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Show tmrr NEWS, MONDAY, 6A WAY 28,1973 Probers call up ghosts of past but not witches B) Lee Byrd - He WASHINGTON (AP) waited his moment, giving the crowd and dozens of newsmen time to settle, and then he stood and joined the ranks of those who had risen before in this room to seek that most splendid of over-capacit- y miseries. My name is Ed Kelley and said, Im announcing my candidacy for president of the United States." Now, as it happens, there were three things curious that about Watergate Hot tin roof for GOP cats Continued from Page A ! tics - 1972. The committee said other vestigations have least-awaite- d Howard to the fact that police were pulling him out the door. Third, the room was booked at the time by the Senate Watergate committee. And that panel, o so it rvms, is not interested in partisan political endeavors. Herman Baker, E Talmadge, Daniel K. Inouye, Joseph M. Montoya, Edward U Gurney and Lowell P, W'eicker. Each, however, is possessed his own particular style. Baker, 47, puts his questions in a polished, border-stat- e drawl. His increased exposure, and evident charisma, could make the Tennesse. senator a prospect for the 1975 GOP presi- After five days of hearings! a dozen witnesses, hundreds of questions and a fiuiry of related developments on the outside, there have been no words from either the four Democrats or the three Republicans who are conducting the congressional probe. Indeed, those who anticipated a televised circus have found instead an atmosphere sometimes more akin to a seminar on archeology a upon incidentally, subject, which Chief Counsel Samuel dential nomination. bom-b-ist- ic Except for Ervins occasional g into excursions e and philosophy, it is Baker who generally triggers what little levity there is. Bible-quotin- down-hom- Talmadge, a Georgia Democrat, is a man who wastes little time. His questions are succinct and, unlike some ers, rarely repetitious. oth- the sea. We miss them, we Continued from Page l miss them especially for their Vetcanism chairman for the he erans of Foreign Wars, speak- courage and patriotism, said. ing at Memorial services in ML Olivet Cemetery this He noted that they were all morning, declared that the volunteers, and added, There boys of 1898 would know how 2,000 men still living would to a handle the gladly shoulder a gun todaY rebels at home. for their country if they could leave their hospital beds or included which The rites, music, taps and the placing of throw away their canes and flowers on the graves of solcrutches. Theirs was the spirit diers, were sponsored by UnitAmerica needs today, a spirit ed Spanish War Veterans. to which America must return if it is to survive. Biorge said of the half million men 'who fought in the services were Additional 4 American for scheduled War, only p.m. today Ln SpanLsh The oth2,009 are left today. Memory Grove, under direcers rest in cemeteries such as tion of the United Veterans this or on foreign lands or in Council of Salt Lake City and A-- table, occupied by Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. and Sens. position, owing he Time to remember . . . and to forget Dash is an expert by hobby. And he obviously believes in giving everybody a chance to dig. No one, in fact, has emerged as a dominant personality on the committees side of the First, unlike the times when Sen. John F. Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy, Robert F. Kennedy and Fred Harris had broken such news in the Caucus Room, Kelleys announcement ranks as the ever. Second, he made it from a County. Wreaths were to be placed in the rotunda in honor of the dead. Ray Griffin, commander of the Intermountain Barbwire Club (a prisoner of war organization), was to give the main address. Musical numbers, posting of the colors, taps and reading of a poem w ere on the program. Memorial holiday j?!?. 5 killed by avalanche KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) An avalance buried four Japanese mountain climbers and a Sherpa guide uri'er tons of ice and snow near the 20,000-folevel on Mt. Annain rorthwest Nepal, the purna Foreign Ministry said Sunday. A spokesman said word had just been received from the climbers telling of the May 18 tragedy. It occurrd one day after blizzards forced an advance assault party to abandon the climb just 150 feet short of the 26,500-fo- It was not immediately known if the victims were members of the advance assault team on their way down or others in the party from the Japanese Alpine Club. ' Participating were Veterans of Foreign Wars, erican LegLon, Military Order of the Disabled Hearts, Puiple American Veterans, Inter- mountain Barbwire Club, Service Star Legion and Gold Star Mothers. TELEVISION ACCESSORIES KareftcM PnsJucIs JUN PUCE TO SHOP! KETCHUM'S 4th So. 7th ML 355-485- 6 The five deaths were the worst disaster of the current season. Ilimalyan climbing The other fatality was also a Japanese, Takeo Matsuda, a who teacher, apparently fell May 14 from a rock 300 feet from the summit of Yalungkang Peak. ot in- tied the Nixon campaign not only to wiretapping and burglary, but to theft of documents, forgery, personal vilification, violations of campaign finance laws, spying and a coverup of apparent crimes. In nearly 20 years of studying the political process, the Fair Practices Campaign Committee has uncovered no campaign tactics comparable in extent or in potential damage to a free, society, the report said. The committee said Nixon had tried to imply that the Watergate episode was merely an example of foul play occasionally engaged in by Democrats and Republicans alike. It cited the Presidents April 30 speech, in which he spoke os shifdy tactics and said, both of pur great parties have been guilty of such tactics in the past. flut the committee said, The sordid scandal called the Watergate affair is not simply more of the same tactics which have made politics a dirty word. It is a conscious c nspiracy to violate laws, to manipulate voters, and to make a mockery of the demoof cratic system DOWNTOWN STORE OEY STARTS WES. MM.-FIRSTC- OM, FIRST SERVED! WE'VE MOVED OUR 1372 GOLF CLUBS STOCK FROM ALL STORES INTO OUR DOWNTOWN STORE Strauss and Symington were - questioned Independently about some of the Presidents staements last week. NLxon admitted for the first time thal he ordered, on grounds of national security, that the FBI be limited in its investigation of Ihe Watergate bugging. Nixon also said current Watergate investigations threaten to uncover sensitive information. including details of a 1970 administration plan to gether intelligence through burglary. Nixon had approved the plan for five days, but changed his mind after then FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover objected. who was the Symington, first to tell the public that sudi a plan existed, said he hoped it would be declassified soon. Speaking of the Armed Ser-viq- Committees closed-deo- r hearings, he said, Some of what we've uncovered, quite a little has' to do with national security. 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