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Show 1' r.- - JH 1 Smith lienijvfnne t enlnmc "y Section A Wednesday Morning, July 16, 1975 Page I Asians Owe Debt t rn lo Protecting the Country Doesnt justify. Violating Constitution Surreptitious entries is how Director Clarence M. Kelley euphemistically describes the way some Federal Bureau o Investigation agents during the UifiOs viol a tea Inn Dinted States Constitution. But the breaking into and entering of foreign embassies or the offices of civil rights groups and other domestic organizations was quite all right Mr. Kd'ey says, because the intent was a very good one, to protect the country." Protect the country from what? A relative few civil rights activists, whose primary goal was to gain for every American the sane liberties and rights already enjoyed bv the then lilv-whi- FBI. tiiesome htaring federal bureaucrats condone their violations ot the fundamental principles of this excuses that country with their actions, no natter how reprehensible, were done "to protect the country." It gets little a weak-knee- d it must be emphasized the In fairness, "surreptitious entries" were authorized and carried out during the tenure of Mr. Kelley's predecessor, the late J. Edgar Hoover, And a measure of commendation .is due Mr. Kelley for revealing the past practices. The revelations are very much in accord with the new openness" that has characterized the FBI since Mr. Kelley took over two years ago. 1 Nevertheless, it is impossible to accept Mr. Kelleys defense of actions that wore in direct violation of the Fourth Amendment of the U N Constitution. No portion of this nation's basic law grants dfiVime the right to illegal search and Novelist James Micbener WASHINGTON called him Communisms greatest enemy in and Wolf Ladcjinsky, whose weapons Asia, were land titles, improved seed and simple toot s , was ail that. seizure on the basis that it might "pi elect the country." The Fourth Amendment does provide for search, but only " upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." Technically, it might be wrong to . . In many ways, Ladejins-ky- , who was about as handsome as Yogi Berra, was nation. They indulged in pMte land-refor- Japan. e To a large extent, its system of r shapes a nation's political destiny. In of class fanner the absence yeoman Japan, 70 percent of all farmers were tenants who for all practical purposes belonged to the great landowwas both a cause and an effect of the ners feudalism that bred the extreme nationalism of the military caste. With shinto values crumbling in the ashes of defeat, a vacuum was created that the Japanese Communists were eager to exploit. But Ladejinsky, with MacArihurs support, moved into Japan like a dustbovvl whirlwind: within a decade of his arrival, 90 percent of Japans tenant farmers had received titles to the 5 million acres that before they had tilled for others. Almost Aborted land-tenur- illegal pre-wa- searches. Mr. Kelley asserted, "I do not note in any gross abuse of I do not feel that it was a authority. corruption of the trust that was placed in activities these us." The statement rings holiovv. "Surreptitious entries" are a trampling of the rights every American has under the Consitution. And any FBI agent who indulged in them violated the oath of office in which he swore to uphold and defend the Constitution. Protecting the country is an honorable undertaking, but only if it is done according to the principles spelled out in the Constitution Those FBI agents who surreptitiously entered the offices of any civil rights group or any other domestic organization were rot behaving honorably and they have absolutely corrupted the trust placed in them can be done if overlimit is suspected. Their snooty, indignant and high hat attitude plus this Editor, Tribune: Having fallen m love with illegal search was in our opinion nothing less I tan climate and scenery many years ago, 1 have than a "witch hunt. Is Panguiteh worried about often toyed with the ideacf making this beautiful making up for last years loss, when the lake was stale my home but I have been a little doubtful of poisoned, by scrounging for violators? This my ability to make enough money to keep body angered and certainly marred the visit of many and soul together. My Email skills are not too campers. salable with the exertion of my talent for Our slay was further marred when these writing letters to the editor, a not too lucrative wardens cited us for cooked fish in our trailer endeavor, at best. from tiie previous day as we were cleaning our Eureka, the other evening I at last found my second day's catch. Utahs codes state eight solution. protected wildlife game fish may be caught (bag UCA. We patronized one of the excellent local limit) and possessed daily": Sec. one derives from a sudexpericncein 1972, restaurants for dinner. Being sufficiently advised What we couldnt cat of our first days limit we when massive grain sales to the Soviet iteforehand of the asinine liquor laws of this slate, cooked and canned for consumption later. The they Union raised a loud domestic yowl on we wont prepared, bottle under arm. We heads, tails and fins were removed and wildbe considered protected couldnt certainly American other than ideological grounds. Forum Kules life game fish any longer. i armors accused the Agriculture DepartThere is nothing in your codes that says we Iuhlic forum letters must he submitted ment of keeping the final ariangemonts can our fish or that, if we do, it should be cant to lull anil The Tribune hear writer's secret, allowing commercial dealers the exclusively considered part of our limit. If this is what is name, signature and address. Names must be biggest financial gain, preventing pro- primed on political letters but may be withheld intended, why isnt this clearly stated in the law? ducers from selling high in what was a for eond reasons on others Writers ore limited to Right now the code has a big hole in it and is very on one letter every III days. Preference will be given ambiguous suddenly rich market. The draw-dow- n It sure doesnt seem right that we cant spend grain reserves also helped cause higher lo short, typewritten (double spared) Ii tiers permitting use of the writers true name. Ml letters a fc v days fishing in Utah and, after spending food costs when inflation was already are subject to condensation. the money for a license, catch our limit without battering the economy. to eat them all before catching is with ordered the law, whit locally being expected Since '72, federal regulations require complied We love eating the fish, but can't eat eight more. all large export grain sales be reported to known as setups The waitress brought us apiece for dinner. So we do cook our fish so we 2 or 3 ounces of in a 4 or 5 the agriculture department at least 2i approximately can enjoy Utah fish later in the year and dream ounce glass full of ice cubes and proudly oi the fun we had m your state. hours in advance. And emphasis on announced the $2.40 for four price We have appealed to your governor and avoiding the criticism that developed-thre(Would you believe approximately $9 a to clear up these regulations. We wish the legislators assures department quart?) years ago to abide by your laws, and thought we were so will release such information promptly. Now, my question is this, how does one go doing. Please make your law crystal clear to us From a purely practical standpunt. Mr. aiout obtaining a concession in this state' tourists so we can remember your state with I from Arrows Fading that, could bootleg Butz exasperation is justifiable. more than utter disgust. home) and within a year or two retire with Most forecasts are for a bumper U.S. miy MR. AND MRS. RICHARD A. BOSSERT 1 enough bread to live in the style to wh'ch would San Gabriel, Calif. grain crop this year, far more than can be love to become accustomed sold domestically. So, it's important to I understand there is a Tourist Council hca find export customers. Evidently Russia, which V! ! promotes tcurisir. in the stylo. Con H vtnii ii s lAutL' from the U.S always expect to get ripped off in having suffered another drought-cause- d Editor, Tribune. With the news media once shortfall, is a willing grain buyer. Yankee this manner? It corns to me that the difficulty of ingenuity has often overlooked political having a cocktail or glass of wine with dinner is again .'peculating as to the possible presidential doctrine in search of the profit margin not conducive to the aims of tins council. This candidacy toof Sen George McGovern, it is review recent history. has reuiiy Lit a bad taste in ray mouth interesting that free enterprise systems depend experience and henceforth T will give Utah a wide berth anri . you suggested that there "Sen Inmivg upon. And this, no doubt, will be the spend my money elsewhere was a possibility that money from Hanoi was the when factor ultimate controlling FRANCES STRUMPEEU coming in? agriculture go., to bounty of U.S Phoenix, Arm Tumi. That was my spi dilution. (Watir-galmarket this year. Hearings, page 3740). McGovern. Last week I urged Secretary n il Sought dml Di-n- m to make immediate contact with the Kissinger Editor. Tribune Im a pui, and a Provisional Revolutionary Government and tiie member of the Church of Jesus Christ of North Vietnamese . . I ask unanimous consent a Latter Day Saints. I'm writing m regards to ihe that there appear in the Record of my cable o Ambassador Dinh P.a Em u a by Stepehcn I Li brook in the Jure eupy ei cess to tiie foothills surrounding Salt Thi . . . (Congressional Record, April 21, 1975). Ci, edition of The Tribune it seems lo ine that Lake City and certain county areas Mr. Holbrook is trying to rush Gad and tins isnt you indicated that the second "Inouye . et foot mr v heed on ' an wkp of a thing for a worldly man to do. People who nov breuk-iwas necessary lo locate evidence in the the foothills Ime more at stake in their Hebrew's 1t: 3(1 states: "For ye have need of ledgers that would indicate that Mr. Castro would . . preservation than do those individuals patience, that, alter ye have done the will ol God, tie contributing to the Democratic Party who see the steep inclines as a iitimg ye nUght receive the promise." ii we wait in "Hunt. Yos Sir." (Hearings, page "Sen Geeige S. McGovern. disclosed challenge for their geared down bun, God will provide. Mr. Holbrook suggested that members and nieeitim " -.- uni never mind vrimt hapMonday that bn received a letter from idike. should fast and pray, until Castro (Tribune, June 17, 1975). pens t ) the Lind. the black priesthood question is answered for the e being examples of McGovern's Wilh the abm Since relatively few residents drive new times we live in." I have prayed and fasted it would seem that he corresponds mail, strange on the Salt Lake to find out for myself if the church is true, and recrcutional vehicles well wilh at least the hostile part of the world, 1 knew that in the knew was. mv it that that when it heart ca be argued bails, grert cf an old say,ng. If u wiiiiu urriuo true, not jurt hilling. or the Word cf it talks like a iv paraphrase majority of Salt Lakers interest in ab of it was Is it duck, and acts like a duck. on of but its all policy it, including Wisdom, iooth.ll preservation overwhelms claims wonder McGovern favors sending 130,000 any blacks holding the priesthood. i.f ii, two and d dock identifiers back to South Vietnam? minority I would like to suggest to Mr. Holbrook that he MICHAEL D. THORPE Utah is a big state with millions of fast and pray, and find out for himielf if God acres md dandy for recreational vehicle knows what He's doing, for as they saying gics1 use. T here simply is no reason to scar the "Seek and ye shall f.nd, knock and the door shall ClianirriJ n mountains which serve as a unique bo opened unto y ou." I'm Lake to the Salt JANICE PETERSON writing to protest the Editor, Tribune: backdrop metropolitan of Israeli the actions of government, reported by and area ihe city's constitute part the Associated Press in your issue of June 26. in 1' ( ionfu a s Limit watershed ns wed c which the remains of two Jewish terrorists were There are indications that the Salt Editor Tribune. We are Californians who honored by lying in state and then buried with Luke Vlty Commission wm aO.;U come teao D.oi YaUr ".a;'" Ncfhrig Scrietr; 'y'-erfoil military honors. under organized pressure to loosen its of June la while vacationing in Utah regarding These were two members of me Stern gang who m ordered Iord Moyne. Britains resilient regulations regarding use of sun minding advice to Utahns te make a ioun-U- s visit to you1 benchbinJ ui.ost of which is private stale an enjoyable one. minister in the Middle East in November 1914. V n i misrioimrs should stand Apparently tbo Israelis believe in the double Maybe you sbounl h ive Mr. a c nt . i; c sen a properly standard, tbal killing is ail rigid when performed at S'-lwho work wardens the Mter lo Came Lake firm, eontidei.t Uvrt the injsmf by them peoni lnt veiy wrong when done by the Ihe Garfield , namely Punguileh, lent.-County sift, a on the vmt rea real Loth'ils Palestinians. Wes Shield'. They wen: McKee ana Norman sealed bv ihonsriiixf in i o.jh looal v.ui-- c trailer TV a, tins of the Urarii government in the every ro'itimly g'ur.g ie dr; ei s j nmper ai the Panguib Ii campgrounds pius the lad few years and its control of our Congress Thw pei, i le who t.nd sport ia driving cabins and aAin for fi .hing la eases and to look to have changed my feelings from W ill I)jia."s auoi icd hi tiie inCadiih) era when Ladcjuioliy, falsely accused of being a security risk, was temporarily suspended from his post as agricultural attache in Tokyo this suspension order was signed by a fellow named Earl Butz, then assistant secretary of Agriculture). Ladejinsky arrived on mainland China too late (1949) lo ha.c any effect on the political outcome there. But on Taiwan he replicated his Japanese triumoh, converting the island in a to a major very few years from a exporter. His efforts in South Vietnam from 1956 through 1961, first on behalf of the American government and later as adviser to President Ngo Dinh Diem, were less successful, primarily because the autocratic Diem was of the mandarin class and his family and political allies stood to lose most in the short-ru- n from an effective program. Trouble Shooter For the next three years, Ladejinsky acted as a U.S. agricultural trouble-shoote- r in such i w- . j- - .... T ua uuu ukcioc luiiuo ao u uu, mcAitu, I tali Another Wheat Deal 9, to comments about further "big wheat deals" with the Soviet Union. Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz has a point. But it's omy a partial one. In his response Challenging the adverse reaction to more large grain sales to the Russian-- , Mr. Butz observed during a Minneapolis, Minn., appearance that Americans still opposition indulge loo much kiiec-ji-iiover any transactions with the Soviet Union. He, apparently, is quite prepared to reconcile making a sale with accommodating an adversary. And theres a hefty measure of Yankee tradition in that. Butz contended if American farmers can market their export harvest at handsome prices, then it shouldn't make much difference whether the customers are British, Scaiidar.avian, South American or even Russian. What bothers him, he said, is the persistent . in the American body tendency (to politic reganP any sale to the Russians (as evil." Hes obviously talking .about a concept spawned by the eold war which holds that the Soviet Union is "the enemy, ana any trafficking with Moscow is equivalent to signing pacts tripled by the devil. That is irrational as Mr. Butz claims. Mr. . However there remain valid questions a loul selling Russia huge export cram stocks nonetheless. The principal four-whe- In- - I J ( inrto,.ii -- Nepal. In 1965, at an age (66) when most men are content to leave the saving of the world to younger men, Ladejinsky began a decade of service in India with the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development This rough-hewman with a face like an old boot preferred talking to peasant farmers in his s to the graphs and endless conferences of the international bureaucrat He believed in the achievement of small practical gains rather than the formulation of grandiose schemes impossible io implement. Thirty years in Asia taught him that if you give a man a hoe and his own land to work, he can move the earth from that fulcrum. Never Gave Up Like an many others, Ladejinsky was unable us uititvc iwuwi ui a uvTu irt uiu o iicuiuaii S iiiuiu, where political considerations and competing priorities shoved land reform onto a backburner. But Ladejinsky never gave up his crusade on behalf of the barefoot millions who were his wards When he died here last week after suffering a strok in New Delhi, they said the bachelor had no known relatives. But millions of Asian peasants live better lives today because of Wolf Ladejinsky. They are the heirs of this quiet, ugly American who realized that a man could stand tall whatever his stature if the land watered by the sweat of his brow was lus own. In the still unresolved battle against Communism in Asia. Wolf Ladejinsky, the immigrant hoy who washed windows to work hie way' through college, was worth at leas' an army corps n set-up- shirt-sleeve- 1 . . . r ... . v . A book takes the position that our government officials should make more of a protest when they resign over a matter of policy. At the very-leas-t on the way out they could slam the door hard enougn to break the glass. . 3739-3740- . I land-refor- e Slav Off Foothills Let's comedo, right from the start, that recreational venities are here to stay ami that tmur iwner: have nul an rights and privileges to enjoy the sport. That doesn't mean, however, that veiiieles ami motordrivers of bikes should be permitted unlimited t the archetypical American. : x A refugee from Soviet Communism, he was 23, penniless and spoke no English when he reached these shores in 1922. To pay for Mr. liempsluiie his education the received a masters degree in agricultural economics from Columbia University in 1931), Ladejinsky washed windows, sold newspapers and worked as a shoemaker. Having jouied the Department of Agriculture in 1935, Ladejinsky was summoned to Tokyo 10 years later by Gen. Douglas MacArthur to oversee the program in occupied . describe "surreptitious entries" as "burglaries. A burglary is generally defined as the illegal entry of a premises w ith intent to commit a felony, most often theft or larceny. While FBI agents of a former day might not be guilty of burglary, they have, as Mr. Kelley quite publicly acknowlegcd, committed a massive violation of one cardinal principle of tins 11ns Keiugee . , The most vocal participant in the late-nigdiscussion group took the position that the CIA not only didnt do it but wont do it again. 1 ... Stuk-k- four-wheele- Fn-ling- ;i!' cl Ur-v.v- r . Yau're . ndo Wioui-- I i inacecvsibl" places Lew here for Heir kit ks. 'irdmarPy i !i ok ; j n ? - iV4 f 'fv; t r ' u.Y,. k. zVVSl - Ur' - r ' iMrt i i - r i t i ! I "X- - ri A, - Jj r' V t 7 i ,t a vorffir. 'll' V'lWU . i wAux AVt t I,- m. i( Wtri'j Y - xixw-- e - r- ! ! J. ar . ; j (Ki 'V-riri- t "Youic sick!' "You n wciK" veh!" ' s typWt iH s M -- . . X i i 'I' ' V . n i .. , HtHXf, 11 loilm al i into - ') A n-l- ' a n rji k j tr. " r"i U tvi( Jt au r - - rz"T 1 OUC Asihut ap'd. FcC - I it. D. SHAFFER h,.x t i J I 1 r 7 ft 7 j j j A- refrigerators Utah - 7 t ; i |