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Show , , .,, ,.. :, , 2'.1 , , k EA:1 r7 At Nt4' Ica ;4 5 c 7 ri 41 LS I I te.S LS L.S -rdf ----- . ft 1 b . - 101111110' :,. , li,c,...,,,.,,,,,,,,...,,,,..,::,,,,,,,,,,,....,,:;.,,,,,.:: , : ,,: ,, V--- :- ,,,:.v.....,;.:.,-,,,....:.- ,: r . AS TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1975 , , ' ' ;.4t, "4 ! Won't m mei Ica,' keep t 4is word to South Vietnam? ' , :, - - ;:. 'I, ,;i,'.4s Some - ,--.., k mi:lion South Vietnamese refugees are clogging roads, struggl- ing to',board shtps. or planes, fleeing in and desperation from oncoming taokootolust troops. They are not running away from the wa,, Indeed they are fleeing to the areas most likely to be fought over in the future. The refugees are abandoning their property and braving dangercas Journeys to get from areas rontrolled by ITanoi to Places gGV- 'erned by Saigon. So much for the clainis that the Viet Cong had the support of the people or that Ito Chi Minh could win an election in the South. It ,was Amerieans who were deceived by such falsehoods. It is Vietnamese who will pay for the decepiion. When the Cammunists took over North Vietnam they killed large ra'imbers of persons in reprisals. Estimates of the number executed range from 50,000 to 500,000. In addition, 1.8 million refugees fled from the North to the South, Many of the present refugees have made themselves vulnerable to Cornmunist reprisals by cooperating with the Saigon government. The United states helped enlist their cooperation by promising to defend their country against Communist aggression. . , '.....' - ,,,,, .. a.,at ... , 1.5 is... pic E. vt, P- g - it--- ; 4 fa --. - . ,- ie,s ,,,,,,it. ,,.: -, Atit:,f,;.4,t.,...4 ;iZIL.gri'it.;:a,.k''''Z'''' l''.4I''''' 1,. .'''''' 1,1,,",!, ,',,' tr ,..',Ja. L...,...4,,,,,,,,,, .:..r '6, ' v.,:',71. ' , ,,,,ibi.' -- - - F--- ,,,,,, ,ii ,v . 4 1 . I.,, - '''' - , ,,.., . 1 1 t i ;, r; '... t i 1 t i I 1 v it - I ; 1 !1 I i t t al -- , .liaa,e-- i 1 ;- ' ' I :, ' - , t . fk . il'' g : , ! . - '1 - lee il ,, - ap..irop-- 4, cs;- . ' ----. , . .,,J . (;0 r - - i !., . - aa ,.. i . i . - -, N, - N ' : - , 6.0. :, ,r, - I 41kr,,,P'''' - - ..megt, "Hello. Jerrie Limit welfare - ... . . . vat One test ot a irioor4 idea is that A prompts one to wonder why it wasn't thought of before. By that standard, or just about any other. the Citizens Advisory Committee on Environmental Quality haij come up with a real winner more railroad lilies As more and afe abandoned throliont the country y become each yuir, at often prices. bargain available, What's to be done with them? ilghts-of-wa- l( com- The euvironmeutal quality Convert the mittee's suggestion for hikirig to trails lines abt)adoned arid bicycling. better use can be found tor ails and ether abantionrd trackage than to make it avallable to this of hikers WitiOn'S orowin., , , ard biking ROWell Alk.e--4.41::,Iii ...444.1443,1.&4:-.. ' , , ' .. - '', ''. 7.1 .....2:...:- has ' -, - It's me again" , ' ,,,,,...., .,k , , v, :1,".,,te' ,,, t ii,,,ii-,...k.5' : .,',,,,,,WeS , ..,.,:',77'1-'-','-r-, ,!,''' . , Is'' sitt7,t , iv... -- AA.: ,.,' t, , ., ,;,,,,,,,,,,e10..,e.tio re ,, -. .NA, ' '1 :;,:C - ak 7 ,, , ,p(' i l'-- ,i 7,2,, , , ,,, , ,,,:. ,,i ' ''''4'''"' i 7 ;. ., i ,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,.. ,,-- . tlf,,,iil,s''.'"',' A. .....,.,., ,,...;.-- - ..- - .. i - Faisal's assas- ,ination remains to be SCULL But in the longer run. a downward price trend appears inevitable. Given that prospect, the -floor prize" gimmickry that the State Department has been selling as a protection for developers of alternative e"'n'ergy sources looks iess and less defensible. renamed The ,11,4)r,,ric "m;nimura import price,- ,,, , , -- .' '' ', , :-, , ', :,.,..!,.. e. I . ':';':'. rt.?.),-.',-- I .1 Z,t,,tio ' Georre nen i t . - r!w4 - Apn! !s . trees that are ncw, to our airplanes, newsprint, plasli cs. - trees that remain Our and greatest renewable resource, and rightfully can claim to be the most versatile of all our ' :'(4101';itilltl, ' -- . , crops. April is trees that have been, and are, and will forever be, beauty and peace. They lite best we have left of our wilderness, and the witnesses of our finest moments. . . , April is trees still standing that tell us how Boone and Lincoln, Lewis and Clark, Washington and Penn took shelter beneath them or laid a hand on the bole of some tree while speaking. 7, ,., ' April is trees. so many of which in our an in . , - , t ., ---,, ... - , á i - - Peace Prize committee A bewiVASIIINGTON Theze is no Nobel Evacualderel nation will nct 3ast give tion Prize.) To his credit the foolish answers t sensible negotiator of seriwill asbut he also agreement peace questions. sumed that the war IV (mid ously debate preposterous questions. Today Wai,hington roar along during the peael; is seriously debating: "Did Kissinger says he assumed Israeli intransigence caust! Congress 1,ouiti cot tinue to the failure of Secretary of vote aid for South Vittsoam's war effort. Stute, Kissinger's sion So whiri you hear it, said prizo-winnin- - Vletnani wr.r provoked that 'iltace moves-wnt$light not peace mit the th4t Thc,. - a evacuoola of from the tig.ht ionnn's wlr U.S, fore, - eati6K., the iniSS ion -- ,worJ fabre pe.aee aesinst Norit. ly these - ., I ,, I t - , - I - ,:f Ail 4a.; ,, '., 1 ae , :' .' I ,... , - . - - ' long-haire- ' r 1 I ,,k 7!.... bank. !7 ,. The next time one candidate accuses another of t., instead of lying, keep in mind that 4: prevaricate" nicarit to walk crookedly, aad you will .know he is being called a crook. Abstract ord s may have ':: been invented to take the sting out el the language, hotly, ? doing so. they often cut the nerve as well. 1 ,- N ler zunr. and Israel would withdi'aw in forces half way through the key Sinai mountain passes. In exchange for these su- bstantial ft tit sup;ly which - r responded , - i k ,, 's Washingtoii The Let :hat Washingtqn Is - . bating whether Israel's ill.; .trarmgence foiled Kistngt er's rozision indicates 'hal: Egypt woo its- gamble. Eykil math. Israel a frivolous :fier that Tis'iae'l had to rOuse:1.14 this triggered- - ze'pre.". ilie cE,pt posterous debate irt : taI! of Isra.:1's . di 1T7 , ,, , z - invotv e Eqirne, wn-- EgyptizAn avLJr e.g., diruinisileti , nt But there was ricthin;g: abor'i Egyptti purpose. Egypt saw that by tvngi he negotiations int4 , ?liarade it could win solri,4-1thing bigger than a tacticat vieton, 'm the Sinai: it ettalq: via a peiitical victory : . But Israel ass,irr.ed that the deelaratir,)n , 0 frivolous subsUmtial negotiating chips tkv.., ;iext ;wind of armistice ncgotiations, Israel asked Lid on-use an Egyptian of force" declaration. Technically, such a deilaratiai woulft have added nowhat Egypt agreed to tking, do when it entered into the Jciulary 7 ' larger territorial -n- - ' Egypt military and sacrifices, :?. - what 'night be described as a: frivolous dernand for stills would have left Israel without ,i ,,. - , a.00 . ' e-- . ru nearly hall its eneitor ; and Israel wou'Ai. agree to Egyp- itholornaticr economic, :and tta fciices moving lomard to prop9,gauda war rr.,xasiltes .occupy thy' current U.N. till- - against IS2ael. i ) ,t, ' n day-z- 14 ; But Egypt wpold rot give tc.; such serious considel-atioa declaration. So Izrael made au extraordinary ,Iffer. Israel would return tiro Abu Like the comept 9 Deace, of aggressiOrt. '' f , Well; vvhy not? It is hardly the little boy's fault that languages freeze up so that the word no longer literally stands for the thing. In the beginning every word had a el, concrete image 'eeferring to something. One could almost take 100 English words at random and show boartime has squeezed the physical out of them, leaving only a vague abstraction. This is why languages must continually grow, shed, and renew themselves, or they become losailized remnants witheut power or , are vitality. 111 I a into list ran that her textbook, flipping through included the following common words: climax, comet, planet, scandal. zest, canopy, trivial, pittance, mile, aa '''k paltry, onyx, clinic, and rival. As the author points out, when these words were coined and derived, each referred e,: to something tangible that explained its meaning. But, in 4 going from Greek to Latin, and then to English, the ::. original image has been lost, and the modern reader has no doe to its graphic. meaning. : et, "Climax" was originally a ladder; "comet" meant from the streaks behind that kind of star: -,,,,. "planet" 'was a Wanderer ; scandal" was a trap or snare; 'zest" was a bit of orange or lemon peel; -triviar' was the canopy" was the first mosquito net place where three roads met, and aimless gossip was 41 . exchanged. .; Ilf,11 bow atl thocp words come t'l when we perceive their reason for being. A -- pittance" ,: was a portion of food given to beggars; a "mile" was 1,000 paces as marked off --by the Roman legions; 'paltry" was Z.: nothLng but rags; onyx" was a fingernail; 'Clinic" came from the vvord "bedside": and a "rival" was simply aureeilioa odic, Ilead Oa the :other sid,e ef the river ae , ' that the ,,,,i. g Fossils of speech 0 , is used casual- '' ,; 1 From the start Israel was prepared to take mititary rigs in exchange lot. Egyptian political gestures-principal desire was an Egyptian delaration of that would signal. for the first time, Egyptian willingness to deal t4th Israel en other than military terms. Roi.leis oil fields ' i ,,, Speaking of languages and changes in words, as I was the other day, my youngest daughter read me an amusing !passage from her seventh grade grammar book ' : .. Clues" by ziliselGieeit0 A little boy learned in class that !'apathy" meant "lack of feeling." Asked to compose a sentence usingthat ,, ord, he wrote: "After the accident, he had apathy in, his ' of a peace a I ......,.... the concept of intransigence is getting a bit rumpled by Washington usage Israli intransigene r,' ,..., 11P11 - ment" that boggled the easrly boggled mind of the- Nobel 4 ; ,: its salk, , $ SYNEY HARRIS .1m17-niese But "evacuation movement" doesn't ,3ound noble and looksIcosy on lapel buttons. Evacuation was achieved 4 , 1 .. i ,, , 77 ., i 1 , , -t , ' .. '. - , 4, ..; o, ti L. I " ' -- - 1 tit ;1 : 1 ,.,.. sylva havF made history, or witnessed it. cr .., entered into OW: folkways, or usefully , , become a part of our daily life, , c.April is the cvbei', spurring the treeless from the twginning sitting in a saddletree made of a native Western wood,,.:;..:4. and thrusting his feet into stirrups of another, while building his corral of a third, and his... .; ranch house of a fourth. . . And it is his,',I;t:I' cattle, browsing the nutritious pods of a fiftW' 4: ai iot of tree, to spread its seeds and g o . march to imade the giasslandz ' :I AprilI is trees that are wondrously tl. companionable, W h e r e v e r one tramps or a or ef t travels. .:5; ghoi ogttli rtehees dthaaytc IAlltriodugitholus t companions I spots, serving to holiday in Western glory keep more truly alive happy memories.... lhushes. they became blockhouses inikt vteels cabins,- gunstocks and criTqlles,-wat,',a..'.a.. fiat ,,,,i .) F. - : has been pushed down the until the threat of competithe Europeans and tion i s eliminated. Jtharpoaantessocf But a floor price, as Rep. by' Assistant Secpoints out, is Joseph retary of State Tom Enders i less than a guarantee as the only way to' assure nothlog of a very high price for OPEC independence from the cartel. Say the cartel cuts the as well as other producers, price to $5 per barrel: then with energy consumers all over the world holding the the eonsuming country would ; be bag. required to boost the price, by tax or tariff, to about $7.50 In practical terms, it is or $8 before the imported oil hard to see how such an reaches the market. international agreement could be kept. No one outside Unless investors in western the State Department seems countries can thus be assured to believe that the Europeans will be against protected they would be able and a sudden flood of : cheip to stick to, say, a $7.50 per OPEC oil, Enders argues, minimuni import barrel alternative energy sources price" if the cartel starts to won't be developed. it out for $4 or $5 a In blunter terms, the spill barrel. De"floor" represents State Let's face it: this country partment concern that the has yet to evolve a consistent U.S. the bigriPst investor will successfully and coherent energy policy. develop new energy The best thing the nation has high-cos- t, done is to set a goal of sources:, and force a break in the cartel's monopoly only reducing dependence on oil to allow the Europeans and imports. That is yet to be achieved; the percentage of Japanese to reap the benefit our Imports :s climbing. in the form of old:fashioned, cheap Mideast oil. The President and ConOne report from a Paris one hopes, will agree gress. conference last week, where on a reduction of imports,. the Europeans reluctantly through quotas, and promote bowed to Ender' pressure, a serious cons?rvation progsaid the US. feared OPEC ram. That is more a matter of alight manipulate prices national security than an downward to preserve their economic imperative. .markets in the WestIf sixecssful , t;th a progf-aThe public is entitled to be will weaken the cartel confused by all of this. Origifurther. To the degree was price nally the official posture that helps Europe and Japan, one of despair over OPEC's Ynuch the better for world ability to manipulate prices so A floor up: Now, we publicly worry CCM:011ie recovery. the work would just price will that OPEC manipulae them down presumably oilier way. B8- ' II ' noi,,- I ,, - ' '' The nlitfin or Israel s inTranslaence - L o no., -,- . --- se ' r ---states Ii I aa, ,44,11 1 ,, I I I ,,. e i -, ''''',''',:l ,... Those figures undoubtedly show of established Utah some carry-ove- r traditions on welfare payments. But there arc other reasons, too: The recession impact, at least to date, has not been as severe in Utah as in other , for one. There is another welfare matter, however, over which Utah can have 'greater control exercise it by establishing an informa tioil center on new hirings. As the Aid to Dependent Children's program now works, welfare payments cease when the head of a household becomes employed and receives a first paycheck. But nowhere in the state is this information compiled on an individual basis ,, I , '- - -- - - .. ......,,. rlf. , , :;:;:oll'-i0kbeiiiiVe- ,4614.4,,-.1- ' I - -- . , ,,,,,,a, ' '' 7:!!.,f! ..4-z',!.,,;'4- eo $.:ki,:: 7 .t", - ' '7,4 1.:.' , ;:.'..;:. I .., ..c.....c...4.,' .'.,. :' , - i ,;;,-,- , 4.: ' , ' .., P'ol ..';,:',.'i.'.:1,-?'..,4:':',' '1 . . 1 '' ! ' A,.,,,., '1",! :,.0, I - ' r''''' ' , . i' ik ,,,,- ,. ,:a... : ,,7 i- - tre. ,- , ;;;;',.:,-:7,7,a,--,-,,:g- ' .40.00.4,,s,,,k,,,,, I , -:,. -- , ' ''1',.':.!7,,, ..,.;,,.,, ,E.fv.aiimAti a , wake of King ',.. ...,:,s ,:,.,:. ''''' ,', ' 2.'1.1 att.:7'4. t.',.'''....1.. t 1.''''' .i W., ,,,t','.1;,...s. 2,1,r-,?4'. p t r ,:',,,,,,,,,,,i ,11 Tk3 :''''. ,,.,.,,.,:- ,-, - .! ,,ro, ,,,,,,;,:.., ,.,...4....,',. , ':' . :, .....e.,::.7 -- 4,,,,,,,t;,,, ,,,..,,, 44 ,,i,,,,.. ,,,:: ti-b- a perceptible glut the market. .- L., ,;41;,-,-1,:,0- "1", - IL:, ei ,..:1;!"..,,-4,,i- dt, ' ; - -' ,, 4,.'.',1,.'7.$40:4'!".itAroftlteAk,e-nOt''',- ,:,..,4,' ; 47 ,,41:),1,, ,,,,, ,,' 1 .....:,,,-11- - zt I.4::1, , ,,,,,,' - ,, ;1, i. - Z'',' .,, ..,0;,,!,,, ,, '1 ; , I ,,, .i ..17n, ,::,. I ''':',;.';'--- ' ,r;--4,- --- i , It , pk-- .k,,,, ,,,,,. ,,A,: ios 4 . - , ,.-, 'Ter ,' ,n-- , .p..:4,.....t.,,,,-- ..,;"'"- ' ;',. ,C,,,,71; ,; - AW''':..a -- ''''',,,., 2 ":i..),1. '4?'''''11.1''...:''1:1.-.1" , OPEC control of the price recenliy has depended on Saudi Arabia's willingness to absorb the biggest share of production cutbacks. How Saudi policy might shift in the in ,s-h- ,.'4. ,.,saea--,,ilti- : There have been unmistakable signs of softness in prices quoted by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), spite' the cartel's effort to protect the price structure by cutting production - d c,,ritliusiasts? I 1- of oil on . ' :': , - ,a,, FormuWASHINGTON lation of a national energy policy has stalled for an obvious reason: The recession here and abroad, coupled with modest conservation efforts (mostly abroad), - , - ,A1,, ,f-- Thus .unaathori?ed paynients may continue long past the time authorized by law unless a case worker happeas to stumble upon tliat tact. With welfare costs soaring, the urgent need is to conflere already-strainefunds for idity these ,ctuaily need the assistance 'What , - , ',,, ,,;';''' , ., -- " , .5:.;i':. , c, ks,.kig,:.7)'''t tano- a, ;og,7 :, 1 .4,, ,...:''.: its' eze toe se oaaa, lI'iT-N- - t .' rs'41 Hobart ' ,. ' ..' a ;-- ''''''''''r ''-7- 1 -- - .4. , ' i7.,,,,,,." - ItAp, '''''''' - , By ............," 1114' ,, , W77.r. d I e V : , ' , keep Utah's welfare load when the federal government took over payments in 1974 for the state's adult welfare programs. Happily, an assessment of that impact, released last week by Utah Foundation, shows some surprising 'results: Rather than the three-folincrease federal officials had predicted, the boost was only moderate from 7,000 on the rolls Jan. 1, 1974, to an estimated 10,000 at the end of the year, That's a welcome turn from the 90,000 to 25,000 expected after the first year on federal cash assistance pa ments for the state's aged. blind. arid dis,k!ed. A new use for old tracks i , . ,,, , , - ..., t ', shouid U.S. help' to: to the needy the time of Brigham Young, has been that welfare recipients should work for their assistance if they are able. Those ideas, however, clash with federal regulations which, among other criteria in the past, have mandated that clients statements concerning eligibility cannot be challenged, and they cannot be required to participate in work projects. No wonder the forecast was for a i : ..iiLi Utahs welfare philosophy, from huge increase , , - , N,..- 4, A,,,,.,,,.,..a., I ...- ' 1 I , - - ,z, ....,..,...... 1 - . :- -- q,..-,-- , ' ' - - ',,..,..-r--- or .q.-,- ,,..J , , ,,,:,,.. , 'We' 7:i -- , . x. , .1i- ( , ,:, T , I- , - .: ; 11 , "......'-.- ''''''rAlor - trees that were, in oer,-country's early history, barriers and am- - -- - ' .0 , 's ' ' ,,. , , .4, I , ,40'.1' ..,.., '',''', ,,s- And it is also the .1 r---- - k fed .,..." '1v, , , red-tippe- I 1 - r Ihz-,-Ilik- - - ,. . ' , ,,,d2f.,,,,, kr,e,i.,!F iit,17,dit,:':i.girsi di.1.10t,ittel. - green litta. the leaves no larger than one's little imgernadhe white blossoms still iii huci. It is also the early apple trees with gray nubs at their wing tips with young lcaf clusters just beginning to emerge from the buds, each leaf the size of a ladybird beetle's wing and each as though blushing.... ..4 4071 . ,,EL. ...- ,.V.i.::.''''5' "." --- 1 l'el .. 1 s - ).,13.,1., ., ...,.. -.- - ett,k., ,..... I i , , sr ..,., ...10.T. ; g , t''''. tree beside the garden dressed i I - ,01 -- -- A 4IS -.- 0, LW t mIrgieL-- ; , -, , ,,,,, ''''''' i '''..,4177("k-427- ...rq..0--- - '-'4'- t ' it A ,,,i.. - -..., , y x , - ) 11' s 4.., ; , r - e..1."4 ,. mr- - ,,,,i, ,, , i -----w- , trokS.Je"'"'..., ' i -7-1- ,, is,': lc afing of timeless April is the buddiii6 p h t no me., )11 of surgent life renewing itself, the ,rii:isteriee of the wad Anti the. seed spin. the mot; the teat of is the beauty the buds and len vesbut April not the purpose of their this is a by.Prot-Inct- , ' existenee. The m issi.on of every liN.if and blossom is to gather food, create seeds, and April is the pear perpetuate the species , I , 1 x trees, the tccurr,n, - I - i LL ,a, It's AprilI i i'. 77.,I,P"!.,,' . ti '' e ;',;?' lf,,,r-4,A,.''.. 4'.;:ii Ot:t,'. ' ei-- - - , .,.,:,,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,.,,,,,4,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,2.,,.,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,'!- ,,,'''' i pect. The alternative is to break our solemn word and let our allies die. . r- ,.,1,',..,-,- - ,,,r1-,- ..., - ,,,''' ' ' I . suet-ession- , .,,) - . , ,' - , e,':,',,' i:'' - '4'.' ,' reItc,i,,,,,,,;44. 1 there are no guarantees. If America were to give aid and South Vietnam were to survive, there woutu be no forseeable time when that aid could end without disaster following. The Americans who made the promises and the South Vietnamese who staked their lives on them envisioned the kind of American commitment that:continues in Europe, Israel and Korea: Froless, nirl in what may well be a losing cause is not a pleasant pros- - . - ''''''''' - But primarily out of concern for South of Vietnam. Rather. a United States governments believed that preventiag a Communist takeover in Soulh Vietnam was important to American interests in the world. ; . -ti- , , ' ' i ' , - p;.:..F 1. k1 7'7.,tr,t147:---',44- T:,......,:ffr,,,,-,,.,,,,,tz-,...'''''''' .. .. 1 saved if sufficient aid is forthcoming. k.t ..- I Vietnarn's military lineS are shorter now. Saigon retains the most populous and most productive part, of the country. Something might still be .3 t: t -, , , i -,- , - :.,,k 1;'',7,-:- I e4''''':,,it',4' ''',.:Si . i P , , '170toiT..7.7!' ',,,t,V.,r4 t ,., , ; o',.;,J'.'f,',,,,,Z''.,..1'c'.;4-1111447,il,e(.-- - .,, I, , - 7: ...,,,,,,.? ' ,,, , '',4", t,f4,T,07,?,-.,fr. f. ,41.t.rA:.',44:4.,'',.11:.4:(7',', , I - ,:,,,,,z,,,,, 1r .,,) ' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,.,:ir.,,,..,;::,,,, - iff!," - ...ft'.'''''''; , ,.s , ' - lg,e,'4;71. ''''., -- i ., 1 ,:.n..?,h,., t .;,,I., ri:77,vr?i,- ; ,,,,,,,,,.,:.....,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,....,,,..,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,, ,,;,,,, sc T,i4 ,, lk,,,,,, ..;,,,,;:', ' IC,Jit, it 44 ,sx,,,,;,10 .atrex., t.NA,V11 , ,,, , 4,,,.461.0.410,.....4.,...,4 4, g.' .3,di .6w ,U , ,....R.,,,. I : -- i'' ,f at.!.liel ,- -- In return for promises of American help, the South Vietnamese undertook to promote the mutual cause by fighting Communists in their country. - Tile- theory that South Vietnam' is vital to American interests is now rejected by most Americans. And because the South Vietnamese are no longer considered important to America, Congress now seems determined to break the promises it joined in malung and to deliver our allies up to their enemies to be killed. , :. r The present debacle was caused in part by Congress' refusal to give the South Vietnamese the means they needed to defend themselves. Whether the horrible reverses can be baited is questionable. But there are some reasons for hope.. South - I , :..'11.;:',',7 ',4-:,-4 - 1 .4...., ,:,,i t . aa '''",- '7: tab':.-- .41 ',47 r''''S.:44 '' '""'':; ,,,,,,!''''' l',,.; '....';',I''- ''''' . .. .,, it,..,, 14:,,e,s.'f,,,,,:14r .',...7.,. , ' or.,-- 1 of - k" It '4,,- I k, A ,774,7" 1 ; r ; 'i 7 , ,, ,3,...,, ,,,.,,,,,,,,56:,:s. ,, ,,.AL;,,At.;:t . 14--- . . , --i..- .., We stand for the Constitut;on fri the United C;otes with its three departments government, each fully irdependent in its own field ,' .......... s .... ..... , I . , ..,.. M.M.00...., 1111111111111 I toe.thilr---- ) 1 ' '" 1.N LS 1,,21 a, k,' NEWS, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH . ... M - , DESERET ' :ek.,telteee.Selt - , , ., i . rel le . Tr. wArivems..--;,..w.--40,4- , ,.. , , . .,,,L.1.-'1161kett'n- t , . , . - ,4"' - ,-- , - '-- '' - .'''''',-'- , '. '''''''.-- -- - -- , ,- - ,,;.,..,' ile - '......--,-- -- ,...' - . - ,,,,. ,t, , -- ,,..,.., -.- , . ) .,.,,tf4 |