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Show ' , ' . -- - ,- , : -' -- 5 ............. ',41: --- - : ithLZ ' , r:;:t ,, - -- -- 1....'i -- - - ri--S I Vn tr!!;;;"''''''-'-;:- WEEKEND OF APk11. 19, 1975 A Francisco ticket that is lit percent higher than charged for the same trip by an airline doing all its n !lying within California. (Men the major cost ot new communic ations services is not the expense of research and development, but the legal fees to get the requisite licenses rom the Federal Communications Com m iSsiOri Again, the upshot is higher prices that ultimately must come Out of the consumer's pocket. Vet these and the tiO other independent federal regulatory agencies m ere originally established to prevent certain industries from overcharging the its little wonder that President Ford is calling for a reduction in the regulatory powers of some of these agencies, particularly those involved transportation, 'This recommendation. issued at a White Fri- House on Domestic and Economic Affairs, is much milder than the gradual but total phasing out of sore federal regulatory agencies that Mr, Ford was said to have been considering. In fact, maybe the recommendation is too mild, considering the poor track record the federal government has compiled in reforming its regulatory Conference studies aimed at substantially ovei hauling the regulatory agencies have been inn& in 1937, 1949, 1955. :'vlajor 19, and ''''''''''-'- -- -- '',, Livii-"- it . ' N ...; '1271914se'l;t AMIK1L f." ; k T -- r4;x5''''''; 1971. Last tall President after Congress passed a raising government price sup- One month ports for milk. Jobn Connally was acquitted Of criminal charges arising out of an increase in gm eminent price supports for milk. Connally was accused of taking 10,10o to prevail on President Nixon t!I increase milk prices. Thursday. he was acquitted by a Washington. D. C. jury. But the former goN, craw. ol Texas, secretary of the treasur. confidant of pres.idents and wily international negotiator. finds lU 1)0111 iCal Career in ruins. Ile had been touted as a leading presidential possibility. Connally is rich. In he NAeren't he !night not have liven able to defend himself successfully. The price of iustice in celebrated trials comes high. of the c,:igressIn contrast. led to raise the price of men Oki -- There are priceless. warming 'Enchanted Moment s. in the experience of a cran new sman as he clears out the battered old desk and calls it a career. once-in-a-lifeti- These you would like to retain. to keep you humble and grateful. but all .!ood things must come to an end. so all you can do is to put them away in ." your Book of Remembrance. Those words still seem appropriate following Les' death this week at the age of St. Ills passing brings to an end one of the very best of thingsthe life of one of the kindest and most gentlemenly men we have ever known. Likewise. we now put away in our own Book of Remembrance the memory of his many acts of friendship, which will long warm us Wht'never we think of them and of him. -- years as sports Doring his Les Goates" Go With editor, his "Les of the ;'at chronicle a was column s of what and events figures - of sports -erathe call now golden 29 old-tim- ,o-'- ; . i V, ; OA 7 , ' 'I PiAV !,.5dtt- it:a ..,),L ', '. ) I cAyor,,,i t tt 1:1 ' I-k raf,00.11, ' f, re ,,, ' t....tv ; ,J A .......,..,, , t.. , kl,..,1 1 , A i Ail I A i I vAly ). t 7::.7:::::. - t CONGREWAOlkkkL i to I '',. I, f ; , ...,,....- -- , - ci. : lIre4-'1,4-,--',- : li,;01-'- ; i 3 ': , 4,, I 1 ! '1 fl''1'''",-7-- ; it t a i ' 1, ,.:grr, t:,4,(ittAg "se:. 14'7-- , ' , ',!;17""'"'''''''', 16'..,,:, ---- t -- i '...'''' ' ' V---:, N 3 N , ''l - , ,,.,,,..,,,, 46:....r.L1 '' Iti I .., ...., --.5.C,'". ' , r"? . 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The delays can be traced to lack of clear policies and standards, lack of planning: and statutory conflicts which force certain agencies to perform the conflicting duties of both promoting and regulating the sa lite industry. The upshot of the delays is that regulated industries are "The United States views the fall of the I,6; (k ' go ' InstGil of facing a i.ninc.:1 paljejeal luture, the congressmen enhanced their political chances. Instead of paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend themselves against. etiminal charges. thc congressmen will receive handsome sums to enable them to stay in office and keep milk prices high. hen government imposes controls on large parts of the ec,..)nomy, discretionary decisions by officials can mean hundreds of millions of dollars to powerful special interests. Under such circuni stances. the line between criminality and politics-asusuis inevitably tenuous. NA al appears most All are as much a product of the sports writer's typewriter as they are f their prowess on the playing tth fieid. then Les Goates had dozens of AllAniericans to nis credit who otherw se y ha ve gone inisung. As one coach of the tiines put it: "Les Goates has produced more than Ike Armstrong. Les' talents were not confined to sports writing. lie served his church in responsible positions, including seven years as a bishop. A labor of love was his women's choruses, and he always "like had a special love for music a fleecy cloud or the lace on milady's handkerchief," he noted. lie turned editorial writer alter his days on spod s. and his editorials were as humanistic. warm. and full of insight as his sports columns had been. To Les Goates, lite was lull of piwtry, accomplishment of humor. of warm experieures. Utah wiU miss his gentle spirit The Deseret News eNtends its 'Fintere sympathies to his and his ilousands of friends, Nk '1 i. : . 1.,,,...4 ..," , v ,,,yt-- , te 2 ,,, 0 ) f ' : ,c'af "t -,- .., .,,,, t.; 7 - ' y :',- ,- .t, 1 ::. 4 ,,.,077,,----- :,:, ' - ;,',:- 4,04, 1 :,,,:',,,'',' - . , - ....., , ,f1, ,, -- LA. . ' !!.',. , t, ' ,.. .. , , .: ,.,...0,6, ,, e , , W '.,.'' y, . , iit I i , : -..,- III! tr" ., fr,,,, '7.11.- - .''. r.' 1 ' ,,,,,,.,;,? ..... i.::,:,-t- ,:. - "I ,k;,' ''''' ,,k,,,,44,- , ,, , ,,-,- : ,- . ,, ,;k:,'"Li.,.,cf,-.,-:..- pt:: , ,,541:01tw4 m,n... ,t-iy.f.4E-Plo-4- -, , EA0 , - I', Ai trii,,,,,,ro , .., ,I. z...0o-- - 4, , , ,LY' i ::, ' ' . )Nr,'7, 7,, , ,, ; ',,,4A.,J.-- ''' , k 0,e01---- , . 7 ,,, o - ' 4:' )4Etoix14; 1,1 , I 11 I ., -4- ., i . , 1 ft;, : ,:a, t'e'.' '' io , , I ;rt. ,,.., ,i 10''' ,.'. -- 1:;.. C,r,1: i ' fi'lI II - ,,,, 'it,4,,-,::;,;',,- ' .11, -, :t.:174.,:i,,o;t1111 , ,,,tit:;;,i''I.--r,,-,1 'o.,,,',' tk...,1,,44i- ,i'.P..e.' '' P''' - :, T - ,.- l'i, ter;!----1 ' , Ivr.n Y1 At.. V, VYr:;TeV- t ,::.;It ' ," ' ,;,71 ' ,, ', :,, ic,;,a;,b,.pktzf, r,..la'f.d. Jr, I , ,,.i,.: :i;:',N ., , k ... , . ', ' r ., '' y,t),,,' ct, rl ' ,,. , ' 1,.,: ' k ',,11, -- 1"101 t ' . , ,,,..,:,,.-- 0,f,t, , 4,4;,, 1' ' 14) tb '; -- vi,,, ';,,,'. ies, ' ,v, rt i:i; vysti .,; - !' ,,, y, V' - , ,ty 27,e , , ,--s ?,-,- ,4 , '?,) t i., W AYAAW--'' .. ,F;,4 .' ' '" .,.;' ior iI co,'r'e;1 ,4.1 ,t, it,,,...... .,,.,, .t,A,,,,, - l',,, ,,,, E,-,.- ,o .,:,-- , r 14 ,,,s I i 1 t v,4g Ike ql"..i ' 1.t4'NeN I 01,, .... .),,' it t'''''' : ... . ..; 110, . ' ,k,,,,14;,.i,.,tt ' .3' Pi esiderg Ford 0 P:1;'...4.''N A ''' Az ."..... . , ,.- 4.,,,, 1 ;'d,1,,VX ,Y 11 i::::, 44$4ril,1;;;,1.;INs. S , 1 Sf Love transcends cultural hock rr t 6V r Coln-pare- d it, Met'IttA77--!-,- li,Cassiorl. , stiit.6; ? A,,;(ir:,,,,,:,,,,,i,;,::;:::,,ikr,z:,i,41 o 01111;111 milk will receive campaign contributiont frOill the dairy interests NAllt.T... they next face the electorate. The $10.l.if Connally ys'as alleged to ha e received is small cheese to the amounts the dairy lobby spends to insure their Holds get elected to office. 40!, '- 111 woiffitihseadKnhemsserRarldepci,)00h g(coavtenrbnomdetan; ',i:--:- 474:;41 '''eVIrs,,,:,,1;4-,,T1t4- 1 it uncorrected. Anti z" , e g V, gliel .7A;e:,-,14;tke- ,4, ., -- 4, fir::IfA',.' " t 4111 ::'; Moreover, many members of the regulatory agencies come to their jobs kith ties to the industries they are supposed to oversee. Even though the Senate must contirm nominees to these post S. there traditionally has been little scrutiny of these ties or the nominees' qualifications. The result is often regulatory decisions being made in favor of a given industry rather than in the public interest. TO describe the problem is to suggest the outline that relorms ought to take as studies of the regulatory e repeatedly done in the has, agencies past. Yet many reforms have foundered because Congress has been suspicious of any reorganization that might weaken its influence on the agetwies. This suggests that if the regulatory agencies are to be better regulated themselves. Congress should have a hand ill lorutulating the reforms. In any event, since the regulatory agencies are said to account for the bulk of the and ad-judicating done by the federal government, its sheer folly to let their defects rule-makin- ''t, ,y,4,7 long-rang- e si.J110. filo: - ;Fi'',i hindered from making expansion plans, and this hindrance slows economic growth. . tk 40 " long-rang- e often :.., 'Taps' for Cambodia center on intolerable delays in produc- ing regulatory decisions, cumbersome operations laden with red tape, and t perts urged President :VA Efforts to bring Vietnamese orphans and homeles.s children to the United States have run into severe opposition from child psychologists and cultural anthropologists. These experts contend that the rescue Operations are being carried out by well intentioned but misguided potpie who have very little of what is in knowledge in plucking children out (if a highly developed culture arid setting them down in a totally difierent 5)ciety. Children. they say, are tan for transplanting; they do not automatically adjust Eisenhower to veto the plans. or at least to order the U.S. Air Force !RA to participate in the program. President Eishower accoded us the courtesy of explaining the project to him personally. I told the President of the credentials of the surgeons and physicians who ; ere volunteering their services. I spoke of the support of the Society of American Friends and of the American Red Cross. I told him of the continuing role of the Saturday Review in carrying out The result to I Ilroshima. bombing The is wati were experts com- much that pletely wrong. All their academic training hadn't is strange, i across cultural barriers. , , alway s has its Expertise hut never more so than when it seeks to speak out on human relationships without tAing into account the fact that human love and compassion are primary and that national differences and cult mid gaps are wconthm but, they will also discover that nothing is more basic in lite than the regenerative force. The potentialities for creabe iniurished bye growth taught. them the one lesson that both precedes and transcends specialized knowledge: Love, 1,nd ,,varncrth arc more war weariness deep , tr Our 'allure to provide the South Vietnamese with the replacement arms, ammunition and tuel thcy needed and now need amounts to a had case ot American myopia and a cause of celebration u 7,,Ioscow and Peking of our fl of n ------....D.......-.----..----..- ri e1,,0 here now, since they are determined to nudge It3t:ir perimeter of influence ever further away front their home territory. Our mettle having been tested and tound wanting in Indochina, the Soviets may lie encouraged to try us again soon. A It hough it's probzibly fair to say that the Britn,h have no specific interest in South Vietnam and Ca nab,idia tier se, they are very worried about the possibility of one their oldest allies, Portugal, drifting into the So let orbit, .ind American Liture to aid the Southeast Asian has symbolic importance hoe that cannot vet be folly measured. Our abandonment ot our anics and our failure to honor the assurances we gave them in signing the Paris accords already have influenced the collapse of the recent talks, and yet may pros, e to be the most haunting mistake the United States luis made in nearly 200 years I the small society , , Cousideriw.,i, past patterns of behavior. the Soviets are likely- to put pressure on the United States and its allies .. i or- -4 ,, The undercurrent is one ot questioning ,knieric an so long kadership which has been taken tor granted by the British and the Western Eur4yeans. throughout the country and Ronald the aggravated. breathless I ., t:" k( anti often distorted reports from the battle zone itself. i 14!litini The American people have been given a steady diet of misinformation with very few actual facts tor a decade or more. Now, Congress, being by nature more eager to follow than to lead. is p:obably happy to have at least what appears to be definitive voter response to the issue, whatever il is. Congressmen tend not to like to cast vates on the floor when they arc uncertain about their constituents. But there is no mistaking the fact that here America's Southeast Asia policy is viewed as a failure and the American visitor is asked constantly if the Asian debacle means that America might not continue to honor its commitments in Europe. plan developed called for the girls to be flown to this country by the U.S. Air Force. They would live with American families when they were not in hospitals. Since most of the girls would reor more quire a operations involving plastic and rehabilitative surgery, their stay in this country would last at least a year. The Society of Friends in America would accept re- sponsibility shock. The west NM allies. American voter reaction to the rapid collapse Southeast Asian allies is not surprising, considering the we half-doze- The Vietnamese children being brought to the United States are not beim, transferred to cold and impersonal institutions: they are becoming members of families. To be sure. they till encounter While U.S. congressinen are reporting overwhelming" voter opposition to blither military aid I() Southeast Asia, British political leaders and press are expressing mounting concern that the United States has created a serious credibility gap for itself among its connected with a project that brought a group of disfigured and crippled young girls from Hiroshima to the United States for surgery and extended hospitalization. The guts were casualties of the atomic were in a LONDON long-lastin- ago, iroshi -- "cultural shock," the effects of which, according to the evperts. can produce mental and physiolog, nal dislocations. low valid is this advice? years H . U.S.is shaky position abroad strange faces. words, foods, custom's, from their American families enabled them to bridge ;;;!! cultural gaps with, brought to the United Slates. During the full period of their stay in this country, there was not a single case of hoinesi, "mess or cultural , by um atmosphere et love and tun acceptance in Ivhih lacy find themsek vs. Both the children wag their rieW Aluerici-atamilles will he not at the atonisl ed dittietillies of language but at the ease with which it is puss Jhe to corn n unicate important than eultucal differences. The experiences of the Hiroshima girls in lik ing rehabilital1011 programs in Hiroshima. President Eisenhower supported us completely kind the project went forward. The diAgured and crippled girls would be unable to sustdin the cultural shock. The ex- Israeli-Egyptia- ..,.. 1 I r r '4!...! n , f- E by Brickman ..1 t.; -- w1.4AT1,; TALLal-- - lt1ityA t ,,,..)"' N rri i J I., I . , 2,1r SlouilqAtc I 167Y77-- i .-- 1,t NF---- V1 c,0 r , : .5er ,,,., I 4.z..,;,,:,w,, ft -; c:, 1 21 17- 14 ft I 11('''',27,-,,- , r-.- ,,k-- ..:, ...ui..,...,L i, I I pt... 1 II ... ....), t'' I; 9,2,7 r k!,42 TAI-E1,- ,. 012 1T 't ,, ,,,,. ,,,A41147.19, -- L, i i e, 64'41 im-e- A. A -1 T70 ; ;; ; , k.,. Pic,R :- 74 ''. ." WHA- 2: J41' cicsk Aij I Pr; r f ' t ii - i , 7- AS- - , . for finding families for each of the girls and for vocational training if desired. No sooner did we announce these plans than formidable 'position developed. Some child psychologists and cultural anthropologists made Public statements severely criticizing the entire project. They predicted that within Iwo weeks after the girls arrived the project would collapse keause the girls X At - . ) ,i,., .S.f.' ...,D W." T 1 U.! 4' ' .., i F 51 5 ;,ts;1. N,LitLt Jr: ,i, I ' ... ', - 4,.,,,,,,r1 tI - '"' ,..,.. 11 ','''T7 '' .4111 0( ,, 1 , ' ' I 4.414.17;l4C:t1-1L-- '." "'' '''''' .'-'. L. g4,')4 it.,), Ford called for another suel study lasting at least a year. .3tit the persisting criticism of the regulatory agencies reflects their resistance to change. The criticisms of the agencies '''''' tietl i :,;'i, Elk,' ,, LI Pia's; Aix '. 4g.:,:';',4 Lesley (Les) Goates When Lesley tt,cs) Goa les retired alter 44 years al service to the Deseret News. as usual he had some thoughtful words tor the occasion r-- -: , ' -..04e4.:7 .t! .fI',..,..1 '-,- I AtIote,allf Some in 1964 ; Sfg'I- -I ., tt.,--,,:- '''' ''' ''' , .,, ti k4,1 Tx I I 4 A rSTAU1011' 0 -- -- ,,,,,,,,.,...,:.,3 ,' .. --- -- -- t c,fRS ' ,..4:i.1 Itt- - ;,,,,;;;...7,7,I 4 - 0ye--tc1;:"-- i t ti .1 ''''',,...,, Connally, crime and politics Li'- " ,....,,,,,,"rii.:77::v; rl', t,..ti,',Itw'; f , lt in its; own field fully Under current regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission, a Texas lariner who sends a truckload of strawberries to Chicago can bring the truck back loaded only with raw farm products. Because of this restriction. the truck often returns empty. As a rerinit, the fariner's cost and the stra v, berry eater's cost are boosted. Under regulations of the Civil Aeronautics Board an interst;d0 Airline must charge a fixed fare for a Los ' ' Zi. - afternoon t' -- 4- -1 5 Why federal regulators i need closer regulation day - - ol the United Stote with It three departments of government, each in --- e.,14 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH We stand for the Constitution So -- 1 ticI IIMMMIONINIMparanamilMI ,kngeles-to-Sa- - 711 Ira 801r''','''.,:l I:: sp.........,. 1 DESERT NEWS 11.... - - ,,,,i. i','. .t.: . r |