Show Wm A II— Th Herald Jecrnal Logan Utah Wrdm-xda- y June 37 1973 Marauding Dogs Arc Problem Vyo (UPI) -Iitrramiie city officials are trythe ing to decide how to control as of dogs marauding problem the result of an attack last week in which two youtlis were seriously injured "It's a jurisdictional problem" (lily Attorney Tom Smith said during a special council ‘ You're going to have meeting to go to the authority Hint lias IARAMIE the greatest jurisdictioiud limitations whether it lie the county or tlie city and county as a whole" Smith said any immediate eooicraliuii was being hamHTed by jurisdictioiud limits Two youngsters were attacked last week by a juii-- of 15 marauding dogs and were seriously injured Both are still hospitalized and the dugs luive been rounded up for lalxiratory tests Charges are pending against the dogs' owners city-coun- d Albany County Sheriff Harold Clay said Die biggest problem was enforcement The Albany County Attorney's office said Monday it knew of no way tlie owner of tlie dogs could be prosecuted for tlie rrrently retired pnifnaur In the USU hai a buaman'a holiday of at Mathematic? Department working on family dry farm and bottle feeding lamb—a family HUNSAKER DK NEVILLE enterprise Mathematician Dons Farm Duds lambs as they graze on the canyon slopes near Hardware Ranch Dr Hunsaker and members of his family run a dry farm near Tremonton and run from sheep Iigan and Blacksmith Fork Canyon to the desert of Park Valley The tiring work of maintaining a profitable dry farm is not new to Dr Hunsaker He was born on the Tremonton spread and has helped with the labor since returning to Northern Utah in By Linda Keith Information Services It's a “busman's holiday” for Dr Neville Hunsaker now that he has retired after 32 years of e teaching at Utah State USU full-tim- University Perhaps that should read “a mathematician's holiday” because Dr Hunsaker spends the biggest part of his time these days counting sheep He's not snoozing in the hammock he's actually covering the range looking after 1200 ewes and backyard Brezhnev Discovered US Also Has Congressmen Ky JOHN HALL WASHINGTON (UPI I tention foreign leaders: American summit luis - At- Tlie two humps mud Brezhnev general ui tlie Communist secretary party climbed both of them when he was here He spent most of his time uii tlie iiuiuntam with President Nixun which is where foreign leaders ordinarily do business in the United Mates But Brezhnev also sciit an extraordinary 3‘s hours with rcpii'scntutivcs of Congress -and that is the second hump in the summit Congress has given away a lot of lower to the executive branch in foreign policy but it still holds tlie trump card on Brezhnev's desire to sell Soviet goods in I I American marketplace He can sell practically tin1 nothing if Congress does not approve a bill giving “most favored tuition" trade concesAnd sions to his country Congress lias uuide it clear it will grant no such concessions until Brezhnev grunts a few elementary civil freedoms — particularly tlie freedom to leave the country -- to Russia's 2 million Jews That is why Brezhnev had members of tlie Senate Foreign Relations Committee and other memliers of Congress in for vodka and caviar at Blair House last week Tluit is why he sient all afternoon with them And tluit is why he spent the uflcrnixui talking about substantive issues not just exchanging pleasantries Brezhnev has recognized a fact that some American presidents have refused to recognize: Tluit the presidency is not the only source of power in the United Slates Congress must play a part ultimately in bargains —nut only trade but on a number of other issues in which tlie Constitution assigns it a role European leaders for instance might be advised to keep Congress in mind when they discuss with Nixun the continuation id US troops in Europe this fall in view of the bucking Sen Mike Mansfield is receiving for his campaign to bring half the troops home The same applies to countries bargaining for more foreign aid In tlie years during and after World War 11 congressional attitudes were not a major factor in summitry because they nearly always coincided with presidential viewpoints Off Premier North Vietnam Dies - i UPI i Phan Ke one of North Vietnam's seven vice premiers died Tuesday in Hanoi of a the i North) heart attack Vietnam News Agency said today in a broadcast monitored in Saigon SAIGON Toai Congress order an end to tlie bombing of Cambodia while he is trying to achieve a negotiated his peace —removing "bargaining chips" as they say But it can also be argued that it is useful to have Congress applying pressure of its own on Its insistence on negotiations American withdrawal from Indochina a might produce These were the heady days greater willingness on the part when and presidents key of South Vietnam and Cammembers of Congress consulted bodia to come to terms with frequently and arrived at their adversaries Its pressure common decisions in advance for disengagement from Europe of international diplomatic arcan bring about a greater rangements like the Marshall willingness among the NATO Plan and the Truinan Doctrine allies to begin sharing a But the Vietnam war has greater burden of the defenses brought ubuut a fundamental And in tlie case of Brezhnev parting of ways between the and the trade bill and Soviet executive and legislative branJewry Congress is playing the ches that apparently neither classic parliamentary role of side is willing to settle behind human rights advocacy howthe scenes There is a certain ever troublesome that may be to about American Brezhnev and Nixon in their foreign policy in the 1970s and quest for detente it is just something that foreign leaders will luive to get used to Soap was so scarce and in Is this duality necessarily demand it was used as money wrong? Perhaps it does bother in 1841 in Mexico National Henry Kissinger to have Geographic says I 84 Phan Ke Toai was the only vice premier who was not a member of the Communist party He had little voice in running the country and diplomatic sources in Saigon said his death was not likely to cause much of a stir Toai was a Mandarin (senior civil servant I in Vietnam's prewar French colonial days He later collaborated with the Japanese as imperial pro-cons- ul in Hanoi but when the French returned to power in Indochina following World War II he tuok to the jungle and Viet joined the Communist Minh North Vietnam's late President Ho Chi Minh took him into the Viet Minh leadership to demonstrate that the Viet Minh was not exclusively Communist Toai served for a time as interior minister before being promoted to 4 A I vice-premi- er o o ourDiKini Stock up nowand save “Raising animals and farming neighbors didn't want” he recalls “I'd feed them by hand and had quite a block within a few years I was about six then" His life has been full of rural experiences but Dr Hunsaker left quite an imprint upon Utah Sate University's Mathematic's Department Responsible for bringing approximately )1 million in grant money to USU the department head was for many years involved with National Science Foundation Summer He was Math Institutes awarded 25 grants over several years in which junior high and high school teachers were brought to campus to learn better teaching techniques The institute became one of the best attended summer programs USU had to offer The rather shy emeritus professor came to Utah State after spending several years in Houston and ACADEMY former cadet at the Air Force Academy Tuesday said he spent part of his indoctrination at the academy's “Hanoi Hilton" mock prison camp lashed to a fence and eating rice fouled with cigarette butts Jack Saine of Bell Calif rcsignvd from the academy only eight weeks before he was scheduled to graduate "l’hysical torture wus definitely in evidence" said Saine now employed by the Singer Corp as a data processor He said cadets undergoing the mandatory indoctrination were confined in program painted black cells and jabbed with sticks for hours on end "Prisoners" also were tied to fences with parachute cord and exposed to all weather condi- Angeles wurking in geophysics— tions the application of mallirmatirs Ills picture of life at the to oil exploration “I always knew I wanted to camp designed like those where American prisoners of end up at Utah State I wanted to war were held (or as long as remain involved with the farm seven years was confirmed by that had belonged to my father anutlier former cadet Bill and his fatlier We sHiit quite a Thornton of Denver who also few summers on the farm living in Iztgan in tlie winter resigned Thornton said he was one of “That was a bit of an adthe first cadets to purticiiute in justment for my wife whom I interrogation of underclassmen nu-- t when we were both under the mandatory training graduate students in math at program Berkeley She always liked it The existence of the camp however and enjoyed having tin came to light recently when the children be out in the country" Air Force asked Congress for he remembers 82441X10 to build a new Neville and Annie Petersen compound at the school Hunsaker an parents of five The appropriation was chililrcn Wortlien is a PhD m by Rep Us Aspin mathematics and an associate who called it a "ghoulish department head at the expenditure" uf Southern Illinois at "The last tiling we need is University Carbondalc Calvin is a physics some Hanoi Hilton and science teacher ut Sky View soft-spok- is i ensembles of with sheer tricot nylon or overlays ensembles of all nylon tricot Pastels for sizes Dress-lengt- h full-leng- PSM th L 9 I Sale 59 Reg 69c Cool combed cotton Prints and solids SML I69 Light control pantihose Sale 67 Reg 79c Cool cotton knit in prints Classic tailored style SML Light control with super stretch luxurious legs Nude heel short a bevy of beautiful average and long Latest fashion colors Sale 85 Reg $1 Nylon tricot in white pastels prints Lace trimmed at hip and leg SML half-bake- d Colorado in the mountains High School in Kmilhficld while where cadets can play psychoJess tlie youngest Is a senior logical tricks on each oilier" at majoring in Aspin said Two Utah are State daughters IxiuiH Dr Mutscliler a married and living in California former academy staff psychia“Retirement prubably came trist said the camp is intended to give cadets an idea uf what easier fur me than for many it would be like to be taken people" he believes "I've always been doing what I'm prisoner tenout of there with doing right "They conic now I have the a clear understanding tluit they ding xheep-b- ut never want to be cuptured" time to enjoy it mure The Mutscliler said pressures aren't as great I'm He added tlie training pro- not about renuiining gram caused some cadets to active I go about things at a become temporarily psychotic much more relaxed pace doing but said "They snapped out of wliat I can one day and knowing it at the completion of there Hre days to come to finish now-hayi- JCPennev ng wuf-rie- We know what you’re looking for Bring your JCPenney charge card Shop Friday night 'til 9 PM Jobs" k ll We're having a kief is what I've done all my life It's what I've done instead of fishing and hunting during summers and most weekends I remember my first real 'Job' was going from farm to farm picking up all the motherless lambs that the Alleged training" V 1941 Physical Torture AIK FORCE Colo i UPI I — A Vice 4 i l |