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Show 1Wm.6.....m.111.1rm..M.M11.16 441'rPli""..,""."1,'"..'"rri V47 vokr. wsok - We LA kE CITY, UTAH AAOh'DAY, octocm 2!, "MAW... I MK r Fri !,5; - :eil:. 1A1A64-- tll .404qtt;'. d - 4 - ' ' . , V vs ''' 1 ''. Control Commission. Nemelka wants the council to quit bolding public hearings and reporting, to Governor Hampton and the Legislature's Judiciary Committee. Ile sought an ..njunction toward that end from Judge Hall. But now can Nemeika curtail the 'ery activities for which the Citizen Conned was set up in the first piace'' Whun the council v, at. organ:i,ed under the present state liquor laws. was to appoint State Liquor thA ilgiOrittyrf-A'inien; a watchdog over the s :.4 r Aor 4 !4,4 "4. , ,gert yc Cunt co! Cominissiou. It did so on the sound premise that the state liquor monopoly is a very corruptempting tmtecitiel source tion and, polities being what they are. an attorney general or county attorney of one party cannot always be tu t unduct d vuutited investigation of an administration of e vigui-uu!- , the same party. For that reason, legislators gave the council authority to conduct brood investigations of any irregularities, including holding both private and public hearings with subpoenaed witnesses. Nemelka complains that the coon some wiiness or witnesses, L."'"1 17:el 4 ,.it 1 ';!'!' '44. 'r4,,i4g4dlaar, ' tit l'-- ;It: ) 14, , ..n 1 ...y , ' stock-relate- over-the-count- er Afterthoughts Old-time- rs s...;, 0!".,' ,7,--rr-- -- ,t7,? 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He therefore must take refuge tn a cause that does his thinking for nim end provides external validatim and authentication for his worth and value ideol,r,gy telt you whnt to think. what to say, who to In'te. Thus if worship, who "hberol" Nixon aod tile Kenr,cdy3 6cf.e this purposc admir- 'T;L.,(6,,,,,i, ,1 WASHINGTON So Nel- spear-carrier- Hugh Morrow, director of COMMUniCatithIS (a state job) for many years, received 11i5,000 in loans and gifts. Morrow is repaying S30.000 of Ibis amount. Rockefeller was a oihing, "oppression." e-- -- ' 14, ' ,Nelw w VA .4.1t,41,',A6 I., , 4. 43,v , ,'.:,,, - p- r .,:, W.,0,n i t r? yr 4 , 441,..S1,:),, .7',,.:,''",-.-- , ,, ,P' I.,r' AA - l 7'2 ' ' ' A...1,, ii, 1:, 1, ;It. oc 10, 4 t.: -, B IHoto 1,,t,v,,Pf, 1',...,0 ,10 I --A ,,,:,,t,,,, 04.,. .,,,,7, ,..it I, w- ilitf 1 ' ft ', .f?' , ' ,t Al; v,,, ;,,4 ri ce ,,'(q,,5'. -- 6,;, ',,, -',... ,: 4,1, ,; srt At ., ''' ,e,,,,c, lit,. A ..,,,,; 16, ,"7,4'.,sztt , Li , z -' ,,4, .54; ,,,, s,,,, 4,6,,,'443Ei,,,,',,, imi., ab.;,..,,..,,,,,T-1.,,,,,44,- .. , . ,,,.1,,, uEt, t . - lell.,. ,,,, -....11,4c,:.! .,,s, ,t,'AL,4k ' ,oe 'tlf , t t, ... 1 ,r ART BUCHWALD frn Naor largesse politics and press son Rockefeller dropped nearly S2 million en loyal s and "warm" fricnds. Most peopk only wished they got some. The question really is. What did Rockelellei get tor his mom), and was anybody or the public compromised? William J. Ronan, chairman ot the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. got SC25.000that's more than a heartfelt g:it. That authority has a strangicoold on transportation, a vital element in the congested New York area. Congress should explore this one thoroughly. Edward J. Logue. president of New York State Urban DeA, clopment received gifts and loans totaling $176,000. It is wrong to loan a state official this kind of money, and Congress should investigate. Alton G. Marshall. who was forgiven 06,000 in loans from Rockefeller, served in a number of state and private posts for Rockefeller over a period of 15 years. Marshall is a gruff, likable man, but how independent could he have been in those state jobs when he knew that big money was coming, his way from Reckefeller himself? w Why must we have et,etnies when we don .1, even know the reasons we hate? 1'11' Henry L. Diamond, now head of Rockefeller's Commission on Critical Choices for Americans, got 8100,000 in gills. lie had served as head of the Department of Environmental Conservation. a state job, and was appointed by Rockefeller. Lo:,.alty has its rewards. Then thcre's Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. who received a 850.000 gift just before he entered the Nixon Administration. Congress and all of us should only be reinforced in the notion that this gift is just one more piece of evidence that Rockefeller owns Kissinger, and this could be problematic in any g T7:' by David Bly tor the Deseret News Nick 1 ;;, 4'.:44 It :ert; ';-!'r,i. .' .4...',.4'.it..,-- ,' Photo aad text motivated by gratitude and compassion in this situation. because Morrow's family is afflicted 1A1th health probleins ,. , tV " "''''',,12, '7; .4 f IN THE MIND'S EYE Da1NO'lle it404 .,. ,A,. 41 I, ' Ar4 0,4 Itt le 7,- AL ':'. p L,4,:- - .., ,J14, , .1.ffit 4 3k',, ,,:,: t mi,,,,,,' '4! -1,-- " 4--, Wt. itect7uw.t71-vrzwe.,- ',100;,s:si1 ,..1' 24 '7 ' ,,,,,, At. -' .42' re 484(44 ,,, - .1AilL -, ' '',!?",1. .i'f''' ', ' At ,i,.1t-(-I- ;P 's$ - 4, '7"4-7444.4- 4 - ' A 'es ''''I04,,t,1 f7t 1 t.s;v7s; ..s,S ..,i4.,.:,.'ot,,,,,,,11.4,444,,,,, ,..,i,., ,,,,,,,..,: :i' i4! ,,r7., t..' 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I am a liberal (without the huge majority of Ameriwords to enable you to fit in at the best dinner parties quotation !narks) and always cans take a liberal stance, yet such key words as "guilt," have been anti confidently most Americans repudiate "minority," "resources," expect to be so always. There the name "hberal," That is a and wi,s a time when American public relation- - accomplishof the ment of monumemal dimen"restoration power of liberalism was flexible, pragCongress." matic, experimental, when it sions But that's what ideology is Libthink tells you what the could make C0111MOIA cause approved social solutions with working men and all about; to snatch defeat are: busing, quotas, compul- women, with ethnics," with from the jaws of victory. those who did not go to Liberal ideologues are the sory birth control in undegraduate school. enersolar countries, worst just now, though anyveloped There are many liberak of one who can remember the gy instead of nuclear. this anti-Covariety still in the counmilmst ideologues Libcult tells you who the fashionable heroes are. For a try, but unfortunately. the of not so long ago can recall name "liberal" has been that the substance may have while it was Dan Berrigan appropriated by a narrow, been different but the style Rod George McGovern, then, dt,ctrir.ire cliçoe that is was the same. Similarly, if briefly, &am Ervin. Currentabout as tolerant of dissent as you have encountered any of ly Ralph Nader seems to he the Congregation of the Inthe extreme Right to Life the only one left in tha used to be. I don't people, in the Catholic Church quisition wtheon. know how this clique ever lately, you know that ',neir And, of course. Libhate came to monopolize the word personalty structures zrc, extells You who the scapegoats "liberal": maybe the rest of actly he same as weir most e, into whom you can us are to blame vehement feminist project it; your frustrEtions them do IL s a :'It z. A Pla!;',',ie on both their with parent liky,res. Richard you happen to be a in contemporauy ':'.-- - '4, -7411401- - - ,,,r., k 4 , .. . 1,t'; 1,, t 4,- ' ' p A ye,,,'EllL ,,P,Ito;ait. -- ..aa4r4t&, ..,Z1'.Ailierit , ,:i It ' ,A4.4 -,, v,e4, ',$'"i 1r 1 t.fi7 - --'- '''' 4..k .. 't I U...,;..27-':- : 'k i:',.. ,:,, - ,,,,,.,,,,,,,,....,,........,....,,,wi..,11,,loimatelmtip,-m. ...,,IP 41,4K; 4, .... ,- Zoe, 4.a..2"ekgmmiswwA,;,.;.-,iL.,,,A0,- ,,,......1. ' .-- 4;11 ""lta alt. ,177,' 7 I. '- I I mr",;141 .' r40,,(4'; ,...4 ,.ottu, Vrt, -, ..- ' VI'''' ' ,t' ;3, ;.',0,'It 0 e-- Ic,10': ;'.r".;" - .,.. "4-- 4 giat; Imo .0.....sawom.,umta 't741.;1.4.111Lwil, ,,,,,- fry; WASHINGTON When President Ford said we all t6 Lite the bullet on the ecor.lmy. I immediately went (town to my local sporting goods store. for the nomination. lughes loathed Nixon. Rockefeller. according to his tax returns, made a gift of $150,000 to Hughes when he joined the 1968 campaign. Ilughes claims the money was deferred payment for services. Did those services overlap the time he was writing for Newsweek? What's up here? As for Tom and Joan Braden. the socialite couple who entertain Washington's high and mighty, well, they've been warm. close friends of Nelson Rockefeller for many years. Fine. Back in 1954, Rockefeller loaned Braden $110,000 to help him Nixon would like a bullet, please," I said to the clerk. You mean a box of bullets," he corrected me. "I No. just one would be enough." Ile looked at me suspiciously. "What kind of bullet do e S500,000. high-minded- , soft-nose- d - I ! - ,. . .; - my mouth. I put it in "Ifs more comfortable than the .22," I said. "Arid it has a nice taste to it." "Would you like to try a .45?" the clerk asked, "It's thicker than a .38 ad lasts twice as long." "No. I think the .38 bullet will do nicely. How much is n. s, w , in California. Total purchase price was Braden sold the paper for $1.6 million in 1961. Braden says Rockefeller and future the other money suppliers; relationship. The rest of the money went were repaid. to a collection of private The Bradens, after working employees. friends and one in the campaign of the late cousin; this largesse must be Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and diagnosed as a reward for Nelson A. Rockefeller. moved to Washington. Their loyal service. next employment in journalBut what's that ? Two journalists also received loans ism was at WTOP, a station. where and gifts. I thought we were careers as brief had they a principled lot, and commenmewscasters of favored being by incapable tators. Braden was also writthe rich and powerful. Alas, ing a syndicated column at what to say about Emmet time. the Tom and John Hughes and No one can fault Hughes for Joan Braden, journalists? extracting high salaries and compensatiom from RockHughes was Rockefeller's and winding up proefeller for counselor many political tected at Rutgers University years, at salaries ranging No one can fault Tom Braden from 860,000 a year and up. for his success as a publisher-businessmaHe left Rockefeller to write a No one can column for Newsweek. That either for Braden Joan fault job started March 25, 1963. But before he officially left receiving a $10,000 gilt from Newsweek on March 18, 1968,, Rockefeller last year. But the question can be he was informally counseling Rockefeller on how to beat raised whether Hughes and the Bradens can function as journalists when they have fireceived such grand-scal- e nancial benefits from Nelson A. Rockefeller? When he was at Newsweek. how could Hughes ever write houses, says I, anything critical of Rockefel The tar or, for that matter. be fair rigiditv nf ideologue is tokrable up to a to those who opposed Rockpoint. but I cannot stand their efeller? The same could he refusal to relate to others as asked of Braden. In fact, The human persena. So weak and Washinletn Post in its rows fragile are their egos that stories pointed out highly they must fall back on social complimentary paragraphs categories to validate who on Rockefeller written by Braden, I could add that they are and what they do. Braden has repeatedly chamYou are interacting with another person. Suddenly he pie:A Kissinger in his colretuaes to relate to you as a unms, indeed. has sometimes served Kissinger's devious fellow human being, taking purposes this way. Kissinger in a which refuge category makes him morally right and is part of the Rockefeller family of fine friends. you morally wrong. You are no longer a person but a It is questionable for jourwhite, a male, or a pig, or a nalists to write about people, combination of all three. The particularta, rshtical Wires, whom they have reeeived atalogue is ended. The other has become frightened and favors or money from, in has taken refuge in an acciwhatever context. It is also dental characteristic in order questionable, it seems to me, to assert his worn and dignifor publishers and broadeas ters to employ people who ty as a human rter3Ort. There can make up their nothing you can do. Either :,,aurr.allats ',hey yau grav e! in gunt or anti ilia. conversation. or political wheeler-dealer- r ant "I don't know. Are there different kinds?.01 course. What kind of gun do you haver he asked. "I don't have a gun." I said. "Then what do you want a bullet for?" -- I want to bite it," I admitted sheepishly. The clerk backed away from me, trying to reach a buzzer which I assumed turned on some kind of alarm. "Don't get frightened," I said. You see, Gerry Ford, as part of his economic message, said that every one of us has to bite the bullet or we'll never lick it." "The bullet?" he asked. ' "No, inflation, dummy," I said. -And he didn't say what caliber of bullet be wanted' Americans to bite?"Not that I know of." I replied. "Does it make difference?" "I would think so," the clerk said. "I mean people, have different size mouths, and what might comfortable for you might not necessarily be comfortable'. for your grocer. Here, try this 22 bullet." He placed it in my mouth. I bit on it. ' 'How dces that teer he askvd. "Not too bad. how does it look?" You have the shell casing stickIng out. Did the President indicate what part of the bullet he wanted yo-to biter -come to think of it, he didn't, ' I said. "The least Mr. Ford could have done is tell us which end of the bullet we should get our teeth into." "He shouldn't take those things for granted," I said. -Listen, my teeth are starting to hurl. You don't have another kind, do you?" "We have a lead .38 dumdum- .you purchase the Oceansid Blade-Tribun- that bullet Bite La- 7 4 - it?" "Let's see,- - the clerk said. On the Nix it says the bullets are four cents each. But we just got a bulletin from the manufacturer telling us they now cost eight cents. SilICP this was mailed out list week, we have to assume the cost went up another two calt.,1. -V4 better add another four cents on the bulict just to be safe. Therefore, it will cost you 14 cents." "That's outrageous!" I said. The clerk shrugged his shoulders as he wrote out the sals slip. "Maybe if you bite on it long enough, the price U)lI ge ologues: left, right and center Ey Rev. Andrew Greeley s .4 -- 04,1, over-the-count- Id , , - 4116,4,,,,ort,i,-.,,,I.--1,,- 14. - Thimmesch them will discourage would-b- e swindDrives against stock fraud have lers. been mounted by both the Salt Lake A natitnal reputation for fraud is a Utah AttorCounty Attorney and disgrace to the city. Swindlers darn-ag- e ney General. of the many holiest the These combined efforts have brokers reputations and underwriters in Salt Lake brough'. inflictments and convictions. City. And news of fraud inhibits Last week in Federal District ability of many legitimate companies Court, a man was sentenced by Chief to raise capital, and thus damages Judge Willis W. Ritter to 10 years in Utah's economy. prison for transporting stolen specuPresently, lation in Salt Lake City is in the doldrums. That's part of the reason the number of brokerage houses in the City has declined from 55 to 12 in the past year. But historically, speculation has Does a,lyon,t low why "Uncle Sam" wears a top hat: w'len nothing i3 advanced and receeded in Salt Lake predict the less indigenous to the American City in waves. boom days will rechat vter or tradition? Continued turn. vigilance by federal, a safe it's local and of the state sexes, agencies is necessary Speaking shows booms are not future woman a assure to that that generalization as past ones shows and theft a man fraud tainted before breakfast, by her 2ge have been. his after dinner. ,,,,..... -- .i 1,40B4ok "FTZVIP 4,"'- a,,o1- -- p."-,...$0...,- - 1:-- d ,:4-- 1 , 1 15-ye- ar ' ',A, ' ,,,. - :, ".1.4 ' ".' .,.,,, 4A , the air nt susploitwo ;Ind bringing any charges that can stand UP n a court ease. ar ,.,,, - 1.4.14".', ..Va,,114- -r ).-- ,, - c1earin,1 white-colla- t 10i , , - t'A )44,,40r; '4,41t, 114. - ' e.i 4- ' t 4, egiviat1.11.,,4,.,,, 41, ,. ,,i ;t ,t7 '41' ikr "f 4,0-- , ,, , r With better cooperation. there is no r.mson all these problems could not be speedily resolved in the interests of that ..'t ..k AV.1,AA. ...w The final reason for more speed is the old problem of money. The Citizen's Council already has ,pent more than halt its S5,000 aloction fof the investigation and has asked for an additional $2,500. Most of the money has gone for a private investigator. It isn't the first time Judge Ritter The Wall Street Journal agrees. r It reported Salt Lake is the sewer of has come down hard on two In sentenced he 1973, criminals. the securities industry." sen15 consecutive one-yeto men Federal agencies recognize a securtences for sJcuritieg fraud. A higher ity-fraud problem in Salt Lake City. court called the terms Roth the Internal Revenue Service excessive." unconscionably and the Securities and Exchange We don't know if Judge Ritter's Commission have formed special task were justified in this parsentences forces to investigate But we hope word of cases. ticular crimes in the Salt Lake area. ,, ,, :1,..,, P,,,,,,.. N z' tetlije,, otc,,: -0, 4 ,!.P le ,ab,,,o, . ..., - ''. 1..1 '!,' 4,.' ,,,,,s: ' ',. L ''l . "". e ,,' i '''''''.-4:- ,,, , - ' r, unfair to continue the My estitatior mucl- - longer withont filing formal charges if they are warranted. )ver-the-count- er z!,:.1 V:1".r.1,11.k'tr A ,A1 nowyou- t, ' - ,, ''''Y ,vt,' or." ; '',,,,,,,,-- , r'e,..0tc-t,'::- , 'harps have The sentence was unusually seWhere is the vere. For example, earlier this month stock market? -don't" Utahns were sentenced to 18 three Last week the Christian Science' months each by a federal judge in Monitor said it's right here in Salt California after they were found guilty Lake City, where of a similiar charge. nickname. has trading , tti . Cleaning up stock fraud "now-you-see-i- ,,,,..., 1;,2- 160.. t:"1, ,...4 ,;!':k', 414trh,,,r - fo4- MICAMO... PIA", Another is the cloud of suspicion cast over the Liquor Commission by the very fact it's being investigated. While POW accusations of misconduct have already been made by the ty,Tn brought. It is '""" ' t , - 3. , anot ask-ol- t.,i.:",:-1.7..74- ,...,cit.T., fiq'''Irel.l't ML.' k.:4 Nk'ill 4,....,..',..);;.,,.;.;......:-.,"- r ,s,.. - - ... .;.,o.,.e..,.,h,...ot:;,...z.'" , .L4 rbirr-7,"1- speedily concluded. One reason for the urgency is so that legislatoN can formulate corrective legislation far any defects in liquor handling the probe may turn up. no 4107 rY, .......,,,,,;,,...,,,,...,,,,,,4wi,,,,Zip . jeopardizU- - ' ,. ;',1 ;,..kir jrk;,4,a,..;,14.,i,...............v.......A.....o.".o...u, Als,..,,!,; 4 Ai...tr. , '..... ,' I ft ..7:r vrxi 1: r7,,,14V lm t pro4;ccutionF Rather than engaging in innuendoes and legal maneuvering, the best course would be tor Nemelka and the council to coordinate their activities so that the long investig,ations can be Citizer:s ...4e..:-- ''''' ,...4..4.4,,,,... --- eil is hampering his own investigation, and is fearful it will grant immtmity ".ti.t"--- attilban'tairkPV....MIErt INterittltrAS4OrbiZAVE, ;- " )eb!"7!--- Y i!, g; - " - ' -- ,4"44. Why liquor probers should coordinate their activities : , ,, ' 41t1,1..mtortrwivro , fie leVet.;o4110. iisuaiMAMVINIa 4 4; 0, 0. ,v,,irer:elsortitry : .'!' 'S"V.;',. ,...,0;,,,,744; ,r7p.'ztaintz...4r 4,4emworvor- A5 '4--t 3.011.,e ,.,r;.tat!!14,';,;,: mn4 f nowniF Pond for the Crwittlhon ths Unikd Stotes wits its three departments of oath fully independent in its own fie!d. gmernmfnt, Third District Judge Gordon R. 110 was right last week when he counseled both County Attorney Carl Nemelka and the Citizen's Council 011 Liquor Control to quit squabbling and show more cooperation in their twin investigations of the State Liquor agNberlir01,,1071.M., I Crommamt DESIkET NEwS, SALT 1010.00.1111.110-44- ..d.odkamiaasNONVOIN.IIA (iv DOUG SIIEYD ,, -c. 4,,, - ):: iisk; .. - '),,, f if-f- c 4 a 1. .,'a , volgemoug. 0, 2,1, -'- A!.,:,..., V1111:1','4:::' 11'-'-, tk, ,.1,..T,94 :. 1 l'ilo;:4;::31-1.- tlirS1:: .',,,:.- ,, 1 :,1 , - - t' ' I; tiSktialetU -- 161, r -1 -sr.cvm n ;-i- ,;,,, ,c 1 ,4Alt - '!!!'w0". - L I s far , r,!"3 ' - qtri,kaL |