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Show $; PEOPLE vote Combined AP, UPI President Ford and Sen. Hansen deny that the senator promised seven GOP convention votes from Wyoming if Ford would sign a bill that tion . ? (AP)-- Japan recognizes Vietnam TOKYO (UPI) Japan recognized today the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, which officially came into being through the reunification of South and North Vietnam Friday, the government announced. a sn Raymond Lane is on the final watermelon leg of tour from Statesboro, walking Georgia, to Philadelphia. It's his gift to the Bicentennial. 800-mi- le WASHINGTON 1AP1 Represer.ta-tiu'- s of four drug manufacturers making swine flu vaccines are to report to their companies this weekend on talks aimed at keeping the national inoculation program alive. In a day-lonmeeting Friday, drug STIGLER, Okla. (API Oklahoma's largest and most intensive manhunt has ended with the capture of two escaped killers who were holding a couple hostage. The pair were captured late Friday night "without incident when Highway Patrol troopers surrounded the home of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Fowler near here. They were being held at gunpoint by William Franklin and Edw in Jones. g met with company representatives those from the Justice Department and the Department of Health. Education and Welfare concerning the insurance problems that threaten to scuttle President Ford's plan to immunize the nation. The four manufacturers that can make swine influenza vaccine say they will not sell it to the government without protection against possible lawsuits from patients. It is obvious that there can be no national influenza immunization program to protect American against swine influenza if there is no vaccine." Dr. Theodore Cooper, assistant HEW secretary for health, said after the 1'ridav session. Jones and Franklin surrendered when the troopers ordered them out of the house, a spokesman for the Highway Patrol said. They were taken to the Haskell County jail here and were expected lo be taken back to the prison at McAlester sometime today. Italys top 2 parties meet Italian Communists entered ROME iUPl roundtable talks with the ruling Christian Democrats for the first time in 29 years today in a meeting that could give Italy its first female parliamentary president. The meeting of all non Fascist parties was the Christian Democrats' first concession to the West's largest Communist party, which made impressive hut still gains in parliamentary elections June finished second 20-2- Charge reduced in recruit death - WASHINGTON (AP) President Ford has vetoed a $3.3 billion bill saying he objected to a provision that would delay military base closings and cutbacks in civilian base work forces. The President, in a veto message to the House, said the bill is generally acceptable in providing a comprehensive construction program for fiscal 11)77. It was Ford's 50th veto. military-constructio- 3 bombs explode in Ireland BELFAST. Northern Ireland :l PD - Three bombs exploded today and a British soldier was shot and critically wounded in Londonderry, Northern in County Antrim Friday nicht took four livev An anon;, moils telephone caller told police six bombs had been planted in the center of Londonderry. Three bombs went off, wrecking two clothing stores. rmy and police mounted intensive searches for the others. The section found objectionable to the President would require proposed base dosings and work force reductions DESERET NEWS D i'wU.lV'fU '.! of Sil t LOM Jiiu'n.' m,3y 0 gi.po m t'd. 'Tr NUMBERS S24444S News ftps 5J Oj 3535 Ombudsman c 'lu-- .V A 4 .v.d op v s e ViruitfosQ.ti SakrtU Aii X (Jijh, lojho Drtt.K SsnCMv ;UtAh 1 VvO'.''4 ifldivt V'v.i-t';.ii . j Urt'iy r m v A ott.. y vi'rt St t1x (All v wn!y N AbCf'lv rtan o ,lv vtJr 00 i $0 H ijcci'Di'0j .ire eav at e m iJ 5i fofr 8 P m f n fBiwi m ijC TwrhN i advaiKt Menu'. AOtl Mofertu u' Crt vJiJtiOls. avdt.at'e Saturday CH'.y and CiWth mail ouisidt earner cvuverv area oeiy NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS OR CARRIER SERVICE L W J0 On trid-'- DELIVERY RATES Oiufih L twf.ri 8 i Clarified 'V.,'th nnm'ri MAIL rticiei cOOtriDutiHJ HDoLigrdorts m'evt ot' .CijSiDn yitt dtfvrfnr 1 CiLitRE TNT Afvreq vprv,l.iU 5 Information H v.)r lo spend Johnson's Bicentennial visit Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip set out today on their Bicentennial visit to America. They left Londons Heathrow Airport on a Royal Air Force plane for Bermuda, where they are to board the royal yacht Britannia and sail to Philadelphia. They are scheduled to arrive Tuesday in PhiladelphiaQueen Grace returns Princess Grace of Monaco, the n film star who hecaoip the princess of Monaco is flying back to her homeland to Philadelphia-bor- celebrate Americas 7 Seven men currently are on deathv State Prison and five of them could be directly affected by the , 1 court ruling. row at the Utah 1 The Utah Affiliate of the America Union issued a state-;- ', men deploring tne decision. ; Shirley Pedler, executive director of 4, the ACLU said, We hold the death''.-penalt- y to be unconstitutional under all circumstances. In addition to sanction-in- g cruel and unusual punishment, thei courts decision overlooks practical considerations. Capital punishment does not decrease the rate of homicide; T and police officers and prison personnel do not suffer higher rates of criminal; assault in abolition states. The death penalty, therefore, is not effective as 3 Civil Liberties -- 7- st; Thursday a House health subcommittee tabled an administration bill that would free manufacturers from claims involving the vaccines, except those resulting from negligence on (be part of the companies. The meeting Friday was an attempt to find ways of satisfying the manufacturers' liability concerns through contract language that did not exceed the legal authority of the government. Cooper said the issue was not resolved, and an HEW spokesman said another meeting of all involved was possible early next week. Insurance companies, wary of the large number of claims that could result from a government program vaccinating more than 200 million persons, are refusing to cover the drug manufacturers. Critics of the proposed indemnification plan said the federal government would be taking over all the risks in as umir.g claims while manufacturers reaped all the profits. Indians carry protest to U.S . be reported - WASHINGTON (AP With tepees and tents set up on a their to Congress with a period to follow in which a service would have to survey all the environmental and social impacts of I he decision. Tiie Pentagon had recommended that Ford veto the bill because it said it would be forced to delay shutdowns or cutbacks at at least 16 military bases for at least a year. The Pentagon statement said it would prevent it from cutting out 10, IKK) military and civilian positions and prevent the military from saving about $130 rml. ion in the year. to nine-mont- Nisqually Indians fly an American flag upside down in protest. college soccer field, approximately 3(K) Indians carrying a message for the nation on the eve of the Bicentennial celebration have completed a journey that began on the shores of the Pacific. Were not a dissident organ iza'ion. Were not here to take over anything or cause any trouble." said Sid Mills, a Nisqually Indian from Nisqually, Wash. "We re here lo secure a future for the Indian people, because there is none now " Mills and his group. Survival for American Indians, left Seattle March 19, in cars, vans, campers and a school hv PORT LOL IS. Mauritius fUPI) Morocco and Mauritania threatened to pull out of the Organization of African Unity today unless the current summit meeting immediately ceased all discussion on the troubled Western Sahara region. The threat, which would be unproeen dented if carried out, came after a meeting of the Organization's foreign ministers approved a controversial resolution on the area and passed it on to the summit for actiotf. The draft, passed on a 29-- 2 vote called on all occupying forces -- - Morocco and Mauritania - in the phosphate-ricdesert land bordering the Atlantic Ocean, to withdraw from the area and allow its people the right of self dctc, 11' illation h The two countries' took over the sprawling bus. caravan that grew as forming a it picked up support on the trip. The Indians had hoped to camp on the Mall across Constitution Avenue from the old Bureau ol Indian Affairs building that was taken over by an Indian group in 197?. but permission was denied. They ended up using the playing field at American University. They set up their tents and teepees Friday, while local residents jogged on the track surrounding the campsite an- - others walked dogs Tiie Indians plan to demonstrate near the White House, but 2 threaten to leave OAU HI CARRIER DELIVERY RATES O Pubi thing cin $$' Th DvsP'ef ro lespor.bifc.irt tor nvmuSCfipiv TELEPHONE pi UTAH IttiU nnu it v.o f .tv D'drt Merle flags have become Bicentennial thieves. Johnson said Friday he has installed a burglar alarm on the U.S. flag in front of his Gilroy. Calif., home because thieves have made off with five of them in recent weeks. a quiet phlebitis. for military bases court-martia- CITY 5 flags stolen Actor Buddy Ebsen has been hospitalized for tests to determine the cause of pains in his legs. Ebsen, 68, complained of the pain Friday while filming an episode of his Barnaby Jones television series at Van Nuys Airport. A spokesman said thp tests should determine if the pains were caused by strain, a sprain or Ford vetoes funds Tiie Marines reduced SAN DIEGO CPI ' charges Friday of negligent homicide against a drill instructor for the death of a trainee to violation of orders and maltreatment Maj. Gen. Kenneth J Houghton, commanding general of the Marine Corps Recniit Depot, took the action less than a week after another drill instructor l was acquitted by an eight man Marine board in the same case. SALT LAKE Chad Barnes, 5, is up to his ears, nose and eyes with curiosity as he peers through a hole in a play sculpture in Honolulu recently. deterrent." - pub massacre ? . concern in talks on vaccine Escaped killers captured A r. Ebsen in pain ssastaar.wi 5 v'Vr ;V.,v Fourth of July with his family, watching Bicentennial events on television during the day and a fireworks display in the evening. Nixons aide, John Brennan, said Friday daughter Julie and her husband David Eisenhower will be present at a family dinner along with Mrs. Nixon. The group will sit in the front yard of the Nixon mansion to watch the fireworks set off from a pier on the Pacific Ocean. On July 5, the family will celebrate Mrs. Eisenhowers 28th birthday. The Y.ww-s is The announcement said Prime Minister Takeo Miki sent a message to Vietnamese Premier Pham Van Dong, congratulating him on the countrys reunification and expressing hope for its prosperity. The foreign ministry, in a statement said Japan hoped the new republic will contribute to the stability and development of Indochina and Southeast Asia. Ireland's second largest city. plans -- - President Richard Former , itr J1 Nixons gather holiday. Officials said the Postal Service will operate on a holiday schedule on both days, and in some areas hol'day lockbox service and special delivery w ill be available. Mail will be collected from mail boxes with one or two white stars, postal officials added. Normal weekend mail service will be provided on Saturday. n V( rf ji ;; Thursday after visiting with his daughter, Mamie Higgs, and talking to police. I just came from North Carolina. Miami detective Richard Bohan said somebody else was in Monroes grave. And that somebody else was named Alex Monroe, too. Bohan also said: and 140 Each Alex Monroe was 62 years old, Each Alex Monroe had a scar across his pounds. ieft check. Each Alex Monroe lived In downtown Miami. Although their homes were just six blocks apart, Alex Monroe never met Alex Monroe. Independence Day WASHINGTON (UPI) Cargill Inc., a private grain trading firm based in Minneapolis, has sold one million Ions of soybeans worth about $250 million to the Soviet Union, the Agriculture Department announced Friday. The department said Cargill is expected to draw about 800,000 tons of soybeans worth about $200 million from the 1976 American crop for shipment in the 1976-7- 7 marketing season which begins next fall. The remaining 200,000 tons and perhaps part of the 8(W,0W-towas handled on an American sale basis by Cargills subsidiary', optional origin Tradax, S.A., of Geneva, the department said . aftef his daughter, aunt and sisters mourned at his funeral as they gazed on his body in an open casket. Tin not dead, Monroe said Postal Service says there will be no regular residential or business mail deliveries Sunday or Monday because of the U.S. soybeans 'T-rr- in Miami only months idle for holiday WASHINGTON 5 I Alex Monroe is alive and well news cflPuLcs Mailmen Soviets buy i Combined wire services Nixon 9 Continued from Arehear the cases involved in Fridays decision to uphold capital punishment statutes of three st ates. Since the capital cases decided ..ere argued late in the term on an , expedited basis and since a relatively-.- ' oral between argu short time elapsed ment and the announcement of th$ ; decision, we intend to file a petition f on rehearing in these cases, Jack Green berg, the funds director counsel, sai,d i Friday. Greenberg told a news conference at the LDFs headquarters the Courts., decisions were very disappointing, bul . soitu progress has been made. j the decD; According to Greenberg, sions very probably strike down the death sentences imposed upon some 300 ' persons in l!) ur 20 states, and may saVe 7 another 55 persons in two or three additional states. However, he noted that the upholding of (he death penalty in three states, in addition to affecting the !J7 persons who have been sentenced to die in those states, may also load to the execution of 100 to 140 persons in other states w ith similar laws. A survey showed a total of 630 inmates on death row around the, nation. rNAACP figures showed 310 blacks; 52.45 percent, 258 whites, 43.65 percent, 17 Mexican-American- s and 6 Indians.,, 1.02 percent. One persons race was 7. unknown. By sex, there were 580 men and 12 women. For crimes other than murder. 40. were sentenced for rape - of which 22-- 7 were black, six were white and one' j Indian. Two whites and three blacks were under death sentence for kidnap-ing, or a combination of crimes. -l wron Carter conceded he was leaning none toward two or three prospects identified. The Democratic National Committee announced the agenda for the national convention which starts in New York July 12 and ends July 16. Sens. George McGovern and Hubert Humphrey, the partys last two presidential nominees, will address the delegates Tuesday. On Wednesday, Carters name will Ire placed in nomination, along with those of Morris Udall, Edmund G. Brown Jr. and Ellen McCormack. A vice presidential nominee will be picked the next day Ronald Reagans backers complained to the Federal Election Commission that the Republican National Committee had favored President Ford by allocating him more convention seats and guest passes for the national convention. Mary Louise Smith, chairman of the the committee, replied that its not realistic to deny convention privileges to a President. But Reagan supporters say they are considering a court suit to ensure equal treatment at Kansas City. the administration had opposed as it made its way through Congress. Fords denial came Friday through White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen, while the Wyoming Republican made his in the Senate. Hansen, referring to an article in Fridays editions of The Washington that quoted him as confirming Post said: he had offered Ford a deal That statement is untrue . Wyoming delegates will make up their own minds In due time. Ford has until midight to decide whether to sign or veto the legislation, which would provide several states, including Wyoming, with a larger share of royalties on coal and oil taken from leased tedcral lands. Wyoming GOP state chairman Tom Stroock said Friday Hansen told him lhat he and Ford discussed political implications of the legislation toward the end of a meeting they had last week, but that Hansen denied offering delegate support. Jimmy Carter is expected to talk to his vice presidential prospects next week but he says he will keep an open . Lryingover mind about a running mate till be gets the Democratic presidential nomina- Clifford 2A OF JULY 3, 1976 DESERET NEWS, WEEKEND Court ruling reactions are mixed territory last year when the Spanish colonial administration withdrew , claiming the people of ihe area approved the action. But the Algerian-backe- d Polisario Liberation Movement has been battling a savage guerrilla war since then, saying it was tilt rightful leader of the Saharans. Morocco boycotted the summit opening Friday and Mauritania walked out of the preliminary ministerial meetng. Spokesmen for tiie two countries said their delegations would return home if the .Algerian-inspireresolution was not dropped from the agenda. d We will then withdraw totally from the OAU if they do not drop this resolution, Moroccan spokesman Mehdi Bennouna told reporters. Its a very, very serious situation. they say they also have arranged meetings with representatives of President Ford and the Interior Department, hoping to discuss an overhaul of government policies relating to the nations Indiai tribes. "We didn't travel three month demonstrate on the Fourth ot Mills July and (hen go homo, said. He said that if the T S. governments treaties with the Indians had been carried out, tiie native Americans would have enough land and enough resources and enough human resources to develop stability and live above th imvertv level Group to dissect anatomy of a joke CARDIFF, Wales tAP) Professors from 12 countries are coming to Wales on Ju.y 13 for a conference on what makes a joke funny. The University of Wales said today it has arranged 80 lectures on the anatomy of laughter around the world, including talks on Elephants and Marshmallow. s and Humor Among Au Pairs. We will be telling each other jokes and it promises to be great fun, said conference organizer Tony Chapman "After three days my sides will be aching with laughing. But we dont be clowning around all the time. We have a lot of work lo do." J |