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Show V if DESERET NEWS, J yw,iW ajtwjfftirgir -j- toiijj mi gwt 'w!itjtf' ify 'ViT Up uft'iimrttnr MiiiiRf i?i i!w0i4fii in Iiu, nn'1 jp Wednesday, May 21, 1969 ABA Sees Did Sen. Kennedy G To For? - well get more Sen. WASHINGTON (AP) s the M. Edward Kennedy, Sen-tte- No. 2 eome under lican doves attacks on jjoJicy and factics. s 14Win t'-'fi-'i A Kennedy triggered the GOP backlash when he said the siege of Hamburger Kill, which killed 46 Americans and 30S wounded, is an for a example of sacrifice false sense of military price. y I feel it is both senseless and irresponsible to continue to send our young men to their deaths to capture hills that. Its difficult to attack President Nixon on over-astrategy now and I suppose Teddys looking for an opportunity, but I dont know how anyone who doesnt know the circumstances can comment and I dont see how he could ll Democrat, has fire from Repubfor going beyond broad Vietnam criticizing battle by Tuesday speech Kennedy, coasidered a frontrunner for his partys 1972 presidential nomination, was supported by some Democrat-l- c critics of the war, but drew barbs from Senate Republicans generally opposed to the nations Vietnam stance. of Sen. Aiken Sen. Kennedy Sen. Hatfield Sen. Mukie on Hamburger Hill or in Saigon or somewhere else, a person is just as dead. You cant delineate between those lives taken on the basis of sound military practice and those on the basis of unsound military practice, Hatfield said. D. Sen. Aiken, George who recently called for and positions that have no relation to ending this conflict, Kennedy said, turning from more general comment on President Nixon's war policies. Sen. Mark Hatfield, reacted by saying: I fault the military policy that put them there. Im not an armchair general who can fault the military tactics of the moment. "Im sure, to the loved ones of those who lose their lives ., ., a start on unilateral withdrawal of U S. troops, said of Kennedys speech : It looks like a little opportunism and I suppose know, Aiken said. Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine, the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 1968 and a potential rival to Kennedy fo the 1972 nomination, said in Detroit he is generally sympathetic to the idea Kennedy expressed in the Senate, Muskie said a re evaluation is required on the kind of American military thinking that reacts to a challenge such as Hamburger Hill by a bloody assault. One Democratic war critic, Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, .said, I confine my own position to policy questions but I wouldnt want to pass judgment on what Kennedy sa.d until I had an opportunity to study it. Another Sen. Democrat, Harold E. Hughes of Iowa, who ran for the Senate on a peace platform and nominated war critic Sen. Eugene for president, defended Kennedy. I think anything is fair game for Senate debate whether its tactics or equalization of troops or number of troops committed, Hughe3 said. I think theres abundant evidence that criticisrrf of individual decisions may be justified, from Kiie Sanh all the way down to Hamburger Hill. A Republican sharing that view is Sen. Clifford P. Case of New Jersey who said: I dont have any inhibition against commenting on what I think to be right or wrong whether It be tactics or strategy but I didnt hear the speech so I dont want to comment on it at all. McCarthy $500 Fortas As Unethical PER DAY FEE PAID U.S. JUSTICE - Supreme Court Justice William WASHINGTON (AP) ?300-a-da- y fee by a California O. Douglas has been paid center which gets part of its money from the constudy WASHINGTON ormer -F(UPI) Court Jus- Supreme tice Abe Fortas relationship with Louis E. Wolfson before the financiers imprisonment for stock fraud was clearly contrary to the canons of judicial ethics, in the opinion of an American Bar Association commltee. The ABA committee on professional ethics said Tuesday it reached that conclusion on the basis of statements Fortas made in a letter to Chief Justice Earl Warren when he resigned last Thursday under severe pressure. troversial foundation he heads. The payments to Douglas by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara, Calif., totaled about $4,000 for 1968 and this year, a Center official said. Douglas has come under fire already for his outside of the Albert salary as president and only paid official Parin Foundation, which has had stock ties with Las Vegas gambling casinos. Congressmen have called for an investigation of Douglas income in the wake of Justice Abe Fortas resignation from the Supreme Court in the dispute over a $20,000 check from the family foundation of jailed financier Louis E. Wolfson. Ted Kennedy Asks Sirhan Clemency The conduct of Mr. Fortas while a Supieme Court justice, described in his statement of the facts, was clearly contrary to the canons of ju- Continued from First Page dicial ethics even if he did not and never intended to intervision; what we need in the cede or take part in any legal, United States is not hatred; cr judicial what we need in the United administrative Mr. States is not violence or lawaffecting Wolfson, the lessness, but love of wisdom panel said in a letter to ABA and compassion toward one president William T. Gossett. another. Kennedy in the handwritten Gossett delivered the letter to Sen. John J. Williams, letter, said that he realized who bad asked the that many other considerations fell within the responsicommittee for an interpretation of the canons after Fortas bility of the district attorney and that of the court. confirmed he had accepted and later returned a $20,000 "But if tne kind of man fee from the Wolfson family my brother was is pertinent foundation. we believe it should be matters seven-memb- NARCOTICS AGENT REPORTS Nixon Mulls Dope Easy To Buy In Salt Lake Stronger llprug Lews m Z t Z WASHINGTON (AP) -p- resident Nixon Is expected So ask Congress soon to put Sack the teeth extracted from federal JJie antimarijuana Jaws by the Supreme Jhis week The small, fast talking officer let his hair grow, went and did without unshaved, bathing for his role as an undercover agent He was able to infiltrate hippie and youth gangs in all parts of the city. This drug abuse thing is a Continued from First Page Court The court, in overturning 3he marijuana conviction of kr. Timothy F. Leary, epecifi-Jfcall- y left the door open for new federal legislation to con-Srol the Salt Lake Detention Home, John McNamara, warned that the type of drug user was shifting from the "flower people, or true hippie, to a more aggressive director of individual. Some of the kids I have dealt with will kill for drugs. We might just see something he like this this summer, warned. Then there win be an outcry to do something about the problem. Yet wait until a policeman shoots one of these kids. Then listen to the public , the controversial weed. Jj The administration, sources aid, Is laboring to revise the Suitldrug message Nixon was outcry." , . ibout to send to Congress hethe costs of Mentioningre the court pointed up the drugs, Brophy , noted that defects in existing federal some pushers and sellers-wer, tows. iV making as much! as . t soirie ' federal 53,000 a month on drugs, Meanwhile, The officer appealed t for Jmd local law enforcement officers tended to discount, at stronger law enforcement We currently have Jour men JJrst reading, the impact of Leary decision on their assigned to narcotics in the Ability to deal with traffic vice squad in Salt Lake City. We need at least 20 more. The Jo pot. whole police department Justice Jnhn Marshall Har-Ji; urgently needs another 100 a for unanimous writing men. court, ruled Monday that: Already Salt Lake City is The 5th Amendments pribecoming the selling center of the West. If we dont get the vilege against 3s an absolute defense to pro-- , help we need, drugs vrill kill !Secution for failing to pay the us. Give us ammunition in the tfederal tax of 5100 per ounce, en marijuana. By signing gov--. form of legal authority, Hmment forms of intent to change the archaic laws, and possess marijuana, the court give us the manpower to fight ! reasoned, an individual Incrim-- . the drug problem, he said. Jpates himself as to possible j gtate prosecution. J 7 The second law, making it Illegal to Import marijuana ' Into this country without prop-- f au r authority, is defective in its sickness, but it is e. sickness the kids themselves have created. I dont think we can blame society for it. These are people who dont care about themselves, and they dont care about others etther, he added. Now assigned to more nor mal, routine police work since n his identity has become to the drug abuse community, Brophy concludes: YOU have to be in it for a while to fully realize the filth and dirt involved. But It is there, and youd better believe it well-know- weighed in balance on the side of compassion, mercy and Gods gift of life itself. Dist. A tty. Evetie - e , -- " oro t presumption that the or knows marijuana came Trom abroad. It does grow In the United States. I The ruling did not affect the I legality of the antipot laws on Ihe books of all 50 states. The federal , ! law is still valid if the govern- -' tji ent can prove the possessor - knew the marijuana was Dave Mart Collection smnD posses- - a nice approach to golf. the 3 under alpaca-blen- d UR u0003 1 floiunttn. top tapered bend faceted crystal tapered band weur-reeiet- stalnlese beck calendar water-resista- 2i . . sweater Golfers, this is your sweater. 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