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l Y y j ^ I ■ ' ' ■ l _ 76th year,, No.A 331 Twtn Falls, Idoiaho — FrKf!3ay, November 27,1981i J 2 5 ^ •sr R e a gja n r€Bady tto OKC d o w(lestiGe CIA sp y irng WASHINGTON (UPI)[) - Soon afler rour draftsIs, and the leak of the third the tl order has not been sijsigned until Instead of only onl abroad, open mail rt ro le w ilh th e F B I d ire c to r IncndomesUc Ists, lo revealal thc I name of an in- his return to Wasblngtington from a one sparked:ed vigorous opposition trom now n Is that Reagan hasIS not been wilhout a warra rra n t a n d w ork w ith local tr biclligencc, at least ass far as telllgence agent,m l, ev en If il is a vailable Thanksgiving vacation,on. President the Senate briefed on the final pn)>jjvlslons by lawenforcemem ent a g en c ies. q tc and House Intelligence b counter-intclllgcnce, Is conccrcmcd. on thc public record.rcco Reagan is expcclcd to0 tapprove the committees)cs. It was denounced by national n security adviserer .Richard These actiotions presumably could The CIA already has a sasay in the Thai reslriclioiclion is aimed primarily most controversial of four(ou proposals botliconscncrvdtlves and liberaistin the A / lie n , w ho h a s b e e n tie d upip de fending Involve only'Americans At believed lobe ci counler-lntclligencc activltielies of the at original publication, pub and penal to strengthen thc CIA, andar other In- Senate paneuie) and by the Democratic hlmsolf ii against aiiegatiorIons he im- targets of foreoreign Inlelllgence or in- p FBI. Tbe head of the CIA alsoal Is the sanctions woulduld not be opplled to a tciligcncc agencies. chairmanloftheHousecommittce. of properly r received gifts frfrom Japa- temational terrorist tc organizations., d dircclor of central Inteliigcnicncc, wllh journalist who,0, forfo Instance, pickcd up Reagan plans to signn ana executive a s a resu]suit of comments submitted nesi; r journalists. nol a n y A m ericiric a n s a t ran d o m . n . responsibility for oversight;hl of the the name off an a a g e n t from one order loosening the1 reslrictionsi by the k^nate Sen commillce, the ad- Besi'Jcs allowing the CIAIA to engage • Authorizeze the CIA lo collect and ‘ e entire intelligence communimily. That publication andid usedu It tn another, - Jim my Carter placed on the,CIA in ministrationlon revised the proposal, ap> la I legal domestic spying forfc the first disseminateI Informatlon.on in U.S. cill- includes\j FBI counler-inlclllgligence a c- R e a g a n also'o' IsIs considering another 1978 to p re v e n t it f roim m \ ^cpm m itting p a re n tly watering w. down the most time and to iofiitratee domestic zens who are t re not thc subjcct of an tivity. ti execullve order,ler, now1 u n d e r review by domestic spying and1 invasioni of provocativeive seclion - one allowing mjuns.Hhef third draft —- \which may Invesligalion,n, andj permit the agcncy O ther p a rts of R e a g a n 's Inlinlelllgence the Senate Intellltelllgence Committee, to privacy abuses documentcailed bya pres- the CIA to i >een or m ay yet be! nmodified — to gain access to spy on Americans in the A ess to bank, medical and package p are bills to cxcxcmpt in- tighten thc secre idential commission and anc a &nnlc Uniicd Slat ecrccy surrounding CIA talcs and lo Inflllrao! ar.-- i,. lelephone recoiicords, T hese ac tio n s m a y te ti lllg e n ce a g en c ies fro m th ec FI re e d o m d o c u m en ts, c o m m illc e . influence domesticdo groups. ■ A iow the CIA to condliducl certain require court 0: lordcrsorwarrants. of 0 Information Act and lo nmake it a It would lengthigthcn the time in which T h e o r d e r h a s g one .throhrough at_leasl one Senal t o p e ra tio n s in th e Un nate sourcc-said Uio rer- Jnlted Stales. Give.the.e CIA-dlrcctor-an-cqual ( - crim c c-for anyone, including[)R journal* . ■ , I j H r v ^ ee(HAPage2 ...... Tharnfcsgiiving$ fkasU s 9 aroumd thhe eoumtxy B y U n ite d P r e s s In temiational atii In M aine, 1,0000 rmembers of the Mayflowcwer Socicly gaU ienxI T h u r s d^ a y with ' families and frfends 0on the day Thousands of Americaricans flocked lo 6cc Thanksgisg iv in g th a t h a s RKJClal mmeaning a for them. Tbe groupip traces ils f e a s ts a n d th e co m p an y olo f o th e rs T h u rsd a y w hile millnil low ancestry dlrecUy' to the signers of the Mayflolo w e r Com- or theJr countrymen renremembered the nation's hisihistoric o rig in s a n d b ra v e d th c elementselei to view annual paradi :, the president of the Americle a n T h e ho lid a y w a s m a dde e ht a p p ie r fo r t h ( ^ w ith no “aSlyfai M iveS“dSMired Thanksgiving "a natloni and no money In dozensns ot< cities around thc countr moumlng"forhispe merchants and restauraurant owners who provided” Clyde Bellecourtrt*safd s Indians had llttlt for w to be m eals and companionship thankful. They are afflicted by some of thNew York. Hundrcidrcds more dined at otherir locations But struggling to relalelain their holiday spirit was I faced throughout the city. Keith Brown family of Escanaba, Mich.,, w l^ f; ly- ' tragedy for the second tim e in th e pa s t few w eeks, In T ex a s, thousam» n d s of po o r a n d e ld e rly in SSanAnlonlo,- a HB h &F ^ ■ H | i w Lost month teenagee sons Jay was killed in anm a u lo F o rt W orth a n d Tylery ie r rec eiv e d fre e T h a n ^ WWng i dinners... m w m r ...... - accident in Oconto Count;unty, Wis. Then the family'ss hhouse Thursdaylhrougtithh thc geheitsify of re'sfa'urafeu]2UTS.' ~ m K B f ...... '' I ' m was destroyed on Thanksnks^ving Eve by a fire policeIce said In .T y le r, J e r r y/ LiL o ^n s fed about 200 of thehe poor and m in i - ' ■ j m a y b a v e b e e n d e lib era‘ate te ly se t. T b e fa m ily w a s no)t t hhome elderly at his restais ta u ra o L In S aii A ntonio, :{oo(ilod pcoducts Ju K m ' ik a t th e tim e o f th e fire. - executive Raul Jimcim e n ez a n d c ity offl'^iais fed 9,0009; peopt». fS Amid the' splendor oof f holiday p a r a d * a n J il»o- . ia thc .iltv convcnllention center. JImcAez «ilso 00] s n ^ the - ’’il tentment lhal comes from fn a delicious turkey dirdinner, doors of his restuasluarant in Fort Worth andd television .7/4 m many Americans rememlembered how this country gogot its station KXAS joinedned him to provide a n o th e r 5,00ooomeaisto wm /i. - m s ta r t. • re sid e n ts In th a t cc ity ity .; I Two ITnillion Iline Brooadway H I NEW YORIKUPir-— U p to two'’ m illion a d u llsIts and clowns. "It's the1 sl start of the holiday seasor the H ' h b j , I c h ild r e n Ignored fre ez inng g tem1 peratures Thursday Inn f;fa v o r e n e rg y Is th e re In the faces of the kids." . . of tradiUon and the thrillrill of the longest running sho\how on ‘it's a greal d d£ a y ," CSilef S c h w a rtz sale adding Broadway - Macy’sI 5£SSlh annual Thanksgivinglg Day “several million’'1" people] were on hand toio u sh e r In p a ra d e . Thanksgiving. Thelie 1police usually decline loI giveg . D ^ u t y P o lice C hieff .Milton,M Schwartz said the crcrowd . cstli^tes, but otherher-observers judged the crow up lo th a t tu rn e d olit u n d e r brl{bright, sunny ikies was “dne'd:B of the ■ two m lllioh...... largek ever" In the hlsloriloryof the parade. "I like ll a lot, espespecially the balloons and flo Bundled well againstBt thet cold, smiling children•n w ith P e le r R eed. 8, o f BBronxville,N.Y. ro their parents lined thele two-milet route as 13 marcirchlng With temperatunlures hovering around thee 32-degree b a n d s , 18 flo ats a n d -nIne ln e giant balloons of such car:artoon, mark, Peter, like5 m;many children along lhe rout characters Kerrait tbe‘ Frog,Fi Superman, and Snoopjo p y le d w as “ freezin g ” b u t tlth a t th a l did no t m a k e It anyly le ss fun. the arrival of Santa Claus.ius. •* " I l o v e p a ra d es,” s ,” said 3-year-old.Peter Glara m b a stla n i, ' M ajorettes with goosese p im p les b ra v e ly kept tim eeto t( the of Wllllston Park,(. N.Y.N “Superman Is my fav bc ..m u ^ ic . added, speaking aab b o u t th c 104-fool ballo o n th U a t the W ith iht crowds 20 dedeep at some Intersections,s, 1good biggest ever to appei>pear In the parade. ‘ vantage liolnts were hardard to find and a number of peoplepe (^hs and aahs,, mlmixed with cheers, filled BrcIroadway as IH H H look lo the tops of phoneone booths, vans, and doorwayvays to the balloons, floats.its. bands and celebrities suchch as Donny , c a lc h a view . Osmond, Erik EstrSstrada and New- York Yanjnkee Dave "Supcnnanan” makes hto way dovlown Broadway In Macy’iV's Thanksgiving Day ParadePa Thursday ^ “I love ll.”.said Wendendy Chumi, 28, one of the; n m a n y W infield filed by.
Grounn < ^ o r k k set forr Wattould b e held, a s ta ffe r sa id v WASHINGTON (UPI)I) -• A House sessions COI which U.S. oil firms find dl's- followed, hey the; have produced testi* 0o f th c M ountain S ta te s Legal}al Founda* * * 1 ? * ' subcommittee bas lallaid Vcarefui none is slateated and the next step could ccriminatory. m o n y fro m constitutionalcoi e x p e rts th a l t tio n , h a s been u n d e r flfire from ^ groundwork for a congreigresslonal con* be a contemiim pl citation. Watt nol only has poiw stponed a in d ic a te s exe_rj>_reparatory Canada’s newne nalional energy policy, tlthat, in the two beariirings that Watt 43. formerfoi chief iesal officer s s o u rc e s ,” he sa id . “ T hey a re wrong.” 1______—e."^ * Bes]itusefcor someeeners.Ip-consservingiproduiCts: Doim’t I -.WASHINGTON (UPUPl) — Home energy spcciccialisl products that don't dor deserve their fuel-blllill-cutting Insulation,I, for example, can shrinkink inside wall Inescapip a b le. J o h n R o tb ch lld sa y s avoiding some energy consciscrva- ' reputation.” c a v itie s andn d a few su b tle a ir le a k s c a n1 aal lso let lh e h e at I t mlakes al no sense. Rothchlld obscrjscrves, for someone ...... tloQ product?. cM_savsave a homeowner more momoney Summarily re]e■ejected are attic ventilalon)rs, those escape, to pondiider over the right momenfif to buy a Treasury '" th p f ^ n g tn g IhPTTT...... ^ mushroom-shap^^ things that spin uselesslyyon 1 roof- Several po. popular myths are savaged,I- bill whihiie he ignores an old fumacinace tbat wastes 40 J o h n R o th ch lld onceuce eqiripped his house wilh a inew tops; timersforele' electric w ater heaters, which:h d1 o n 't do F ire p la c ec ! e s “ a r e even w o rs e th a nI you yc Ihink," he percentn l of th e oil b e buys, solar water heater thatth< he thought would shaveve his much to lowerr hhot water bills; combustistlon air said. "In manym: places, thc fireplacec isI: a net loser. Hecnencourages people to think ofciofcncrgy savings a s/- • fuel billastheadvertlsrtislng blurbs had promised, h u m id ifiers, a nid d :storm doors, which are less lc cost Sometimes,!»s, th e best you c a n do Is ju s t b ricr k it u p ." ta x -frecc e dividends lhat apprcclaleJale in a mythical It didn't. But thce formerf< household energyy 00." w o o d sto v'e e s m a n a g e to sp e n d a s m u c:b h moneyn as they and-annn n u a l p a y b a c k s and re tu rnis s fofor e a c h conserva* g a d g e t m a k e rs. The most effectfectlve cost-cutter Is simplyy to turn did on the gasga tbey burned before." lio n d eecision. c The -book. "Sti^p BurningI Your Money" liIs a , down the Ihermosnostat and pul on a sweatere r. " T h a t I t m a y loollook c h ic lo build a g re e n h o u se c n th e sid e of R othchcbild analyzes all the commonmon improvements m e s s a g e o f sim p le economicseco In energy conservalv a llo n g iv e s a b e tte r lee lu tu i m lh a n th e one on w a ll Insusulatlon," , the bouse.. ButB for those who don't knovnow just exactly. that preirofilabiy can be made lo the3e sishell oflhehouse, and household cfficierklehcy. U othchlidsaid..^' what theyf h c ^ to accomplish, the greenhousegn can the olioI or gas burner and the w alerrh he e a te r. "To mc, the onlyily worthy energy conservalvallon Although attlc^nc^nsulallon rates high, it's efleffect can become a1 both box in sumlfher and1 a heal sink in Convev e rtin g fro m oil to g a s by swwitching itc burners, for d e c isio n Is o n e th a t ppa> a y s o ff," w rite s th e a u lh o r.. " Y o u ' b e sa b o ta g e d byly vw h a t h e c a lls '" s p o ile rs " thal ti can winter, c x am ppie, li would cost J800 and save:iv e 30 p e rc e n t o f the c a n s a v e h u n d re d s of}f dci o lla rs by siirp ly avo id in g; aa f e w d e stro y 30 p e rccent en of tbe insulating valueue. Some Yel thc ! '* wisdom of true energy conservation coi Is • heatingig b ill. 1 J ' la l g l e d l A-2TlmGS‘News.TwlnFall!-alls. Idaho... ..Frldav. Novembeiber27.1981 AlleEin’sirienndattenddedcartatalks Iti^ States OQ the auto -IFirSdlcilsi^'IbirSdM M g — ~ I TOKYO (Ul( U P I) - A Ja p a n e se friend T a k a s e 's w ife w as th e Inte:ilctprelerln and Ihe United ______of N ationalI SecurityS. Advisor Richard _that_intervlew ( rep^eriedly gave exportslssue.'' Shaping lo ~ ~ H e “ said :-Toytroyota-eorp.-executive- ^ U.S. rejectsits m ilitary d^al T fiifa p a r^^^In s In Englann d ------AUen Mid *niTliursday he accompanJS'M’'.hirn a-watch as a gift for I a leading ToToyota executive to meet-; jarrange the interview. ■ Sholch'^Toyod./o d a acc o m p an ie d him In W ASHINGTON (Ul(UPI)-rASieniorU.S. officialJal says CROSBY, Englai^and GJPl) — Social. Denemocrat _ with Allen,L inh the. White H o ^ but Takase was Interviewed'd Thursday Ihe meeting wllhvith Allen. Uic U n ilc d S la te s Im!has decided to rejcct Israel’sI’s drall Shirley W.lllams,, knowkm n a s " o u r S h irl," w on aaspecial s denied thatIt car Imports were dls* iby tbe Mainlchi newspapere r a l Kyoto "We also paida id visits on M r. W illiam proposal on closerer jmilitary cooperation becaicause it e le c tio n th a t g a v,'C e her h new moderate party itits first cussed, 1Industrial University whereT ch c holds Brock (U.S., • trade tr representative) BOOS Licyoiid th e limiimited relationship Washfngtoijton has elected member of Partlament and shattersred Bri- P ro fessor r! Ta m o lsu T a k a se , a friend a j te a c h in g po st a n d th e Interiervlcw was and other ol/lcl(ficials but I can't uo- - In m ind. tain's two-party systlystem . of Ailen’s since sl the two attended published i today. In addltiiIllon to his dcratand whyy pipeople seem to focus Thc Uniled Slatesites and Israel agreed on thcie basicI Turnout was unusnusualiy heavy In thc by-eleclKtlon in Stanford Uni'Jn iv erslty io 19S5, sa id th e teaching, t Takase also woi^orks as a attention on the meeting wllh Mr. ' concept of a new patpact for "strate^c cooperalloiHon” in the Crosby districtict north of Liverpool, where;re Mrs. m eeting took)ok place March 23. when business I consultant. Allen,"Takasewse was quoted as saying; August when Prfmeme Minister Menachem Begir•gin vis- W illia m s - B ritaain's in ’ most popular politician1 —- was debates onfl curt^lingc Japanese car Takase's denial that Jap{ipanese car in London,t, ToyodaT told Japan’s ite d th e U nited St.Slates and met.with Presresident running against Conservative Ci .John Butcheiie r and , ^ im ports wereere ra^ng in Congress and exports < were discussed Innthe Allen Kyodo news agerageni^ Uiat the visit was ' K ca g an . Labor's John Backhickhouse. There were also sixIx other diplom ats wtwere shuttling across the imeeting conflicted wllh aI statements a "courtesy call” ca to congratulate Is ra e li D efense MinisterMii Ariel Sharon will retuetumlo minorcandidates.5. globe to strai(■aighten th e tho rn y issue. Ihe made during the Asia-PaPacific con- Allen on his proniromotion to the national W ash in g lo n n e x t weeweek todiscuss the draft "men:le m o so f T h e w in b y M rs.!. W illiam s ga v e th e 8-month-olioldSDP Allen hass tbeen in the spotlight for fference near Tokyo In April,II, Mainlchi -security posL— understanding" cxchixchanged by the two countric!ries and its first elected scat:eat in th e H ouse o f C o m m o n}.The23 s.' the past two twi weeks after it was s a id . h e lp p u t th em In toI (infinal form . previous Social DenDemocrat M P's were defectorors pre- revealed he received an envelope The newspaper quoted TTi ak a se , S2, O ffic ia ls sa y th ecrc rc a p p e a rs to b c a w id e d ivergence e rt vlously elected on1 LaborLa or Conservative tlckels5ls. containing f$1,000 from a Japanese asi saying, "When 1 v i s i t e d between the two courH>untrles on how f a r th e cooperaeration Mrs. Williams v.’aswaj elected with 49.1 pcrcentat of the.. Journalist for foi help in arranging an Washington\ in March. Mr. M Allen ^ should go. The UnitenIted States sent its draft to0 IIsrael vote in a constltuenclency which has been a Conserervative interview orri r pho to se ssio n w ilh N an cy expressed c (the view) thatt tht e re is a ^ Tuesday in rcsponaonsc to the Israeli draft reci■eceived P a r t y b a stio n sinc ce 1918.1 H e r C o n se rv ativ e chaiiallenger Reagan. coc m m u n ic atio n s g a p betwe<, e e n . p a n earlier In Washingtonjton. w on 39.8 p c rc e n t of thti e vote. R05UN
R o s e K e n nn e e d y l e a v e s h o s ppital l FAA quiett onc altered scorcres p r / ______. ^ W ES T PA LM BEA)EACH,Fla. (U PI)-R ose KeiKennedy OKLAHOMA CIT CITY (UPI) - Federal AvAviation A—— Sun .PorttbloH estar ■ w en t h o m e fro mI the th( hospital Thursday In tin: A Koro-Sun.. time for Administration officials of in Washington’ have _ „ 1.0% luel-elllclonl. Thanksgiving Day•ay dinner in her Palm I stonewalled a Housclusc cornmlttee investigatingi aallega- * Contlntinued from Pa^J i • Screened more than 28 2 million vith her family. o c c a n fro n t villa w ith th e a g e n c yI alaltered test scores of studedent air most agencjney documents tL'iuAbe pieces ] of mall coming Into0 New1 York AKoro.SunPoin Porlobio Mris. K ennedy. 91, m atriarch of the Kennedyify traffic conlrollers.rs. a committee member chcharged secret“et from thc 20'^M 3.* b I e tw e e n 1953 an d 1973. Ktolor will ll - -was-rolcased-fromom~the coronary care unitIt day over oorthem1 UUtah. Partly ■ Yo\ith D cloudy and warmer i ' ES]*'*""’'' Counselellng Director • Dr. H.. IhLivingston VEATHCn FOTOCAST « . S e ^ Winter storm walch P h . 7 3 3 - 2 2 0 9 AKX.IKUBl.'^KANlX'll today. Scattered showhowers spread- near 25 mpm ph in th e T r e a s u re V alley EDrorccincpt I Departments ollfredoil this ing east and south thithrough today, made for)r an uncomfortable wind road-by-road'rcport i of drlvirving CDodi- HiRhslnthe40s.low8h™lnthc20s. chui. Ilions: ■ U.S. 95 - Plummer. Micaca Hlil and T lic state’s sla highest reported SyiM psls: W hile Bird Hill, icy fpoU. iture was 43 at Lewiston; ^ I Santaraw 1 m Arrive A strong low pressunsure lyslera Ij Jcm^ralm S tale Highway 55 - Horses) now located just offUulUiesiithwest. ^ cst was 10 below xero at •' to| Donnelly. Icy spots; McCUUlUOl lo New I Saturdirdoy, 12:30 em Oregon coast aodud Is expecled . Meadows, icy. - to m o v e slow ly to thK6outtoisl.As e s< . A velers advisory has ^ n ' Interstate 90 - Fourth ofDf July Ca- Novembeib er 28th : this system approacxiaches Idaho '“ ued, focrlo the . mountains of nyon, i Icy spots: Kellogg to WaiVallace, icy m spots and soowing: Lookokout Pass, ' . ByByHollcoptdr : occasional snow shoulcould move over souUiwesI£t Idaho as weli as the i brokcnsoownoor. m 01 IlK! sU le . .s o u t h e r n1 portion1 of tbe central i the southern portion c • • U.S. 12 - Orolino area, Icyspotsr l< \ # N orthem sections will be less a|. mountains,Ins. Snow’ was expects to ' ’ ito those areas Thursday, Lolo ' P ass, snov floor aixl soow fected by the storm1 andan only teal, m”™ State Highway 21 - ldab(^ '" c i t y lo travel difficult. Persons , tered snow showersOT arc anilcl. m ^ng tf Stanley, broken snow floor andndsnoVDig. p a te d . d riv in g Into lr thc high country chalnsadvised. ] C lo u d s m oved in tolosoulhwesletn si take appropriate precau- InterstateM —Bare. J Idaho this momingrifl a n d b e M n ' U.S. 20 & U.S. 93-20-26 -' C Craters of xtended forecast for Sun- i lowering temperature! 3.1s "to” ^ c extc thc Moon, broken snow noor;or; Areo to ' Idaho Falls, snow floor. • noon. Snow developeoped over Ihe day Mondin d a y a n d T u e s d a y c a lls fo r i e of snow In the north late U.S. 83 - Willow Creek Sur^ m i l . Icy '' higher terrain a l o n g t h e and. across the state on spots, • broken snow noor; Lost L Trill N e v a d a /Id a h o b o r dkiralmldaller. e n Sm L N In tersta te 86 - Raft I MCG c u rr e d in th c southeast.a s t ■ Z Z A here In the nation, the iRocMand. Icy.spots. Afternoon temperatiratircs varied t te m p e r a tu re w a s 90 a t Interstate IS — Monlda Pas:ass, brokeo c o n sid era b ly a c ro s sithe tlx slate with “* ^ “ 4 1. T e x a s, th e c o ld e st w a s 12 snow : floor and soowlng. readings ranging fronrom Ihc upper iro a t B u tte, M ont. U.S. 20 - Asbton Hill to0 IMontana, 20s at Idaho Falls and Salmon to below zero snow door. around 40 at Boise,e, BurleyI and Ro«lr«fio(t U.S. 30 -M o n tp e lier to Wyo:yoming, ley tew lslon. Gusty southeitheast winds to 'n» statestc TransportallOD and Ljiw spots, , broken snow floor. la 37 .... Ponl«nd,Oro. U 42 4 ,1> liUhoftils 30 It TRA / ZA luniMCttir : Ncrtional U(V«0U st » .... St.Uul« 74 44 4 .it L««l»lon 433 31 .... f m Mm Min Pcp LoiAnMl** U 31 .... S«IIL»k«Clly 17’ 24: PoMltIM 3S1 IS .... • / Albuou«rqu« « it1» MimpM* 77 IU .... SinFrinclKO U 49 4 JS Salmon ttfl 13 ...... f Attonu ea 3717 .... MUmlBMcn 7S 71 .... smui* 4t> 440 McCkll 31 11 TRA Boiion 4j :i MIMukM 47 3n .W Spokjno » : CMctgo U OO .14 MtnoMDOlt* 3 7•', , ]JJ ,17 WiUilnoion 52' J Jl OtJIU 73 HM .... titmO W im O Iae .... D*nw U 11II .a N«iiYorti^ ‘ 44 T w in Fallst D«»M0lna« *3 »» .... GkunotnttiiT a ■3 :: : Idaho lulh Uncoln — Jerom e | DtVoll U M» M Om»n« 40 Uu Honolulu tl nn — Piwenlx es 3t Mu1 MMin Pep Y«st«r0l/ 41 Houilon to nn .... p«t»t»WBh 54 S24 .01 Bolia 42' ]21 ... UalYMr 3414 17 lndur.ipou* U ii .1S PortUnd.Ms. 42 24 .... 8uii«y 40I :20 .... Normii 4St 24 .... m >______li — I fRIREE CANDY CANESES FOR THE KIDS N e w s Mi'mi^r. I Mill'diiliiI I'rmliiloriiliioiial If y o u h a v e a newsI's Ij]lip o r w ish to ta lk lo som eonenein th e COMIME IN TO ALL THEE STORES! TO REGIS-5 - y / M edilorial departmentle n t, call 733-0931 b etw een 9:3i;30 a.m. T E R F lK-r.,\DdililuiTauotl*.rcubiion F O R D E C . 19th D)RAW R , ING FOR FREEiE Circulation a n d 5:30 p.m . wee)veekdays. Ask for Ihc apprt )roprlalc jURK!KEYS. PLANE RIDES If y o u do nol rccciv e0 youry( paper by 7 a.m .. pleaseS'“ II editor. ES AND MORE SUR-I- th e n u m b e r for y o u r arc a re a : p R' s5E e DRAW INGS- IS- Jon Kinney, city Jerome-Wendcll-Goodiio d in g -H ag c rm an ' 536-i36-25;i5 ' ii(?sts o r K elly E v e nritt.assl. t OND Burley-Rupcrl-Paul-Oal-Oakley 678-^8-2552 - prTOvcraRer6(iij(?si DECEMBER Sth SANiNTA c ity e!dllor d l l y ^ i , , , Duhl'Castleford - Mi-WW648 „ . Marv Clemons, sportsrtsedilor- WILLIL BE BACK TO HAVE/E FileivRogcrsonHolllsKllsier ' 326-[26-5375 S p o rts ;s l/jrayneSmith, lifestylesles editor H I S P I T w In F a lls and a ll olhctIher a re a s 7J3--33-0931 V alley HappeninRs PICTURE TAKEN w/ITH n THE KIDS, Editorials, letters! Nell Hopp, managingngeditor' Circulation phones are manned belween 7 and 1010 a .m . ■ ‘F r id a y S p ccial. TVV Bill O stendorf, e n te rta:ainmenl i ‘H elicopter Complliillm ents: only. e d ito'«■ r CIRCLE < A CONSTRLR U aiO N P Q SubKrIpIloD nilc*. Clly liomrlomrdclurry [)jity"V|irruirk Suial,„.i . J,., T o r e p o rt la to newlews and sports results onl)ily. call [KTuirk, Daily Ji«lSuixtayitay 1 prr M«'k liuNi inolur fnuii'.Ih'ii'm ih-i 733MiG. MARVIN ASLELETT ^ Djily II (XT Sunlsvmlav pcf mrk. DaiK jrnl Suiubv II • -IP lane Rides Compl MjiI >ul>M-ripl>oa'pji'dpjid m i<)>jiiccnul iiijinlaiiifdi • l>ailyaiKlSurK]j> I mimlli'l.'. tV Im Sin u.'i, i; muii'Ns tci.iu. ijiJtnoniUW.'u m lllll' only I 100.111. ti to place:c anai ad v e rtise m e n t, c all 7 3 30931. ^ : VALLEY fLYEYERS iiiomi»lll..V.; (i mofiihs 1/1l/i III;|i li inonltif tu El .Sumbv iinly. I 1 Toplaceaclassiflcd, •ext. 267 MARK,& MARVIN WWALTERS ii 63: 1 munilij J< R p<(inili(»illia tIS.WJ. IJ monllu til ni Spivi.il i-i led ad ■« I ^ atui M-ri icriiunritr M «Jprr1 prr iinonih Ior lijtly jiw.Suixl i> T o b u y a disp lay ad3d eext. 265 F o r a c o rre c tio n on)nadis|)layad a eext. 213 j Tll^Tlm^^ NrusispulilishrdiiKilditlyai i.CniirdSirvrlU .TkioKj iI k i i i TheodvertlsinRdlre(li iiKi.'ul Illyiii; ii™i C las.sifjed a d s a ree lalakcn Monday-Friday fromn 8i a.m. SHOP LIIINCOLNPI counly iic'>tp.i|x'rpur>uaninl.oSorlWiKMMofllfldilnCuitc .o: Tlwi lAZAMAALL i> licfH ;. 'Ji-MilnjtrO ,i> llipe ilj;dty ot tlic wrrli on vIik ji Ii'kjI nulii « u n lil 5 p .m . and SalS a tu rd ay s fro m 8 i^.m. lintlltn noon, ^ . puhlixlicil Information ondtspinsp h y a d s is a v a ila b le w eekday!lysonly S O Uth tf Lincoln Streel e t Jerom e ^ Fritfay, NovembnOQr 27, )981 ' T im es-Now s.i.T Tw w in Falls. Idaho A-3 -JM i]whilite Houuse: Alllen^sa ile 9 of fiirm-cauusesno G o n f l i cct ■ ■■ W ASHINGTOTON (UPI) - A review under und the Ethics in Govcmmcilent Act of the sale — whlcl;hlch provide monthly / , of nalional seciecurity adviser Richard to to Investigateii further, checks for Allen;n —- " it w as c le a r It * Allen's sale of his consulting firm, Earlier,e Allen’s disclosure‘c form was outside thc! reportingre( period and which providejdes him monlhly pay- was amended to reflect the 1981981 sa le d id n 't ne ed to b cjp pul u t o n th e rc p o rt." ments, concludiludcd that no conflict of of of his firm, Foloniac Intema-national He said thc infornformallon on Income Interest is invotivolved, a White House Corp. Cor It had been listed asi i a 1978 fro m th e s a le vill w ill have lo go on the lawyer said Tliuliursday. transaction. trai The correction proirompted next i-«port, duonorno later lhan May 15, Allon’s finanlancial disclosure form tho the review of the form and thetd d ls c o v - 1982. -was am en d e dI th is w eek fo r th e second ery e ry he had not listed the valueJC of th c T h e p a y m e n iss aa r n e to re tire a debt of tim e , lo list hils is (ctirilc r financial s la k e firmbntheform. fjr'i- b e tw ee n $100,0000 an d $250,000, lfl th e com panymy, which was sold Just Thot Washington Post rc|reported . before Preslderdent Reagan's Inaugura* jhT h iu rsd ay th e d eal “ ra is e s qucluestions T...... • * i f i lio n to P e te r D. Hannaford, a former ,o('of whether a conflict of interere st has Reagan aide andan specchwriler before arisen arii sincc Inauguration - D ay In- ______th e election. Allen'sAlll regular contact withth Han- . Allen has beenbee in the spotlight for naford, naf Hannaford’s clientsi ia n d a ’ the pasl two-/O'weeks after it was Japanese jap professor wh6 had1 :served 14 revealed he rcccived r an envelope a IIi A llen and now H annaford a s aic c o n d u li ^ G O L D) C C I U S T O M \ co n tain in g $1,0:i,000 from a. Japanese to tos some Japanese Industrial leai’a d e r s ." fl I F W E journalist forr 1help in arranging an slant lo jrvvcW E L R Y \ \ V Richard Hauser, an asslsti in te rv ie w o r photoph( session with N ancy Wh While House counsci Fred Fl(Plelding, 0„o,„g,nai D esig n s ' R e a g a n . toldtok Unlted.Prcss Intemalioniimai In a ; L o n g l o a d T h e R e a g a,n n aadviser said hc put thc telephone tch interview th a t a fte r tl envelope in ansn officc safe and forgot date dat was revised he reviewc ■eartferman. about it unlllII it was found in Sep- tratransaction with Allen, and manade lhe ';3u.vn*>^ m.i t ASoutbernP D Pacific train carrying tbeI first(h load through the SieSierra foothUls west of Reoo,K), Nev. tember. The JusticeJu Department has correction cor lisling the firm’s ; o f C o lo ra d o ""vEraoftiK , [to c o a l fo r e x p o rt to J a ptan a n winds Tbe84carsare - - ; Marathion batthfe mdves! itofedenna/ couHitoday
~:^^LUNIBU^"ohlo~(UPUPI) — The hoping to winwi modification of a re- pipurchase Macathon’s Intere■resl in the q u a r te r o f a billbillion dollars, according / O P E N • legal tug of war belweenccn Mobil Oil straining ordorder blocking its offor - rlirich Yates oil field in Texa:(as for $2.e to e s tim a te s byby: securities analysts, : Corp. and U.S. Steeleel over the was able tog0 get the hearing.moved up bib illio n if M a ra th o n w erc ta kken e over by Mobil, the secondse largest U.S. oil A L L D A Y \ : purchase of Marathon Oil Co. moves by six days.:• aa third party. The restrain!Ining order .-.company, swee^ectencd its takeover bid \ ’ Into fe d e ra l c o u rt today. =RIDAY & SA T. J u d g e Jooseph se Klnneary issued thc piprohibits transfer of thc YaI'ates inter* by raising its> cac a sh o ffe r for SI p erccn t ^ 0 - A hearing was requeste the In additionlon, Mobil challenged the la la rg e s t oil c o m p an y to $6.$6.5 billion paying $85 a i share cash for up to ^ sizos and colors of Quori7r y T 1 ilo ; ; :two giant corporations. legality off ani agreement between f fr ro m $5.1 billion. two-thirds ofM,Marathon stock. Mobil’s : The hearing was originsjinaJly set for .Marathon andam U.S. Steel which gave M obil’s re v is e d p a c k a g e beatsb( rival pjan to acguireire Ihe remaining shares V o ONLIIY ... *2® par h.u I .Dec. 3. But U.S. StwlI - which Js Ihesleelmaktaker thc exclusive option to bidder bt U.S. Steel’s offer byty nearly a by an exchanjange of securities was r a is e d in va luJC e tto $90 a sh a re fro m $85. .C h oock c our toblos of assorted St. U.S. Steel's plan to tiio spocials tool I l i r e ; Air,contrcrollcnrs file uunder bankkruptcy lavW o a c q u ir e th e remc m aln ln g sh a re s through LlirimitodTc Stocfe ^ Hand1 an exchangele of senior notes is ~ o p I n f r i. : • WASHINGTON (UPI)) - — T h e P n h a s s e ts of abcabout $3.5 'million, without EEventually they will. Thc questionqi Is appraised byy one( a n aly st a t $83 a 8A.M..5P.M. / :'fesslonal Air Traffic Contlontrollers Or- Income. Thel e oi rd e r d enied PATCO th e w:whether they’ll have ‘0 to go *0 s h a re . SAT. ; iganizatlons, facing million:lions o f do lla rs r ig h t to r e!prcsent p n workers or collect b:b a n k ru p tc y ^ u r t to p ro v e! whalv they sanlord Marlargoshcs, -oil Industry \ 9 A.M.- / \ i?M. / ■ i In fin e s a n d w ith c re d ito»rs rs Iknocking a t d u e s. mmlghl have to prove clse\icwhorc or analyst at Bache Bi Halsey Stuart p ro v e it in a n o th e r co u rt,’’ he l^the door, has filed fqr^reoireo rg an lM tio n _____i ^ h c y ’rc_bad_off,ll_sald.l.«ighlon. e j ___E! „ ._ S h l c l d s Inc., ap;appraised Mobil's entire______— A’ federar]Qdge-|n-New^ — ______:i under banknipl^aw s,s, tthe union’s "Theycan't]rt pay current debts, aodlf = olfer at an avorve ra g e $108 a sh a re , o r a ' lawyer said Thur^ay. they did notot reorganizei they woifldn’t ordered PATCO to pay alrl illlion. The U.S. Steel bid, 1 . ^ 1, to ta l o t $6.5 bllll ualiIIT Y TILE B a r b i e Richard Leighton saidd PATCOP law- exist." ram illio n fo r v io la tin g a 1970 h c e s tim a te d . iIs s valu ed a t about $104 a I Q ______7 3 4 -7 4 S 1 Injunction, and LeightonI sa id the s h a re , o r a tolal I2S3B ADDISON AVE.E. E.______•yers will meet Mondayly co r T u e ^ a y thc applicable statute, ta l of $6.24 billon. Justice Department wants^ about SI •with m ajor creditors toI slartsti working pATCOmustust file a plan for settling its _ :o n a re o rg a n iz a tio n plan. million in fines and a Judgigment un- d e b ls w ithinInl20days. 1 JJrelated'to- the strike of $800,000 ${ is ' - • ■ The- reorganization p paperwork, Leighton1 saids the filing at least oioutstanding. He said all I .•filed Wednesday in U.S. I ly “holds off" government bkeeping PATCO in exlstcn.i'ncS'Soii ia " rpPATCO . after thc Aug. 3 aianother case alrilnes arcrc seeking lappeals an order remo\ h a t sa w abo u t 11,500 con- alabout, $130 million for’ d a m ag e s >bargalning agent for firedISdcontrollers » ^rollers firedred for refusing President ala lle g e d ly su ffe red in th e firstrst m onth o f J * :rand to keep creditors fronrom forcing It Reagan’s demanddei that-thcy rcturnto thc ti strike. ;;lnto involuntary bankruptc w ork. He said PATCO's other: debts,( for ^ 2 . ii Last month’s decertlflciIfication order “Our filingIng holds off all that Jltlga- items it such as business sen•rvices ren* jileft PATCO, which hadlad pre-strike tlon. Theyy can’t« evert go forward. d(d e re d th e union, a r c not dispi■puled. I I i BMEVrisiT I See I ^ ' I jDlagw£ I . r - l l e S h o w iM a w E p H m \ JlioK' — 1 $ t # WleuRS ■ £ i I W EDNESDAY, I I t D A Y : g If THURSSDAY AND FRIC 1P.M . TO 9 P.M .
I N D A Y ^ r d a y a n d s u n CL t s a t u r 2 P.M . TO 5 P.M . I 1 2 «- ^ : 1 i
t y t h e ^ : : ■ : J ------^ Y e s , F r o s t y LC S n o w M a nn , t h a t * I I JV® jolly ol’ soul) u l , i s S .
. com ing to) s p e n d ® ■ \ t the holiday!lys. He’s w
FR ID A Y'AND / SATURDA)AY alive, in pene r s o n g 1 lOOP.I’.M.to5:00P.MM. and w aitingi g t o • Brimring your children to see} K Magic M ary’s lightening) qiquick cartooning |[ iH -m eet youl : : . off Santa S and bis elves. ShiShe'll be in the Children's's JAttic today and I I ^ I / Frosty invittr i t e s a l l K • lomc)morrow^ only (or your chlldrIdren's enjoyment. of the childildren to ^
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^ hjm. Ifs furu n , j y m d S r exciting an( absolutelyy 1 f r e e ! ® open Daily 1C € AM.to,6:30f • 124 M ain A venlueN. u e y.M fw Friday. Nov. • Twin Falls • 733-1\3-1506 'til9:OOP.h
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m nio>fl A-4 T im es-N ew3 s.'. Twin Falis. Idaho Friday,/,November27,10ai N(
m m o w c HA$ BRoo&H'HT ^ VJHAT VJ DoK m a , ■Jj- , PROPOSE TO DO : W w v RI$lW6r ABOirr IT ? Wllli,im r. UoUow.ird William1C C Bhkc UMeMPU)YM( PublliliiT Ad«JtTll5ln(islncj M.uwgct A , 1 ^ ■_ -NulC.Hopp)pp G.iryL.Ni.NHion m m m W oTH lK /6 Mnn.iglng: EditorEdii (' CirculiJllonHon Mnn.iu«:r '
The members ol thet c’dilorial t>oard csnd writi/riters ol editorials a rc NNeil d Hopp a nd William E. Hovlo w a rd i
Sowhhat’s ancO t h e r % $50 irmillion ori r s o ? DO WA le - theW ggestpit portion of “ tu rk e y ” thlis is holiday season . up by Congress and the It Reagan ad- PRopose TOD D O W / C T was dished up * beforeThanksgiying. 2 - ( i l ^ f m in is tra tio n bci . APOUT IT ^ er (N o t h i n - — - -By tailing.loto agree-on a compromimise budget, the S- ■ . y American taxp,ixpayers had to pick up the tab for a . l r ' w a s te d d ay inn tithe ledefal bureaucrac;acy, caused when th e g o v ern m en:nt t technically ran out ofJf mi oney, ■ ' Essentially,r, wev paid Uncle Sam ara n estim ated $50 1^ $1 . niiiiiohfordoinfling nothing last Monday.y.
Although thehe crisis was short-lived,ed, it has not been - o v erco m e. ThiThe stopgajp spendhiglg measure only e x te n d e d th e: iiinfighting and bickerinring until D ec. 15, w h en fu n d in g aiagain will expire, The affair gaveg£ both Reagan andid the Congress a ■ b la c k e y e . m [ 3 ; H e re w e a r:e e 1in a recession, pessimn i; ism running high 7 Goodman and the “boys”ys” on the Hill are poutiuting and sticking . o u t th e ir tonguiigues between backyard•d volleys of ‘‘Y es y o u w ill; n o lw[won’t.” i ok her I _ The incident■nl will y d to the .disiiscontent among ______She toe backfcor grantIted Americans. It also damages Redgaigan’s standing. A poll releasedI W ednesday In d icatedI tlthat for the first ©The ( Boston Glot>e 'ThisT particular lunge was ddlff ifferen t fro m all o th e r T hey w e re no l all rep e n tanant. t, One sim ply refused tim e since hee wasv elected, a majoritrity of Americans luIt n g e s fo r only one rea so n .. TTti his lim e m y b a c k lclo a c c e p t a n y fau lt. All h e hlad a d done « was rcach over now disapprovime ot the president’ss handlingI of the ^ B O S T O N - I a m w ritin g tthis column lying down r n e fu se d to follow m e. toplck up a pencil and his discUse had dropped out. in the com er of the clly roono m w ilh a keyboand on U ntil U iat m o m e n t, I h a di alwal' ay s m a d e th e AAnoUier kept shifting Uie blamlame to tbe chair she sat ec o n o m y . m y sto m a c h . T h is is not a n co rd in a ry e v e ry d a y de di cisio n s fo r bo th o t u s. II waswa: an authoritarian irin. A U iird p re d ic ta b ly blamnedieveryUiingonhis ed R e a g a n m aay y Ib e ju stifie d for u sin g tht e veto on a bill {e v e n t in m y life o r in th e lifeifcoflhiscilyroom. nrclation^ip, I grant you, butlu t one< w hich I b a d n e v er nm oU ier’s g e n e s. And a f o u-Ul i^ rre fu se s , Ju st refu ses, h e te rm e d "bludget-busting.” u d B u t thle e ai ffa ir m ay h av e Ills, in fact, an admissionDnof defeat: thedefealof q u e stio n e d . W hat I d id n ’t kno'tnow, of course, was Uiat Ulo even adm it Uiat anythingg Is'Is wrong and give in to d iv id e d Congresre s s ev en fu rth e r. tm in d b y m a tte r, w ill by bod;xly. I have been betrayed m y b a c k h a d be en rep ress inIng g rage, anger and UUlls b a ck b la ck m a il. s tr e s s fo r d e c a d e s a t tb e arbllrary rb ll way I bad called Ib y a n a to m y , laid low and lailaid up. B ut I h a v e de cid e d to acc» ep p t m y 50p e rc e n t. WiUi th e sh o ts. In sh o rt, ray b a ck lsw rec^!ckcd. “ Uie aid of assorted Uieraplsts,its, jroy back and I are . N The dispute,e i also in d icate s th e RHeagan e team has T h is lim e ll sim p ly refused>ed to follow m y le ad . II {{ H ow did th is ha p p en to a1 nno rm ally up rig h t ^ Irying lo leam once again bowrawtocommunlcate.to ^ little depth whevhen it comes to m ajorr skirmishes.£ The d e se rte d m e. c itiz e n ? you m a y a sk . T b ef lclong answer Is Uiat, once live in harm ony and biterdepeiependence. • - ’ « jrsonally into this D u rin g UUs p a in fu l periodjdofourseparaUon,! o president did1 nnot inject himself pers \upo n a tim e , o u r prim itiv e; aancestors decided to do . h a v e disc o v ere d m y ow n deptlependence. I have spent After admiUlng to decadese so oi fn e g le c t, I fin ally ' . ' I o ne, a n d h is teaiearn ca m e aw ay bru ised . s o m e lh in g fo r w hich they w«were nol equipped. Tbey !; Uie better part of several weev eeks on m y b ack , understand why 11 was forcedledtotakeUilsextrerae t ■ d e c id e d lo sta n d on tw o feet. . staring at the ceiling, obsess!'sssively going over the aciion before I would pay atteniltention. Q By using thevle veto, R eag a n m a y haviiv e tak e n th e ed g e ' sl The short answer, howevever, Is: Squash. The c fit, 1 have voluntarily/e e n te r e d a sm all w h ite abandon, a: slumped withoutt a seconds thought. I a m M y b a ^ k in tu m Is le a rn inn g U iat it m u st develop a' th e b u d g et simnply p has been put off to) a n o th e r d ay. room ‘ several limes a week.k- now ni a s h a m e d a t th e w ay I hba( a d ta k e n m y b a ck fo r m uch w id e r su p p o rt sy ste mn. . TlTbe discs andlcan't I h a v e gone th e re , arm ed oniyi w ith a ra c q u e t and g What Reagan;an and the Congress didild was “a^ee to ^ g ra n te d . d(do it alo n e in th is w orld. W eB ram ustt lean on oUier a s m a ll g re e n ba ll, lo b a ltlele age, . infirmity and the- ' -' 1 know I a m not Uie only oneont w bo m is tre a te d a n d Uilngsaroundus. U d is a g re e .” Ib u lg e . T h e re , w llb th e aid oof f a p a r tn e r , I u su a lly bit lived.tok regret il. I have comeime Into contaci with Uie N o, It’s no t e a sy m a k in g thctranslliontoath e I .; W e a g r e e onn oone thing: Without conorresponding cuts tbe t ball, occasionally hil theh e p a rtn e r and fro m tim e entire ci underground of fellowow baI ck s u ffe re rs. I h a v e partnership pi of brain and musciluscle, sense and sinew, , in government:nt spending to matchch the tax cuts toUmeblltbewaii.HjUingt i g Uie w all in sq u a sh . 1 ' m n et dozens of olher people}whoselivesbavebccn wl decisions di and discs. Tbere are 'occasions when I ; approved eariierlier. Uncle Sam’s deficificit will continue h { a s te n to tc li you. is nol liketeUiebllUngthewallln . ruptured, p whose relationship:hips have slipped, who long lo for the old days when 1IwasUieboss. wa Jogging. have been temporarily divon/o rce d fro m U ielr daily . But Uiis bas got to be betterler thanL having your ' unabated, maklaking economic recovfwery an elusive . ^ b O ne d a y , se v e ra l w eeks ago,a{ I lunged lo th e rig h t, liv ji e s. biba ck r a r e a t y o u all Uie timle. e. . . ._ ^ - d re a m .
L etterss to th e5 ed ito rr — — VJiatiawoManntinrostjgothra^tol:otecoffiapriest) \What would happipenif. . - ' w a tc h e d his black-eyed childd playingpl in Uic sun. sse v en d a y s a w eek? 'B u t w h a t w ould h a p p en. if, onei lim e , one y e a r , th c W e w ould do all Uiis h a rdd wwc ork fo r Ju sl m inim um * E d llo r, T lm es-N cw s: Vworkers didn’t come? Whatlat wouldn happeaif Idabo vwage, som etim es a iltUe morenore, often le ss, a n d tr y lo I E v e ry sp rin g lh e w ord gogoesout: THERE'S g a v e a h a rv e s t a n d nobodyy showsl ed? ssu p p o rt a fa m ily ? W ho w oulduld Ilive in w b a t a r e ' WORK IN IDAHO; we needed you in Idaho to w ork W ho w ould w ork tb e be ets,cts, hoc the beans —in ^c alle d ''c a m p s ” b e c a u sc Uiey'hey're not paid enough by Uieir em ployers to afford dece the fields; come on up. The:lere’s work in the sugar b o t, e n d le ss ro w s u n d e r thie e IdaboI sun? Who would decent housing? - - beets: hoeing, weeding. Th('h e re ’s w ork in th e b e an s; b rin g In th e po ta to e s , e v eryday, ry c twelve hours a W hat w o u ld ha p p en lo thh e ece o n o m y ? W bat would m o re hoeing. T h e rc ’s lh e potatoes:po new potaloes, d a y , on in to th e cold O ctoberber ni^ls, shivering wllh im a rk e ts do wiUi food le ft onUieshelfbyUieon U fall harvest potaloes. Therere’s onions and onion the chill, Uielr backs and facfao es c a k e d wlUi d irt a n d |farm workers who didn't shou> h o w ? ^ a l w ould seeds—your order of onion3n rin g s cornin’ rig h t up. sw eat? Who would bend Ihclihclrbacksalldaylo ]m erchants do? Who wouldd bubuy ail Uie tru c k s , c ars,; Hops— gel me anoUier Oly.ly. T hen th e re ’s th c fru it: harvest the onions? Wbatoftot Uie hops? Itire s, g a so lin e , tools, gu n s,s. cca a tc h e rs m ilts, p e a c h e sra p p lc s, plum s, cheb e rrie s, n e cta rin es, cols, a t o , ^ iwasa ^^ h o o rset ' W ho w ould clim b la ll ladd£d d e rsw iU i b u c k e ts a l |u n d e rw e a r, b lu e Je an s, babib y ralUi es, rc c o rd s and deaoon T h e r e ’s a lso plenty of linen e lo m ove: q u a rte r-m ile their waists to gather the ppet e ac h es, tb e p lu m s, th e Uie th o u sa n d a n d o n e oUier‘rU th iln g sU ia l lin es, h a lf-m ile lin e s; 40 fee!eet lo th e l i n e - w a t c h it, apples, thechcrries? Whowc) would rise at 2 a.m. on a ^fa rm w o rk e rs buy w h en Uiey'iley’re up here? What i f s h e a v y w hen il’s gol wat(a te r iii it. E v ery y e a r the freezing night in January to feedI Uie cows, to m ilk 'w ould h a p p e n to th e sa le s; la x rev e n u es? W hat w o rd go e s out. th e Invilatloitons a rc passed alo n g . Uie cows? Who would terWd cca a ltle ? W ho w ould m ove ^wouid h a p p e n lo th c Uiousand»nds Uiat are collecled , e a c h m onU i by Uie m a n a g;ersof e rs the'‘camps"? Thc Chicano in Alamo gel;clsbisasbcsipsabrew lin e in th e m o rn in g , lie arounound all day In a hot * clnder-block barrack 30 mileniles fro m tow n, b e c a u se ' * u U 1 1 *on th e p o rc h . T h e Anglo fror•om lhe Arkansas boonies W hat w o u ld hap p en to Uie•crops? cro g e ts h is a s b c re lu m s fro mn tthc hunl. The Mexican Uie b o ss d o e sn 't b a v e a n y oUieroUi w o rk a n d Ih e re ’s no W h al w o u ld ha p p en to Iddaho? ah in S o n o ra g e ts h is w hile IrinIm m ln g lh e lam p. In New c a r , a n d th e n m o v e lin e agg abain in tb e e v en in g , a ll fo r CHRISTIAN T. PROVENS!SNSEN ' m m \ \M cxico, th c w ord co m es too lht c N avajo as h e $2.50 a h ho u r, le ss Uian m inlrinlmura wage, every day, B u rle y
Geonjrge Will______W T iMove A\meric€an embyassyinn IsraelI to Jenvsalemn ©The Washington Post-,tCo. Q said Uiat Jerusalemm '"should^m ain undivided wwith free secure borderse rs , w hich c an not b c Uiose ofDf 1967.li a n d w hich n e g o tlalIatlon Uian a s c l of d e m a n d s1 Uiathat make negotiations > a c c e s s lo th e holy ssite ite s ." mustbesellle■ bc tbat the only scrloirious subiecis for negotiationsIS ia rc T h ir d , tb e• UlUnlled States recognizes thla a t t. J e ru sa le m I? plan calls for the conlracUonofm o f Isra e l, E m b a s s y in T el A viv? A tltim ely qucslion, lh a t. codification of freee aac cc css lo. a n d p e rh a p s so m e cconlrol of a n d o u g tit fo>rever re to rem ain tbe capital of Isra1 el. a p h ica lly , to Uie 1967 b o rd e rs.-s. II a lso c a lls fo r Uie - T b e U n ite d S ta te s b aiS s liundertalw sishould bc to bringthe c e n tr a lity lo Je w ish lifee Is know n to ail. Je ru sa le m Is nowr T h e relo c atio n oif f thlb e e m b assy should b e donetin ir statesmanlikeike. S in ce Uien, Uie U.S. govern:c rnm e n t b a s S a u d ii riregime ioto conformity withhUierccenlU.S. lb and will continue to bedw tin u in g c o n ju n ctio n w llh aI fofor rm al ra tific a tio n by th e U nitlite d m a n a g e d toI avavoid noticing Uial Uie''hew'”iv” ;Saudi p e ac e d e s c rIption ip of It as moderate and stalstatesmanllke.,The first; ... frceaccessforall.” Last\ist week be again said that hea States of three pointsn ts tb a t ha v e b e en a lle a s t p la n is nol o nnly lj not noticeably new. Indeed,ie d , it is lik e th e s te p sheihould b e to b rin g Uie S audi reg l im e to Its se n ses by fa v o re d a u n ite d Je n isaalem ie i under Israeli sovereigntynty. semi-cndoreed by variousvar administrations and couldco Holy Romann E m p ire , w hich w as n e ith er holy,he nor Roman demonsnstratliig Uiat we bave comee toto ou rs. T h e m ost But tbe bureaucracy’s'’s ggears ground and out camcican a hardly bc disavowed'cdnow I ; nor an empire,Ire. e fficicne n t \6ay todo Uiat quickly Isi by di e m o n stra tin g .- obfuscating “clarificationlion" of the President’s perfect!sctly . Firsi, UieUnlledSl;i Stales opposes creation of ann T b e “ S a u d i jp e a c e p la n ’,' is h a rd ly S a ui d d ij ^ - i t h a s P L a ------Uirougti^ relocation of Uie U:SrEmbasnbassy, Uiat we consider------' clear statetnent.lt saidi "t"the future sta’us of Jerusaleiilem is independent PalestinI>tinlan slate between Jordan andan Israel. fingerprints> allal o v e r it. It envisions not peapeace biit Uie • someqiquestions dosed, including thestatusofJerusalemUie to be determined throughIgh negotiatians. ’-However, ilalsoil t Second, the Uniled;led S tate s su p p o rts th c rig h t oif f IIsra e l to p h a ^ liq u ldIdatlon a o f Isra e i. And ll is le ss a p la n fo r a s Israc-aei’sindivisible capital. Friday; NnwGfiGfTiBor 27,1981 T im es-N awW5 s,',TwinFalls.ldahoA-5- - - Mcrceimaries foiled1 ilin plot tto oven[th ro w Africari n count]try DURBAN. SouUi Africalea (U P I) — a n "A m c ric:aii a ii source," but the source or arcHn hiding." a police spokesmansp government oo f P re s id c n l F r a n c e newspapers nc said. released passeng«ngers boarded a plane About 100 whUe mercenariiarles tried to was nOt namemed and no further details sasaid over Seychelles radio,). “We ask Albert Rene; e eariler said only that One security policeman wa:■as quoted for Johannesburiburg to resume their * ■^■overmrow the leftist Seychychellesgov- wcrclmmedled ia te ly av aila b le . (^e citizcns of our counlry' tot' remain “some" mercercenarics were captured as as saying, “They were cheap,ip. ^unds lournev to Bombam b a y . . ’ ' ernment Thursday. The soldieniers of fortune, who fought cac a lm ." as the coupp 'was smashed in the likeik b a rg a in b a sem e n t m creer ■enariesto ^ ..THere wass a lot of good humor, They then fled the IndlIndian Occan a five-hourr i airport gunbattle when The Seychelles Republic said& about strategic nalioition. In w hich th e re is a m rne ." nereenaries and passcn- Island nation under heaveavy g u n fire th e y w erc discovered di entering the 100 lO m e n In v ad ed b u t only 44surren- 4- U.S. space trac:•acking station. “I asked one of them why/ \wc wore everyone - men e very relaxed." said aboard a hljaclced airlinerIner and sur- country, wercere mainly Soulh Africans dedered al Durban. Passenger!crs aboard Rene later r 1 broadcast a message going gc to South Africa.” one opa a s L n e e r ' - w e re v lg. a British passenger, rendered In ^ u th Africa. and Rhodesitjsian army veterans and the th Air India Jct said five! mayr have urgingthepcopMpletoremaincalm, said. ss "He said, if you wer??e sS5S David Bcnnlng I arles unloaded thc mag- Seventy-nine hostages5 aboardai the possibly Inclm:luded Americans. Britons, died di in the Seychelles, leavjw in g aboul T h e 44 m enen were being held at a Africanai and werc Involved1 liin Sme- mercenaric iheir AK47S and stashed Indian airliner were released rel In NcwZealandendcrs and Italians. 50 possibly captured or in hidlidlng. prison near PnPretoria, Le Grange said, n, th in g like th is In lh e Scychellc;les, where weapons.-IS.” We all had a few Durban while an undendelermlned r One commjimando died from wounds Passengers reported thailat gunfire Mosl of the hi[hijacked passengers flew wouldyou.wanltqgo?’’_’_ w. atled.’- -.— ...... t :------number of the originalI bandbi of hi- aboard the; ctcommandeered Air India rljripped 'into the plane as theth Jetliner to Johannesbusburg and caiif^t other The commandos were harlandcuffcd -drink..«ndchatle jackcrs remained at large lan in the Boeing 707. Two ' olher mercenaries w:w llh G5 p a s s e n g e rs a n d a I4-t4-m an cre w flights, to g e th e r by South A frican polioliceafter A Soulh African A m ilitary Seychelles, where a dusk-to-dawn dus were serious)lUsly wounded in thc bot- 111lifted off from the Scychelldies’ main ' For their ppart In the attempted the th Jet put down at Durbann Airport, spokesman woulik'ould n e ith e r confirm o r c u rfe w w a s Imposed. ch ed co u p aItte tu m p t. Is:Island of Mahe for thc 1.000-m l lie coup, e a c h of)f Ithe mercenaries was to Thet i commandos, describedxl by thc deny lhat Soutik)ulh African nationals South African newspaperpers reported "We havec destroyedt the attackers. g(get-away flight. re c e iv e $1,03030 plu s a $10,000 b onus if pilol p| as "marvdous fdlowsA'S." w ero w ero Involvedd Inin: th e c oup a ttem p t, but that funding-for-thc couptp camec from They have beenb& either arrested, killed The one-party lefllst SSeychelles the coup sucsucceed. South African-• taken ta to Pretoria for questiononing. The strongly deniedied official' involvement.
A t t a c k Js u b m a ri i n e C o r p) i u s C h r i sS ti k e e p ss n a m e rniD A Y • CRAAND O P IN IN G -NN o v . a o i h R e g is te r (or(c $750.00 In FREEDrawiniw ing* WASHINGTON (UPI)[) •- Despite “BodyofChrlh rist.'.' — named the 360-foot subn:jmiirinc for Santa Barbaraj r a ." Thermal Art • Fainting:igs Thai Hoot Boaulilul •• RotoiiRo • Universal strong protest from the NaNational Con- The bishop: thc Texas clly of Corpus ClChristi. the Butthebishcshop ot Corpus Christi. the lOps a sk ed N avy S e c re la r y ' tf Chomlcol - W holosalo) • Now Im prossions - W allII Painting.P< ference of Catholic BishopslOps. th e N a v y Jo h n L ehmlan an to find a new namfir for-.. S|s p o k e sm a n s a id . It w a s cchristened Mosl Rev. Thorhomas Dniry. has led the nilD A T, NOV.;’. le th To lATUBDAT,, NN< O V . a e t b will keep USS Corpus ChiChrlsti as the thesubmarlmrin e. AApril 25 al the GeneralI Dynamics1 campaign to0 changec thc name of the nam e of Its newest nuclei E le c tr ic B o a l' D ivision in Groton, boat. :retary of the Navy has not 5 attack submarine, a Navy! Conn. renam e the Corpus Chrlsti T om M o (o r » 2 5 9 o o s a id T h u rsd ay . The attack:k ;sub is the second U.S. C o o k if th e re c e n l C o n fercn ce of H orn* The conference this w ^ Corpus Christi, Texas. “1“has a long Navy vessel1 tcto bear the nam e Corpus Hand Painting P » tt Bishops.” the Navy C a r* asked thc Navy for a nan n." hc said.' Chrlsti. the\ Navy^ spokesman said, T h a t H o g t i C o n tro l is a ld . ® C « n t* r - stating thc bishops found 1 “ T h e N a \ 7 In te n d e d only to honor the The first wasas a Worid War II patrol — G l v * n A w a y — 7 S 3 .0 I O O for a warship to be namlamed Corpus Sen. Johnin 'Tower,' R-Texas. - '“son •'p■'proud city Jii^^as submarineInes honored escort lhal wa;w as co m m en d ed tw ic e a n d 7 9 3 . S 3 7 7 247 M ain Av*.W . Chrlsti bccause that Is Latin for and prnnHsnr of Methodist ministers uth e c itic s o f L o s A n g d e s, Sai>an Jose and decommissionioned In 1946. Officers putp m forignoriiing :« * rape victiiim ;I
CHICAGO (UPI) - P I I I Division are investlgatlniting the two % ■ ^ Your Family Store officers' actions in the aftermathafte of a .1 ■ ■ In.Bliilue Lakes Shopping CeC enter r North Side rape and betbealing early . ■ " ^SAFAtMILY S u n d a y . I*"' B rz ec ze k W ednesday suspendedsu< for Q 30 days patrolmen _PPelmon R. ^ OPEN SATUIURDAYJTIIL 9 PP.M. BEFORE Ch: h r i s t m a s > aML l WEEKDAYS 10 1 A.M. TO 9 P. Thompson. 36, a*Sx-yearear ’^llce vel-' | — - p y ,- I , eran. and his partner GetGeorge Lyles, C FREE S otrmething for aB'ifcne oh ywiroiir-Lisi. 39, a five-year veteran,’afi,-and said he ^ plans to seek the officers^rs’ dismissal > MFTWRAPPINa i by the Police Board.I. 1T hc 3 (k lay ■ | Of Your Purcha** • PETITEE LOTION SISOAP J suspension was the mostlost severe ac- i tlo n h e could ta k e on h isjow ow n. ^ J UD 10 oz. containere r. . The officers arc accuse!used of Joking V '•K’ 4 R eg. 1.49 with a pair of rape suspecipects and then I letting them go despitei ththe pleadings ■ ' of the badly beaten vicllndim. They^are j BLOlUSES ^ also accused of later■r ifinding the ■ _ I o ) M V , y e ■ suspects and warning thethem to leave | " O ne group of nevk!W fresh foil blouses fl before olher officers arrivi■rived. J i 100% p o ly e s te r LongLc sleeve in sizes ^ “What happened isi oioutrageous," ^ BfolS K 9 ' p ' B rz ec ze k sa id . “ U 's a hI in:Insult to e v e ry ^ . / « i I ' i C I policc officer in the depaiip a rtm en t. I t is _ I U Iw a o S pmM i a l ! ! [ ' in to ta l opposition to th]e e ppublic t r u s t . ' | f . . if people can’t look toa pcpolice officers I / fo r p ro te c tio n ." ' Police investigators sajsay that one of \ ■ '______Ii C the two suspects arrested5led In th e c a s e j r 1 by olher officers wasIS )a friend of ^ I / T h o m p so n ’s fam ily. Chariged with rape, deideviate sexual H I S LADIES’ ■ & assault, aggravated kldnUdnapping. a g- • ■ gravated battery., unlawiawful restraint j r'^A and robbery werc Johnohn Fitzgerald I / Moore and Thomas Bro\Jrown. both 17. | ■ ^ ly1 /, They werc in Cookk Look at what i \ ONL\Y CH(lO IC E ' th e y ’v e done to m e . ThiThey beat me. _ > ^ i'i1" ll T h e y b e a t m e .’ “The policemen woul'ouldn’t look'at I 3 3 _ I .. me. They told me to gel In the back . * r I scat of the squad car amand I did. They | I stood outsle talking toth(I th e se tw o gu y s. ■ j even laughing with thenhem — I heard | " / ^ l a u g h t e r - a n d th e n theyhey lel th e m g o . T I N G O M F O RI T E R / ; / , a Solid Colors "They never askedI m(me my side of ^ whal happened. They/ wweren't really T Soft W arm Easy To WoVosh / ■ /, interested." % ReRegular She said the officersrs ttook her to a if ca^35.95 ONLY frlend^s home, despitee h I FORTHE I SAN FRANCISCO (UPU PI)-A New n ;edly b e in g h e ld ^ j) Pockett VWatches _ Zealand woman allegedl; f a m i l y {ONICS GAMES against her will by the Unification i r Timex ^ ALL£IECTR( THEY LAST I Church spoke with famlamlly members % -WHILE Tl ------Thursday and assuredd ththem lhat she i EmIi m b o i tc d ByMoH*l andTiT*xot ln>trumon!i w a n te d to com e hom e. ^ Baseballill .S o c c e r Wednesday, two "Moo>Ioonle" le a d e rs i s im ila r to stand trial on % lotboll wero ordered to stan ■>" . ” luttratlor) ^ Foo contempt-of-court charg(irges when they' ^ W M ath • W.Vord G am es failed lo produce M aiyt 0 (w ith c h u rc h officials);) litoday and get b a c k to us to m o rro w ."’shesaid. 6h f l liJ 5 Z S 5 5 5 5 S 9^ i s 3 ills, Idatio' Friday, N ovem ber>er27,1081 A-6 Tim es-New s. Twin Falls, Beginfalls,I i, breaks thhigh ' TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) - P r i m e w e re no t Im mcdlately edia available. S u m m f l i t c o l i aa p s e s t aalls peaice plarn ■ ' mMI inister Menachem Begin fefell in his Begin has-frequ-equcntly complained of apartment Thursday and brbroke his pain In a knee» fromf an old soccer ' FEZ. Morocco (UPI)f - Tho col- _ • ------League L alter Anwar Saoott signeds Uie Syrian F'oo rre ig n M inister Abdel, ic^left thigh, a spokeswom•man for injury but It vaswas not known wheUier ■lapse of the Arab U aguee summitsi has first treaty ever betweenn an Arab Halim Khaddjddam, who headed his HcHadassah hospital In Jerusaleile m sa ld . h e h a d fallen becai•ecause of the pain In his .. . country’s deleclegatlon, Uireatcned. to ijq ft S a u d i A ra b ia 's M id dlie le! E a s t p e ac e '■ A , n a tio n a n d Isra e l in 1979. Begin, 68, w as rushed to H.Hadassah leg. iplaninlimboandshowedUid th e Inability \ n a ! y s i s " Arab analysts said Thurscreday Saudi leave because5c ihe felt he was not being hohospital and was expectcdI 1to sp e n d In th e la s t four foui years .Begin has o f lh e A ra b s lo u n lle p n m alak in g p e ac e V ^ ^ = = = ^ = ArabiaA now faced the decision dc of treated as a ""h« h e a d of S tate ." tinUieni^tinUichospilal. suffered a mildd stroke,st which temp<^ w ith Isra e l, th e com m onI ene n em y /o r 33 pP re ssin g a h e a d wiUi ils eight-point cl The Syrian-Sn-SaudI rifl leaves PLO The spokeswoman said Begegln fell In rarily affectedI hishis vision, and a mild y e a rs . ______in th e s u m mmit l Crown Prince Fahd,1he ~plan p dwpening Ihe'rift In'AiArab ranks Chairman Ya&'a s s e r A ra fat cau g h t be- - thithe a p a r tm e n t o f h is officlaiI nresidence heart attack. But But he.bounced back The breakup-of Ihe conclDnciave (in its author of the proposal, said he would or o abandoning Its initiatlviIvc leaving Iw ra the Sauiaudis wbo help, bankroll Thursday evening and brokeke his left after both illncssclesscs, taking on a full first day Wednesday als111 th e A ra b s, b u t in th e e n d for f< pcace Inthc region. organization'sI's presence In Lebanon h o s ta g e be tw ee n th e Saudisidla and Syria___u w a s d e cidIded e 10 postp o n e th c s u m m i t . . _____, a tid c o n fro n tatatlon.Uierc.wlUi t Israel. -- a n d no c lo se r to lU goal ofjfstatehood, sl toanunspeclecifieddate. The firm opposition To ihc1C p la n w a s T h e su p p o rt ofo fi bo th nations Is v ita l for The Saudi plan tacitlyly recognized-—i Observersfrs-noted-that-Arab-world-e' -evidenced by Syrian PresideIdent H afez_lhePLO ______th e e x iste n c e o f Isra el a nnd d called( fora reservationsins.took fjrecedence over the Assad's A boycott of Ute sumnfimlt. Eight Other Arablb summits have ended Palestinian state and ththe summit praise the php la n h a d w on by th e U n lle d o ol th e r h e ad s of s ta te In Uie 221 1-m em ber wlUi c le a r dlvlllvlslons on some Issues. collapsed because of fearsars that hard- States andi EEurope's Common Market le Ic ag u e also did no t atten d . Last year’s.^Amman supimlt was ALL BE/EANSGROUND TO liners rejecting any ackno'uiowledgment as a possibiible beginning point for a The collapse of Uie sumnnm il on Its .b o y c o tte d b y' sixsl: members because of ORDEERIN OUR SHOP of lhe "Zionist entity"' wouldv. have final compnprehenslve pcace between flrs fi l d a y aiso p ointed up a riflift between Uie thcm-heatedted border confrontation . ispllt the Arab world if It11 came to a the Arabs ama n d Is ra e l. U)c U Saudis and Syria, whicIlch is still between Syriaia and Jordan. But none ;vote. Similar ArArab world sentiments led trying ti to regain occupied1 iterritory, of Uie conclaveaves have ended as pre- ; Delegate sources saidJ alat one stage to the ousterler of Egypl from the Arab th t^ c (jo la n H eig h ts, fro m Isra‘
PLO sets ■ ' I J* * ! explosionns f K l in Israel ‘ A m J HAIFA, Israel (UPI)-I — A c h ain of } ■s explosions set off by the PLO in a H ^ i V V i m munitions dump northwestvest of th e port I of Haifa Thursday killeded one< person, wounded two' others and a forced S 4 hundreds of others fromnfactorle^and fa — apartm ents into bomb shelihelters. HH READY IN 3 EASY STEPS ^ The blasts propelled m(mortar shells lund the com- in a large radius arounc ORBaAD£IU£/lG£f/a£S AMYTIMiriMBAMYWHm/ pound, sandwiched betweeween th e H aifa suburb of Kiryat HalmI andan an Indus- ^ f \ , trial park. A 4 i d l . a n el E ^ C B ___ ^In Beirut, a m ilitary spokesmanspo for th e P a le s tin e U b e ra tloh n O0 rganization RtEADY l RESUCE^M-W I AY FUtL-POWf i i f e - — _____ : claimed that PLO guerriltrrillas set the j a R6ENCY CB RADU1 0 c « a\T r GIFT BUY! le Israeli mill- WlO-CHANMEL EM ERI - explosions, although the I tllcal nubb«r Anttnna To B* Ui«di On Unit Or Magnaile Bata. 40 Chaihannal H V ■ ta n command had earll1 For Low VUIblllty CondlUona. T h e d e a d p e rso n w a s} ideid< n tifie d a s a 9 ! Tima To Raact' High •ZO0 17-year-old Arab garage■age m ech an ic A M muiniNG.fmm m ic wddltlonal . ^ m truetlon " C H R O a U o m ;r people were f(| from Jenin. Two other i r R I O ^ A V O E S ------You Battar Vltll Thay Allow f l ^ B ^ ' ^ ^ f l a i l R C lE A N E R RE». 10.99 . r e p o rte d In ju red . AlrciUrcraft Stylad 290* B ■! Vahlcla. Idaal F ’ Olamatar. High Wllh Of Your 3%" ombs in the laugaa la R ugga^ . ^ "Tbousands of bom kccurata fr Eaay To U B " 2 ' ” 1 A aahabla b Ra-Uaabla Flliar. storehouses went off on>n timt e , se ttin g {'n.u dapiar Avallabla For2(»4 8 ^ 9 iitall. Complata With 1.00M O FFI irtal Carburatora, ; th e ta r g e ts on fire a n d inflictininfl g h e av y Ad«itdaptara & Flttlr>g«.______” III'US! fljBglffM ■ n M • • •MSTAUATIM losses in men and equl{qulpment," the * 12.99 P L O ^ k e s m a n sa id inn BB( e iru t. . f t UECHANI He said some of the armyam buildings / ft T O O L S f and Stocks worth millionlions of dollara ^ t were completely destrojtroyed in the - explosions. 3 B IARD OR M EfRICwes ► a r e s , !T W RENCH SET PliCC Israel prepa ^ r / J ' t x i Slaal, Chroma RElEVERSIBLE A I e" Eatanalona, l e e t l l S T A N DJ" i Spark Plug , tATCNETUIC C for Sinai me r' Orlva. « l« . 1 D.C.NWER SOCKET BOlOX WRENCH s n ^ ■ TEL AVIV, Israel (UPlUPI) - Israeli fl IUIU£ ■ lAtlT l#W «nhl Oroirop Forgad Alloy M IN v U V HI Oroe Foraad S >3.00 M O Itzhak Shamir fl .JM Staitaal. Chroma Platad. 3.00 Foreign Minister Yitzh Easy To Uaa With p i,„ d . 3 - „ g' Smemooih Ratchating O ff/? 9 9 9 s t e p p ^ T h u rsd a y fro mian an emergency 9Q ly « Volt Syatam. b/B" (> 13/18" ; OFFI ^ Actl,ction. With No Effort. _ 6H -la a d a With Sockat., 3 / r 1 meeting preparing for urgentur( lalks in H..vrDwClip.. Washington. i . « . n V A O O raouiur >15.00 O f He said there was "no "n room for H I Q 7 T (MXMVnMHUl fiHlMliffjlimM flexibility" in Israel'sI's terms for ■ ^ 1 7 euuAimai 9 9 European participationon in a Slnal ■ ■ Toasjmi >N HYDRAULIC p e a c e k e e p in g force. Shamir met with Prir’rime Minister ■ ' T t J A C K S 4 Menachenv^-Sfgin andn d o th e r to p ' / I hIclaaTo'S.OOOLBS. I M F F E A C H J A C K I hi. Swivalling Saddia J H Israeli officials before)re w h a t w as ' ■ \ Illl Load. ih day of lalks ■ . expected to be a tough ( “ F U U SIZE” ^ today wllh Secretary of State Alex- ..flA I I A L T u i FLMR CWtfAU Quick Sticking Mount. y y Kandlat Vahic JA C K ( rauCK SEAI COVERS ' ander Haig in Washington[ton. I ^Adjuaubla Companaatora. Puah tES. 44.99 :omplata Wllh Sawn-ln W m S 4 ir Oroaa Walghi.M. llfla Scabbard And w A’n _ “There Is no room foror flexibilityf on • I buBunon« Light With Battary. t Halpa Sublllii I" WJBS ■tap Pouch. Eaay To • t f . the question of Europea;>ean p a rticip a - U TUU m Showa Haight Abova &*a-Laval Te IS.OOO Faat. CompactIIMHER 9 9 4 Q 9 9 natall. Look! Oraat, O FF! A • tion," Shamir told reporporters.' “Their flauBUck Caaa. Eaay To Adjwat. UiOftad Colora,______^ c o n d itio n s c a n n o t b e accei:ceptable." I I * « . « i But in London, a spokesman spo for Prim e Minister Margargaret Thatcher said, “There are no conditions co at- 9 ? ^ 3 4 ^ ta c h e d b y th e fo u r s t a tes e s participating ; in th e S in a i f o rc e ." •- Brilain, France, Italy Ital and the H f' Netherlands said thislis w ee k Oiey : would participate in ththe e S ln al force ' t'but indicated thal Ina relum i they ^flj ' expecled Israel to soften:ien its attitude SI] ■ • and begin negotiationsions with the ' P^estlnlans as liie EurE uropean C^om- ^ mffSk .: mon M arket has been urgingun for two flfl : y e a r s . : In W ash in g lo n , a se nlior io r o fficia l sa id p m s EFFECTIVE THRU U a il Y 8 :3 0 * 9 :C ' the United 'Stales hadad decided to H 1HUR$DAY.D£CEIIBQI3,1981 SUNDAYS 9 : 0 0 - « - reject Israel’s, earlierr proposa]p for m DAILY 8:30-9:00 1140 AD lAVE- milllary coo- , B PHONE 734-^ ■ closer U.S.-lsraeil mil SUNDAYS 9:00-6:00fi : Deration because It wentent beyond ihe 'Olalinashin » i ■ I ' '«> - S 3 A PDISON r Martiiin playssarat rfid ay . Novo v a m b ef2 7 ,19fli Times-Newalew s. Twin Falls. Idatio ft-7 in lateest filmirole
ByJOANHANAUER Sch umann istrutted toward -hls fans I ' United Press Internation.Ional when he wjw as a cc id en ta lly hit w ith 100 . ______volts or cleelectricity. Eyes bulging and curls straifaighteiiing, Schuman told thc E 4 £ - YOU DIRTY RAT... a g h a s t audiencc, aui "This Is truly a of inspiration.” - 5teve Martin won’t't jptay a wild, c ra z y guy in h is la te st filfilm, “ Pennies n t r v n n v REVISITED From Heaven." Insteadead he’ll play a ngiish have turned bullish on1______;______^______rat, he.confided.to.lhe fc Id to y tc d d lcs a rc h a rd to find, ------atFfve,'’-the local news;«'! 8howbnrad. S “ so ison; thc currently playing cast by WNBC-TV, NBC ? ' ll m dramatization of Evdyn operated station in New > "Brldeshead Revisited,” in public will have to acc ne of the leading characters way," Martin said. "Or IS a constant companion a have- to blow up the \ amed Aloyslus. Thc Granada ^ C e n te r.” T h a t’s p r e tly wi series stars Jeremy In»s, A n th o n y’ Andrews A and Diana Quick, NEW FORD TRUSTEE with speciiccial guest stars Laurence . * Donald F. McHeory,7, fonner U.S. OUWer. Claire ( Boom and John ambassador to the UniUnited Nations, Gielgud.. ForFi U.S. audiences it airs on has been elected to thele FFord Founda- the PBS)S “Great Performances” tlor) Board of Trusteeitees. McHenry series beglijg ln n ln g J a n . 18. >K> currently teaches dlplonjlomacy and in teroational affairs atit )Washington’s “LTITLEIE P R IN C E ” -' ^ ' .! JPIBI5 Georgetown Universityity a n d h e a d s a • Re h eairsals rsj began this week for a New Yoric and Washiiihington based musical based b on Antoine de St. c o n su ltin g firm . H e a lsoIso Iis a go v e rn o r E x \q )e ry/’s ’s fable, “The Little Prince,” oC the American Stock"ck Exchange, a starring! MichaelJ York. Thc show director of thc First NalNational Boston opens DeJazz fans in Tokyo v f o T o o k f/orward e to, as well as re- treated to an electrlf 6 and other possible revenue mancc by the group ^ s ta g e w as a b la z e wli Blimip experiliment woorksforiCoast Gruard l lights, and dry ice gave;ave off a mood- >n;cifn'rr ;TITLES setting mist. Keyboi POMPANO BEACi:CH, Fla. (UPI) - Thet ' mirror the men were; U2 using as a signal. 'The WV, ar II, and the Coast Guardjard is looking at Uie .boardlst Tom ’ jS luIes S on a television sitcom — Goodyear blimp Enleiierprlsc, participating in aI Enterprise directed thehe Cape Gull lo thc dis- possibility p of using them agaiiigain bkause, among w h a t w ill11 thI e y th in k of ne x t. T h e show " recent experimental three^JayU lour lo help the! tressed boat, which hadid a d isabled e n g in e a n d a other ol things, they are soI fuelfw efficient," Bell _ is “ B akker’s ei Dozen," starring Ron “ Coast Guard, helped findfi a 35-fool boal adrift InI malfunctioning rudder. Sjsaid.. * S U v er anduid Cindy Weintraub, sched- '* the Atlantic Ocean withith tw o m en a b o ard , Ron Bell, a.spokesmanan for Goodyear, said the. Tlie Enterprise is basedd duringdi the fall and Now you knf l o w .... uled to go on CBS during the winter The boat was firstt sightedi 30 miles ott^ort! „Sn(e^rtsestflsbeJngusecised by th e C o ast G u a rd (0 wfnler w al Pompano Beach.. DDu u rin g th e su m m er, T V se asoion.-In n one episode, now t^lng i Lauderdale by a prlvavate plane, which rep^edI help with search and res)asl . c h a in sa w In J u ly 197676 iafter hli wife ..bother Silver-—Sll’ he has a master’s ^ spotted a flash-of ligh?ht thal turned out to be a1 “Blimps played a roleIe wwllh the Navy In World Guard G station. • suedfordiyorcc. d e g re e ^nCin C hinese stu d ies.
P olice fea3ir d ru g p us!s h e r s ’
p u t th e ir cid o g o n h it; li l i s t _
DILLSBURG, Pa. (UPI)»I) - P o lice h u r tin g s o mnc e people,” p CasUesaid. believe drug dealers wavanl to kill Misty's serviservices are in demand by Misty, a 4-year-oId Germailan shepherd state, local andand Philadelphia lawmen, w ho is I c r y good a t sniffingigoutdrugs. Shehas25to30to 30iarrests to her credii. “ R ig h l a f le r w e g o lh e r•we w received "She's morejore lhan a one-drug dog,” information from Informrmants lhal Castle said.I. HeH( said Misty can locate there was a standing conlintracl on thc marijuana,, hashish, h{ morphine, cb- dog,” William Castle,c, Carroll- calne and-hei- heroin. "She has found Franklin Township police:e chlcf said, everything; from fr three marijuana m R A N T ^ Misty was bought for.^.OQi000 ra is e d by s e e d s to lalf h a lf pounds of cocaine and community groups. . . ' - 25-pound balesalesofmarijauna.” TOTl PROTECT "W e’ve never been ablible to prove Misty oncesice sn iffed ou l $S,000 woi;th anything,” he said, "but wu e rec eiv e d of d ru g s thlal a l sstrike force officers iiad YOUR UWARRANTY! information on an occasa slo n w h ere m is se d in airaldnearDlllsburg. rail therc was going lo be an; attempta (on AnoUierUmeUme, w h en police stopped a her life) and Wt look stcpj»ps lo c u rta il m a n fo r drurdrunk driving. Misty led O I L F l lLTERS th a t a ttc m p l.” officers lo a half-poundh< of marijuana Fram Oil FiltersFi Protect Yourur Engine. Aids C a s tle h e a rd o f a p lo t to> sprinkles thc in the man’sI’s ttruck, CasUe said. The d iso rie n tin g d ru g " a n g e l du3l"nearadi driver, who10 • allegedly tried lo run Performancce:e, Helps Keep Youiur Car Running d e m o n stra tio n by th e dog! anda lhe lire down a pollceillceman, saw Uie dog and Longer. Changge Your Filter Whereni You Change department h o ^ downn the area, becamecalm.Im. Your Oil ft Chaiange To Fram. Castle protects Misty by'moving n her . At the requesqu e st o f 14 schools in Y ork, between sccrct locations. P e r ry , Cunil>imberiand and Dauphin There’s good reason1 (or dope counties, Ml»Misty conducts periodic i d e a le rs to be ne rv o u s. searches olof "lockers, cars, ' W ' f i i r / “The dog Is approachlihing a half- classrooms5 andant p la c e s w h ere narcoU c .. ..miUion dollars.in narcoticc finf d s In h e r u se h a s been. m ore dirt. “ block[ GRANT MEE™ r i The Idaho Deparirtm ent of Health andmd W elfare will 9 . 1 0> .9 9 sponsor on informm otional m eeting at 7 (p.m ., M onday, 4 .9 1 Nov. 30, 1981, aat the Health and WeW elfare Offices, 677 Filer Ave., TvFwin Falls, to discusss thetl' six federal biock grants in he'lealth and hum an servic•vice program s.
Topics to b e disiiscussed include: ' “ Hwn Tre«l»dl*d ilno*r Finer Irspt EiOutiv« Anai" Oull 4remaJnng H _ | »iop**rWhoWi90Si >1, cofflbmet wuh helptxlinofiirork tin oulwnntfiofti S0%lon9«r. ______bfMJw motoiPi — Block G r o n tuL' ^ v e r v i e w FOR MOST AMERICAN t — Federal Criteritria for Block G rant Funi'u n d s — S tate Plans for3r Fiscal Y ear 1983 Blocilock G rants — Maternal andJ lione s e le c t th e m en u o r sisweat {fver a hol - Universal PresssSyndlciile Sy sc rc an : nming from her room is the waywa been called anythlnfing but "Happy" numbercr three times iti'tho iastI tvtw o sto v e , b u t th e Vaii-1ii-Dinc Scries IV ______sh o alw always dredges up Some incideiident from the time she wasw a year old. years;; it1 costs $25 everyj.tirnc! y(you -system does keep' t track of who is fro m1 nmy childhood that she thinks : iks is Very few people evencn know her rcal change[e y' o u r telep lig n e n u m b e r h e rer , e a lin g a n d w ho i: and Ihal -^^^V i luslng,” It's invariably somethin DEAR ABBY: YoYou frequenlly fill "amusi Ihing name, b u t il waswa' worth it to'me because eacheac assistance has madeic the food opera* y o u r co lu m n wiftiI a lot of sand imo- lhat wasv painful, degrading and an How should, it appcpear on the wed- tim elgogol rid o fo n c b a d pest, tlon more efficient, a yourfutfuture self. a u th o rity . c u ttin gg h e r off on ce sh e g e ls m o onnthe tli From her officc Gojoff can hear thc minutes about peopicople I had nover pho n e , staccato clicking off thc computer’s heard ol. When she wasn't talking DEAIJAR ABBY: Our daughter., 24,-12'! pEARABBY:Alot(Jt of w om on en jo y ' - TRAPPEDD INi; p rin te r in th e n ex l rooix>m. All d a y long, about people 1 didn'dn't know, she was will b be e g e tlin g m a rrie d w ilhin the tin talking on'the telepliohone, but I don't TAHUA.WASIASH, . se v en d a y s a w eek.k. 11 counts and complaining aboutit ththc other people in next slx.months.sb She wants a forma'mai happen to bc one of them.111 I am busy ' • records the eating aca c tiv itie s of 1.700 thc home, the foodood, the caro. her church’ch wedding. with gardening, canniming. sewing and DEAR\R TRAPPED: Whal's wror,Tong students, registering; rmeals eaten and aches and pains, and the high cost of Of course,co we will send engraveiived other productive activivllles. and I con- with thc:hc truth? Simply tell her th;Ihat meals remaining undiider the six sep B -....^|^B i e v e ry th in g . (She lacks Int for nolhing, invitatiiations, hut wc have a questiontion. slder talking on Ihe IdIclcphonc a waste you dlslilsiikc talking on thc tdepjione;n e :it. and thc home she’sc’s In is one of Ihe Uur daughter’s da given namo ass iti of time. Besides. il 1 m a k e s m e m a k e s5 you y ncn’ous. Just reclfe >*oi most expensive.) a p p e aars rs on her birlli certificatee isi; no'"'-''"'- s p e e c hl aai n d ha n g up, IK* BK ^Dr. Lam b______Poppinig aspiri)in tenibl^le forncausea )n lh a t a s p irin is so m e tim es use< B y L A W R EN C E LA ^ Jsed S ta lio n , N ew Y ork, N1.Y. .' 10019. ° D E\R A R READER - II means whiwhat ^ X -i/I I’iewspaperEnterpris :lp prevent recurrences of hearcart Anyone who las ha persistent it Is callca iled — foods m a d e from wholt'holc ks and strokes in men (11 has> nolno digestive problems nlustnli be under a grainproducts, prt such as wheal, ratheIther /P .4 1 8 ^ I, Top prices fo>r r' your raw furs: p ro v eod d Ito b e useful in w om en). doctor’s care. An occi:c asio n al a n ta c id & a n arefin re e d pro d u ct, | f \ • Coyote • Badger Ba • Muskrat DEAR DR. LAMBMB - I went to the Alsoio i salicylates may Increase theth( for a temporary proiroblem is not a The main n- difference is lhat U: ■ d o c to r a n d h e did bIo(Wood tests. The only IrritalioIlion of th c lining of th c sto m acach. h disaster, but persist!stent symptoms refinedd producip has lost part or ail. l u t i • Fox • BBO: obcat • Mink - thing he (ound wass lhatU; I am anemic. And yoiy o u a r e a n em ic , w hich m a y/ be b( suggest a more serious sei problem the husksk o r b ra n . W h ile flo u r Is a goo 1 W a * Raccoon • Beaver Be n o t e n ough Iron tn ththe e blood. fromoooozing blood from your stomlach ad n e e d in g m e d ica l a tlention. n t example>ic of a refined product. Th I went because 1I aiam always nause- lining.;. (Or you may havo an ulcer lha _____M d_lf_a_pereon_rneeds antacids main losslos is the buik that.thc.brab r a n ____ W Check our lovlow prices on — ^------ated but i don’t vomijm liri hate iheldea— isn’t-fa"faring“ aroirweil~with~you]/our regularly, as prescribebed by his doctor, provides.les. I quality steellel trap s, snares, of v o m itin g — It scarcs set me. I have horribleb ic tre a tm e n t, . ll Is important lo gel;el enough, suffi- T h isI Is Is not ali bad either. 'The branbra |i[U'' jl stretchers andar o th er - - been eating up aspirin asj and Alka Gobaback to your doctor at once andanc clenlly oflen, to proiromole healing, does deciIccrcase the absorption ol som5ome ' iW Seltzer. I mean actuidually ealing them stop yoyour aspirin and Alka Sellzeiizer That usually meansis lhat a liquid mineralsals thal your body needs. WhilVhlle ( ^ trapping supiupplies. — J u s t pop them in my mouth and immediedialcly. I do nol know why youyoi preparation should bcix used as op- bread docsdc contain about thc sam>ame c h e w Ih e m up. It se en ^ euying and sellln(Milng _ eemstohelpalol. arc nain a u se a te d b ut. you ne ed to find fine posed to the convenientmceofatablel. amountU of vitamins because II 11 ifs th t ballet, ____ I know thal Is proprobably the worst oul. M(Meanwhile If you do have In-.. In DEAR DR. LAMB-i - All we hear enriched,ied,______thlnglh the world'Ud'lb do burrhavc digestloitlon, as' a'temporary measunsure anymore is lo eal whohole grain foods. An exa•xample of a whole grain cereiireal flfeJ b e e n do in g it for quiteu ile so m e lim p npw . ta k e a n a n ta d d . J u s t w h a t a r c w hole g^ n a l n foods? w o u ld beb e shredded wheat made frofroi m . ■ I would like lo stopp aiand never have tb Antactadds can bc abused, loo. I onian W h at d o th e y includede? Also, is white whole graingr; wheat. If you get enougough . ■DkS. Uiil! l S : , do th is a n y m o re . C:a an n you tell m e w h at se n d ining g you thc Heailh Letter No. No bread all bad for a penerson? Should we bulk fronrom other sources, you can1 uus se — ' steel/Hldes/f•5/Furs/Recycling to d o ? 10-1. Uj se a n d Abuse of A n tacid s,>. s(so eal all whole wheat Breads?bn I can eat while bread. br For example, use DEAR READER- Youareright.il you wilwill use them properly. Otherh e rs th e m fo r a few day s, thenthl I c ra v e to go w h o le graingr, ccreal for breakfast an ; Highland Ave. • 734-:14-7440 Is about the worstt thingth In thc world who wawant this issue can send 75 cent;ents back to my white bn)read. I buy my eal plentsnty of salads, fresh fruits; andan Twin Falls or In Jerom e» 32324-6873 y o u co u ld do. w llh a Ilong, stamped, self-addrcssetssed bread in a good bakiikcry and nol a vegelableibics. Then wholc-wheat brearea d Open 8-5 Mon.-Frl. 8*12•12 Sal. Salicylates dccrearease the normal enveloplopc for il to me In carc of thisthl: grocery store. II hasi aa lol morc body becomesies le ss im p o rta n t a s a so u rcceof c < Also blbuying deer, elk & mo(noose skins. blood clotting mecharhanlsm. That Is the newspaipaD cr, P . 0 . Box 1551, R adio C ltjity to il. b u lk .* At Wit’s En'nd She helas her A N e vw i B r e e d o f(L i u g g a g e price anda $5 not ennough i ^
ByERMABOMBFCK:cK , I . (‘ i m Field Enlerpriiyyriscs ' I ri Q^o/jn A manufacturer ol 0 . I of foods came oul w ith ^ a full-paKC ad3il staples thal no longerger have nieaninu T a k e b a k in g so o)>fall
- : E f Tiploy/er ga\v^freestrips
B y FR A N K ROSSI I9.')S,19 a f le r h is la th e r 's heatleart attack, was un- ThThe year I9S1 for Keystone;tone E ngineering P Knlf^l-Rlddcr Newspap apcrs (Jidisputed big boss of thc comp;mp.nny. turmrned out to be miserable,le. The company l ^ n a r d E v clcv trie d to do ri^I it. He thought ot finis:lished three major contracts,s. butbi paymenl for Z_ ...... KKeystone EnginccringjiplI asMYa? company but thc2 work' camo in bo slowly thatth a t fo r a w hile it PHILADELPHIA-Collo n sid er th is a C h ristm a s OUK 0 company, taking Into account the few . lookt)ked a s though K eystone woulduid bc1 w iped out. s to ry AND a T hanksgivingng story. •hihundred people who workedxiforhlm. fc It HI is a n oddity of e le c tric a l contro n tra c lin g th a t you It is about a man whoovowns a business and the don'ln't need much money lo startart upi becausc you By tlie mid-1960s two thingsmgs of importance had p e o p le w ho w ork fo r himI ana d how th e ir exchange n 'l ne ed to spend big bucks on inventory.it But if ' happened to Leonard Evcl of gifts perhaps helped savesa a company. W hicli' - ht 'Ivolcv; His business you'u don’t pay the people who'S sup upply you. if you boomed, and hc became liix g a v e both sides re a so n to3 RiveR th a n k s. ^ hooked on traveling. don'n'l pay your employees, youou disappear( fast. H alf th e fun w as planning.. For Fc months he would vcn;ry fast. It slarted two decadess agoj with l/conard and b b< e u p to h ls elbow s In tra v e)1 l folders.fo ^ H elen Evclcv. Helen waranted lo see the world, Al one point, during the threecebig b Jobs, Evelev Leonard didn’t. Helen persisted. p How about When business continuedued to be good, hc hadid to poy almost SOO employee}yees. His salaries m ^ Mexico? "You don’t have/e to go there," l/jonard th o u g h t h e should s p re a dI Ihe Ih joy of traveling. andid expenses were running a few m illion dollars i i s a id , " T h e y 're ple n ty of rcstaurantshere."rc SIS h a re It w ith his to p em ployeelyccs, a month. m Two or three monthsths without' money So h e took 44 people on a Irip t to Mexico, and id Keystone Engineering could coi have gone Inthe end, Helen won., aiand Leonard got hooked _■ picked up the tab. Many wouA'ould ne v er h a v e done ink ru p t. on traveling. The moreI exoticc the better. Four ' || it on Iheir own. With money,y. Iheyll pro b ab ly w ould Thc T t creditors and the banks h tim es to South America.. SeeS l^ n ard and Helen. ks had confidence. have paid off a bill. Turkeyseys they could buy for The'le y d id n 'l squeeze K eystone, i i i paddling a dugout downm thc Amazon. Sec the it' themselves. Mexico was. somethingso different. Jivaro Indians checkin;ing out IxK)nard and” The employees had confidenc I.xM)nard Evelev went withI them.th< That's when he ience. They didn't H e le n 's h a t sizes. T en times tli to Mexico, a few ill out. Some people figureJrc that Keystone V J I V H v I ^ ; U l i 3 found ou t th c fun of giving a tr trip s,to B urm a a n d Indiaa a n d N epal. ^ survirvived because it had this: edge:edj a boss who 5 • M R . AAND MRS. GARY DUNJNCAN ' Evelev brouglit his employ)loycc^ on other vaca- ires fo r his people a n d peoplee whowt c a re for th e ir Keystone Electrical Engineering I Co. was lions; ti( Bermuda. Nassau.. Jamaica,Ji six in all ISS. In hard tim es, people luchich ia s J im W allace, s ta r te d in 1920 by Y ale Eviilvelev, Leonard Evelev’s over o\ to years. Each time.. EvelevE' invited more job e stim a te r, stood w ith himTl. . father. Yale Evclcv emmmigrated from Russia in employees, er until more than I O)lson-Dunca l. an han 100 p eople w ere "Nobody is going to pul their:heir hand in their 1905. When hc slopped ofoff thc boat,^ he couldn’^ m a k in g th e trip s reg u la rly , Tt . Thc c o m pany a lw ay s pocj,ickel and say, 'Here, we’rc goligoing on a trip.'It ? TWIN FALLS - Julie Ju Olson Biddinger and a Ben Spcncer were ‘speak'a word of English;ih; by 19lfi, Y ale E v clcv p pi ic k e d up th e tab. w as a b ig su rp rise in th e bcginnirnnlng, but knowing .. ^ b e c a m e th c b rid e of GGary ar Duijcan-. ushers, had a degree from MIT.. IHe paid for it by selling Evelev got pleasure fromm givingg the trips: He Leoilonard then afterward; no, It d o e sn 't su rp rise •Oct. 3 fll a garden ccrenncmony at the Spccial guesls gu inciudod Florence .newspapers on a corncr. ddo o e s n 't Ihink m u c h aboul whether win the company me.e. He's a very generous persorrson. 1 would think homo of Mr. ahd Mrs. John'ihn T h ieb ert. J e n s o n of Montpelier,Mo grandmother of He was a new capitaitalist, but he clung td b bc e n e fite d fro m th e good will*111. “1 just have this thele tr ip s w ere good fo r c o m p an,ny y hloyalty." ■ The bride is thc daughtcihter of Ann J. the bride, aiand Margaret Duncan of tradition. His philosoph>hy was uncomplicated: feeling,” fc says Evclcv. "Il'st's juslj a plus. It’s not T Tt h is y e a r, 110 e m p lo y ee s w/ill ill makcaoncKlayr O lson a n d th c b rid eg ro om isii th e son of • H o m ed ale,, gigrandmother ot the bride- Always do right. On that,It. Keystone Engineering a ar n y th in g you c an w eigh. All other things being triplp lo New York for lunchI andan a BroadWay Mr. and Mrs, Art Duncan.in, alli of Twin groom. su rv iv e d a de p re ssio n andnd grew . In 1948 I ^ n a r d e eq q u a l, th e e m p lo y ee s willII say: si i'd rather be ’ shovlow. I t w on’t b e M exico o r thhe e B a h am as, bu t in F a lls . A recepllortion followed the ceremony, Evclcv camc into his fatfather's business and by h he e re th a n th e re .’" a ww a ay it will be th c m o st Im portanrtantlripofall. Sheldon Slagcl omciatccQted. M arilyn D ia n e Dunczncan and Lean Whiteman, Roundtree and Lori Burk)irkhalter pro- sisters off the bridegroom; Rita vid e d th e m usic. Rawls, cousjusin of the bridegroom; •- The bride, given awayray by Paige Peggy Klinsinsky, Joan Tortel, Linda tj Tortei, wore a gown (rin:rimmed wilh and Shawnana Slutzman, Mary Oben- i! Chantilly lace. She carriedied a bouquet chain, Elsl1 Mink,^ Amy Thiebert and 3 of roses, daisies andid m in ia tu re D o n n a Benoitloil served. ^ carnations wltb ribtwn)n and iace Nancy Jemennings attended the guest 3 m i £ stream ers.' book. Carl1 SStarry, Wayne and Alan m 1 ^ l ~ i r f Lod Burkhalter was mailnaid of honor. Stutzman ancand John Thiebert assisted. 9 I | g Lisa Benoit, Tara Biddingcnger, sister ol The brideie is employed by-Payiess m s the bride, and Laura Raylay of Hailey Drug in Twirwin Falls and the bride- S Sl Now thru Tuu es. THE: S A V I N were bridesmaids. MelissaIssa and Sara groom workjrks for Moore Business 3 PLAI Biddingcr were flower girlsiris, F o r m s in Jlerom e n e. S ------J o e -H lc k m a n -o f-B o isise-was-best e ------Followingig ta trip to Lake Tahoc and— Jj -I- man. Bill Miller. Dave! LLawley and the Oregon1 Coast,C thc couple is resid- K evin P a c k a r d w ere groomximsmen.Joe ing in Twin1 F aj lls . 3 5 I S m mm HI s i w ^ ^ f l a i f i S l B M 1 ~ ‘' " I ' fS f I X l j r ^ 1 . i s ^ ' • w I i a s h P . ! . I.®. y i m tans or Coveralls ^ I rfJeg. I 97 j U B g I
This. Isis top quality merchon- 3. No seconds. Dress in1 j ( g j H ■ • m m ^ nous brand designer stzM jeansns at o Kmorl^ price. m m ■ ■ SizesIS 20-38. ‘ ^ T o m CC a t ” ! ■ i ' 1 ...... - Insulated Covoveralls £ llS sF •-•ll: I P e e p N o r t h s
MR. AND MRSIRS. TERRY THANE LAJ^NCASTER ff.3 Downlookk P a r k a Ouf Reg. ? 111 Uurl^eg. / « 2 7r I R eeed-Lancast i iter I 27.97 ^ Excellent quollty coveoverall. Quilt- 3j5 ■ F IL E R - L au ren Li;Liane Reed Brennan; Mick M Bames and Jack g ed lining of 1 0 0 %)o nylon.n Zip- JJE ibecame the' bride of Terry Tci Thane Montgomery:ry were ushers, Adrian •9 5 Detaciiable hood.'i. 1 0 0 % nylon out- ^ Al' '■ ir/v^X pered legs for easy3 sy removal. f f t First Church Isaacs wasiringbeare rii ms g Zippered pockets, v , [Lancaster Oct. 30 at the Fi Z er and lining. Big3 roomy pockets, k ^ J s, water re- g of the Nazarene of Twin Falls.Fal Special guestsgu included Mr. and ® Snop and zipper cio:iosure. Save! sistant outer. ‘ Rev. Gemie Iwerson offofficatcd and Mrs. Donaldlid 0. Davis and Mrs. Lela g •Dennis McCracken was/as organist. Reed, grand;ndparenls of the bride, and • S 5 , 'Georgia Blastock and Rebileba Tripplett Mrs. Clide‘ RuthR Lancaster and Mrs. j! :sang solos. . Faye Savagtage, grandparents of the M : T h e b rid e is th e daught. including a preliminaryry hh< e a rin g J a n . 20. inning and Con- from whenlen they were first offered byy c o n tra c ts in th e fu tu re. M o n ta n a PcPower Co., Utah Power & ' se rv a tio n Act. th e B P A\ —- Aug. 28 — to c h alle n g;e e P a c ific P o w e r & L i ^It t Co. said the Light Co. ana n d C .P . N ational Corp.
T h ^ t c a u s es H aw aiian stut u d e n t s > A ttom ei; genel e r a / will decide to eat m acarroni fo r Thank.i k s g i v i n g
HONOLULU (UPI) -- 'The theft of A dairy' companyco did donate ice Seattl(le newspjapaer ‘irnerger’ ffaces cheallenge 14 tu r k e y s fro m th e WjWalanae Ele- cream thatit wwt a s added to W ed n e sd ay 's m entary School causedd an abrupt menu, she sail I ByCARRlCKLEAV;a v i t t s a id . When the ailorne;•ney general" receives . change in the traditional I United Press Interna‘rnational coalition of P-I employeesees, sm aller newspapers al Thanksgiv- Another turkeytui lunch with all the ^ Hanscom's recommendi■ndation, there will be an nnd olher people oppc^ed lo the Joint operation, inglunchfare-lobakedrd macaroni. trimmings> isIs planned for D e^m ber, addillonal 45 days for■ pupublic comment, and then said the Post-Intelllgencor;c r is on now on th e ve rg e Food services mana^lager Mitsue she said, mand d “hopefully, nothing like .. S m ith w ill m a k e a fin all l dst- a re a , th e P -I Is n o}t t .1 in a position lo la k e the newspaper could "tu‘‘tum the comer’’ if il for lunch Wednesday, sso she im- . Intcliigenccrlsafallfailing newspaper, desperately cly advantage of the situatliiatlon.” attorney Jonathan wasn’t “gnissly mlsmanaanaged by its corporate provised and served the school’ssf 1,000 In ne ed of h e lp from)m itsI afternoon rival, a federal ral Thackeray lold lhe judgeig e . owners,” Dwyer said. , students baked creole manacaroni. col- < exam iner has beenin tctold. . Sterling The P-I expects to lolosc se $2.6 m illion th is y e a r, Pointing lo the testimiImony of a newspaper eslaw, mixed fruit, Frenclichtircadand The morning PosPost-Intelligencer and the af- af- and ils editorial voicece will disappear forever accountant who predictet:ted that the P-I could m ilk . ternoon Seattle Timeim e s a re seeking pe rm issio n to Silverware I to unless the newspaper coicombines with the Times. m a k e a p ro fit by 1984,, DDwyer said new lead- "It makes me angry,y, especially ’ ) combine all but th(their news and editorial de- hesald. . ership and strong flnancla:cial backing would boost when something like thiiiis happens, If youu are a looldng for a 1 , partments;' They cndedcm thrco-and-a-half .weeks 5ks Thackeray, summinging up the case for thc the P-I into contention withith the Times, and little children have blete se t o r Individ*, ive Hearst Corp., the ownerner of the P-I, reiterated ‘‘The P-I had ali the monloney 11 needed from lhe forward toll,” Hanabusas -i JawJutfgflDanlefHaiH anscom . feces, C ontact Us { lhat the newspaper, whlcih lc h h a s chro n ic le d e v e n ts Hearst Corp.,” countered:d ’’Thackeray, who said She said there were ooffers from ualp^oc 1 If Ihe-requesl iss gigranted, Seattle will bccomc Tie In the Pacific Northwesv e st sin c e 1881, h a s be en lhal Improvements in theihe circulation and pro- private citizens and bmlusinesses to I the 25th cily in thithe nation with newspapers jr s lo sin g m o n e y fo r m o re! lhanIhi half a century, duetion departments wervere made in the lale supply free turkeys, but \ operating under a jointjoli operating arrangem ent. t. The P-I must show thailhat it is a failing newspa- 1970s. A new fo rm a t w a s lailau n ch ed la s t y e a r, turned down by schooool officials Idi ; jfil Hanscom ’took underunc advisement volumes of Idaho Coin of per in order lo qualifyIfy for a Joint operating B u t s in c e 1921, w hen thehe newspaper came into ^ because defrosting and: ppreparation ‘ 1' tesllmony for andI againstag the plan. He has until Itil arrangement under tenterms of the Newspaper H e a rs t o w n ersh ip , It h a s loslost $8.6 m il lio n ...... w o u ld ta k e too long.' } -D e c. 16 to m a k e a writtenv recommendation to to P re s e rv a tio n A ct o f 1970.-70.' " ...... "That Is a terrible retreturn for 60 years of "W e really appreciatei tthe concern JfGalleries ^ I U.S. Attomey Genera N . M a in T w in F a lli leral W illiam F re n ch Sm ith. But attomey Williamm Dwyer,1 representing a effort.”hesald. . o f th e p eople a n d th c co:community,” p|, s h e sa id . Ph. 733.8593 ______r fSi x sta tee i s co opera]Ite on nuclee a r d u m p ssite . B i 1 : f : CARSON CITY, Nev.ev. (UPI) — An apwmentent, which provides that Col-1- be presented to all11 the stale ■ R j V agreement betweenu six; Westem orado wotvould open a nuclear burialll le g is la tu re s Involved. { s ta te s In w h ic h C oloradoado would open a g ro u n dI, s, p ro b ab ly b y ab o u t 1987. ■ Under thc plan, eachh state would mp is near com- Other stalItates woukl then ship their ta k e a tu m a t h o stin g a m ______plelloD. Nevada’s hum,uman resources. radioacUviUve waste there. — -- n u c le a r d u m p ____ where the'other statw : director said Wednesdayd ay. T h is wou^ould allow Nevada to close Its s coiild bury ' : Ace Martolle said thjthat he expects burial groipounds in Beatty, which has their low-level nuclearr waste. The fl a g re e m e n t, M a rte lle sa j thc agreement to be in final. form by been open•en sin c e th e e a rly l9G0s and ;ays, exempts _ Nevada, which air th c e n d of th e y e a r and ai ready for has acc(ccepted shipments from I r e a d y h a s i presenlatlon of ttthe various throughoulout the nation. p e rfo rm e d its d u ty . ; legislatures. M a rte!lle lle and representatives of*f A specific site in Colorado Co still Martelle met earlier le r this w eek in o th e r gov3 C r J on1 your I.[.R.A.mloney !ZJ !*!*
M a k e y o uir r reservation nc'i o t o . show you howw tt( o m a k e t h e m o s t o f t h e:m n 2 Liter A n d w h e n it com cs to retirem ent pla>lans, w e'rea A • An Equitable SavingsSa' Individual Retirem leaderin the fiel.W d, serving over 65,000) nretirem ent tj Account, I R.A , Ictscts you set aside up to S2.0( of your annual eaminningsforyourretirem ent 1 D K E , T Ai I B , e've been developing retirercment plans H I CC a r c d e f e r r e d till y o u w ith d r a w t h e m o n e y w h e since 1890 And.n d w e r e t h c o n l y s a v in g s; iiinstitution BS you retire. inthcNorthwesv e s t w ith a te a m o f re tire mncnt e special- M I spRrITE/FRESi S C A : ThenewI.RA.'sV s g o im o e ff e c t J a n u a r y !, ists, O urup-to-t:o-the-m inutc inform ationn a n d v a s t m ; but Equitable Saving?ngs believes sound retireme experience insurs u r e y o u t h c b e s t p o s s ib l e (g u id a n c e 5 planning is too im porxjaant to putoff Sobegini -" 8 andscrvicc. D ecem ^r 1st. 1981,I, youcandcposit.yourj 198 I $1 , S o c o m e in O rgiveusacall W e'reTeager to ■ i contribution in oursprspecial Retirem ent Reservi h e l p y o u . N o ww, , andi in the com ing years,rs. T h a t w a y , ^ cam 20% annual inteiI te r e s t ’ N o t a b a d w a y to si 1 . 1 19 ' y o u r r e t i r e m er n n t t w ill b e a t im e t o lo o k foo ir w a r d to . y o u r n e s t e g g A n ^ 'h o V Injanuary, we'lle'll autom atically convert yyc o u r Prices EffectiveEf Thru NNovem ber 29 Retirem ent Reservetr fuft n d s t o a n I R A a c c o un n t t 'w h ic h will continue to earnm highI tax-deferred interesrest • •77)t$i$an8lojfiitjf Jayuaounl, drpcnJinponlhtda^lay it ! opmid. It if art obligation, nottiotij ticcouHtordeposit, amnaii not imumi M fl AtParticiFIclpdtlng } by lhe Ftderal SavingwojJS and Loan tnwance Corporal■aiion. TTwr is a W e 'lls hhow i you how. ■ I 7-Elevenn SS tores. iCX)%mtnTStpfnjll>altyand S7Sjnifmihtiram Pnorior to maturity. G as A vailable at ArEquitableSasSavings. w ccallallourSaviiivings . RrtimnfnlRom>f.24 Hours ^ I 24 H ours.rs. ___ _ dally. I e i e w inl ' \ Burley too I : ^ ^ S . E c puitable J Savi/ings is P eo|3 p l e A n t d fH o w . E Friday, Novevem ber 27. ’ Times-News,BWS. Twin Falla. Idaho A-lt Reagaan invejsstigatoi»rs findiing allssorts oi waste5 to root>tout
By JEROM E CAHILL newspapers that WiUwill to ta l $100 m illion Ih ls y e air. r. ta x e s fro m ththe citizenry — a sum currenren tly e stim a te d a t B ut the ll biggest coUectioo beadatadacbe for Uncle Sara, * ^^euiXortDaHiLNews— ------.. Edwin L. Harper.|)er..depuly.dlrector.o(.tbc-W Vhlte )i House— 134 biilhM. oior enough moneiy.to.cul theiie present federal aside fromfr lax delinquents, centersters on the coUege loan Office of Managemesment and Budget, cited tbe$eK examples Jjudgetdeficitc itin b a lf . p ro g raa nm . Wednesday as he>e Ibriefed a group of reporterteri on the Harper saida id th a l d e q )lte tb e h irin g frettieze e th a t h a s been A lmlost « $3 bUlion of such loansI arean DOW in default, an WASHINGTON - Fed ■ Federal investigators operaliniting un- government’s pro{)rogress in carrying out P re sid e n t a p p lie d to mee acJ tio n s a n d tb e Uke. amental testing equipment;; and a a by the governmentlent against contractors, sup]ippliers and Harper, the No. 2 man at the budget:et agcncy.t w bo h a s H arpcper said tbe Injectors general gen and other ad- .' federal worker wbo badad 15I new se ts of tir e s InstalledKl con his other recipients ofjf governmentg( casb. assumed an increasingly public roleTile sin c e B udget m in lstntration officials invdved in tbtbe e c a m p a ig n wiU m eel ' government-owned cara r w\ biie rolling u p only 32,000M miles1 In nine months,3, heh< said, the nlimber of suchJjjudlts bas Direclor Daviavid Stockman got himself inIn the presidential for two10 days next week to comparelare notes oo their work ..o n (b e od o m e ter. been trimmed fronro m 10,000 to ta lin g so m e S1.71.7 billion to d o g h o u s e with disclosure of bislis doubts over and draraft plans for tbe New Year.ir. A p p ro p ria te ly enough Not to mention one out of fo u r tra v e l vo u ch ers ofr federalfet 2,500 amounting to $200t m illion. “Reaganomlcnics," said a $1 blUlon saving'ng was achieved in for thele Investigators, Ibey wiU be meeUng al the FBI wo'rlcers for wbicb tbeJe iinvestigators can find no-^ij’^tated During the sameme period, Harper said, the aiadm inis^- reducing dellilellnquent loans made by tbehe Farmers Home .Acadeir2my al Quanlico, Va., aboutMut 60 miles south of purpose for tbe trip,», anda outlays for magazinesies and tion stepped up effefforts to colleci delinquentIt loans and AdministratloItion. Currently such loans totalotal $1.7 billion. W ashiniIn ^ o n . Heart ddrug \ wins Ol) K ^\ b w tt o s ui r v i v' e from FIDA .B y JU D IT H RANDAL ;NewYorkDaUyNews o m n r e ttir e n rf i e n tf
W ASHINGTON - TbiTbe Food and .Drug Administrationon announced Wednesday that it hadid apa p ro v e d th e u s e o f tim o lo l, a d ru g alreadya ir used In • eyednv form for treatin • for tbe prevention of recrecurrent heart ■ attacits. The drug, wbicb wlU11 beb sold under tbe brand name “BioBlocadren" by Merclc, Sharp & Dobnobme, will be available by presicriptioJtion, beginning a b o u t D ec. 9. ' ^ FDA approval is baseased on tbe re- ' \ ' . ' suits of a Norwegian stucstudy o f se v e ra l « 111 th o u sa n d p a tie n ts io wlwhich timolol was started seven to 2828 ddays after an i l i ^ J y / In itia l b e a rt a tta c k -an■and found lo reduce the expected ralrale of repeat attacks by about one-tblnbird. . D r.‘Arttaur HuU.Hayc(ayes Jr., FDA commissioner, told ai ppress confer- e n c e tb a t tim olol a n d sim ila r d ru g s — known as “beta biockiKkers" — ar^ e x p e c te d to p ro lo n g tb» e 11 liv e s o f m any o f tb e 350,000 A m ericancans'wbo each year survive beart attadlacks. As many as SO.OOO of these people}ple die from a recurrence within two years,yet be said. Timolol is tbe secondtd d ru g re c e n tly . _ found to be helpful In preventing. — repeat heart-fittacksrsr iEarller'tbls" ' ...... month, tbe National Heaile a r t L u n g s a n d Blood Institute announounced that a o p e n am J ” U.S.-Canadian study had hi shown a w t o > similar protective effeiffecl for pro- In d ivid u i t panolol, sold by the} ^Ayerst Coro. , 'm l R f ti m mlentAccount under tbe brand name “k“Inderal." ^ c ju d ijy for i r a n L R A Inderal bas been onft tbtbe market in atEcjuitahkS t Savings • th is co u n try fo r tb e tre a a tm t e n t o f high blo o d p re s s u re f o r o v eir r 101( y e a rs . Like Umolol, it Is a beta bloblocker, a sub- \ b u r r e:tirem t i ent could bbe th e best years■ s o f AMl l l w age earners u|j p t o d i e a g e o f 7 0 V 2 c a n stance tbat acts on noervous ^ system endings called “t)eta adrenergicad re y o u r life. O rththe w orst. Becausise unless y o u pialan open annIR .A , evenifdiheyarealreacfycc c o v e r e d ceptors” important in regulating . beart muscle behavior. foritno\^t youIU m ay find yourseself in a b attle zon, n e b y a p e2nsion n plan, profitit-sharing plan, ICK e o g h A y e r s t b a s a n nounced^ tth a t although p l a n , o r ; physicians may alreadeady prescribe later on, ju st strugglingst to m aiike ends m eet ir are participatingg in a local, statej e ( o r Inderal. it is seeking spMpMlfic approval ve federal ^vernmg ent plann . of .th e d ^ 's use for tbeX prevF e n tio n of There's ^ iall l! S ecm ity of co uurse, b u t ifyou'v( rroeat heart attacks. (our E quitable Sav . Meantime, tbree otherie r b e ta blocker ' been reading[ tlth e papers latelyY, you know it mn a y ivings IR A accovX D u n t drbgs are already avalvallable In the not be of m ud is a voluiuntary.plm . S oyyou can put m on() n e y i n ' U.3. They are metc^rapralol. nadolol. - ich help in the years e ahead. anjl'atenol — all long; ppr re sc rib e d for T h a t s wvhy l you need to : f o r . w h e n e vver e you w ant the control of bigb blood)d p re ssu re , ) start p lan n in g fc Despite their benents,bis, b e ta blockers yourretirem enent now A nd Equ ar6; not without side^dfreffects. Dr. iiitable Savings ac a n ____ H4)«3 said tb ^ shouldId notd generally help. W ith ann IndividualI R etinirem ent A ccountI t ber used by patients wilwith bronchial W l l shouw y o u h o w aspftiia; in addition, the;they, m ay cause (I R . A ). It's a FKpersonal retjremlent e plan th at letst s wosHness, nausea, dlziiiiTTitw>gfl a n d . In so te patients, moreI sA n d y oDU u w on't have to p O n . t o lId: d pay any taxes onn because’ew e show you helow to m ake diee ; keep outto f that m oney orDr o n th e interestt it earns, u n tiljcrau most oftf t h e m . w ithdraw it wvhen ll y o u retire. BI y that tim e, yoo u r A^ n d w hen it com;es e to retirem ent t p l a n s ,
Puerto Rflico tax liability ougu g h t to b e a lo t lesss th an it is todayay were a leadk er in th e fieldd, serving over 6f6 5 , 0 0 0 UNITED NATIONSS ((UPI) - The because youll11 beI in alo w ertajax bracket. r e t i r e mlent e i accounts, United States told the>e \ U .N . G en e ra l Assembly Wednesdayf thetb United Na- I n fact, I w e've beenn developing retiir t i r e m e n t tions bad no busloess£s meddling in Puerto Rican affairs.. H o wm r u c h w illyy o u earn? plans sineince 1890. A ndwvere th e on ly savij v i n g s U .S . A m b a ssa d o r WiUiVilliam S h e rm an said the pe^Ie of Puei>uerto Rico bad institutioion in the N orthww estw idiateamn io f th e ir ow n in stitu tio ns for fc expressing th e ir opinion a b o u t the e ffuture l political ' W h e n yyn o u w oric o u t th(le figures, th e r e t i r e mlen e i t specialists. status of the Caribbean:an island, which am ounts are st is a commonwealthI ofol the United staggering. Especxrially considerinjn g O)u l r up-to-the-m irinute inform ation) n a n d S ta te s . Yew I BtUncttt Ann utl Amount the fix break; y o u receive. TooJimount V3Sjst experience insii s u r e Sherman strongly rerejected to a agefiJ wttJxlrawnbtglftnlng wilhdrawn y over resolution adopted iott A u g u st by th e ______« ia c 6 5 ______lO ytar period y Q | L e t s s a yy, fbr exam ple, 24-member U.N. Deen- am ount allow^'ed e o f $ 2 ,0 0 0 S o com e in.L O< r dence" for Its people. 15 1 1 1 .9 5 9 ______22,522______225,222 T h a t resolution, b e ssai( a id , vio la te s th e in y o u r E quitalable Savings 2 0 2 4 3 ,2 8 1 ______48,939 489,393 g rve v us a call. W re U.N. Charter and “coni»nstitutes inter- v ' 25 I 510,313 102,656 ference in tbe intemi>mal affairs of IR -A plan eacich year T he 1,026,564 ~ | . Puerto Rira and tbe Utdtm tedOtatea." ------« Ian Hutchens Australian delegate 1 tollow ing char!art snow s how miuch i you w ouldJ No\^5 ancnd in the com ingg y e a r s . si^rt^^U .S.^tiisitio n . . not iQclude the earn at 14% intnterest over th eyyears. T his chartrt That wayay y o u r retirem ei:n t w ill b e m ore: lli i k ^ “ Puerto Rican q u ^ nm con its agenda. but it was brought u{up during the should be used^ only as an exaijm ple. Foran a stroll ththrough the parl^(, than a m arch ddi i i o u g h discussion of the commlnmittee's aobual report which containsstber^lutlon. tbi incom e projectction based on yci^our specific d iccum i - ^ m ine field.fie M l be a ttole toJcxD k forw ana r d t o . ^ ------Tbe United Statestes 'and other W estern delegations baveba cautioned stances, see oui>ur retirem en t plaan n in g specialistst e . A nn c d h o w " against across4he-boan}ard ai^roval of th e re p o rt w hid» w ouldlid im e a n In d irec t acceptance of tbe commn m itte e ’s P u e rto _____ • J JI _ ^ ______♦ RicoresoluUon.— — But Sherman made! ccle le a r th e U nited Slates would ool Interpr!rpret an approv- T g s i s R feoph/^ndHc a l o f th e r e p o r t'a s p aisslng s s i the resolu- tion on Puerto Rico.I. TTbe resolutkin TW INFALLS ■ i^m m ends a (ull Ass — m I A-12 Timos-Now3. TwiTwin Falls, Idaho Friday, NNovem o bor 27.1981 Agecof comjiputer-6 3n-a-chlip Denver ymphomV fig h ts ccoughs • D E N ENVER (UPI) - The tranquilq u liity of th e m o m en t - Ms^s. Oienski sakl the decisionlion to use co'u^ d n ^ d u rinng g Denver Symphony concerts irts w o n 't b e distu rb e d w aIS s based-on a projcct by James Jai Pennebaker. a th is flu celebbrates 1 flu season by wheezing, snifsniffling and hacking socit:ial psycologlst at the UniverIversity of Viglnia, who lOthbin p a troons. n s - rthday founi md that people are m ost likelykely to cough w hen they . SAN FRANCISCOCO (UPI) - It Ihoughl ?hl of have come to be. You justjus processor was bomQ - as an Intei RealluUlzlng lh a l o n e p e rso n 's b airk rk inevitably leads lo - ares ini a large group or when lhe' h a rd ly s e e m s th a l long loi ago, but this can't pr Ihey hear the coughs of p r e d ic t." employee, Ted Hoff,', w orked on o »«>tbejbcr's answer until the audlenHence sounds as if 11 otheiiers nearby. month the revoliitioitlionary compute^ In the the iate 1950s, InventioQ of thethi family of circuit desjgiIgns' for a Japa- 'J'cre! irImllating the tympanic cres:resce n d o o f th e 1812 “‘Pennebakcr's P conclusions \ o n -a-ch lp b e c a m e 10lOyearsoId. y< integr IS were based on a grated circuit replace(ced nese maker of desktop) ccalculators. He Overtuilure, symphCny offlclals thiahink they've found a 'cou{lu^ogram' hc developed v It appeared aboutlUt th e tim e P re si- tra n s isti d which charted the, listors wllh tiny slices of etchet:hed realized a complex combination cc of solutloilion to the distracting problem,!m. numm l b e r a n d lo c atio n s o f co u g h s li . d e n t N ixon m a d e! hihis first trip to silicon, hs in an audience," Ms. he said the psychologist found)und lhal the larger the i of munJer and “Tliehe 1French Connec- of transliis isto rs. ed lo p ro v id e fre e sa m p le s to c Quickly, similar mlnlcroprocessors agreed lo co n c e rtg o e rs In th e grou])up, the larger the percentagelage of coughs. And, as t io n " w on a n O sca r. . U p to. t the eariy -19708, thry called ROM and a blanka n k w ould b e m o re th a n the th( en^neerlng production ofr 2: 0 0 m i l l i o n m e m o)ry ry ca lle d RAM . breakthrough of minilnlaturiiing a_ Y . F e a t u r i n g microprocessors r re e q u ire s - 250,000 — W hile le previous logic chips weree re ' c o m p u te r’s functions to tc a single in- ng • •. •Solocf Poinislnsottlos .employees and saleses Ihit billions. For highly’ specialized,s tbe cenlnd pro-)ro- tegrated circuit chip, computers-on*a-chlp,ip, that's still only cessor w • W ro Q tiis — A ll S iz o s, G r o o n ‘ was simple enough to be gen-len- It provided a devicee ithat couid be % thc beginning. e ra l purpose. u n Its uses could be widely " ond Flocko(k o d . lely inserted into a varietyy o f m a ch in e s, . M "When we firstJt introduced: the modifiedled by tbe memories attached, •Orr^amontsnts •Contprplocos 1. large and small, thafwjwas endless. In microprocessor, I couldi imagine The m microprocessor also incorpo-p o - e a c h — a lio m e comput)uter, for exam- a n moybe a dozen appllppllcations around rated m BEAUTIFU:UL memory and other functionsons ple - the intelligent cocore is nothing the home,". Intei (Hiairman Ou Gordon along wwilh the central processing ing morclhanasinglemlcrt>n^rocessor. ^ C H R I S T M A S T R E E S Moore said. “Nonee ofo them has yel facilityy liinto one computer-on-a-chip— }— And so wilh otheiier items - All fii* f r lo 20'— Cul CraCraon Traai A LIvoPottod Troai c o m c tr u e . a silico»n n piece the size of a child’s d’s electronic games, di^lgitai watchcs, • FIrt ;► sSpruco p oNobloPIno “ O n th e o lh c r hand,nd, many different fingemaJc a ll. stereos and now the lateitest models of . • Norway Pin* aCr• G rand F r . Whllo Ptno a p p lic a tio n s I wotiliotUd never have Thecoico n ce p t o f a sim p le a ll-p u rp o se aloL e g a l i sssues s surro Dund ‘surroo g a t e b a b y ■ DETROIT (UPI)I - A baby girl Theba b a b y w a s borrj M o nday in S lnnal al as the child's molherT on thc birth |H | bom this week to a "surrogate Hospital tJJ and Mnj. Appleyard, 20. c e rtific a te a n d th e fatbber’s e name will . m o th e r " w en t ho m e! froftt m th e ho sp ital tu m e d hi OallvarySarv I her over lo the Syrkowskls on be left blank. A firsl naname has been W* Con Bag Your Trao F wilh her father for ThanksgivingThj but Thursda] ao For Long Dliloneo Travol day, said Herb firaii. law clerkerk picked, but thc family 'li is keeping it a legal Issues surround undlng her birth for Noel]el Keane, Syrkowskl’s attorney.ey. s w r e t. rem ained unresolved.d. T h eS y ] S y rk o w sk ls v U H je a b le to koepsep Mrs. Appleyard andd her husband j George Syrkowskiki of Dearborn the baby by fo r a t le a s t six hio n th s u q dte* tf Roger agree thal Syrkrkowski is the p Heights, whose wife5 SheliaSl is unable a powci ver of attomey agreement•n t biol< i^cal f a th e r a n d do10 ] no t challe n g e ^ to bear chiidren,, paid| Corinne .allowed i IRICH’S d under tbe Michigan Probate fWllTH ite custody bf the Infant. BuBut Keane filed S60 FlWr Avonuo. Twin FalU Appleyard 110,000» plus; medical Code, BriBrail said. alU • 735-9647 a "friendly” lawsuit, sseeking a de- Opon Monday throihrough Saturday expenses to have hislis baby through But uni unlii the legal issues are re-re- flnltive declaratton ofl JSyrkowski as h h m artificial insemination.on. solved, MM rs. A p p le y ard w ill b e n a m eed d tbe legal father.
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f iINANCING n AVAIAILABLE BS h Sb b h I “F•rench n L ieutenan» n f ■ ; N e!w v R ingo albumn ' ■■ •■ A c t r e!sses s haunted-byby o n ec! o f y ear's b e st flif l i c k s : ' , - has 1 B eatles o l d1 nude photos
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PRojij^^H^L bby STEPHANIE SCHOIl O R O W k p h o t o g r a p h s b y ^ l l l e I tt f e o> f a BOB DeLASHMUTT (.(lUTIMES-NEWS^ ^ . £ y % . L ^ s t ia n d T'T.W
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just a joob he really; Ihues to do3
■cla sa y s. B ut p u t those JA C K P O Tr, , Nev. - “I don’t go0 around pulling HundrtIreds and hundreds," Garcia I say, '‘Show us whal you la m p sh a d e s5 oion my head,” said stand-upup comedian Hank authon>rs In a room togelher and saj s.Befunny.'”rheycan’tdoll.11. -> W ^ G a rc ia , eyeingling the nearest light fixture.t. w ro te. iK k y ^C. Fields once said comedltedlans can'l,' be experts, Backstage;e ai t C a ctu s P e te ’s G a la RoRoom, before the "W.C o n 't know w hy they m a k e / ^ I . night's first.Iit phow,-Garcia muses overirer-how strangers Theynm a k e people lau g h , th e y d o n ’t X H e x p e c t h im to’lo ll>e cracking Jokes every cha:hancehegels. peoplele la u g h .” 'actus Pefe's croH-d with For somcoieone who must scintillate:e lfo r h is su p p e r, Carcrela prods his tooixlite Cacti -JR^ '' Jl larcla seems like a seriousIS kindi of guy. He storiessso/AisAarrfii/e; "SomeUmtUmes Vm so /ruseen wrltt«rllten (on humor). •See com c Pag i " d m i
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3 H«nkiik Garcia cheers, mantpitpulatea aod m llkt hlaI aaudience during a recei:cent visit to Jackpot B-2■Hmes-News. Twin Falls.18. Idaho!■ ■ Friday. Novemberit 272 ,1981 — — , 1KAlb toI broadcaast |:6 a len i d a r ffrom. Twidn Falls areaa T W IN FA L L S - P u b lic television tel is “Snow Goose,’’se,’’ P a u l G alileo’s ac- '"ff yoti have an Item«m for-The-TImes-New^ charcoal sketching and pec. 4 1 "It’s a Wonderful Ufe,”' stalling , ‘Wve. . Lincoln Elementary. ' ,, : ; TWIN FALLS-Bartlart Bracket Is offering art Sundaysat5,6:30,8and9:4‘9:45p.m. Dec. D( € at 2 p.m.. at Uie Li Jimmy Stewart and Doomma Reed. Friends of Four, Fo a Bolse4>ased School. 210 West 4Ui. AdmlImission Is free, b u t^ , - : classes for children agei]g es 6 through 16 y e a r s old. Sc which will be aired Thurs(rsday and_public supportrl ggroup, will produce 'u r f Club will p rese n t a n do ^ accep ted . ' " ] > ; Classes will Includc wat(v a ter color, a c ry lic paining, TWIN FA LLS-The Turf d o n a tio n s w iii b e g ra te fu lly ac Friday nights respectlvely.1 Wlnterfest In hoihonor of the Nation's • AlP''oriijvinled for Sundayyatep.m I . lothseasononUieI Uie a ir. A maa In the Cac'Cactus Pete's audience yelpsJ ssomething _ _ unintelligible at GatGarcia. “You a comedian, too: ------asks. “That'sright;.ht; Ilaughed when you walkedJ i k ’?"'"'" C B SI cat n c e ls quuality shouV FORTHE Comicc—----- G arela’s "big brebreak" camc when Connie Stcjtevens saw PROFE3FESSIONAL •C ontinuenu ed fro m P a g e B l his acl and askedI hirhim to open her show. He’s sinIncebeenon ^KENNETHIHR.CLARK InIrritating people wbo need1 to1 be Ir- APPIPPROACH Ilshing Uie yQ ' • Hc insists he’s not rclnfoinforclng stereotypes: "Not whcvhen I the Merv Griffin1 show,8li the Mac Davis show,V. U»e M ike UPI TV Reportorter rilritated and generally demolU r o YOUR tempt Douglas show andid oother TV shows. There's nonoUiing like ______foforccs of apaUiy. • s o m e ou t In a $300 to $400DO ssu il and m a k e a d e ce n t atten HE/BEARING • at thc king's English; TmI’n> breaking the stereotypes withw televlson for exposuijsu re . But “Up To 77ie Minute,te," H’hlch PRCPROBLEM, : tJint. B u t If 1 c a m e In andd slsle p t ag ain st a c a c tu s a n d talalked ll "Oh, oh, I saw you.yoi no. don’t teU me, on Mervrv. no Mike NEW YORKflK -.N o one Is going lo made Its debut on Sept. 28,8. isn't, as Douglas. DO, on Carslarson! You're whatslsname.-’'•’WhenUils ' m isssudilightghtw elghl p rim e tim e fa re : H ke d e c e e s e .. Uiey say In network boaila rd ro o m s, I Bandlto Image; he avoids com-co happens. Garcia hashasn’t the heart to say he’s nev(iverbeenon a8ABC's"Mag!aggle” or CBS's "Jessica “ SEE ; ' He dislikes the Frlto Bt "pulling Uie numbers.'’ Forj - ments on thievery and peipersonal cleanliness. But hele wv ill Jo h n n y C a rso n , Novak," butt to strangle "Up To Thc U ly and redeeming social K va JACKV1KWARBERC'S - ‘ poke (un at his grandpadparenls who bave hundredsids of Gareik who Is in ht is mld-30s, still bci)es to geget pasl Uie Minute.” almomost at blrUi, should be ^ penally for that Is dcaUi. : religious statues on theirelr dashboard. They need them.the "whalslkpameV sla{stage. If he doesn't "m ake It,'It." h e s a y s d e e m e d a felon Hearing; AAid Counselors : % ere are so many, theyy ccan'l see out the windshield.!ld. h e h e 's s t u r ^ a t e j u l1 behe can make a living at som «k-wrllten -, q j | ,mething l« ^el, facedid wlUi Uie bottom -line ABC’s Erma Bombecli LUE LAKES NORTH loves doing. \ "Maggie." and two. CBS i r e a liti e s o f Uie Un marketplace, Uiat Is " L™ ?. " TWINFALLSa i S , IDAHO 63301 : : On-stage Garc/a admits.Its he doesn't at'the macho LatinLa But how does bee re a c t lo a bad n i ^ t ? "Y o u me "Jessica Novak" and "Sha K S thecrlmewhftihfchCBShascoromilted. la n n o n — p h o9NE: n e 7 3 3 4 6 0 1 ' stereotype. His room hasjas posters of Cheryl TIeggs,p , Bo cut my wrists?’^te asks.i "Any kind of rejectloi a ls o h a v e fallen u n d e r Uich e N ielsen ber0k and Ruth BiazJ. doesn't as much aAlllAllusedto." " U p T o T-he h e Minute." a new 2-2:30 a a x e . “ M a g g ie ” Is " o n h ia tuIS'’ s' w h ere II ^ e 16 years experts I “When I get hurt I cry like a baby." Silence. Then TI Perhaps In no ot^3t W profession Is fee d b ac k so liulania- p.m., vcmlonin of( '*60 M in u tes" - king probably p wlU remain. "Shananoon” will We hove 1 ’ -emerging from his throat,at, ibarsh aod realistic. Is a waivail of neous as in stanckn c ^ comedyl Authors waitIt lor book ol the Nielsen'en T(^i 10 - is one of b e st, be b continued In productkioon and re- «nce andd tlthe lotest equlpr a 6-month-oId, so startllngl,Ingly realistic bis audience lauia u ^ re v ie w s ; a c to r s wal^wait for tho play’s finale, mususicians for most daringlg aod controversial in- scheduled ^ at . a laler daliate, which ment to) properlyp fit th* with amazement. the song's end. A Afl ft* every line, comediansOS have an depUi news reportsre ever to grace an m n e a n s U iat som eone UilIhlnks the finest hearlearlng aids avail*' : Gania launches IntoI hLhis trademark. Saying he> oionce immediate appraisealsal.Xll’s addicting and deilevastallng. oU)crwlselamirnlsbedtubc. doctors d mlghl save it. “Jess•sslca" will able. All^11 olds are dlt« \i orked at a Spanlsh-IanguiIguage TV station dubbing Engingllsh G a rc ia o ften w o nd d e ers r , ev en en ro u te lo a sh o w, ,""Why am I produced bybj Grace Diekhaus and breaUie b her last Wednesday.y^ ______wwith it 30 day trial. . ------shows, he proceeds to dodo a P e f e r T ^ k imitation -— In— dolngthls to myself? ------Staffed by Uie'stalwarts-ofUm Uie-"‘60------ices are competl* iMrs. M O fle n h e m u s t "■be b e fu n iy " w i m he’s U red, d e j Only"UpTo Tlie Minute”"Iswortha ! Pi-I'*' Spanish. Followed by Joh:lohn Wayne, Porky Pig and lepressedor Minutes" crevrew, It specializes In pro- tlv e . Olsen. Spanish with a Swedvedlsh accent? Si-eeee. when Ihere’s been!en national dlsaster."SometleUmes It’s bing forbiddenlent(^ics,raislnghacklcs, ' w ^ ak e . : When he takes on MorrisTis the Cat, his voice cracks IntInto a easiest then. I wond3nder,ftow I’m going lo get ihi[hrough this giggle. "My Morris soundsnds like he's been tlxed, "he bitblurts night and then I get;e t o4 u t b n sta g e 'a n d th e peoplele scream . I out. It sounds like he broktvke himself up, but the laughjh iand wonder. "Am I doing)ing this? I don’t believe It. Thetie m o re you |------(hellne are repeated exactiactlylnhissecondshow. t r y In co m e d y , th eB le less funny I tls .” : Nexttothe(alleged)RutRuth BuzzI poster in Garcia'ssW W e st T h e m o sl d ifficuu itlt p1 a rt of h is Job. h e feels; IsI nod t com ing ' Hollywood home Is a (real) (rej poster with a saying! byb; a up with new materiterial; It’s doing Uie same olold schtlck F re n c h philo so p h er, " B■e e ableal to sacrifice whal you areir e for n ig h t a fte r n ig h t ain n d m a k in g It se e m fre sh . w h a t yo u w ill b e In th e fuu tu re ." ‘HelIot3 bIesandafd chairs," Garcia says, walkia■Jng onstage , ; Bom In Los Angelestes and raised outside off SanI for his second Cactiactus Pete’s show of tbe algh “I'm a ^rancisco, Garcia start©irted doing sland-up routinesnes In litUe bit differentnt jfrom your Jewish comediidlans. I'm unlor high school. He maj(fiajored In d r a m a a t San Jo sei SSI tate Mexican." The crowrowd fills only the back com■aersofthe Jniverslty. was draftedd Inli the mid-1960s and spentnt tw< o Gala Room, but thehheir lau^ter Is louder than tbehe previous y e a r s in th e A rm y . crowd. ' D u rin g th e n e x t sev en1 to eig h t y e a rs a s h e struggledie d fo r “...W hen I gett hihurt, I cry like a baby." TTiee rreaction to recognition, he worked In Catskills< resorts and in topiopless his walling baby isIs IrInstaneous and intense, grow.fwlttglouder Jo in ts In L os A n g eles a nd SSi a n F ra n c is c o . H e called IIt grg re a t as Garcia grows! shshriller. He draws a deep breath.b He training, making peoplele 1 la u g h w ho c a m e to se e n nai aked usually stops Itr here, h but he begins cryhying anew, women; "the last thing theythe; want to see is a guy." provoking fresh laugaugbter. Walling, be drags outJt every^ last H e le a rn e d to do d g e IceX c u b e s and lis te n to ad v icc : ""i G e t bit of laughter fromtm the audience. ' offlhestagel" N ow . th a t’s U mling. ing GiftsS l olible 'TE !' AndPPractical Too!1 Stainleless Flatware C< u tlery ^ I I . overSOpallernsrns |||H ||||||| M nmm H u Best Selection Ever I Oneida H ri Case-ChlcajIcago - Buck ■ Henekel - G erli r b e r , S e ls o r O p e n Stock> I United Spoclally Pricod:o d nBinH :] for Christmos SeassQ so n I I I I H I \
V i c t o r ! Cookwarere ‘T f T S t r a l mn e f I M ! 'R o v o re II Forberworo •PuroosSSoup , Magnolito • B o b y & D ie tI FFc o o d s |i Ciub Aluminum • Tomofo SauceJCO Silvorstone • No Peeling oor r C o rin g W o s tb o n d ' All lln«i purcha»«d fa< ; 2 9 9 9 ^ = * ^ • K r / , ^ dirsct for lowar pricat. R.g- I I $ 3 6 .9 5 . . A
Staniclley Tope Rulesi . SPICIAI ’A" b lad es Food Dehydrar o to r s lo«Kt>«n»ly». Pfoctlci(ItoI fxin R « g . S \ Way l6 Praiarv*'• Food. I lOII. .. *9.99 *( 3mod«l>tochoo(«l'• Irom. 12ft. . $10.69
1 6 f l. . $ 1 2 .9 9 *1 . » i 4 r * I $ ^ 8 8 ...... * ^ . 201!. . S13.99 *' S a y ''M I erry Chnststm as, Love" WtllCjllf { 25fl. . $15.49*11 0 ” 1 FreeC(Gift Wrapping3 ■ J w i th ag ifto f 14 kk a r a t g d d ! ZALESCH5 CREDIT; INCLUDING •'ct to Moms IlKshaiodd ir ^ nocouortry Ihoso on sole. T . , 117 MviAi.s-ai AvENt:*. W e s t - ANitomisuDioc I M I M i S ------/ ' Friday, Noverem ber 27.1981 TIm os-N etfs.'w s. Twin Fa1ls..Ida)io B-3 Ringo> Starr'i’s*Rose3s\albu1171/eat]turesBeleatles; notI Lernnon sastrous late-'70s period B y S T E V E M O R S E ____ I is n 't. “ I ’m agaigainst that {cocaine)," ho minisclng m about thc Beatles,s, why did following a dlsast .©196IBortaoGk)be says on a seri«srious note. “ B ul w c knew —-h ht e resurrect -Beatlo-lyrics?-:U i W h a L l t - In-, 'v h ic h ^ h is; sosolo albums steadily as.soon as we did it. that would get m tr a in ly w a s go in g to be w as lineslii from declined, cappe always come off as more! ccongenial done It before.c. SoSc I s a t around w ith no lat didn't comc perty," a ratrathcr silly pop tune do- f do a few tracks, but lhat i th a n ta le n te d , esp ecially a s} a vocalist, g r e a t en lh u Slasmtodoanaibum.” la sn n a te d by McC)cCactney. “She’s mlnc/she U about," Starr said, spcakia k in g by phone T h a t re m a in s tru e on his ne« belongs to m n e.. .she’s my privale ‘ Stnrr rinal.yliy got the fever again recently from Los AngelcSelcs. "W c h o d . . ■ though there aro a (ew ------' p ro p e rty ” aare r the lyrics, and the J -car, “I was wandering • Ibis raeeting In the Plazclaza H otel, a n d •------Wood’s smoldering ■ ■ D e ad y ' " reference appippcars to bc to Ringo and » /orld and I thought, well. •he was really up for)r it. He was Giveaway," Stephen Stills'1’ smoolhlv around the worli ing to do 11 in Lennon onn thc 11 album. “That's nol my h i is w ife, a c tre s s B a rb a ra Bach.B his wife. "Y('Yeah, il was written tor ) lolng that, 1 might as well------excited. We were going funky "Nice Way" and Carl[rl P c S while I was doln, nature," h(he says modestly, adding Now It is his LP. whicilch fcalures 'Barbara andnd me. She’s my privale > um a s w ell." J a n u a r y ." country sing-song "Sure tcto F a ll In m a k e nn a lb u m I cut short by. that "theI onlyor tribute Is to my 'three songs i not Just by McCaJartncy and property,” JStarr says, tongue-ln- J ' Those pians werc cu •Love wllh You") that aro aiamong thc The new albunibum is important lohim, st December, brothers,’’ whichw Is a line al thc back Harrison but by Ronrnnic Wood, cheek. Askedked If h e m ig h t g e t-in lo -J Lennon’s death last best songs he has recorded,j. in gener- he says, "becau^ausc I'm coming back . a d e de m o ta p e s o f I h e a lb}um.-It u r wasn't In me to do a S : te p h e n Stills, H a rry Nilss(5son a n d C a rl tro u b le w ithh vwomen’s groups tor such t Lennonhad already made a l, th e re ’s a n uptow n teel tcto the new into the music;ic business..t .I’m really - they merely tribute thinhlng. I loved the man. The P e rk in s . a sentiment,nt. he adds humorously, ^ of the new son^ — tl disk (lots of saxophone),, Ibul Starr more interesiediled in do in g album s rig h t Rlngo’s vocals man is gonem e. W e a ll h a v e lo c a rry on.” Thc title song. “Stop anmd Take the “Yes, I cann (get Into a lot of trouble, t a w a ite d th e a d d in g o f Rli r„„nrt rocommlHed toJ I:his music, now than moviesv ie s.” ■ but Starr subsequentlyntly shied away For his5 part,p Starr is carrying on, Time to Smell thc Roses," co-written but we can'llI't help that either. At leasl ' from them for use on his new album bloodiedbul bui unbowcdrHis philosophy' by Ringo and Harry Nii'liisson, is a Barbara’snotnoloftended." ' " S to p a n d T a k e th e T immc'to e' Smell the appears 10toi b c s u m m e d up in "A ll th e( . virtual summary of the! 19811 Ringo. T h e re a re o th e r novelty so n g s on the Roses,” which Is his finfir s t'r e le a s e in s a m e I play pi; the game," a verse! “W hat’s all this hurry? H,Have a good LP, includinding “Drumming is My r P U B L - -threeyears ______• ' ____ HarrisonI wrotew for him tn the song.', tim e In life. Don't Ict ever::j7^ h in g p ^ ___M a d n ess" iw lth Ringo singing in his___ . "Of course I wouldId haveI gotten “WrackMy My B r a in .” Ju sfch o sen a s th e! ' ’ y o u b y . . .Y ou’r e only h ejre n once; and patented hea:learty tone, '‘Drumming is great publicity from It, but 1 didn’l first singletJe off the new album. I've been here longer thi[ban most ot my middle2 nname; drumming makes want to use a dead frierriend,” he says Playingg thet game- — at-least the! you,” he recltcs during a stream-of- me g6 insaisa n c ’’); and “ B ack Off blu n tly . “ T h ey w an tedd to tc send them, promotloffalhal game — is something alL consclousncss portion he calls thc Boogaloo."■ vwhich incorporates snlp- but. I said 'No, I don’t’t wantv to hear which theic 40-year-old‘ Ringo Starr Is5 s o n g ’s " m a d v e rb a l” p a rt.i. . pots ot oldd 1 Beatles verses, such as /oice on them, I very sklllellled. These days he does5 Despite thc song's breceezincss. one "good day’ sunshine,’'si "1 need some- thepi.’ Just put your voic Snpke R iver Auctionl o n we had played interviewsvs only < w h en h e h a s a p roductt of the verses (“take thec time to fill body.. .notit JustJi anybody” a n d "w h a t s was told; But no. If we Evary Saturdoy 10: A.M. to g e th e r a n d done it togetIgether, it would to sell. Eariler Eai this year it was his5 your noses’-’) will neverthiheless incite do you sec» when you tum off thc m o v ie ""Caveman," O a lightweightt c o n tro v e rsy . It sounds likiike a cocaine light?" have been different.” WIDIDNIiDAY, DICIMB Bi I R 3 N e ith e r Is th e re a n ^ RRit ingo trib u te to ju n g le spoojoof in which he romped with} Joke, but Starr is quick to point out il Consldcrinring- Starr dislikes ro-' M IM EQUIPMENT tarliiamant Novam bar 30. Sola.Tima Tim U:00e.m. wstanccs you ingested, You may respondm d th a t it's b a d N ow youu c a n fin d o u t for sure. enough to-pay ».98 Ilu5 has released "On The but that plane fare I old of a Dream" (NR21), bit steep. (And Brli >bile F id e lity announced th c f e u fo r ab o u t $10.)W ent release of "Days of leave the country.. St>‘ i r F I M t y P a s s e d ," w hich it sa y s m a y Sound Lab andd Nautilus Re- ot the highest quality pop GiveQirlamour. cordlngs are tnutnundatlng the “ ^JJ^Ilh ilc a lb u m s 11 h a s presse d , I market with some oof the best pop r Nautilus releases Include WV ant to im press y ouD urbeautitil people th;his pressings ever. 5 by Little Feat, J. Cells a lb u m s t Christmas?c Give a prpresent for th e iutureE , ; The last Ume tbithese audiophile Band, PabloPa Cruise. Eric Clapton. : r e c o rd c o m p a n ies s wwere mentioned the Alim;Iman Brothers, Al Stewart -oneofthe'DesignLiLine®phonesfrom imcs Taylor. Mobile Fidelity . In this column, theirleir releases werc and Jam( M ountain BeU. Like;etheCelebrity®knocl I ck- a m e r e tric k le , a few all-time groat releaseses include the. Rolling ; . chartbuster pop allalbums, or ones Stones,, the I Beatles, the Kinks, out.Theyj;e0 beautifulllilly practical, so they Tull ("Aqualung" is out- that were partlculicularly good for Jethro T getg used and enjoyeded long after other giftL ' audio demonstraticatlon and a few standing]ng), Al Stewart and half a classic discs. Thar h a t tric k le h a s d o z en classics. cl Including Fritz are gone. And they’lli^Tl remind your loved\ turned ioto a lorremrent, and although Reinerr with w the Chicago Symphony ■ ' 111IIIIIIIII 1 ^ones to call you more)re often. W hat other: Springsteen Isn’tt IrIncluded In this Orcheslr:s lra . orgy of great soui>ound. Just about SheffleH eld L ab s, p e rh a p s th e m o st Chnsfmas presents3 letle you give and recei e v e r y o lh e r po p stasta r r Is. fa m o uIS s of < audiophile record pro-. soS much? Stop in att youry Bell PhoneC ent[Iter - ’The other greateat news Is that ducers,5, Issued a direct-toKlisc a w onderland of deccCO' these albums areire no longer re- pressingng of “Tower of Power” as Store.S C hoose from1 a strictedtoaudiophllphlle stereo stores, w ell as a a new Amanda . ing services and Gift M a n y o f th e m a joo r rc1 c o rd re ta ile rs M cB roorwm-Lincoln Mayorga col- jive the gifts that w f1 stock the complet(ilete catalog. You laboratioItion. Telarc. the most pro-- sserjsa 1 them at a slight llflc digltal dig classics audiophile I ^ might even find th maken you both locJcic egood a l year long. discount. The nonriirnialpriceofthese label.Is Is releasing at least a disc a1 111 I I III II I audlophUe pressingingsis$l&-$20. m6nth,li\, including recordings by the! I I II I I I I I III I Don’t be fooledled by the major , Bostonn Symphony.S -rccord-labftlfi. RCAICA and Columbia We’llII h1 a v e a n o th e r ro undup ofr d isc s in a few w eeks. are releasing s i>called x b audiophile these dls I
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• 0.»i'»oia>!)OP>ooi>1001 OiilMtei. . '•<] m Krnluitv I fVAN WmiAWS Dl'il'Lll'lV' ■ “ ^ ) M o u n^ 1 B e l F O R ^ ;• IJ03. OJ'dilc B-4 T im es-N ew s. Twin Falls.3lls, Idaho Friday, N o v em b> $ B y V ER N O N SCOTT . ------a n o th e r T woman who was involved inal. UPI mllyuvxl ReporterT I slckenin;in g a c t. I w as a fra id o f w h ailm t r yhBband__P3 lJ^lonjJ ‘ I was In Chicago, a Playbo;joy photo- — %Z9 w o u ld Ihth ln k .” , ask ed m e lo pose to ta lly n u d eta a: n d lsa id I J a imie e Is married lo makeup artartist Jeremy grapher ask long as my facc would not bcirecognlz- r S w an, FHe went out to buy the msmagazine and HOLLYWOOD - Nudeude photographs, often able. I hadad posedj for a Playboy cover•earlier e In — ' re tu m ec tl d laughing. p o ^ by starving younglg nmodels and actresses. • In which I was recognizable3le. I was I T T ~ 'lieved Jaime said Jeremyy 1realized Uie a bikini In oflen comc back loHauraunt-thBbcautics-aflcr ------when il .was._publlshed bc<)ccause it c w a s a phony a n d illeg ally pupublished. Bul shocked wl Uiey’ve become famous, nore of my bottom than I'd roallallzed. Y doesn’t plan to bring suit,11 against the Marilyn Monroe, Suzaluzanne Somers, Stella totally nude Playboy photogr;graph w a s ------J— ,• nour giris who posed au — A reli'sine. Slevens and other glamou w o m a n Iro m a v e ry a rtist:tlstlc and my hair was coi larrassment over those p ic tu recd \ how a n Intelligent yo u n g wc )w lil hold until nalurel suffered embarr :ed Into posing shadow mymy face so I couldn't be iden . S ' o o : ' taining celebrity In laler | J a im efamily c background Is enticed C hrh r lil m o i youthlul nudes after attaii a u llfu l pose. J a im e h'ad a re a d y explanalloiHon. y e a r s . or commercial------T h e n -I-.-1-came-to-Hollywood.and.p.posed J o r _ . ___ EXTRA CHWCHRISTNAS SPECIAL llm of naked modeling Is o v i e s e g a n m odeling In C hicago fo r a lo ty p a d lo r o n ly The most recent victim That's world Penthousese because I was really broJ•oke. They $ 1 7 5 ta lo i H good faigraphers," she said. "Th Jaim e Lyn Bauer,-whoJ slslarsinlhe eoap-opcra—-publl6hed-in-tacky,-horrible- pu m me I was posing in an artrt form of $50 wvlth ith purchaso of luarters.tor catalogue modeidellng. H you assur^ m( “ T h c Y cu n g and T h c R esllcsllcss." tr:t r y to m a k e it sound a s if 1 pos<______1 n u d e . J a 1 nudes. I w a s su pposed to b c ppaid».CKXI i Trom polinoIno boloro Doc. Sth led lingerie, you were paidI ddouble. So to beautllul nu Therc has been a vcrltarltable publishing bonan- re c e n tly . “ I beg ,e ric “ fi lot t m ot oney — fo r th e c e n te rfo ld . In skin magazines which "They make me feel as If I’dmagflzines-whNh phologrm o re m oney I m odeled lin g e r z a o f J a im e in th e buff I n ! Is. bixly oil or “But [Irc refused lo assume any lewdd iposes, SO hotos from their original dirty dii b^ause those magazines[)osed for th e m ju st h c a d q uyou t did soap commerelals. have snapped up thc phot' orked nude but they paidd men a fraction of thc promlised ls $8,000 andan degrading. I makes me m o d elc(•r door commercials you worl o w n ers. ely n u d e , if you a n d p rinte te d d th o ph o to g rap h s a s a I h Md feature.'.'-..-I d and thc njolher of a a as sso c ia te d w ith them . I’d done something make em r e nol p h o to g rap h e d en tirely Jaime, now married i Id of work you She also]so posed for some test photogi•graphs for ' "Actually, the photographsInes aro disgusting “If yiwhat I mean. For that kind couple of toddlers, has5 bosed nude a n d b e a u ty of m y ow n fre1 ' in th e d a y s of th e old P roduM*n T u rn er, I c a n ’l help but O F d i n i n g o n th e en v y b a rr ie r. Id h is nock. In fac l, 1 d isa g reee the days when filmmakers,the subtle ways Humphrey T U R D A T c h ie f Je r r y F a lw e li and h 3.1 contend that, for rcasla so n s I c a n ’t co m p re h en d , SATU hip of any kind (wilh thcc had to bc more creative.all A handled such situations with them. Censorship c e r ta in a c to rs - lik e Robert Rol Duvall and Bruce O ^ N O V I MIM I D IR IS T H possible exception off self-censorship) Is a most:t h o d any dlfli'cully flgurlnioduclion Code. Those were st Dern — don’t play wellII opposite( w om en, w hich o Insidious evil, and more)re than ever before, we needd B a b y w e re up lo. :rs, be ca u sc of restric tio n s, ATURING , might be the one factoctor keeping them from 0 an informed public cnc(incouraged to think Indepen-1- We have to come togelhi!. And I don’t think anyone ring oul what Bogey and superstar status. THE ARLOLON BASTIAN d e n tiy . what mosl people do: We c ng of lhe way movies are But we also need tolo \hamper the inhuman faree for films like “Savage Bei VIEWPOINT: Speaking o BAND - time, condemn peopleelher w on this. Wc can't do sold, have you noticedd how effective the TV r 1 being passed off as "ai“art" and entertainment - , j, 1 DInnor Fromm 7:00lo9J)0PJ«.7 'e can’t display our disgust advertisem ents tor filmss hhi a v e be en la tely ? lascivious junk iiite TV’jPV’s “Three's Company” andd somelhing about Ihem-So 0 A\\ \ D a n c in g Starting ta r t 019:00 PJ». h av e d e te rio ra te d In re c e n t anti-social movies llice"e " I Spit on Your Grave" andid firs t sle p . Beasts" and, at the same _ T h e a t e r tr a ile r s m a y hav i are super, easily serving ■r porton Includoi dInnor “Savage Beasts" {'‘S<[“See teen-agers eat theirir ! who are trying to do ye'ars, bul the TV spots ai |\\i\ ‘S.OOp.,,. PRONOUNCEMENT:.Someone J has to lake the their purpose. They efflcliiclcntly create a desire to parents!” ). se e th e film b e ln g h aw k exl. d . )p«rporiondrdonco If Ihey can rid ouriir )airwaves and theaters ofJf thoughts on women In mov ■ m . ‘4.00p. Thc TV spots for suclluch films as “Rich and FOBRESIRVATICATIONS CAUi 753-0710 shows that laice advantaintagc of (and bastardize) thc1C orleave: : Here are a few idle Famous," "Continental1 Divide."I “Only When I Firsl Amendment, wlUwithout interfering with thele i.l contend lhal Jacquelli ill In " R ic h a n d F a m o u s" Isnovies, be which you can take Laugh” and “True ConConfessions” arc actuaUy 7 3 4 - 2 0 0 0 truly Innovative, fine.e. If1 they can spare us Phil >y Meryl Streep’s in “The belter lhan the films themsm selv cs. Donahue’s selMmportajrtant. self-serving sexology I lellne Bisset’s performance s b e tle r lh a n th c overhyped CreateB a silhoiiuette rhe FVench Lieutenant’s ."ILVJTO for sonmething different( ByJOHNALDERSON)N I------© iSSJ ChicagoSun’TImrimes t ^ H pf S I 2 2 1
Silhouettes'are outoutlines - dark shapes seen againstt a brighter back- S L Q il O P Y ground. They canbevie very mysterious 5^ lo A N N ICASTLE because we see no detail in thc silhouetted subject, onlonly Its torm . W h en m o v ie a n d TVrv ]producers want HH ' to create an aura offf mmystery about a characlcr, they oftenen show thc char- MM acter in silhouettee so! the viewer cannot easily identifyify him. This tech- l* nl « o t o g r a p h y n lq u e is a lso u se d w herh e n a w itness in an I------expose docs not wishsh tto be Identified, psychologlogy lexis contain such percep- • Silhouetting the witncjin ess allow s him to iu a l c x;erciscs. e n and most of us proba- a p p e a r o n c a m e ra wllwllhoul really be- bly havevc seen the classic example of in g se e n . th e d rawiwing l lhal is either a goblet or • In still photography,ihy, the silhouetted two facesces looking at cach olher. de- subject lends to becoricome a symbol. A pendingig on0 w hich p a rt of th e im age Qtis man or woman seciseen in silhouette taken as as "figure” and which as cannot be identifiedd a;as one particular “ground.'id ." person, so he or she can becomc a In terrerms of exposure, silhouettes symbol of Man orDr Woman In the are veryry easy to do - and I’m sure a us have made some uninten- framework of the: inImage. This ten- lot of us 1 dency can be useded as a conscious tional oneson< byforgeltlngto meter our d e v ic e b y th e p h o lojgrapher, g rt who must subjectsrts carefully. ( H th e n p a y c a re fu l alattention to the To malnake a sUhouetle, simply place N o v . 1 38 - P e c . ^ ___Dee. TtlIh-Pec. aot background against5t w hich the silhou- th e subjiibject to be outlined against a c ite is p la c e d so visu^ O P E N ed vocalist from CALL NOW FOIOR RESERVATIONS> >nceWelkShow • SHERR _____ 208-733-516313 or 702-755-2321 T O N I G H Fe^ature< 4 T M Lowren ' T I L 9 P . y J C aMjbUCS T 5 C
PQaJfPIC IA t.______C A C Tru U s PITE'S rU Y lUHBAy \ S H O> W W T I M I S * 9 r S ) bulUt In Iho convention room „ h u dlnlnfl room ar.d got iho \ . SU N D A YY Ihthru SATURDAV a rclr««. Th* p ritoi goooor> al lhe Ho F»uoCt