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Show 2 A The Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday, December 18. 1977 Sadat Invites Begin to Egypt for Working Visit in Peace Quest Continued From Page One Organization another chance" to join the peace process. When asked how he could do that now that Carter had said the PLO hau alioinated itself from the process, he answered: "Mr. Carter is entitled to his opinion. Sadat said he still hoped that King Hussein of Jordan would join the Cairo conference. But he added that ns of now he was unable to tell Ilussein there had been any change in the Israeli position on the West Bank of the Jordan. Sadat indicated that, the level of the Cairo conference, which has done virtually no work so far, would be raised after the Begin visit. There has been speculation that the Egyptian and Israeli foreign ministers will participate for a while. Some diplomats here predict that the conference will be kept ui session intermittently for many weeks and perhaps months but that the really important exchanges will be in personal exchanges between Sadat and Begin. (Copyright) Reuter News Agency King Hussein of Jordan travels to Saudi Arabia Sunday to pursue his efforts to heal divisions in the Arab world over Egyptian President Anwar Sadats Middle East peace initiative. Saudi Arabia and Jordan both want to restore Arab solidarity, shattered by AMMAN state ' - - ! t .V ;V ? m,y. ; .! ' r! m J ", f 0 ' , J, l.y tf V t i st;, V w t '' '' ': K T r t PvM , ' 'Ti w v Vt '' A,y V? 7 Continued From Page One tanks in Europe but said, We are trying to make sure that those tanks are vulnerable. We are developmg new weapons of our own. This was an apparent reference to the neutron bomb, the enhanced radiation weapon that the administration has proposed to counter any Soviet bloc invasion of Western Europe. I dont think anyone needs to worry about the United States being second in military strength to anybody," he said. Fayetteville is the home of the sprawling Fort Bragg army post and Pope Air Force Base. Wliile Carter was in Fayetteville, the sumWliite House released a mary of what it considered Carters domestic policy accomplishments during the first year of his presidency. They included sending Congress a national energy plan, welfare reform proposals, Social Security refinancing, and economic stimulus plans. The energy plan is stalled in House-Senat- e conference committee, the welfare revision proposal is just undergoing congressional consideration and the Social Security plan squeaked through Congress Thursday and is awaiting the president's signature. Much of the presidents economic stimulus legislaton was approved last spring after Carter dropped his proposed rebate. Carter also claimed as accomplishments: ; J 'X ' f;k?- V ,N v, , ? Associated Press Laserphoto Lee Gainey, after ceremony in Fayetteville, President Carter attended the wedding. Sydney Scott Stapleton, nephew of President Jimmy Carter, kisses new bride, former Caro N.C. Willi Carter Clan President Attends Nephews Wedding By James Gerstenzang Associated Press Writer FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. With President Carter and more than 800 other persons looking on, Sydney Scott Stapleton, one of the presidents nephews, and Caro Lee Gainey were married Saturday. The president, his wife Rnsalynn, daughter Amy and other members of the Carter clan flocked to this southeastern North Carolina city for the family reunion and wedding. Carters appearance prompted a woman charged with unlawful burning and conspiracy during a civil rights protest in 1971 in Wilmington, N.C. Simnle Ceremony Shouts of free the Wilmington 10 could be heard faintly in the church when the front door was opened but could not be distinguished during the simple, ceremony. The president sat in a second-ropew, facing an altar that was decorated with red poinsettias and a lighted Christmas tree, but did not take part in the ceremony at the Highland Presbyterian Church. Marshal Leon Lancaster estimated the crowd at more than 800. At least as many persons were on the sidewalks near the church waiting to catch a glimpse of the president. Silver Spoon Carter and his wife gave Stapleton, 25, a University of North Carolina medical student, and his wife, a dental hygienist, a silver serving spoon engraved on one side with the presidents signature and on the other with the words The Presidents House. life imported from France, halo head piece. Press and a floral Internat- Calm descended on the nations coalfields Saturday after nearly two weeks of scattered violence and flaring tempers in the United Mine Workers strike which has idled 188,000 miners. UMW President Arnold Miller, who did not participate in talks with the Bituminous U.S. News Scene heavy snow warning was jxistel for strike More Inmates Fly Home Tow boat Sinks SAN NEW ORLEANS (AP) DIEGO (UP!) group of American prisoners from Mexican jienitentiaries flew home Saturday to complete the first phase of an unprecedented international prisoner exchange. The flight left Culiaean, Mexico, Saturday morning and arrived shortly after 2 p.m. A spokesman for the Federal Correctional Institution here said the plane brought back 35 prisoners. The Texas International Aircraft began the convict ferry Dec. 9 when it carried 30 Mexican nationals who had been imprisoned in the United States o Mexico City. They constitute! less than 2 percent of the Mexicans in U.S. prisons. Symphony Director Dies NEW YORK (AP) Thomas Schippers, music director of the Cincinnati Symphony who made his first piano lour at the age of (1, has died of cancer at his home here He was 17 Schippers, who died Friday night, became niu-i- c director in Cincinnati in 1)7(). Last Oetolxr. he stepped aside after his illness was diagnosed as lung cancer. d I soft-co- am. Miller, instead, visited the UMW' organizing headquarters in Mingo County. W.Va., where he pledged Friday to continue active political organizing of the nations mines. non-unio- n Were going to organize all the coal mines in this country," Miller said. It may take us awhile to get there but were going to get there. He said the union would reactivate its political action in eastern Kentucky, described by Miller as "a land that elects coal operators for judges. Any coal company operating, or planning to mine open, a A Coast Guard search for three people believed drowntsl when their towboat sank in (he Mississippi River was ham pered Saturday by fog A Coast Guard sioho-masaid divers hoped to Ix'gin searching the river for todios late in the day Requiring Cabinet members and House staff to disclose their income and assets. Proposing legislation requiring all public officials to disclose their financial situations. This legislation passed the Senate and is being considered by the House. there every day to listen to a whole lot of nothing, the white-haire- d union chief said of his absence from the Washington talks. Im in touch with them and there will be no agreement unless I approve it. Miller i right-to-strik- Retired General Dies at 77, Military Writer retired S. L. A. EL PASO, Texas (AP) Marshall, a brigadier general and noted military historian who wrote the book Pork Chop Hill, died Saturday after a long illness. He was 77. Marshall, who had been hospitalized at William Beaumont Army Medical Center here, was a graduate of the Texas College of Mines, now the University of Texas at El Paso. As a civilian, Marshall worked for several media, including the El Paso Herald, the Detroit News and WWJ-Tin Detroit. He was a foreign correspondent and his syndicated column was printed in the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post. Marshall enlisted in the Army in 1917 and was commissioned from the ranks. He established the Army News Service and was one of three founders of the Armys historical division. He is credited with the definitive analysis of Gen. Jimmy Doolittles historic first bombing raid on Tokyo during World War II. Marshall served mostly in the European Theater and was historian for the armies of occupation. He was promoted to brigadier general in 1951 and served in Korea. Marshall held the Legion of Merit and several honorary academic degrees. will he a target ganizing efforts, of ! A SAVE ciltimr i tl i Nimilx r on ifnl iiifor m.ihuii. w.nii vjntts orrs, li.jvc a Is our pujHT Mm u.mt !o Inlk .ilioul sjor ur a classified vs, ml tu display siiu; iHi ttii ' I I I u WHERE tut U.l. ROCKWELL In Kentucky, where a Chcssie System railroad bridge serving six mines was dynamited and a mine house lielonging to the Canada Coal Co. was burned Friday, state police reported no additional flureups. A spokesman for the j;i! I H u ckil.iv it u.i r s Ikl't.lil GASr ,kON damage to the bridge near Wayland, in southeast Kentucky, was not sufficient to stop the flow of coal shipments from mines served bv the line. !N), in fun- rt kil.i v s ,d tri p hi kilfiii.r, s .ifti p !H s.iLm 'i.tv s ,tf t r p m loll I rcr in I l.th nt ;7 J i '.7 J" :: jur. i List Price YOUR $89.50 COST$3900 hAD - Price $89.50 YOUaCOST$39CO PRESS COMPLETE WITH 2hr vail Calf grtbnnr 143 South Mam Now While They Last DiIZ37MOO April ), ij7i. by tl' Coroofetion. Sa'i l.ekp City. Utah Ml 10 Second flat postage pa.d at Salt l City, Utah morning vprv SUGGESTED RETAIL List AH unsolicited articles, manes riptv ittleri and pictures sent to Sait Lake Tribune are sent at fte nynner'i riK and Kearns-TribunCorporation assumes no responsibility tor the.r custody ot Tho 4 ; Vi4 ou Thi- costW0 NEW ALL IN BOXES WITH ONE (1) YEAR GUARANTEE !, If M-- t r if lone ts a memf-- ' o thp The Asvk Oed Asv lafed .t is e.- ipS'Vpiy to trp press use ot reprodiXMjn o alt local in this rvws or inh-ras art ties i A P re T ..$109.45 ALL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier Delivery i'j Price Yeua c .. t: i ''V .:ti j Is Vj" CHUCK Daily and Sunday Utah, Idaho Nevada ano rVvomiig i Daily and Sunday (Utah, Idaho Nevada and Vsd ' v' U Avorrungi Daily Only (UMh, Idaho. Nevada and Wyoming) t nn month Sunder Only utan, Idaho. Neva W S 'T,u da and Wyoming Daly and Sunday (Ail other V UArM DaGr and SurxJay iAli other I year Maesj Al' mad subs npt.ons parable .o adv.v e Notices One was Mitchell Ray, one of the last of the lightship tenders, who managed to find for Jose a treasure trove of original basket molds used by the lightship weavers. Over the years Jose has added more to the collection, but it is his own skill that makes his baskets special. Chessie System said By Msjtl ,1V Nantucket we made some close friends who helped us so much. TOOLS DRILL PRESSES fAETAL COVER non-UM- D':y I The house on Nantucket was a godsend, Mrs. Reyes said. We had nothing left in the Philippines. On TOOLS MILWAUKEE during the Daily and Sunuav li being as best he could. Finally, when their privation became too severe, he hired out to the Japanese and at last could manage to bring occasional stores of food. CHICAGO POWER TOOLS rpft.rn HERES After the fall of the islands, Jose fought as a guerrilla. In the dark of night, by outrigger canoe, he visited his family and saw to their well- Selling Over from Las Vegas, Nevada, Automotive Trade Show Kprnv "Tribune CLIP We were on one of the first refugee ships out of the Philippines when the war ended, she said. My mother owned a house here on Nantucket and we came here simply to recuperate. Both of us and our three children were in pretty bad shape physically. Jose Reyes was bom in the Philippines in 1902. He1 came to America on a scholarship to Reed College in Portland, Ore., where he met Mary Elizabeth, a transplanted New Englander. After Jose earned a masters degree in education at Harvard they went to the Philippines where he taught school until W'orld War II began. Manufacturer's Representative or- Miller out emotion. de- e weekend. Continued From Page One all the more intriguing. Though she has told the story many times, Mrs. Reyes still cannot recount those desperate times witha Filipino, All Tools Left mands unless the coal operators give us something to solve all the other problems we have, and I dont think theyre likely to do that. Strike-relate- d violence subsided Of Nantucket White Below Manufacturer's Cost This Week! not would specify what item had snagged the negotiations. He said, however, the miners will not yield on their A Symbol . ATTENTION MECHANICS . . . to be non-unio- Cleveland Poliee Return CLEVELAND AP) Cleveland patrolmen ended blue flu" protest by returning to work a two-da- y Saturday, and Mayor Dennis J. Kueinieh proclaimed victory and said he intends to keep dose tabs on police operations. Hie 31 year-olmayor said he w as out on pal ml D until 3 a. m. with his now police chief, buck out mi o streets Hongisto, and planned to later in the day. by miners in 22 states will resume Monday at 11 the Tahoe Basin on the Califomia-Nevad- a border. Nine inches of snow was reported on Donner Summit and 7 inches at Alpine Meadows. Rainfall in Northern California caused slight rises on the north coast streams, but the Sacramento River at Tisdale Pier was cxHcted to overflow into Sutter Pass Sunday. The frontal system causing the rain and snow moved slowly eastward, and a winter storm watch was issued for Sunday in the Colorado mountains. A Coal Operators Association in Washington Friday, said the negotiations were hung up on one of the items on the table. Talks to resolve the Rain, Snow Return to West T ravelers Advisories Issued dont have I ut Da7 vowed. ional effort to and an all-oheal the rift in the Arab world. Jordan has close ties with Syria. Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states hold a special place in the Arab world because they give financial aid to the confrontation states bordering Israel Egypt, Syria and Jordan. visit to the Saudi During his capital of Riyadh, King Hussein is expected to discuss both the Cairo talks and what results were achieved by the recent Middle East tour of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. This Basket's Violence Eases In Coal Strike United A Increasing aceessibilty to the president by holding news conferences every two weeks, meeting with editors and holding town meetings around the country. floor-lengt- with robinson United Press International Rain and snow' returned to the West and upper Midwest Saturday while flooding was rejx.rted in parts of the East and some Midwesterners basked in record warm temperatures. Travel advisories were in effect for the Cascades and Siskiyou mountains of Oregon and the Sierra Novadas of California as snow, whipped by strong winds, fell in those areas. Snow also fell in Idaho and western llah. Winning authority from Congress to reorganize the executive branch, which, he said, included reducing the White House staff by 28 percent, streamlining the United States Information Agency and creating a Department of Energy. The bride, 24, wore a h ivory satin dress, a train made of lace small but noisy demonstration across the street on behalf of the Wilmington' The church was filled and some 10 nine black men and a white guests stood along the walls. Fire preparing for a renewed Geneva peace conference. King Hussein visited Damascus and Cairo last week in an attempt to persuade both countries to halt their mutual recriminations. Since then he has said that if the rift in the Arab world is not healed, recent developments will deal a major setback to peace in the area. Asks Effort to Ileal Rift Crown Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia has echoed this appeal with a call for Carter Sees Early Need To Build Strike Force i.Tia&'V'T "fit - President Sadats visit to Israel, and King Hussein has said he would go to any Arab capital in tireless efforts to achieve that aim. He and King Khalid of Saudi Arabia are apparently facing a tough task in their efforts to heal the split between Egypt and Syria. Denounces Sadat Visit deSyrian President Hafez nounced Sadats visit to Israel last month as treachery and has boycotted the subsequent Cairo talks aimed at enUf nes( pr i Supply Limited See the Complete Display HOLIDAY INN Room ta tlrVf Trfi'rW V n'l 1 S3 533-900- 0 AIRPORT Salt Lake City, Utah Act Fast |