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Show Page 8-THE HERALD,Provo, *Itah Sunday, June27, 1971, Utah State Senate More Viet WarDisclosurcs HumphreyFelt WarEscalation Might Endanger Great Society Approves Appointees By HOWARD S. DRESCHER SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — After nearly five hours in executive session the Utah Senate Friday confirmed a list of 75 appointees to state offices recommended by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton. During the lengthy closed door session the 23 ee present quizzed seven prospective appointees, most of tinue in present posts. Sen, Dean C. Chrisvensen, Provo Republican and chairman of the Senate Appointments Committee, said ove of the main factors being considered was age. Ten named are 70 or older or would reach 70 during the coming terms. Although all were confirmed, Sen. Christensen said, “We will introduce legislation at the next general session to have a mandatory retirement age of 70 tion witn the retirementiegislation, “In regard to full-time paid office holders I think it’s a mn idea, but not for per diem or ting mer of advisory committees.” The solons considered appointments of both types during Friday’s session, The Senate convened at 10 a.m.with five of the 28 absent, iincluding Senate President HaAt 11:15, the Senate chambers were locked and interviews began. The Senate cust-marily considers appointments in executive session and withholds the names of appointees until confirmation is made. This is to avoid possible embarrassment to persons who may be rejected. In a message to the Senate just after convening, Gov. Rampton said he would prepare ae to have the ee ites of office terms ex- b= ons the months ofte general legislative session. would avoid the necessity o: calling a special session to i for terms e confirm ending June 30. Board of Higher Education and The session endedabout 4:30 a fifth is a new appointee to the Rex Plowman, a Lewisspecial session in August to ton vanker. t, fie ‘Two higher education appoin- consider nancing and the 18-year-old vote amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Huggins, Og¢ ; A number of Central Utahns Hatch and Donald B. Holbrook were appointed or reappointed were also questioned and con- to various posts, including: Angus Belliston, Orem, refirmed for six-year terms. Also interviewed were Mrs. named .o theSnow College InMarjorie Goodman, Salt Lake stitutional Council; Dr. LeRoy ae being reappointed to the R. Lindeman, Provo, State Fine Arts Board and Freda B. Library Commission; Ray Provo, Fire ‘Wood, Woods Cross, being reap- Murdock, pointed to the RetirementBoard. Prevention Board; and Arnold Of the 75, 47 are current of- Roylance, Springville, and Norma Lewis Wightman, Provo, fice-holders and 28 are usw ofCouncil for. Visually ficials, Sen.Christensen said,‘I think Handica) at of appointments there will be a lot of support The AP for a 70-year-old retirement folows: bill. I sensed a lot of favorable College of Eastern Utah sentiment here today.” Gov. Rampton sald he was pleased with the work of the Senate and added in CONNEC- Moab. Proxmire Protests —— WASHINGTON (UPI) William Proxmire, charged aete Atkin, St. ard Blood ard Ruth Draper, Salttake City; James Kimball (new), Bloomington. College Institutional Council Pig Nielsen, Salt Lake eel er Hansen, Mt. Pleasant; Bnous Belliston, ae Theodore Tuttle, eeLake Cit umpfer, orth of bunk loansto torte~ “eo A. L. cane sntake etyGeorge A. Rich, Beaver; Marjorie ooeperts, Salt Lake City: Twain Logan; Ronald L. Mole eaeSait LakeCity. Board of Parks and Recreation James D. eySalt Lake City, and E. J. Claus, Moab. Passengertramway Board Edwin L. Madsen, and Edward Imm Salt a ae says it will go under if it is Freda B. Wood.Woods Cross. Commission on patere forced to abandon the project, jate Law: in which $1.4 billion has teen E. Wayne Thode, Salt LakeCity. invested. State Library Commission R. Lindeman, Provo; Proxmire, a member of the ennonLeRoy Rampton, Bountiful; Melvin banking committee, opesaee the smith § (new), Salt Lake City; all July 1, 1977; irene on (new}. Lockheed loan guarantee. He said his subcommittee on Homer T Bandley,,“Richtie Id; priorities and economy in Gordon James Black, Monticello; enneth Sowards, Vernal; Rebert government had learned that (new). Salt Lake ed the Navy had agreed to pay TempleFire Prevention Boat $45.8 million Lockheed and Ray Murdock, id "Charles Storey, beoe Both ni restici ide Control » “the government was horsetrading with its contractors and Logan; Dr. Lyman J. Olsen, ‘and John_Anderson, Sait Lake City; ee Hamilton, Riverton; Jose; Francis, Morgan; John E. thet, and J. Rosco Hunt, Salt Lake City, Roy Holman, Air Conservation At Hearings WASHINGTON(UPI —Senate Democratic leader Mike Maisag said Saturday the Senate’s of the secret Pentagon S@# papers would be locked in a safe when they are delivered to Congress Monday. Mansfield said a “tentative ent” has been reached between Foreiga Relations Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-ark., and Armed Services Chairman John Stennis, DMiss., to hold joint hearings on the documents before a panel of eight members from each PHOENIX,Ariz. (UPI)—The Journalists are misleading newsmen who reveal govern- the public into believing that ment secrets are “the same most Americans are “solidly people whoarefirmly controll- behind this th..z they call fieArnericon opinion through a freedom of the press,” Agnew ing biased and slanted” view of the said. world, said Vice President Spiro Agnew Friday night. But a poll showed the Hecalled the publication of majority of Americans do not the classified Pentagon report want the news media to publish on the growth of the Vietnam classified government material War “common, cheap, fending until the government decides it’s safe, he said, operation.” Robert S. McNamara told President Lyndon B, Johnson in a memorandum dated Oct. 14, 1966, that the Indochina War “mest be fought and won by the Vietnamese people themselves,” the St. Pe PostDispatch reported Friday. The memo ecatinnek: “we have known from the Restraining Order Issued AgainstSt. Louis Paper ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) —U.S. District Court Judge James H. Meredith Saturday issued a temporary restraining order barring the St. Louis PostDipsatch from further publication of secret Pentagon documents on the Vietnam: War. David Lipman,assistart man- saying it planned to resume pubtication of the series, begun Friday, in Sunday's e¢itions, In a later edition Satu.day, the newspaper described as “(otally inaccurate” reports quoting a Justice Department official as saying that PostDispatch lawyers agreed Friaging editor, said, “In view of day night not to publish the restraining order, we must additional Vietnam War doabide by it pending further cuments pending a U.S. Supreme Court decision. litigation,” “Our position,” Lipman said, Meredith said the order, sought by U.S. Attorney Daniel “was that we would not publish Bartlett Jr., would be effective a Pentagon article in The until July 6. He set a hearing Saturday paper because of its for July 5 to decide whether to small circulation but would make the order permanent. resumepublication of the series The first edition of Saturday’s in the Sunday edition.” Post-Dispatch was halted mi- The Post Dispatch began nutes before it went to press to publishing its documents Fripermit the newspaper to day. A story said former publish a bulletin reporting that Defense Secretary RobertS. the temporary order was McNamara was calling the issued, There was no Pentagon pacifivation program a ‘“‘bad story in the Saturdayedition. disappointment” a year and The bulletin replaced a story half after the U.S. troop buildup the newspaper had prepared began in Vietnam. 1405 NORTH.STA g FAMILY the two points of view” which he hopes will ultimately “restore credibility and faith in the government.” He said he expects final hearing plans to be settled next LOW DISCOUNT PRICES EVERY DAY! Solons Chased By Addicts From Gallery NEW YORK (UPI) —Four UsS. senators visiting a Harlem gallery” where addicts were preparing to inject themselves with heroin fled quickly Friday when one addict threatened Sen. Harold Hughes, D-lowa,with a knife. Hughes said he did not see the knife, possibly because a dangerous place to be in.” Six male addicts were preparing to take heroin shots in a basement of the Harlem tenement visited by Hughes, Sens. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., PEIGNOIR ENSEMBLES OF EXQUISITE # CAPROLAN NYLON TRICOT§ N.J., and newsmenand television cameramen, When camera crews turned on their lights, the surprised addicts screamed at them to leave. 206 LACE MAGIC Fully-lines exquite Nylon lace for the entire yoke and sleeves ofthis sheer Peignoir. Fulllength lace-hemmed gown is double-layered, sheer-over- Prison Inmates Ordered to Get Mandalay Crew Haircuts PINEAPPLE ‘ounc Donald A. Dahlstrom, Salt cae City, to fill voseices term of Leon — Sweretha igned. \dvisor Council for vistHaraicappea opaque. Sizes P.S.M.L. in Bridal White, Something Blue, Kiss Pink, Jonquil, 524 “i Western Family MANDARIN ORANGES LINGERIE SPECIALS Full Length pink Peignoir. Elaborate lace trim. 1 only. Small. Reducedto.... 2... $ ld Petite Peignoir. Wide lace paneltrim. Pink in the Knee length. Tonly . . Printed Hostess JumpSuits.20 s lis Printed Hostess JumpSuits. o°6°* aE SLIPS. a 2&3 The Wine iessays nearly 57 million gallons were above the same period last ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI)— Former Defense Secretary ment by the United States in Indochina. The Post-Dispatch said it had obtained xeroxed parts of the history, but added, “although other parts quoted by other newspapers in the last two weeks have been described as top secret, the several hundred it was included in parts of a xeroxed pages obtained ... bore Pentagon history of the involve- no security classification.” Credit Cords Welcome WINE SHIPMENTS UP ter, more than 19 per cent Humphrey, now a US. senator from Minnesota, said he was “not a powerful influence” cn Johnson’s war policies. He said he all of Johnson's Vietnam decisions “because I honestly felt Mr. Johnson was doing his damnest ‘to end the war.” MaATCT aL mre RT Ty hie SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — California wine ee reached’ an all-time first three months of shipped during the first quar- 1965 memorandum from Humphreyto Johnson and on interviews Potter had with Humphrey for a book on the Vietnam War. In one of those interviews Humphrey told Potter that in 1965, ‘‘the trouble was that none of us understood the war, its political aspects or what type of war it was. Our military advisers during the Eisenhower and early Kennedy years never understood the war of liberation.” beginning. But the discouraging truth is that, as was the case in 1961 and 1963 and 1965, ve have not found the formula, the catalyst, for traini and inspiring themt into effective ction,” The newspaper printed the text of the memoand said sive jurisdiction, Mansfield 7 favored a joint examination to “bring about a blending of MANILA (UPI)—Vicente Raval, director of the Philippine National Penitentiary, today ordered the prison’s 08 prisoners and their yyce Barnes, and Vera eed shave off sideburns and ie the verge of bankruptey besalteke city: Max Ki gd len; crew haircuts. cause of the mismanagementof Arnold Roylance, Springville: Raval, a retired brigadier -its commercial Estine and Jesse Anderson, Or. yi general, said the penitentiary is L. has asked Congress to bail it i" jormi . “a semi-military organization” out with a government-guaranjoard J. clark Ballard, opan: Robert and therefore military crewcuts teed loan. But the bail-out were more appropriate, process by the government Billie , Aneth. began long time ago.” government had any’liability and if ss, how much,for these rlaims, This was a ‘nonsensical Memorial. Ziolkowski has been working on the project for 24 years and the mountain now is starting to Lear resemblance to the model in the foreground. The monumentwill be 563 feet high and 641 feet long when completed. Documents Majority Against Publication : Te Be Awed Of f Secret Papers, Says Agnew week, but autioned “a lot of preparatory work” is necessary , before hearings could begin. The House is expected to ” refer its set of the Papers to the Armed Services Committee. Institutional Coutnell Joseph Bernolfo, Reed Brinton, andeeTibbels: Gait ake ‘cin: D. Harris, Tre= ° . Hammond (new), Ogd Weber StateColiege enue Council B. Green, Tremonton, Francbeans Jr., Dale Browning, nd T. Heiner (new), from bankruptey . AMODEL OFSioux Indian Chief Crazy Horse stands in front of Thunderhead Mountain in the Black Hills of South Dakota where Korezak Ziolkowski is working day after day to carve out the Crazy Horse sti Loretta Clin he Calvin W. Rell ee Fullmer. H. besSalt Lal lah State The administration bill would BALTIMORE (UP: —Former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey urged President Johnson not to escalate the Vietnam War in 1965 because it might endanget his Greet iety programs and draw and China into the Sundance SummerTheatre Dusters. 1971 SEASON 8 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY reservations 374-8446 Now Playing: thes PORTER ROCKWELL @ Semi Quilted Robes. HARD Rotts .40/°1 Fyegyt 53. % ‘J ;nihiteed mn. Take your pick. We have them aslowas ... |