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Show DESERET 2A NEWS, u&M&a vua Tijrn(ii Saturday, May 10, 1969 olon's Life Threatened - The DETROIT (UPI) chief Senate antagonist of Supreme Court Justice Abe For-ta- s says his life has been because of information incriminating he and others have against tas to be chief justice, revealed a telephoned threat on his life Friday at a news Fortas. The threat did relate to my position on the Fortas threatened P. Griffin, Robert who led the success-- f '1 fight to block President Johnsons nomination of For- Sen. matter. Griffin arrived at the news conference accompanied by easy-goin- several by Bil Keane coming months, was issued at the weekend conference of the Business Council with high administration officials. the members Nearly council, including heads of scores of the countrys biggest attended the corporations, conference. of A guarded forecast of another automobile price increase when the new model year begins next September came Friday, along with a proposal from a construction industry leader for compulsory arbitration of wage dis- putes in the building industry to curb wage boosts. Patrick E. Haggerty, vice chairman of the Business Council who arranged the program on economic outlook, There will told reporters: still be Inflation next year, though not as great as this year. Haggerty, board chairman of Texas Instruments, Inc., Dallas, said Business Council members generally approve the g o v e rnment's the tax program surcharge, tight money, and restraints on federal spending although most members wish that Congress had imposed the surtax sooner. anti-infiati- I forget, Mommy. Do we do things for YOU on Mother's Day, or is that the day you do things for US?'' Talks, Jail Terms Replace Rioting By Associated Press tumult and shouting on the college scene has ended on a quieter note with scholars and politicians discussing the campus crisis and a New Hampshire judge dealing jail terms to 45 Dartmouth A week of sit-in- s. The shock of Dr. Euell C. Gallaghers resignation as president of City College ol a steady Ne.v York and day- long rain combined to end two days of violence and arson at school. die 20, Ray L. Heffner, president of Brown University in Providence, R.I., has announced his resignation but did not link it to campus protest. He said he had simply reached the conclusion that I do not enjoy being a university president. ROTC ISSUE t The school, has experienced however, months of controversy in which faculty and student government leaders expressed displeasure with Heffners position on ROTC. 3,700-studen- VORLD DATELINES London Students Shout At HHH - Former President Hubert H. Humphrey escaped unhurt Friday night from a crowd of shouting college students who cornered him in a pub. LONDON (UPI) Vice Down with Humphrey! and End the Vietnam War! shouted more than 40 students from the London School of Economics. They smashed glass- - es and kicked and pounded Humphreys car with their fists, one witness said. television Two newsmen were kicked and punched as they tried to protect Humphrey. It was a nasty scene. Glasses were broken everywhere and the students were said Martin quite violent, Leslie, a bartender at the White Horse Pub. Vatican Demotes Doubtful Saints VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Motorists still can hang St. from medals Christopher dashboards, artillerymen still can pray to St. Barbara and the British still can venerate dragon killer St. George despite the Vaticans demotion of dozens of saints Roman Catholics have honored for centuries. The Vatican cannot be sure of them ever lived. The names will disappear any from the church calendar of and recognized approved saints whom Catholics must honor on special days. But all will remain saints and Catholics may name them in prayers. The idea is to downgrade the role of saints, particularly ones the Vatican is not sure even existed and emphasize the importance of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Americans Careless , Climber Says KATMANDU. NEPAL A veteran mountain(UPI) eer said today the six Americans who died in an avalanche in the Himalayas had met disaster because they were careless and in a hurry. Elaine Hemilton, formerly of Baltimore and now living in France, said an experienced climber would have realized that avalanches were an imminent danger on 26,817 foot Mt. Dhaulagiri, where the late last month. six-die- Miss Hemilton was camped about 12 miles from the Americans, on the other side of a ridge on D lagiri. She said her climbing party decided it was too dangerous where they were so they moved to another camp. During their trek "we heard a thundering sound of two avalanches within an hour of each other. We are not sure which one killed the Ameri- cans. At Howard University, where police wrested control frjm s by firing tear gas rockets into the buildings, the student activists told a news conference there was no change in their demands. sit-ir.- In Woodville, N.H., 45 young people, most of them Dartmouth students, were learning prison routine today at the Grafton County jail while lawyers prepared appeals to the state Supreme Court. Judge Martin Loughlin sentenced the group, including y five girls, to serve jail terms and pay $100 fines each for criminal contempt in the seizure of the college administration building last Tuesday. DEMAND REMOVAL The demonstration led by the Students for a Democratic Society was to demand the immru ate expulsion of ROTC programs from the campus. They were removed from the building by state police early Wednesday. Judge Laughlins sentence was twice the term recommended by County Attv. George Papademas and was die stiffest mass sentence yet meled out for student uprisings across the nation. One advocate of the h approach to campus disorders testified before the Senate permanent investigations subcommittee Friday. - philosopher Longshoreman Eric Hoffer said the campus crisis called for strong-wille- Turns - d You need chancellors of universities and mayors oi cities who will get up in the morning and spit on their hands and say Who am I going to kill today? " Hoffer said. These are the people who will save you. iiniiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiiiL CALIF. II. Jaci.Mm, u.e naoldest admiral, cele- CORONADO. tion's brated hr, 103rd bKhuey today. His recipe for a long li'e is taking things easy. for His 27 hoj'r.kepper years. Airs. Charles Bucey, admiral has says the hecn slowirg down but still is remaikably spry. He stopped golfing at 95 and quit garden-trat 98. Mrs. Bucey said she g istered stock and is now servr ing a prison term. Court Justice Abe Supreme Fortas confirmed last Sunday that in 1966 he received and an unspecified amount of money sent him by tiie Wolfson Family Foundation. He is said to have kept the money for 11 months, returning it only a few days after Douglas connection with the was Foundation revealed and shoitiy after Wolfson was indicted. WIFE TAKES CASE The Parvin Foundation's 1967 tax return also shows that Fortas wife, a noted tax laywei, who practices as Carole n Agger with his former lirnt of Arnold and Porter, was retained in November 1966, to evaluate the founda- the flames. The destruction was confined to the block-lonmain street. Townspeople stayed in their homes overnight and their dwellings were not harmed. g HE STAYED HOME Emanuel Sandau. in his 7Gs and the operator of one of Zaps two beer taverns, was among those who stayed home. In anticipation of the revelry', Sandau had stocked a side room along his Luckys Bar with 10,000 cases of beer. He stayed home Friday night and left some young employes in charge. The tavern was wrecked by the town visitors. Anything portable had been dragged about and smashed. tax-fre- e status. Douglas has come under sett tee criticism from several members of Congress, particularly Sen. John J. Williams, because of the Parvin Foundation's financial holdings in Nevada gambling casinos and his continued relationship with the foundation. Rebels Burn Flag MARACAIBO -(UPI) Rebel students occupying the office of Zulia University's president for two weeks burned an American flag and sloshouted gans Friday while repelling an attempt by other students to oust them. British George W. Romney, now' a Cabinet member, used the Furthermore word again. was he said proud he Romney time. At first teh it used had one accused nine Welshmen! oiganizing and! training the free Welsh aritty ! of Jackson remembers when his goals G's. were three the Golf in the morning, gardening in the afternoon and, his blue eyes twinkling, in the evening. gali-vanti- - Paul WITH BRITISH TV Haney, the former voice of on U.S. control mission manned space flights, will do commentary on the July 20 Apollo moon flight for a British television network. The announcement Friday by InNews Television dependent said Haney would work in its London studios and quoted him as sajing he was being paid a handsome sum. Kon-Tik- - of Hous- DE G.ULLE IN IRELAND Former President Charles de Gaulle of France arrived by plane today for a monthDe long visit to Ireland. Gaulle and his wife flew here in a French military jetplane, accompanied by one aide. REAFFIRMS BRAINWASH Nearly tw'o years ago a leading contender for the Re- - anthro-pologi- -' word. I said we were brainwashed, and I'm proud of it because people won't forget I said it and the facts are beginning to show' that I was BARONEES INNOCENT PLEADS n Welch speaking pleadthrough her attorney ed innocent to city and state charges of prostitution Friday in Chicagos Women's Court and requested to be tried by a jury. Miss Welch was romantically linked with George C. the third Wallace during TO SHED y NO. 7 - heires3 Barbara GOLDBERG PENSION -FSupreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg has received a $25,000 lifetime pension from the United Steelworkers cf America (USW), the Pittsburgh said today in a copyright e said story. The the USWs executive board last week approved the pension for Goldberg, who once served as the union's legal counsel. It said the decision, reached during a three-daPost-Gazett- Baton-es- s 1 party candidates presidential campaign last fall. She once claimed Wallace, the former Governor of Alabama and presidential aspirant of the American Independent Party, would marry her aftei he was elected. He was not elected and he did not marry her. e - ILL Maria Augusta Trapp, 64, mother of the Trapp family singers, was hospitalized in Austria Friday hours after meeting Queen Elizabeth II of England. The woman's physi- cian refused to discuss the na-ture of her illness. It had been reported earler that she suffered a heart attack. correct. ormer of of PREPARES TO SAIL I The man who sailed the raft! i across tire Pacific 22 j years ago prepared today ini Casablanca to conquer the At- lar.tic in a boat made- of! reeds. The daring sailor hi Thor Hyerdahl, at 54 on? of Norways most famous men.J I When he sailed the Kon-Tifrom Peru to Tahiti in threel and a half months in 1947,1 Heyerdahl wanted to see 'if ! man could have migrated from South America to Poly-- j nesia over the sea. He found they could. Now the hopes to test a theory that the Egyptians and Phoenecians could have sailed in I papyrus boats from Africa to the new world. a long Thats story, Romney replied. But I once summatized it in one had to take his bicycle away whet! lie was 91 because people told me hewasn't stopping at stop signs. not una Prince Charles, heir to thj throne. Tasker MjjJ bams, Queens counsel, saii jj documents outlining a pia, which included the assassir.nl tion were found at the home! publican nomination for President came back from a trip to Vietnam and said he had been b r a i n w a s lied. Friday, ing and Urban Development, why there was little money for housing but government funds to shoot rockets to tiie moon and to kill people in countries that are just coming to returned tion's 'jiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiHii istration's Secretary s PLOT ON CHARLES? i Wales court was told Fri4v cf a plan to assassinate! ed Romney, the Nixon Admin- one-yea- Parvin Peogsle housing conference sponsored by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, someone ask- Times said Friday that Parvin had been named as a coconspirator but not a defendant in the Securities and Exchange Commissions case against Wolfson, who has bpe" convicted on a chaigp of trading unreg- here, meeting rnous. a 1 he Los Angeles They wrecked the whole town, said the Mercer County sheriff, Ivan Stiefei. DEBRIS SCATTERED Interiors of business buildings were strewn with merchandise. Their windows were broken. A solt drink machine was ripped apart in the town auditorium. Wallboard was shredded. A gaping hole had been punched into the foundation of one building. The stench of dying bonfires on Main Street was made worse by the empty beer cans which had been thrown into Wool-wort- h Hutton has started divorce proceedings against her seventh husband, Prince Raymond Doan Vinh de Champassak, a Tangier regional tribunal said today. Tiie marriage took place four years ago in Tangier, where Miss Hutton owns an oriental-styl- e house in the Casbah. SEES LMPEACILMENT -Rep. Wright Patman sevs impeachment can be the ultimate outcome unless the White House takes action in a reasonable time on his conflict of interest charge against Treasury Secretary David AC, Kennedy. Patman, chairman of the House Banking Committee, said he has no plans now to seek impeachment, but I'm not making any promises not to do it. Rough looking place this the old man said, morning, moving a pipe through his yellow teeth. Mrs. Sandau stood crying at her husband's side. Weve lost eveiything," she said. to BAR WRECKED Paul Renner, owner of the other bar, sat behind a locked door in his place this mcming and shook his head. The windows of Pauls Bar had been smashed and the interior was covered with wreckage. The glass in most of the windows on store fronts has I been broken. said Maj. Gen. LaClair A. Mclhouse, adjutant general of the National Guard. Debris clutters the rW k sW streets. a DESERET NEWS SALT LAKS CITY, UTAH y administrators. Oldest Admiral Has One Tiie Albert Panin Foundations federal tax return for 1967 shews that Douglas, who is botli and a director oi the organization, was paid $12,000 for a variety of services while none of the ether foundation officers received compensation. NAMED IN CASE National guardsmen armed with rifles and five-fowooden clubs emptied Zap today of 2,000 to 3.000 young revelers, many of them collegians, who transformed the main street of this tiny village into a shambles overnight. The community of 300 residents went under martial law as more than 500 guardsmen in combat uniforms joined police in lowering the curtain on the weekend Zap-in- . (AP) Spread in WASHINGTON (UPI) -records s! ovv that in 1967 Supieme Con; l Justice William O. Dougias was the only paid officer of a Los Angeles foundation named for Albert Parvin. who reportedly was involved in th stock manipulation ease that sent financier Louis E. Wolfson lo jail. infoimation. An aide later said that information reletred to further information Criffin and others have about Fortas. who is under fire for accepting $20,000 from the family foundation of convicted securities manipulator Louis F. Wolfson. A Shambles that prices will continue rising into 1970, despite a slowing of the boom in Recipe For Longevity: T,i of that Town Into A warning 100 1 ZAP, N.D. (AP) 'Ripples' Top Court I hesitate to make that statement, he sain, but make it so it might lie known I am not the only one in Zap-I- n '70 VA. HOT SPRINGS, grim. FAMILY CIRCUS Inflation To Be Factor Through conference. My office in Detroit tells me my life has been threatened," Griffin said, his face plainclothes Detroit policemen. He said the Federal had Bureau of Investigation been notified of the threat, which came to his Detroit office and was Wednesday, investigating it. Griffin, usually smiling and was tense and terse. He blurted out word of the threat after answering routine questions about Fortas. two o Editorial (Hfica, U E. First Sovtti Advarlislnf and Circulation 143 J. Mam St. Salt Lako City, Utoh 411 Established Juno 15, 1150 Published twCft evening Entered or the Sait Late City Post Office as second class matter accord. no to Act of Congress, March 3, 119. The Oesorat News Publishing Comfor pany assumes no responsibility manuscripts and photographs contributed. Photograohs and articles may be reprinted only with written permission given in advance. 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Lee 45, former Soo-keu- ice president of the official Nor.h Korean Central News Agency, was sentenced after trial in Seoul a month-londistrict criminal court. He pleaded guilty to the charge but said he would appeal the death sentence. g HOW FOR MOTHER'S DAY! ' ' ' s t Indonesia Sticks To Vote Plans - JAKARTA (AP) Despite an uprising hy some 30,000 West Irians the Indonesian government still plans to let the territory decide whether to remain part of Indonesia or Forvote lor independence, eign Minister said today. Adam Maiik The tebellious tribesmen are demanding that the territory establish itself as the instate of Papua. dependent They claim the government is trying to rig the July plebiscite, known as the act of free choice. " . ' ' May 9th, 10th, and 11th Friday, Saturday, Sunday . . Utah National Guard Armory 1543 Sunnyside Avenue Sponsored by Salt Lake Newspapers . a |