources said. Has State of Emergency BELT, Mont. (UPI) - Acting Gov. Gtatc of Christiansen declared emergency Saturday in th farming town of Belt, population 700, where mysterious explosions and Tires injured 20 and left two persons missing. n Two propane tanks exploded Friday, and 27 cars of a Burlington Northern freight train derailed. Flames destroyed a farm cooperative grain elevator, a lumber yard, a newspaper office and at least 15 Dill 30,000-g3llo- 121-c- health-departme- One of the huge tanks blew up in and the other two hours later. Firemen came from four surrounding communities and an air force base. Of the 20 injured persons, 14 were hospitalized Saturday in Great Falls. r . , a . .. i f i, d resolution condemning Israeli archaeological excavations in M. , J India School Vaccination Brings Score r w. - - ThouNEW DELHI, India (UPI) sands of parents descended on schools in the Indian capital this week to remove children they feared were being . about three weeks ago in -- Mrs. Gandhi, who admitted to Parliament last month that police shot and killed some persons during riots against forced sterilization, also denounced those she said were spreading "wholly untrue stories of atrocities" in India's family planning program. Telephoio. Continues On COPENHAGEN, Denmark (UFI) -Danish truck drivers went back to work strike which Friday to end an eight-da- y set off a government crisis and created chaos in the ' nation's industry. But problems remained unsolved. teeth." Valley Research sponsored by SMU and six other institutions, also found hand axes in layers above and below the fossil face, indicating the man had developed the use of tools. Nearby were fossilized remains of The Mission, , anti-Isra- demning Israel for archaeological excavations in Jerusalem in defiance of previous UNESCO resolutions. The draft agreed to continue sanctions imposed two years ago by denying Israel UNESCO cultural aid an estimated $25,000 annually. The United States, which cut off its own contributions to UNESCO in 1974 partly in response to the original resolution, Friday again condemned the latest draft as "unconstitutional and illegal." sterilized. "Just this morning some people came to see me and they said that their crocodiles an1 nine hippopotamuses, antelope, leading scientists io speculate the area may have served as a prehistoric "butcher's shop." "This may well prove to be one of the world's hottest il areas," Wendorf said children in Delhi schools had been told by their own teachers to run away because there were going to be injections," Mrs. Gandhi said. fo-s- "And this is why thousands of parents rushed to the schools to take away their children." The excellent preservation of the ancient remains was due to silt deposits from a nearby lake that covered the bones shortly after they were left on the ground, he said. Culture and Yale University anthropology student Paul Whitehead, both team members. The first homo erectus was found in central Java in the 1890s. The biggest single concentration of the species found to date was near Peking beginning in 1927 where 75 individuals have been unearthed. Fragmentary cranial fossils also have been found in various parts of Africa in the past two decades, but the Bodo Man find is believed to be the only complete homo erectus face. The Deseret Federal Nazi War Criminal Worsens The skull was found by Alemayehu Asfaw of the Ethiopian Ministry of d in ihn nnvt fmrr Hove The conference Friday also adopted its second resolution, con- New Delhi officials announced they arrested 15 persons for spreading rumors in various parts of the capital school children being inocculated against diseases were actually being :neo se Soviet-inspire- tuberculosis. Ethiopia's fossil rich Danakt! depression. The skull was dubbed "Mo Man" after the area. UPI llllon A well preserved DALLAS (UFi) skull dating back 500,000 years may give anthropologists a clue into the physical and social development of early man. The skull, dubbed "Hodo Man" after the area in which it was found, was unearthed three weeks ago by a team of Southern Methodist University scientists working in Ethiopia's fossil rich Danakil Depression. The discovery was announced Friday. "For the first time, we may be able to understand something of the variety of activities and the amount of sophistication of these Paleolithic hominids," said Dr. Fred Wendorf, SMU anthropology professor and member of the dig team. "It's really a remarkable find. The sinuses, the nose, all the little bones are still intact, right down to the upper sterilized, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi said Saturday. The prime ministe. said the children were actually being vaccinated against missr THIS SKULL of an early man thought to have lived in Africa more than 506,000 years ago was (ikenvrprf hy g tg!n of Southern Methodist University scientists Danish Crisis March, 1877, VTi ;?;! 7 - Prime Minister Anker Joergensen leader of a Social Democratic minority government brought to the brink of collapse by the strike ruled out general elections after shop stewards decided to end the walkout. The strike, at first involving 2,000 truckers, ended although truckers failed to achieve their aim of a $1.70 per hour raise. But the workers hinted they could walk off their jobs again if their demands were not met in the next wage negotiations, scheduled for ; The meeting Friday unanimously adopted a Tunisian-inspiredraft with a long-teraim of creating a more balanced flow of news between rich and poor countries by strengthening the news agencies and journalistic talent of developing nations. The United States, West European and Nordic nations, as well as Communist states and the developing countries themselves, enthusiastically supported the Tunisian measure as a practical first step in leveling out the current imbalance in news flow which delegates agreed could be a danger to world stability. Western spokesmen said the Tunisian resolution unlike drafts presented at a regional UNESCO conference earlier did not seek to bolster third this year world media at the expense of curbs on the Western press and therefore could be readily supported. The only other major resolution now pending at the conference, which ends Tuesday, is a second draft on the press a resolution 'on the mass media many countries said would lead to state control of the press. A special negotiating committee Thursday agreed to refer this matter to the next UNESCO general conference in two years and the full convention is expected to endorse this Jerusalem. As-Sai- homes. The heat was so intense it set fire to asphalt on the street. The missing were believed working in the cooperative at the time of the explosion. The sheriff's department did not identify them, but said, "we are operating on the assumption they are dead." On Saturday investigators stil! did not know which occurred first the first propane tank explosion or the train's derailment alongside the tanks. The derailed train segment included 15 tank cars holding propane, crude oil, asphalt and possibly other flammable material. At least one tank car fell off a railroad overpass onto a Beit street. Acting Gov. Christiansen declared a state of emergency Saturday morning and ordered the National Guard to continue to assist. State Civil Defense and officials flew in by helicopter from Helena. b-- The development came as Syria appeared to have arrived at a tacit understanding with Israel that a token Arab peacekeeping force could be sent to certain parts of south Lebanon if Syria curbed the operations of the Palestinian guerrillas. But the PLO reportedly told Col. Ahmed Al Hajj military commander of the multinational Arab army in Lebanon-th- at the demand they give up their weapons would be a violation of the 1909 Cairo agreement governing the scope of Palestinian activities in Lebanon. Under the terms of this agreement, which was ratified once again at recent Arab summits on Lebanon in Riyadh and Cairo, the Palestinians were allowed to retain their guns in their camps and at bases in the south where they have operated against Israel. The Cairo pact is ambiguous on the point. It says Palestinian command pests "will be in charge of regulating wnd limiting the presence of weapons in the camps" and puts this "within the framework of Lebanese security." Representatives of all Palestinian groups except the Syrian-backe- d organization met in Beirut Friday night and issued a statement Saturday denouncing what they termed to liquidate the Palestinian revolution." f miiifJ:C, ; .VV-lii- m Lebanon - The U.N. NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) Educational, Scientific and Cultural organization has approved proposals aimed at establishing a new global order for news distribution and a P 4 i Sua s MASTER CARD Your KEY .v to... College Educations and j. - 1 tm Viz The condition of Nazi war n cancer-stricke- criminal Herbert Happier has taken a turn for the worse and his death is a matter of days, the newspaper II Messag-ger- o said Saturday. complete Family Financial Services! mtfii'"' 0 1 3 Li li Xf l" (New Location Only) We are overstocked on hundreds of books and we are going to move in early 1977 . . . ana a im t nn X'vt W.-- Xr n its v, ' 4- v . - '"'"'XA - v rf vx......,.... i-- ' ' v, ' t - a N y f-- .' , 4 XrJg - DOH'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE f.lAUY TO? SkLLYilQ COOKS 00 t. 8 'I IDS Books General Interest (Fiction, Nonfietion, efe.) Children's Books Hardcover and Paperback Miscellaneous Items (Tap, iter, efet-o- . . . KXIS "He AT lOCCfflOH, tOnWciiu from our preitnt t. U ut Dtrt . J ,c V r " .. ; r ..- - " j tc.) ONLY ACROSS THE MAIL book bat outgrown ifi current ,, ,,fii i i nivtmy uvivi nit Itutl JUdr .M A? E't - 1 Univtriity Moll. r n . to SOS! bing h!d rf f in( ti i . 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