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Show r-I- Friday, April SOUTH SALT LAKE HERALD Page 2 The patrons of the Granite School District have car. Review - " T" payments, house payments, dentist bills, insurance payments,' food bills all of which are, what you might call, HfllVdrd fixed costs. individual, under God s laws, with certain unalienable rights. So build two stories with Cinder Blocks. SOUTH SALT LAKE HERALD 2185 South 9th East Publisher-Edito- r - - Vol. 24 : How about a friend or two of the "Pocketbook"? at PRINTERS INC. IN J. Dohn Lewis No. 17 32 Yes, we need more school buildings in Granite Di- strict - We need a few. But we do not need luxurious palaces. We need places for children to gather and sit down so that they might be exposed to learning. The buildings need to be warm in the winter. A high school in the district was built, we understand, at $11 a square foot. How about going for $8 a square foot and a twenty percent cut back in the square foot needs? J. Dohn Lewis Editorial Granite School Bond Needed Books The Granite School Board met and tumbled about somewhere between an $8,700,000 and $12,200,000 bond. The idea was to qualify, for certain, for State Aid. Now the State Aid figure is an estimated $8,700,000 dollars based upon a certain percentage of an estimated assessed valuation of 165 million dollars in property taxes. The Board appears to have agreed to come to the lint filled pockets of the Granite District citizens who are facing a $27 million bond for their county improvements. Agreed, that the $27 million may be as high as $40 million and that at whatever limit it finally reaches it will be split with the city. We are for, generally speaking, school districts which support themselves. We, generally, are for and will support, with reservations, the coming school bond. "The Snake Has All the Lines" Penned by Kerr of Daisy Fame Friday, S May, the following books will be added to the shelves of the South Salt Lake Library at 2480 South State. FOR ADULTS The Snake lias All the Lines by Jean Kerr, is the answer to cries of "More! More!" which greeted Mrs. Kerr's enormously successful "Please Don't Eat the Daisies." Return To Japan, by Elizabeth Gran Vining, ' takes the reader to the royal wedding and observes the great political and social changes of the past decade. What we are for, we cannot get at this time. That South of the Angels, by is more private schools so that more and more parents West, is a rich and spacious with background book can economically afford to send their children to private the founding of a community, Jes-sam- yn schools. forty years ago, on a tract of Los Angeles. But, back to the bond issue. av-al- We like goodies, we once liked popcycles. We like buildings designed by Walter Gropius. We want a new Thunderbird, heck, we even want an old Thunderbird. Why, we even want a new pair of shoes. But, we can't afford to have a member of the Bau-hadesign our home, buy any kind of car, or buy a new pair of shoes. us tory of opera from its origin in 1600 to the present day. MOTHER IS MINE, by So- phie Guggenheimer Untermey-e- r and Alix Williamson, is the memories of a New York City woman whose energy, good ity to create chaos where order nature, malapropisms and reigned have made her life and the lives of those around her a joyous confusion. HOW TO BE A FATHER, by Frank B. Gilbreth, Jr., solves all problems from the moment the great news is flashed to the day Daddy's Sweetheart takes her first step. abil-origina- lly BOTS AND GIRLS BETSY'S LITTLE STAR, by Carolyn Haywood, is a novel about a little girl 4 years old and her older sister. Love's Refrain, is a new romance by Jane Corby. on A SIIIRTAIL TO HANG TO, by Beth Day, is the story of Cal Farley and his boys ranch community of 240 boys, 36 buildings and 8,000 acres in Amarillo, Texas. AN THROUGH OPERA Gass Irene and GLASS, by disHerbert Weinstock, is the STOWAY TO AMERICA, by Borghild Dahl, is based on historical fact and tells of a young girl and Cleng Peerson, one of INDY AND MR. LINCOLN, by Natalia M. Belting, is based on the true incident of Indy's (the pig)) rescue by Abraham Lincoln. Continued on Page 3, Col. 1 We have paid several visits to the library and walked filled among its partially stacks. for (Librarianese shelves) We did not see on the shelves a new' book which we have read. This book was written by a distinguished list of Harvard almuni who are protesting the type of thinking promoted by the economic theories of John Maynard Keynes and the Fabian Socialists which is fare at Harvard. . now-standar- d The book has the title "Keynes at Harvard," $2.00 paperback, Veritas Foundation, Box 340, Wall Street Station, New York 5, New York.) The book, 114 pages of documented evidence, tells the "pitch" of this economic theory and exposes Mr. Keynes and his graduates for exactly what they are. One need know absolutely nothing about economics to understand and appreciate this book. We recommend it to &U. A few other books wc would like to see in the "stacks" we list below: The Evolution of a Conservative, W. H. Chamberlain. Autumn of Liberty, Harper. Planning for Freedom, Mises. The John Franklin Letters, Anonymous. Up From Liberalism, Buckley. The Rise and Fall of Society, Chodorov. Panmunjon, Vatcher. Inside the State Department, Barron. While You Slept, Flynn. Brainwashing in the High Schools, Root The number of pupils per teacher has dropped in the public schools for 36 in 1900 to 29 in 1930 and to 24.4' in 1960-B- l. . . at this rate it will be 1970. CONVENIENT LOCATIONS We would like to see about 8 more schools in the district. But, let's have them made of cinder block (approved Operation Abolition Rim Rental $10.00 Call INgersoll Herald Office 32 23 to 24 pupils per teacher by CHECK THESE We hope they weren't scheduled as a threat only. No huge student parking lots, please. books' available for adults and children alike which may be found in the South Salt Lake Library. CHECKING CHECKING? scheduled for next fall. Please, no swimming pools. We have published, on almost a regular basis, a list of leaders. But we agree that the Granite School District needs more schools, several of them. We are aware, tho not as vitally as some parents, that double sessions are by our civil defense as the best protection available). i Oracle Subject of Book In fact how about some Army Surplus buildings? The University has been using surplus buildings for fifteen years. There are "Friends of the Library." There are "Civ-i- c Auditorium Boosters." Entered as 2nd Class Matter at the Post Office in Salt Lake City, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published weekly on Friday. Payable in Advance By Mail Subscription Rates Anywhere in Utah, 1 year, $5 - Elsewhere in UJ3A., $5.50 Single Copy, 10 cents Published Weekly . . .... "the RST' 2ff, 1961 |