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Show Moisture, Maybe ME Increasing clouds and winds tonight. Rain likely tonight and DeWednesday. Lows in tails, weather map on Page mid-40- s. 374, NO. 1 t i fK 09 TKtf 5 8 10c PAGES vv , 4 1 ly rmst THE r MOUNTAIN HI , asassr UPI Telephot These young GOP supporters were really ''turned on" as President Nixon greeted them in North Dakota campaign stop. paigns for Republicans battling to take over Democratic ' seats m the Senate. His targets today r Indiana and North Car- Ten-ness- e, olina. Shouting knots of protesters have provided a backdrop for the Nixon law and order message at every stop so far on his campaign swt:g, and the President is telling voters to retort with Republican ballots in the Nov. 3 elections. I say dont answer in kind, Nixon declared. You dont have to shout four letter obscenities . . On Nov. 3 in the quiet of the polling booth consider the candidates, consider their record the year counted. six-sta- . ... Remember, the four letter word that is the most powerful of all the four letters in the world is vote. In Kansas City, where admission to a campaign rally was by ticket and the demonstrators were kept outside, Nixon stressed the same theme. In Columbus,. Nixon paid a visit to the surprise campus of Ohio State University and drew an instant crowd of about 1,CQ0. students, with only a scattering of dissidents.:.:-..-He said later most students are turned off by the dis- graceful conduct of Ihe disrupters, those who dose down campuses, those who engage in violence, those who shout four letter obscenities or any other kind of obscenities and those who try to shout down speakers. This morning President Nixon demonstrated his concern for law and order with a visit to two police officers in Kansas City and later flew to Tennessee to push his campaign to unseat Sen. Albert Gore, a persistent critic of his Vietnam policy. Instead of calling them pigs and spitting on them and shouting profane slogans as they go about their jobs, lets give our police respect, lockefelier Assails Lindsay, Goldberg Tie ' - Gov. NEW YORK (UPI) Nelson A. Rockefeller said Monday the endorsement of Arthur Goldberg for governor by Mayor John V. Lindsay was an act of "expediency designed to further Lindsays political ambitions. asked was Rockefel!r whether Lindsays statement was the start of a campaign to obtain the Democratic presidential nomination in the belief that he could not get the GOP nomination because of his liberalism. With a wry smile, the governor answered, What do you think? Lindsay was acting out of expediency to fulfill the political ambitions of both Rockefeller. m e n, There is ip basic evidence of either commitment to princi said ple or conviction in this political marriage of convenience. On Sunday the governor had urged Lindsay to sit this one out; advice which Lindsay disregarded and Goldberg characterized as extremely inappropriate. The endorsement by Lindsay of Goldberg, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nae associate tions and justice of the Supreme Court, added still another piece to the crazy-qui-lt pattern of New York state politics. Lindsay, who says "I am a Republican and intend to remain a 'Republican, was denied the GOP mayoral nomination last year. He won on the liberal line with ihe bless-o- f a number of high mgs one-tim- d Inside The News SECTION A liaBonal, Foreign City, Regional World of Woman Editorial Pages Do-- It 11 Man SECTION B City, Regional Our Man Jones Financial 6-- 8 Sports - 0 12-1- 5 16, 17 17 10, 11 1 4, 5 12 12 Obituaries Action Ads SECTION C Car Care 12-1- 0 SECTION D Political Pot City, Regional 1, 2 Comics TV Highlights 8 9 6 federal 9,000 from Answer Rocks With Ballots, President Tel Is The Voters around and if the candidate has given encouragement to, has condoned lawlessness and violence and permissiveness, then, you know what to do. That was Nixons advice Monday to a campaign crowd in Columbus, Ohio. At a wind-swerally in Grand Forks, N.D., he urged, the great silent majority of this country to stand up and be ranking Democrats including Goldberg. He has endorsed some Republicans such as Sen. Charles Goodell and Attorney General Louis Lefkowitz but made it clear in his statement Monday he thought the Democrats were the best chance to end the citys annual role as a for survival in beggar Albany. Lindsays move, sent shock waves through the major political parties but the reactions. could have been anticipated. Democratic state chairman called Lindsays endorsewhile ment significant, GOP state chairman said it would increase support for Gov. Rockefeller. In Chicago Vice President Spiro T. Agr.ew said today that New York Mayor John V. Lindsay has not read himself out of the Republican Party with his endorsement of Democrat Arthur Goldberg. Agnew said Lindsays statement in support of Goldberg over Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller in the New York gubernatorial race was not entirely surprising. I think it was predictable, he said. Mr. Goldberg supported Mayor Lindsay in his campaign and this is a re- ciprocal step. -5- 24-4445' -5-24-4448 Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 521-35- TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1970 Nixon, said when he emerged from a visit with two policemen hospitalized in Kansas City with serious injuries suffered in a dynamite explosion. Nixon arrived at Johnson City in east Tennessee on the second day of his campaign swing to boost Resix-sta- te publican candidates and oust Democratic doves who oppose his Vietnam policies. Tennessees Gore is one such critic. Nixon stepped off Air Force One in a light drizzle at the Johnson City airport and was greeted by William Brock, the Republican congressman who is frying to win Gores seat. Nixons aides issued a statement in which the President praised Brock as a man who stands for law enforcement, fiscal responsibility and local control of schools. Expel Him, Martha Says WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mrs. Martha Mitchell says New York Mayor John V. is a political Lindsay opportunist who should be expelled from the Republican Party. Eut she doubts the Democrats would want him either. . The outspoken wife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell called a UPI reporter from her Washington apartment Monday night to complain about Republican Lindsay's endorsement of New York Demo cratic gubernatorial candidate Arthur Goldberg. police throughout Quebec pressed their search for three men wanted as suspects in the and kidnapings of Cross LaPorte, Since Trudeau Friday decreed emergency war powers police broadening powers and suspending some Canadian civil rights, authorities have seized without charges 341 suspected FLQ leaders and sympathizers in 1.627 raids throughout Quebec. They have failed to find the kidnapers or Cross, who was abducted from his suburban Montreal home Oct. 5 by armed members of the FLQ. Apparently he still is alive, for he sent a communique to police Sunday begging them to call off their search and accede to FLQ demands. AWAITS WORD The Canadian government waited for word from the FLQ to its standing offer for safe passage to Cuba for the kidnapers. If the abductors agree, they would bring Cross to the Concordia Bridge over the St. Lawrence River at the site of Expo 67, Montreals world fairgrounds. There the kidnapers would turn Cross over to the Cuban consul, hop into a waiting helicopter for the short ride to Montreal International Airy port, then aboard a flight to Havana. Cross would be released when the kidnapers arrived in Cuba. But the FLQ has ignored the offer made Saturday night by Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa at about the same time police discovered the of LaPorte bloody body stashed in the trunk of the auto in which he had been The FLQ has kidnaped. demanded release of 23 political prisoners and $500,000 gold in ransom for Cross. BOTH GRIEVED Trudeau and Bourassa were men deeply grievous on tne day of LaPortes funeral. Both leaders were uose personal friends of LaPorte, as well as being his political colleague. It was Trudeau and Bouras-whhad to make the wrenching decision not to trade the lives of Cross and LaPorte for the kidnapers demands, a decision made despite a dramatic appeal by Laporte as a personal friend. one-wa- o The government acceded to his wifes wishes to avoid a state funeral and keep the services private. Parliament Monday gave overwhelming endorsement to Trudeaus assumption of war powers. By a vote of 190-1the House of Commons approved a resolution Trudeaus decision to qutlaw the FLQ and to continue his until powers extraordinary EX-UTAH- April 30, 1971, unless revoked earlier by Parliament. In Washington, D. C., tlie State Department said it has cautioned U.S. diplomats in Candada to take special precautions against kidnaping9 in light of the Laporte-Cros- s abductions that have plunged Canada into turmoil. The FLQ wants a separate nation for Quebec, and has resorted to French-speakin- g and violence t muscle to back its demands. Ironically, Laporte once was a strong supporter of partition, but in recent years modified his stand and sought improved living standards and conditions for Quebecers, but within the framework of a unified Canada. That switch perhaps, was the reason for his kidnap and terrorism assassination. VICTIM N 5 Californians Slain In Family Execution' SANTA CRUZ. CALIF. The scarf-boun(AP) bodies of an eye surgeon, his wife, two sons and a secretary were found shot in the head and tossed into a swimming pool Monday night as fire destroyed the doctors $250,000 home. d was identified as Thomas S. Dececco, 19. Officers would not say if was floating, the others were on the pool bottom. The killers left no notes, James said. He said no sign of struggle was found in the house, located atop a hilt overlooking Monterey Bay between Santa Cruz and Soquel, 300 miles south of San Francisco. ; At about 8:10 p.m., two s h e r i f fs deputies noticed smoke and went to the home. One driveway was blocked they believe the slayings were Sheriff Douglas James of Santa Cruz County said only that he was contacting officials in Saratoga about that case. Mud and poor visibility The victims were Dr. Victor from the first rain of the seaM. Ohta, 45; his wife, Virginson hampered the search for ia, 43; their sons, Derik, 12, ar.d Taggart, 11, and Ohtas clues in the five Santa Cruz deaths. Each had been secretary, Dorothy Cadwalia-de- r, County shot once in the back of the by Ohtas . the 38. head and the physician had a other by Mrs. Cadwalladers Mrs. Cadwailer is a Salt second wound in the upper Lincoln Continental. Both autoLake native, the daughter of back. mobiles wrere locked and the Mr. and Mrs. Lester B. Kinnel, Their wrists were bound in officer had to push them former Salt Lakers now living front with brightly colored aside when firemen rrrived. in Santa Cruz. She was educatLive Oak Fire Chief Ted scarves, James said, and ed in Salt Lake elementary and scarves covered the faces of Pound, searching for a water junior high schools and was the three victims. supply to extinguish the blaze, mother of two daughters one It was like an execution, found the bodies in the pool. seven, the other an infant. r. The sheriff said he believed said Sheriffs Lt. Kenneth In Saratoga 30 miles away, No motive was establthe death bullets came from a a gas station attendant was ished. James weapon. found bound and fatally shot Patches of blood stained the added it appeared more than in the back of the head two cement apron around the one person was involved in hours later in his station. He pool. The secretarys body the killings. related. - Rolls-Royc- 2 More Arrests Made In Kent State Indictments KENT, OHIO (UPI) -S h e r i f 1s deputies today arrested two more persons indicted by a special state grand jury that investigated the fatal shooting of four Kent State University students last spring. The arrests were the fifth and sixth made on warrants issued for the arrest of 25 persons indicted by the grand jury last Friday. Four persons, including the president of the Kent State student body, Craig Morgan, were arrested on Monday. Those arrested today were Larry A. Shub, 19, a former Kent State student, of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Douglas C. Cormack,20, of Willoughby, Obin. Both surrendered at the Portage County sher- iffs office. Cormack, who never attend-- e d the university, was e riot, charged with allegedly interfering with firemen at the scene by throwing rocks. Shub was indicted on charges of first- - and second-degre- e riot and allegedly attempted to burn property. first-degre- The 20,000 student campus reacted with shock to the arrest of Morgan, a senior Air Force ROTC cadet. More of the 25 persons named in secret indictments by a special state grand jury were expected to be arrested today. William M. Kunstler, the lawyer who defended the Chicago Seven, said here Monday night he would send several lawyers to coordinate the defense of The Kent 25. Morgan pleaded innocent to degree riot and was released on $1,000 bond. Others arrested Monday were Dr. Thomas S. Lough, 42, associate professor of sociology; Jerry II. Rupe, 22, and Richard C. Felber, 21, of Akron. Felber and Rupe, former students now serving jail terms on drug convictions, were charged in connection with the burning of the campus ROTC building May 2. Lough was released on $5,000 bond on a charge of inciting to riot May 4, the day four Kent State students were slain in a confrontation with National Guardsmen. James Nuber, a senior from Ohio and Morgans executive assistant in the student government, said : Craigs just not a radical. A lot of kids are uptight. They See KENT on Page A- -i Canton, , second Craig Morgan , . . pleads innocent - . Awesome Powers Of The President - WASHINGTON (AP) On Dec. 16, 1950, after Red China intervened in the Korean War, President Harry S Truman declared a state of emergency, which gave him some awesome powers. That proclamation still is in effect and available for use. There are 134 special provisions, covering every phase of even to the American life of the point suspending week for munitions plant workers. The emergency powers, all granted by Congress in various statutes, compare with those now in effect in Canada. One paragraph reads, without elaboration : During a war or declared national emergency, the President may detail members of the armed forces to give military assistance to countries requesting it when he considers it in the interest o.' national defense. There are other extraordinary powers in the law that are not biought into effect by the declaration of an emergency, but by a state of war or a state of hostilities. The Civil Defense Act, for instance, brings into effect almost totalitarian powers only in the event of a nuclear assault on tire United States. The powers emergency granted Truman are still in or at least available, force if not actually in effect. They are more numerous than drastic; providing, for inthat: stance, Temporary promotions of officers may be made; enlistments may be extended; retired Navy officers and enlisted men may be called to duty. Advance payments may be made on defense contracts and contracts may be let without advertising for bids. meaVarious security sures may be invoked and penalties for their violation may be increased; destruction of defense materials may be prohibited; some patents may be kept secret. The government may recapture, use, control or lease nearly 40 specified airports, camps, tracts of land and formerly fortified areas which are now owned by states and municipalities. Todays Thought Slat love to icondcr and that is the, seed of our science. ; Waldo Emerson Ralph V S 35 IT, CanMONTREAL (UPI) ada today buries its martyr in the cause of Canadian unit,, Pkrre Laporte, while the search intensified for his killers and the kidnapers of British Diplomat James L. Cross. Canadian political figures Prime Minister including Pierre Trudeau and opposition leaders from Ottawa, were joining Laportes family in paying final respects to the Quebec Labor Minister murdered Saturday, one week after his abduction by the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ). Conservative leader Robert Stanfield Monday eulogized Laporte as a martyr ir. the eyes of all democratically-minde- d Canadians. At the request- of Laportes wife, Francoise, the simple afternoon funeral at Notre Dame Cathedral in Montreal was private. Extraordinary security, including the 4,000 troops mobilized Thursday by Trudeau, were poised for possible FLQ trouble. PRESS SEARCH Meanwhile, CAMPAIGN JUNKET CONTINUES CITY (AP) -PNixon is fashioning the taunts and jeers of youthful hecklers into part of the political weaponry as he cam- -5- 24-2840 C! - KANSAS -5- 24-4100 Information Sports Scores WEST'S FIRST NEWSPAPER c resident News Tips Home Delivery SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH B-1- 2. VOL. Our Phone Numbers V ' . |