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Show Page 30—THE SUNDAY HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday, April ! 12, 1970 Protestart Teaches at Catholic University By BARRY JAMES Nelson of the Euston University Hesaid h already has stayed for School of Thi recom- at a dozen Monasteries in doctorate for a book called ROME (UPI) — Theologian Dale Moody thinks Christian unity stands a good chance when a Texas Baptist can teach at the Roman Catholic church's Pontifical Gregorian University - ‘Baptism, Foundation Christian Unity.” The book makes the point mended him to the Gregorian Nelson, a Methodist, was the that baptism—with a small b— first Protestant to teach at the B is something all Christian Catholic university churches have in common and Having tackled Anglicanism Moody's parents now live at —and enjoyit could therefore be the jumping- and Roman Catholicism, Moody Grapevine, Tex Moody became only the off point for eventua) reunifica- next wants to learn at first second Prote.‘ani to teach at tion. hand about the Eastern OrthoNebraska leads the nation in the university—the alma mater Moodyplanned to return to dox Church by staying on of many Popes and cardinals— Oxford for a sabbatical last Mount Athos, the monastic production of dehydrated alfalfa, milling 643,000 tons, when he conducted a Ph. D. year when a friend, J. Robert center in Greece. course there last semester. “I felt myself among friends, even among Christian brethren,” he said. “There was no strangeness at all.” Moody, a professur at Southern Baptist Theological Center at Louisville, Ky., said his teaching at the Gregorian John Kuhni Sons taught him something too. “T found out that Cetholics and Protestants can agree on ( KAINBOW BRIDGE,the monarch of the natural Shaets stands in the semi-desert country of soutneastern Utah among canyons carved by streams that wind their way from 5 i F River. Tl..5 bridge has a 278-foot span and it gracefully ar- ehes to a height of 309 feet, large enough to straddle the capitol building in Washington, D. ©. the northern side of Navajo| Mountain toward the ¢ ‘olorado Cheating Tax Collectoris tench National Pastime AmongSelf-Employed Professionals By MICHAEL DENNIGAN For example, a doctor who PARIS (UPI)—The widow dressed elezantly in black stood in court and asked for $ million francs ($181,000) damages for the death of her husband in a car crash. She justified it by saying that her late husband was a prominent professor of medicine and had earned much more than he ever declared to the tax authorities. Therefore, she said, her loss was all the greater. tel The court gave her the million francs — the biggest used to practice in the framework of the state medicare system quit and began workingprivately. He admitted, “T have fewer patients now but my fees are higner—and I pay inspectors on the job fulltime— a lot less tax on the same only 3,000 fewer than the U.S. federal government for a earnings.” A Paris banker who hired a population five times as large. w Racket yacht to cruise in the Mediterranean with friends last sum- Nonetheless, the Finance mer, reported that at every Ministry admits the problem is French harhor he put into he getting tougherwith the springwas greeted by the locals as ing up of a new racket, often involving underworld “brains” “doctor.” award up to that time in France for an accidentfatality. The award illustrated a fact about the French—cheating the tax collector is a national pastime for everyone who can get on the band wagon. Finance Ministry officials estimate that tax cheating costs the government 10 to 15 per cent of its income every year. That runs to between $2.7 billion and $4.7 billion. It’s enough to pay France’s education bill for a year or build 5,000 miles of superhighway. And the cheating is carried out by onlyfive million of the nation’s 20 million taxpayers. No Hope For 15 million wage earners there is no hope, however much they would like to, Their incomes are reported to the governmentby their employers. But the field is wide open for the rest—self-employed busiMessmen, expense account executives, fashionable doctors, glamorous entertainment figures, prominent lawyers, den- Utah Payrall Employment Increases During March By United Press International Utan’s payroll employment level tnecenie by eight tenths of one per cent during March, State Department of EmploymentSecurity officials reportehWednesday, A spoken said the job total climbed to 347,100, an increase of 2,700 over the February figures. that di-ides us.” Another thing his Gregorian experience madeclear, he said, wasthat “‘there is a fermentin —~ the Roman Catholic church and it has reached the grape. 1 behind the scenes, answered ‘“‘Aren't you one? This is the setting up of Uusually the owners of yachts dummy companies whose sole equipmentis a printing pr2ss to are always doctors.”” But not all get away scot run off fake invoices and bills free. France has 62,000 tax for those businessmen who need When he asked why, he was During the same period, unernployment totaled 20,200 or 4.8 per cent, compared with 17,900 or 4.3 per cent for March of last year. Manufacturing showed little change in employmentwith 51,800 jobs or 300 more than March 1969 and construction at ANIMAL BY-PRODUCTS ATTENTION FARMERS-STOCKMEN about 9 per cent of Christian belief, It’s the other 10 per cent that manyoutsiders do not appreciate. “Why there's as as SWISS BRAND much difference between Jesuits and Dominicans, for example, as MEAT AND BONE MEAL,,, m idea! animal diet there is between Baptists and Methodists,”he said. “Once people start getting the idea that diversity supplemert, is healthy and concentrate on the many things they have in common, rather than the few 9 them. things oe: don’t, we will be The businessman gets a fake well on the way to Christian bill and pays a good check to unity. the dummy company. A few “Unity doesn’t mean we all days later the check is cashed have to think the same, Rather and the businessman gets most the Church should be one big of it back in cash—less a roof over all of us. We should percentage for “‘expenses.”” start by isolating our differenAnother twist on the racketis ces, putting them where we can French businessmen PayiNG see them and then concentrate large sums of “royalties on overcoming them through abroad—often to Switzerland— dialogue and contacts.” for “patent” rights. Beginning Often, say Finance Ministry Moody began an ecumenical officials, the patent does not journey of his own in 1961 when exist and the money winds up he went to Oxford University in the businessman's secret for a year to study the Angiican bank account in Switzerland Communion. He was born on a after being deducted from his ranch near Stamford, Tex. taxable profits in France. 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