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Imagine, if you can, American adolescents to -- The waving flags and dancing hav-ilStars and Stripes Forever." 6. By Saul Pell AP special correspondent It turned out to be a big. warm surprise party. We surprised ourselves. There was a disposition. a hunger. to feel good. Not just well but good. We felt good, At long last. the grim cliches of more than a decade "The American malaise," Ile sick society" were scarcely heard m the land. praise God. There were. here and there. voices of protest and gloom and guilt. but they were easy to turn off or tune out this day Can you forgive us. Jane Fonda! Were the blacks less reproachful. the Indians less hulltant7 It would seem so. Even the tr,creastricly assertive American Woman , -, 4,it,it,.Ar,),--1--: ' Z- ,- ,,,, ti , . ,.-!- ''' 't '''''' titT. - 1,' rt'Air ' 'F''',11 ' - ;- - 1, ;e, j .4 Ali ' , ,,' ,..1".004's - ss 44k 4 so,,, 4,,,r ..' lc4,,- . s ' ss, t. ''.i..84.1 , N,.., 4,,,i , ' ' - ' '. !..:::;--;(,:- . att. !,.,, t.:''. 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X 3' ,:..fs : ..1:-.'t$'01.i' ! ' ..,.: ,k.,,,,i ,.4., ,7 tf ,:' ; ,:y. ;17. ;,,,, t q!,,,, ,,:t......A.,-:. ' ,,.fi.Vi,,c,-, ''. 4- - ' -,,. i ,,,,;. ,,...,:i.,,.., .''.-;:, ,,,,..,:1;- . :.:: '' ' s - . :,,, ..4t,. , ... , t ,,' v;.,,, ., ' ,,,.. - :' ;.; '''' ' ' :"'-'''-- - ' ,- -- ::.:':. ,. .,,, ... ...,...4 rioirts, , ......,....,.'i .....,, .?.. :::',. .s., .,,.: ,,, , ..,:.-- 4'.'i -- 7 ',1 AF Edmund Muskie chats with let Inv C itlf , g cv r ..4 41' 2. f ,. ,p i t "1 1 ' Z..., 11.... 1I k u' LI U 1 -.. . ,,,..4,,,; .,6,401.1 .. V 1,,n4 - , - ''' 4 - - t - ; , ,k,,.. -- , , ,. , .., ,,4,,,,, v., z .,,,,i1,,, ..,tr.4,,,,,,44,,,,A.0,,,,,- gr4 - at, in :I GAAO .:. , 1 4. t, , , 1- , , - i t 4110'''-- '' , ''''' - 11' - .,,,,. , .. lij ,U . 4. ,,,', ...:, .. e WE,. , 2:::::',. ,;.. ,.., a.,4 . ,..., u tr, - 'V2.,,,e,' At ' 3 SPAIN'S NEW PREMIER A Ito Suarez wcrtzed on the formation of his new government amid i :, - , UPI mom Liberty Bell in Philadelphia. -- literally takes God out of our concept of freedom." 1681. More than 5.000 persons crowded along the Delaware River under heavy security to greet the queen and her husband. Prince Philip. The welcoming group included about SO demonstrators protesting the Bicentennial Bell. BritairCs birthday present ta the United States. The protesters. led by the Rev. Carl McIntire. said the new bell should have a Biblical quotation like the old one. He said the fact there is no Biblical inscription The Liberty Bell bears a quotation from Leviticus: "Proclaim liberty throughout the land unto all the inhabitants thereof." The inscription on the Bicentennial Bell says: "Let Freedom Ring." Bieentenrual Bell. cast at the The Whitechapel Bell Foundry in London where the Liberty Bell was made in 1752. hangs in a brick bell tower at the new Visitors Center. 10-t- Lebanese battles rage, peace talks collapse Thousands of BEIRUT, lAsbanon tUPD leftist and Palestinian troops attacked the Christian town of Chekka today to avenge the siege of a Palestinian refugee camp. Fighting on all fronts gave Lebanon the war and bloodiest fighting of the destroyed the latest Arab League peace efforts. Casualties were estimated at more than NO the worst one day dead and 500 wounded total since April, 1975. Fighting was reported at Chekka. at the Palestinian refugee camp of Tal Zaatar, in the Christian town of Zghorta. and along the confrontation line in Beirut. n The forces moved I5-d- against Chekka, 10 miles south of the northern port of Tripoli, after the Christians launched another offensive to close a gap in their circle around Tal Zaatar. Heavy fighting around the camp in southeast Beirut blocked the second attempt by the Red Cross in two days to send a convoy Mto the camp to evacuate hundreds of wounded who have been without water and medical supplies for days. Heeding leftist leader Kama! Jumblatt's till for a -- popular war" to avenge the siege, the force attacked Chekka and claimed the capture of four villages. Rightists, however. said the attackers were beaten back during the night. presidential candidate wades through his meetings with men being considered for the lob. Carter spent Monday at his Plains. Ga., home with Maine Sen, Edmund M tit,,kie and told reporters a final derision will no( be made until next week, when the Democrats convene in New York City. Muskie was the first of several possible vice presidential candidates Carter intends to meet before that time. Carter said today he will interview Sen. Walter Mondale Ot rts.,ta as a passible rice presidential running mate Thursday. Carter, who trsveled to a breakfast of Democratie governors assembled for the National Governors Conference in Hershey, Pc, today, told rcporters he believes a good mining mate should have: Perstztal compatibility. i Lesder,b ip A geopoutical balance to his own candidacy. leftist-Palestini- A lack of "political contention" with Carter's programs. "A constant consultation between the two leaders would be a very important element in a vice presidential relationship with me," the former Georgia governor said. While Carter locked ahead. President Ford and his campaign strategists continued to map plans for a challenge that is very real one that could end in a floor right with Ronald Reagan in the Republicans' Kansas City convention. But even with the close fight. Fords only real campaigning was scheduled for July 17 in Hartford, Conn.. to woo delegates attending a state GOP convention. By UPI's count Ford has 1,0G6 delegates pledged or leaning to Reagan's 993, with 97 uncommitted and fki still to be chosen. It takes 1,130 to win nomination Reagan schedulei a onehalf hour speech which will be nationally televial at 8:30 pm. (MDT) today on reports he has offered some cabinet posts to democratic opposition parities. Suarez, 43, was sworn in Monday and met today with several members of the outgoing cabinet. He will address the nation oOn televiSinn tnnight A RESEARCH GROUP has recommended the federal government replace its revenue-sharin- g of all welfare program with a financial lake-ovcosts. The Committee for Economic Development, which first proposed federal control of public assistance in 1970, said, "The national experience over the past six years has served to reinforze that recommendat!on." er SOUTH CAROLINA will defend its refusal to hire women state troopers at a hearing likely to be watched closely by r)olice agencies across tne country. The state hires no women for police work, a POSitiOn which saying they are not qualified would cost it aid from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration. SOUTH AFRICA HAS BACKED DOWN on the language issue that touched off the recent black uprising in which at least 176 persons were killed and more than 1,000 iniured. The government announced that it is dropping the requirement that instruction in black schools be given in Afrikaans, the language derived from Dutch and used by supporters of the ruling National Party. STOCK MARKET TODAY NEW YORK (UPI) Prices moved 992.21 lower in moderate trading on the New York Stock Exchange today. DThe At5A7.. , Dow Jones Industrial Average, which gained five points Friday, had lost 7,61 to 99213 shortly before 3 p.m. EDT. Earlier in the session, the blue Nr 400-yar- d Carter meets with Muskie, still shopping for No. 2 man Jimmy Carter's criteria for a running mate are clearer now as the almost certain Democratic A FOUR-DASUMMIT MEETING of the Organization of African Unity ended today in disarray. failing to solve major continental problems and facing several new crises. Delegates said it was one of the most disappointing and divisive meetings in OAU history. ..,,,A 1,,,,'.-i- '.1;Jail I Y ii,,11..t lit ' .... t trl,,,S ' k:t:rz.47.! - 't - ,. k., , '3k l' RUBBER TALKS BROKE OFF today as union negotiators reiected new offers that COMParly spokesmen calied the best in the industry's history. Spokesmen for Firestorie, Goodyear, S.F. Goodrich and Uniroyal said they will take the offer to union The strike ty &IWO rnembers ot The United Rubber Workers union enters its lith week Wednesday. r.e-c- ..- :- -- ,,,:,,,.. 1 t: THE ITALIAN PARLIAMENT'S new Communist and Christian Democratic presiding officers are hinting of continued politica; crisis. After elected President of the Sanate Monday. Amintore Fanfani, the Christian Democrat's leading called for a repudiation of "confused assemblyism" that would blur the lines of division between opposing Parties. Communist Pietro Ingrao, elected cff a for head of tne Chamber bi a new relationship among political forces. ,. :' - ,,, x,,.,,,-,-A. k4 l'Ll . I. 154 .t-- f.4 ,.:1 At . tr.' 4$ i6442-111- ' - - -- , 1 .,,,N ,31,,,: , s''..-,.)'4, 7 I X' I A 11 IT t4t., 1.1) i , - ' ji face-to-fa- ....' ,,..,-;,:-.,---Z.,,k- ,, - .., '...,, 1:', 41 . ,.;-.i- ,...: ...... ,,, United Press International 1, :',.,,, M, ' N.,;,.. . '''', , 'f, ' 'A. ,.,.,,, &,4,,,.,,,,olo , NI.,:!rtork,it-,,?,;,,:.4.,oz,.,,,,-t.f,o4,..tr(:5x,g,apo,13 N,.;14'.:!-- :,;,- - ,,, s,,, ,,;.,. !,,,,,...,,,4.4-- ; ,.,:,..,,:s;:. ,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,i- - .:r.Z.,,t .....!,...4 , r.!..,. ,,,,,,-- '':: ,,,;,,,, 4:',01.,1,.. 4s.,544 -- - ,"' , I, ;Aft '. , : . leftist-Palestinia- 'TV,' s'."t"'.'"'.::,-:.4:';'- .',.., - '''''s... , 'i - , - 4.- - sponsors said would create or preserve 350.000 jobs. Except for the amount of money involved. the measure was almost identical to a $6.2 billion bill vetoed by Ford in February on grounds that it would increase inflation and fail to provide lasting jobs. version The scaled-dow- n passed the House by a vote of 328 to 83 and the Senate by a 5 vote margins big enough to reverse a Ford veto. ;IP' '1,,;. - . - ,), A .0.41 4 1 Democratic congressional ,,,,.f '''''''''' N''' .. , 4.,,. '.' ttt,.,,ttt ; tttIt's..tliri.-.1T,;;111:.-44:- , - A t , ,..,IF.-"7,:.:,- itr- - - AdWASHINGTON (LTD ministration sources said today President Ford will veto a $3.95 billion public works bill that ,.,: -.: ,u,.:1-40(r- f ,4, vl-- -- i 1 , 7 . '- , 4 ',:i --, '''"vo,-- " Y's, -,,,41 ,,,..t .11. ..al. ,4 ,. illt , " ,,, - , , to veto lobs bill - - r2 '''.Z.ss' 1.;;,'-':. tft ....14-!--,- i - Ford is expected i ,;.: - ,,,,:!.-:,:,,,,,,- ,,, ,T.;s7,1',,A's,.',4;-,v's.,,1 l'r-,1- ,,, fiiivasave,tk,,,,,,,,:aft,dris.,.;:et7,4,,,i,v-,,y,w- t .A$4 ',.,'... :::',',..;; ,,,,. -,,-,,,:..-1 -,- - f ,,,,,,r-fil 1 -' .:.4. it4e,4 ' George The visit was part of a sentimental Bicentennial Journey to the historic city where American patriots 2(03 years ago rose up against British tyranny. The royal yacht Britannia docked at Penn's Landing. where William Penn. the founder of Pennsylvania. first came ashore ' '..... ', 1,i,:k,,,;,t., ,i,;', 454 -- "5 !.. X' ',,,et,;::,;','A. ,..1-'- . .7.:' j ' oomit14,E.-4- lp .- , PHILADELPHIA (AP) Queen Elizabeth II of England arrived in Philadelphia today and visited the Liberty Bell. the symbol of freedom for the former British colonies once ruled by her ancestor, King X'. . , ,,itiel',:,'"trki ' ,,, t i . it ' 7. '''- ,. ,i !; ', ';' I : ;,,,, . ,.,,r'''' . . . t',,, .4 44'4,, ,:,',.'- " c ' t. It ',..p.,-,,- . - ! - 4te - N ,r-n ,,,,.:,, 'It;;.VI!,:;f'''7,...,...'': t;'41,1V,Itiri., , , 41.4..,,,,,.44:. , li,',',?,v,,,s14.-t-1,4- -- -- tt s' . English queen begins U.S. visit iiii":4,' sz T- --- I litalk -- ... . veterar and FBI AGENTS SEIZED 930 sticks of dynamite Monday during a manhunt for two suspects wanted in a series of bombings in the three New England states. An FBI spokesman said the exP:osives were found in two steei drums in a wooded section of Boxford, 18 miles nortn of Boston. "Tne dynamite has been trace o and is oefinite:y stolen," he said ,L, v., , Queen Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip, view the , ,,; . ,."':!, , ',,.', '.:t . , ..ni, :IrsrF ;, - ,,,..,,;:.,: ,,.,. , -.1114k, 'li , I. 4i 4,7, ! ,kk,.., ...:,?f,1..:$4.t.i.,,..,..,.......,c,;,, vglAC, ' '' ' V6 - 3 t ' ;. WS 1 1, ,J, it! ' ...t:': '1i ,...,,iit-- '6'-'''.- '. :ss'r,',' , ., ''''''.. - 7,' v k, e-- , 'A.A.7 . 0,- V 4. t--.- ii , pr-,---..: 4 gliNt s, - ,...,. "s',',,,- - f- . 4(.. ,s "izt-siot- i - ..,... 'k) ' : , - ,,1,, ,14, : ,k Ir''' 14(7.4, ,.e -i)- : - .1-- , 4; I - .1, - 4,0-- ,,,-- , 't- ,,, t1..1,z, Tv-- , - Lit , - (, : ; THE U.S. NAVAL ACADEMY bewed to a new trao4ion today as women ore d the rars of the uniforrhed at the icist of the traditic,r-bouncserOce aca,defries. Eighty women frest-ime- r were 5Cheaujea tO go aboard with 1,320 rilaies Neches. oaY. 110 women are scheduled to enter the U.S. Military Academy's freshman class. - - q 6 1!,' ' ii i, cor,-.L.;c- In each cipe the feeling sotm faded This one will go. too but, one desperately hopes not yet. not yet - - !i,- tne isirt U.S Soviet ranned sPace ass sad Bors last Ju!v .o:nov and fo3lt,t ergineer ,ftal.! Ztobov would t exoerirrents SaiyLt 5, a space ary,,ratorv sent 14 OdiS ago. Western experts said 'hex expected the cosmonauts To cha!ienge the American endurance record ot 34 days, in sPace. orted - t,1 -- e feit some of that when a freck4N1 named .1(.4n Glenn boy the earth Some of it when Neil Ar7r.strong A a:ked on the moor, - -,:- , ,' THE SOVIET UNION LAUNCHED e cosrrona u! into tcoca, tr,e '.. ' t - ' ,,,,, 31,,,,,, 4,, - r-- -, ,...,-', , , 1 l.,... e40,-,,- . it: v 4--' ,tr'- 14-0, 1,- ItVte, Friday. - ,:', 1 The opinions last week rested on a finding that the statutes in the two states provide for mandatory imposition of the death sentence without appropriate appeal procedure or leeway for judges and juries to exercise mercy. The court also Lgreed to consider additional abortion issues next term by granting hearings to St. Louis, Connecticut and Pennsylvania officials forced by lower courts to make abortions available in public hospitals to women who cannot afford to pay for them. The illegal search case involved appeals by state officials in California and Nebraska of lower federal court rulings ordering new trials for two men convicted of murder. David L. Rice, an Omaha Black Panther leader. was convicted in a Nebraska state court for the bomb slaying of a city policeman. Lloyd Charles Price was of the convicted in California for the robbery-murde- r wife of a San Bernadino liquor store owner. Both men claimed evidence used against them was seized illegally by police and should not have been used at their trials. They appealed their convictions to federal courts, relying on a 1961 Supreme Court ruling that illegally seized evidence must be suppressed to deter police misconduct. The 1961 decision was one of the most controversial handed down under Warren. Prosecutors have been attempting to overturn the "exclusionary rule" ever since. Justice Lewis F. Powell, writing for the court majority today, declined to go so far. But the court did hold that state courts are able to rule on what evidence is admissible at a trial without being subject to further review in federal courts. Poie 11 said permitting federal review of state COLIViCtiOnS on Fourth Amendment illegal search and seizure grounds "deflects the truthfinding process and often frees the guilty- - because otherwise reliable evidence is excluded on technical grounds. "Thus, although the rule is thought to deter See COURT on A4 1'.zi,- ",. ,,,4,1Acti F---- . , ' ,1 ,,.. t '',,-- Nii,-,,,- ' - , ,',,Ikt d 4'11, , , .t. - 1 L0,....,.., 1 '1 y Ai -- ' - , Today in the News -- ,,,i ;., t 'az";. , 'I. pnwPreraftmePoplof , , - '.- 4111' ,,,:4 , 4 !- - 4,, - 40.:., , , .17.4eroul"r'".!,r,"(84:',7 444 ',:. ' , To- - '.! : 1 il, ,r4 ' r4lit tei41"'' ,,.;k , 1 , 7,..' ''''-'- z". ,I, , ''' 4111? It.741 o , ", ' ...4. . . OdtottO0',-,--o7- D 11-P- -- ' - : - ;,,, K4, ''...'''r- .7"Pi '," 4.i ' ; '.. - - ,r ; ,,'''.--,- .,, '' , , ,',... The Supreme Court WASMNGTON ruled t9day criminal defendants have no constitutional right to appeal their state court convictions to lederal tribunals on grounds police illegally seized evidence used against them. which curbs an important right The decision afforded the accused under Chief Justice Earl was the major ruling in the court's iast day Warrcn of activity before adjourning for the summer. Following up on its decisions last Friday upholding some death penalty laws and striking down others. the justices ruled Oklahoma's death penalty Jaw unconstitutional and vacated the death sentences for six Oklahomans who had appealed to the high eoul In a brief order. the justices said Oklahoma's law violates the Constitution's ban against cruel and unusual punishment in the same way as the laws of North Carolina and Louisiana, which the court struck down - z. , pure. spontaneous. undilated unashamed it feel good feeling good invidua'ily, this kind of eruption of elation has been known to happen to a city. as :t did to Pittsburgh when the Pir2tes won the pennant, as it does to Centerville when the high school basketball team wins the te title. as it does to a research lab whf n tne o.A1 man filially wins a Nobel. but for a whole nation to blow its top snort a Aar ending is singular, indeed Nk hat had we won this time but the renewal of ill respect. CVI'n pride, in the perspec- Darned if we didn't. In an apartment overlooking the Hudson River and the greatest splash of sad since Trafalgar, New Yorkers watched from bored off terraces. &rraeone starteci sme.ing and a contagion spread among people who could not skre each other and from the whole glassy face of this soulless, modern building. from the individual warren pens ti Neu, Yorkers famous for not seeing or or kmowing each other. there came hearing -God Bless America:' In the cloudbursts of wiggly flames that broke all around her, could you fad to look at the Statue of Liberty with the eyes of a frightened Russian immigrant or the heart of a boy from Iowa returning from a Isar that la as won and was good to win' The joy of the rockets red glare may not have given proof through the night that it would iast But for a moment. it v, as there. Somehow. after all the ballyhoo. we had feared someone would muck it up with the black headlines of violence or a torrent of bad taste born of commercial greed But they didict. As the tourist said at the pageant of Valley Forge. "It is history and darned if they am't doing it nght." Ciru puts rb on riAht to alkoefai lt,' 1 And for a moment didn't it feel good? ..m :? on , -. :.,- r'..,: --- -- g ., , 4$4 , it 'r ! , SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 38 PAGES 161 67?'''''''' t"5"1746374;1 s., 1 e chip indicator had risen almost a point. Declines pulled ahead of advances, 666 to 656, the 1,786 issues crossing 7.61 I an-lon- the tape. Volume for the first five hours came to about 13.50C,000 shares. (Complete New Yorik, Business Comics Comment Deaths American lists on C4.) C4, 5 C6 Do-It-M- an Al Living 13 C1-- 3 Sports Today Theater AS TV B6 A3 What's Doing C7 A9 Co UTAH WEATHER Hot and dry until a weak Pa:tif IC cold front moves the state Wednesday. Lows in mid 5DS, Highs in the mid 90s 41b io NI 0 ta.N Zones 1, 1. 0 Cache ki Vatiey. Vitasitch Front northwestern deserts) Hot with a chhnce ot lute, 7 noon clouds WednesdaN Lows near 60 with h.cins the wooer 90s L4094 4. (Deita, Milford, C4k1ar C;ty, Sevier Valley. Carton C Juntv ) pair and hot Chancy ot rain in tha trboumains t. SS in Rtchteld ano Delta, 60 in Cedar Cltv. Histrts round 10 2 t 8 OP. s Dixie) end hot. St. Fair Georste low 614 htait IOC Zane Winiah Basin) -- Mostly sunny and hot. Lows 53-4Highs in the mid 90s, Zoom Utah. 7, 9 (Soutneala Canyonlands- - Lake .owel1) Nanonat Fair and hot eo, - 3 141 9 .,,,,.,L ,. 5 St Zone S 6 . with lows of S3 in Monticana and 65 in Moat) 44Ighs 91 and macactivtly. 'Tao recredtion ounNolt calh tee: In , .,, ,, 4 - mostly tunny and ant' Weather tilreitala Wattleswittt loon 'Amite tram 1 AO 4n Ilr,ce to ls) t aka ' west, Anew max 0,7,4 IN'agu ed t;) ' ;47 - tutewnant SIN 64. If . - 1 . t 41. |