OCR Text |
Show Kent State protesters jailed KENT, Ohio (UPI) Police armed with dubs dragged and carried away 192 singing and chanting demonstrators from the Kent State University campus area today where four students were killed by National Guard troops seven years ago. The demonstrators have camped out on the site for the past two months in protest of a proposed gynamisum to be built near the area where the students were shot. About 1,000, persons who watched the arrests, moved onto the campus commons and held a rally to protest the removal of the demonstrators. The first two persons arrested were Mr. and Mrs. Martin Scheuer of Boardman, Ohio, parents of Sandra Scheuer, one of the shot to death by National demonstratGuardsmen during an anti-wfour students ar ion May 4, 1970. Also arrested were Arthur Krause, of Pittsburgh, father of Allison Krause, who was also killed in the shootings and the parents of Alan Canfora, who was wounded in the shootings. Canfora was one of the demonstrators and was also arrested. About 30 campus police, backed up by Portage County deputy sheriffs and Kent City police and wearing riot gear and armed only with clubs, moved into "Tent City and began taking the demonstrators to four buses. The demonstrators were booked at the scene and the buses were to take them to peoples. . The study conceivably cokid result in nearly tripling the portion of the U.S. gross national product which is earmarked for development assistance abroad. The study also is seen in some quarters as part of Carters emphasis on human rights, .which he calls central to his foreign policy. The Presidents Development Coordinating Committee, headed by John Gilligan, administrator of the Agency for International Development, is conducting the review. Gilligan .already has issued a critique of his agency and ordered a cutback in paperwork and decentralization of decision making. from Members include representatives several departments and agencies such as the . Treasury Department, the Budget Bureau, the . CIA and the National Security Council. ' AID officials said Carter set the Sept. 1 deadline to help him prepare the next budget with a possible substantial increase in the amount of assistance. Last year the United States gave $4.4 billion for economic aid abroad about 0.25 percent of its gross national product. Ted Van Dyk, assistant aid administrator, said a new target practical immediate benefits for their aid for the poor majorities in the South, then they soon will question whether they should give any aid at all." 3 contest decontrol data WASHINGTON (UPI) Republican Party chairman Bill Brock today urged President Carter to name a special prosecutor to investigate South Korean lobbying on Capitol Hill. Brock issued a statement . alter reports that the top lawyer for the House Ethics Committee said the inquiry is going too slowly and blamed the chairman for the delay. "It is time for the President to throw his support to the creation of a special prosecutor and disregard any political damage that may occur to members of the Democratic Party," said Brock. "We have too many reports of stalls. - delays, and foot draging. "The same situation applies now which did during a similar phase in the Watergate investigation." he said. In order to avoid any appearance of eoverup, it's time to appoint the same type of mdependanl thousand cubic feet (the current ceilmg is $1.45) and extending controls to sales of gas in the state where it is produced. The House Commerce Committee is considering that proposal as well as a proposal to phase out controls altogether. Dave Reps. Clarence Brown, and Jim Collins, Stockman, showed reporters the results of studies on the cost of energy under various assumptions. The main flaw in President Carters reasoning is that he estimates higher prices will not bring much new production of gas. the three said. TWA wins okay to trim fare assistant Watergate prosecutor panels chief counsel, expressed his dissatisfaction in a private memo last week, sources said. The lawyer held Chairman John Flynt, directly responsible for various delays in action and a failure to meet more than 11 times all year, the sources said. now serving as the Laeovaras move, they said, suggested a major rift with Flynt that could further stall the inquiry into allegations the South Korean government had businessman Tongsun Park peddle cash, gifts and other favors to influence economic and military policies. On Monday three more House Democrats said Park gave them campaign donations in 1970. Reps. Tom Foley ol Washington and Melvin Price of Illinois said they each received $500. Rep. Morris I da of Arizona said he got $300. The donations were legal then, but would not be now About 10 past and prerent Democratic congressmen now are on record as say ing they got some kind of financial help r. If there is a major scandal Congress, it needs to be exxised totally and forthrightly now." Brock said. "Delay will only make matters worse. . in the Philip Lacovara. former a US. Irom Park WASHINGTON (UPI) The Civil Aeronautics Board said today it will let Trans World Airlines reduce coach fares between Chicago and Los Angeles by almost 40 percent to reflect savings the airline will realize by halting three of its five flights between the cities. In approv ing TWAs $99 Super Coach fare, the board noted that it was setting a possible precedent for other routes and airlines to follow. It said the broad implications of the action will be formally examined in a future hearing. "For the first time in many years, a carrier proposes to introduce a new class of regularly-scheduleservice at a fare well below the regular coach level." the board said TWAs proposal strikes us as a rational experiment to improve its operational and finan- cial position Chicago-Lo- s market nearly there. Meadows, sailing a Sunfish, was on the last leg today of his journey from burden of pensions If our citizens in the north do not see the GOP chief calls for a prosecutor 'overgrown surfboard." Hes Firms feel "Projections of domestic and international resources required to implement a successful approach to basic human needs; Proposals for sharing costs among developed and developing nations; Agreement on measures needed to use those resources more effectively. If human needs investments are not made and the poor majority are forgotten or overlooked, then we will surely be judged and poor in guilty of taxing the middle-clas- s our own countries to enrich the wealthy elites in the South, Van Dyk said. high-price- Combined wire services Jerry Lee Meadows set out three months ago, vowing to sail 1,700 miles on an The demonstrators voted earlier today to defy a court order, which was issued Monday, to leave the site of the proposed $6 million gymnasium complex. include: WASHINTON (UPI) Three congressmen say the White House used massive errors and misconceptions to convince Americans they cannot afford removal of federal price controls on natural gas. The truth is, the congressmen said Monday, decontrol will cost $48 billion less than continuing controls. Production will decline with continued price regulation and the nation will have to use d more and more substitutes for lagging natural gas supplies, the lawmakers said. President Carter has proposed putting natural gas under a ceiling of $1.75 per dares and wins ar 7 percent has been set for development assistance. Van Dyk spelled out the administrations Devel views at a meeting of the lopment Assistance Committee in Paris several days ago. Much of the discussion in Paris was about the worldwide relationship between developed nations in the northern hemisphere and poorer nations to the south. Van Dyk told the committee a multination program for basic human needs should 1 Sailor Two demonstrators in wheelchairs were inside the circle. One was identified as Ron Kovic, a crippled Vietnam veteran who book Bom on the wrote the anti-wFourth of July. of 0 in the Angeles . of "This is indeed a very moving and very fulfilling for me and my family," Mrs King said, turning to Carter. moment . is highly significant that you, Mr. President, a white southerner, would la the first to recognize Martin Luther King and to bestow on him the highest civ ilian award " . Ihis action is indicate eof the spiiit of reconciliation. die said, adding it will serve as a "continuous reminder that King's dream of equality must be nurtured and protected ) Barnard. V 29. Well, a Barnard, hes free-lanc- e from photographer Mass., who dub- in pensions than the companies have put aside to pay retirement checks. This massive potential debt is more than the companies combined profits of $32 billion in 1976, one indication that it could pose a major problem for some companies and for their employes. The bill collector wont come around next week or even next year to collect this debt. Piece by piece, like a home mortgage, the companies have to payoff the debt. And if the companies fold or can't pay their pension debts, the government will step in. debt Paying off these long-terobligations plus funding the pension checks due now is quite a burden already for some companies, since it is a business expense that must be paid out of income and thus lowers profits. For example, Uniroyals pension costs of $79.4 million were almost four times its S20. profit. the aircraft company, made a $108.8 million profit in 1976, but that is overshadowed by the $115.6 million it paid for employe pension costs. Others among the top 100 whose profits were lower than pension costs include Lockheed, Republic Steel. LTV and Litton. Together, the top 100 firms paid $9 billion for pensions last year both in current costs and paying off the $38 billion liability. Thats up $1.4 billion from 1975 costs, a 20 percent rise in one year. These totals come from an Associated Press study of annual reports and other official reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission by the largest 100 industrial corporations. Despite the huge dollar figures, individual workers' pensions generally are not threatened. A agency, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., now insures pensions for millions of workers, assuring them of retirement benefits up to a certain dollar limit, even if the company is unable to pay the benefits. The $38 billion figure is the total of the unfunded liabilities of the pension plans of the top 100 companies. These liabilities are estimates of how much the firm must pay in pensions for all its workers, minus what it already put in the bank and what it plans to put in the bank in the future to pay retirement benefits. These are estimates based on extremely complicated assumptions, such as future salary increases, inflation in future years and how the stock market will perform. Georgetown, bed Meadows' and is her softball team's No. 2 pitcher. But the slugger has been benched and she is angry. Opposing teams refuse to take the field against Janet because she is pregnant. That decision is archaic, she says. Janet Goldstein bats .600 No joined the journey in Atlantic City, N.J. He said Meadows. 28, of Concord, Mass., plans to write a book about the voyage. "Itll be called 'A Piece of the Wind' and it'll be partly Lunch break regrets Dr. Christian Barnard, who recently announced that a growing arthritis problem will soon force him to give up surgery, says he has no second thoughts about a conn troversial transplant he performed last month. In the operation, a baboons heart was placed in a woman. The patient died after the operation. At least we were able to give her five and a half extra hours of life. Barnard said. Barnard said he does not regret leaving surgery. I think that I have reached the top. 1 cant do any more or any better than what I'm He spoke Mondoing now. day in Cincinnati at the College of Mount St. Joseph. animal-to-huma- Groucho better If his famous eyebrows are any indication, Groucho Marx is feeling better. He's starting to do whatever it is he does with his eyebrows," Larry Baum, spokesman for Cedars-Sina- i Medical Center, said. Marx, 86, is in the hospital with a mild form of pneumonia. But Baum said he has been improving since he was admitted June 24, just a day after he had been nt released surgery. Writer dies Dr. Leren C. Eiseley. an internationally known expert on evolution and author of such books as The Immense Journey," has died following surgery at the University of Pennsy lv ania Hospital. A native of Lincoln. Neb.. Eiseley, 69. was associated with the University ol Penn--yl- v ania. Rosalynn Carter gave a luncheon for Empress Farah of Iran Monday, and broke the tradition of "ladies only lunches for female Eesides distinguished women from the arts and politics, Mrs. Carter invited author Alex Haley, Sen. Hubert Humphrey, Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Duffey and Daniel Boorstin. librarian of Congress. Outside the While House gates, uninvited Iranian students staged a noisy demonstration to protest the affair. guests-of-hono- philosophical. That happens to you when you are alone on the water for a while. Barnard said. The trip started April in Miami. Since then, Meadows has been washed overboard by a breaker in Florida, was capsized on a coral reef, ran into a bad thunderstorm off Folly Island, S.C. and got lost in fog crossing Delaware r. 1 Bay. Everybody said the worst would be Chesapeake Bay and Delaware Bay. They were right about Delaware Bay, Barnard said. Meadows, whose real name is Jerry Lee Inferrera, has sailed only by day throughout the trip. At night, he has camped on shore in a small pup tent. He's carried food and water for about four days and wears a wet suit to ward oil cold weather. "He started out with a lot more stuff, but once he was at sea for about two weeks he discarded most of it. You quickly get rid of anything not absolutely necessary." Barnard said Meadows uses a road map and a compass to plot his course, and is carrjing beer for ballast. "Hes been Sunfish sailing for more than 10 years. He knows what he's doing," said Barnard. "Hes choosy about what days to sail, keeping an eye out for right wind and weather conditions." .Along the way. Meadows has made many friends. "Hes done a lot of partying and met a lot of people." Barnard said. The two men, however, were not exactly welcomed with open arms by the Coast Guard when they arrived in New London last weekend. parts Peking bound Former United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock. now chief U.S. envoy to the Peoples' Republic of China, will leave lor the liaison office in Peking on July 21. In a Detroit speech before taking his oath of office Monday, Woodcock said he will follow orders iii working for normalization of relations between the United States and mainland China. Memory jogger Convicted assassin Sirhan says his B. Sirhan's attorney c bent will seek court sion to return to the sador Hotel where Sen. Robert Kennedy boat an surfboard. overgrown six-mont- hs McDon-nell-Dougla- s, permisAmbashe shot in 1968. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, w bo visited Sirhan in Soledad Prison on June 2, said he received the information in a letter from Sirhans attorney. Godfrey Isaac. Hahn said Monday that Isaac wants to see if a return to the hotel will jog Sirhan's memory about the shooting. Sirhans defense al his trial was that he had blanked out and couldn't remember anything about the assassination. HEW tries to tighten student aid rules - WASHINGTON (AP) The federal government is proposing changes in the definition of a financially "Independent" student to make it tougher to get this classification and qualify for additional college aid. The Department of Health. Education and Welfare says the proposed revisions would help plug loopholes by which increasing numbers ol students are being declared independent. The projiosals v ill be published in the Federal Register Students are classified either financially independent or dependent on parents to participate in federal aid prog rams for postsecondary school. If classified dependent, a student applying for assistance must show that the .family income isn't sufficient to meet his needs. Peter Idee more than 10 years to pay director of the student grants division of HEW's Olfiee of Education, says more "independent" students means more people to share a limited amount of grant money. This could deny aid to those who need it the most, he added K. U. Voigt, Carter recalled that as thinks, uiir repayment plan should suit your nerds as wt11 as our home improvement docs. So our Home Lquity Loan yuves uu NO WONDER n choice of flexible vas to repay. Lor example, you can take more than 10 ears to pay Or t iu can skip up to paments every year. Or evenwait (i months U'fore making your first payment. What's more, Person can tfive you up to $2d.()()() or more. And we make sure you yret our money as soon as possible. The Improved Home Improvement . Loan from Because a wide YOURE TIRED . dream." when you go day after day. straining to hear and afraid you wont Drop that heavy burden of deafness replace it with a tinv. light Starkey m the ear) Hearing Aid Enjov hfe . a "young boy in Georgia he and every one at the tune feared the scourge of poliomyelitis . The citation, read by Salk, said that because of I)r Jonas E Salk, our country is free from the cruel epidemics of poliomyelitis that once struck yearly. Because work, untold hundreds of thousands who might have been crippled are sound in body today. BEYELER SERVING SINCE LYNN 1948 again1 Call me today My experience has helped hundreds 521-416- tireless hed gonna make it. (AP) Americas largest industrial corporations owe their employes at least $38 billion more lxt us all once again rededicate our lives to the fulfillment of Martin Luther Kings dream which was truly the American of his said 'Everybody WASHINGTON . "It men." T . Mas- never make it, that it couldn't be done, said friend Jeremy 100 Medal of Freedom presented to King's widow, Jonas Salk Kings widow, Corelta, and his father, the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr. received the medal. Miami to sachusetts. He hopes to arrive Friday in Boston Harbor. Person-to-Perso- WASHINGTON lUPu President Carter Monday awarded the Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award, to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. posthumously and to the first inventor of polio vaccine. Dr. Jonas E. Salk. Carter called them "two great men . . . who had alleviated . in the. suffering and despair field of health and human freedom. At a ceremony in the Executive Office Building, Carter said King and Salk were "noble reel pients, one in life and one in death. "We know that both live now and will live a thousand years from now in the hearts and minds 2A 1977 DESERET NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 12, the Portage County jail at nearby Ravenna.. Singing, "We Shall Overcome" and the demonWe shall win, chanting strators locked arms and legs and formed a circle. Police had to pull them apart and carry them one by one to the buses. Foreign aid review aimed at global poor President Carter WASHINGTON (UPI) wants comprehensive review of foreign aid completed by Sept. as part of a plan for the United States to help the worlds poorest PEOPLE 1 BEYELER HEARING AID SERVICE 73 E. 7TH SOUTH PHONE 521-416- 1 Person-to-Person- isnt enough that your home improvement meets your personal needs. Your repay ment plan should meet them also. it I il.n i 3ll Mig.iiliniisr umiMiII A,w klahn.KlDl(jnlw M.ili, C I'Onm Id. 221-22hiUiHiii 'l ii i 1. ill 'tin i.nTd. i W.ishnitiiiiii I.Kii Omli'ii T!. 621 7!!!l '1. Iliglil.mil Hum S,i l.,iki tils 'Id. in .( Mull. 33 Isl.S 'us Id Vi I llivlil.inil llm. Sun, M Sill l.ik, iilMiSunth ( i,n vi i Tel. 399-sS.iuili S ilt ,d (. u Id W- -i M.im so, Id. 7X9-J- I ts i W .1 (3 I g u- -l i , , 1 1 l,i, l.- 533-!,ls- 1, (' , 27s.;r |