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Show 77 The only daily newspaper devoted to tne prqgfess and advancement of Central Utah and its peoplo Say Fellows, the Back Door'5 j - ;. . ' r .' Tribute To, The Lowly Gf Wide-open- " I' 'I j'. " Soldier. Really a Product Of His Own Home Communify ' .TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1960 No French Threat chev knows his Western men, he must know he hasn t much Ihope of chipping away at the granite figure of President Charles de Gaulle . of France. iTTis ral mimosa must surelv be to talk naat "le irrand Charlie" to they not? They gather on street corners to watch a policeman write a traffic ticket. The French often indulge in wishful thinking. They like to avoid hard decisions that interrupt good living. But they're a pretty seasoned lot, and can have few illusions' about the brand of peace and disarmament Nikita is selling. It's not that he 'does not have certain appealing argum e n t s. When he speaks of the threat of German militarism and calls for an end to a NATO heavily beefed tip with German forces, he striwes a painful chord. Germans twice in this century overran France. In the back of their minds, Frenchmen may never quite1 shake off the fear of a revived Germany. Yet their good sense tellst them that today the Germans are pn the Western side, and that the real menace to life and liberty comes, 'from the Kremlin. Not until he can manage to the mammoth threat he himself represents can Khrushchev have any genuine hope of focusing French attention on the obviously far smaller danger from r .1 the Jrench people. ' Looking at France from great distance, one might imagine things-were different. De Gaulle often sets himself apart from American and British leaders on major mat-ters of defense and foreign policy, But anyone who thinks fbr a moment that this, makes him susceptible to Communist blandishments and a fit subject for separate negotiations doesn't know his De Gaulle. He may be a solitary rock, ) -- j but he is a rock As for going past him to the mil- lions of ordinary Frenchmen, that, too, probably will prove a futile ex- ercise for Khrushchev. 7 ' i 7 . 110 mum His reception in France thus far has been polite but chilly. Frenchmen are exhibiting none of their customary friendliness. Of course they are curious, but when are K.nrush- - If Soviet Preanier Nikita II I ' 1X7- ' BAN, CQUtROlS II I ii ri i ii (KT mi : i r if . a i i f 'y . Symbol of Change Only some 15 years have, flowed under the bridge of time since Hit-tiand his Nazi ideology was crushed, but West" Germany and its', leaders continue every evidence of subscribing to the West's! demo- ' uaub vyajt vx nip. The latest note of this, sort was approval; by Bonn for screening iin Germany of ''Tomorrow the World," an American film made during World War II to dramatize the, victory "of democratic ideas over Nazjsm; Fifteen' years is but a moment in history., and many of the film's viewers will be adults who an 1945 were the core of Hitler's' Youth Movement, around which the film evolves-Decisito show a film which depicts Germany's shameful period under Nazism requires courage and a resolve to place Germany squarely, in the community of" ..' democratic nations. K It is hoped that the film's anti-- ! discrimination message will prove r re-redu- er i their old German enemy. . Skirmish On The Potomac The enemy was in sight, the time for action had come, and the order of battle thundered down through the ranks: "A coffee break is a coffee break only when nothing else is consumed. If a doughnut is eaten with the coffee that constitutes breakfast. Breakfast is not allowed during working hours." So read the directive issued to civilian employes by a colonel in charge of a unit in the Pentagon. At latest report, the were in .full retreatj leaving the field littered with fragments of smoldering fried cakes. -- . s coffee-clunke- rs strong deterrent to any 'more i swastika outbreaks such as recent- ' ' aV ly plagued Germany. . .,.. on i ce t ' WHat's. Your Question? yyy U. N.flot Likely to Admit Red China . . ,1 ''. 1 , . i-- i By EDGAR. ANSEL MOWRER "Do youVhink our government is sible". T. i. . , of-wa- . that To the question, "If at the summit meeting, Khrushchev maintains his demand, for the neutralization) of West Berlin, what should be the answer of in our anti- - Pandora's box. He says the bene- ficiaries will not be us or .even the i colonial peoples but the Communists. 4 " Do you ayree?" U (Observer, Tampa,! Fla.t Cextainly, it could turn out tffat' way. The stampede to. liber- ate former colonies has been pushed in : the U. S. chiefly by humanitarians who think immorial colonialism and by T others who thmk it inevitable. I ; . J) am afraid that at this 'point, the latter are the three Western statesmen?' the best brief answer comes from John E. Stew. art of Gary, Ind. "Meet Soviet pressure, aggression and demands with counterdemands. Insist that as compensation for any withdrawal from West Berlin, the; Soviets withdraw from "East Germany" and theother ' i '- satellites." This week's (rs' -- 'Your column each ' Mr. Mowrer Tuesday is one I admire and re spect. Doesn't President Eisenhow' er's denial to Latin Americans that he favors 'dictators become hollow mockery while he turns bis back on r, Israel in support of Dictator - f , .j ... ser?" H Paul Elliot, Philadelphia, Pa.V .Not exactly. Our current policy is op--' 4W W Mab U W W 41. r4an1rrri.al ASAWAV.WUA 1 consistency. Its fundamental weakness, : yyRalph A. y yyy-:Buglione of Old y NLJ.J Bridge, reproaches me with "lack of knowledge of the Vatican in world affairs? because 1 tried to explain the opposition! of many. Americans to giving diplomatic; recognition to the Vatican state. I covered the Vatican as a "foreign correspondent in Rome 'for several years andj think I understand it. What Americans do not s. see is why any church should need to be , a physical state in order to; figfit com-munism and bring souls to Christ. More-ove- r, with apologies to Mr. Buglione, in Spain are NOT , given to .proselytize. Their freedom equal arm resstriftted in several wavs. " 1 non-Cathol- ics ac-tiviH- They Say J think I've become something of an expert on small .boats in " the bast few .' weeks. Soviet Pvt. Ivan Fedotov upon being rescued, after 49 days adrift on disabled landing craft in Pacific. "V. ' . 0.y-- i . i j ;. We must patiently address! ourselves to the task of designing a! workable plan of general disarmament, in a world .1 - : the in which man can' live at peace with himself, where freedoms will flourish, secure fronj the fear of forces of oppression. Frederick M. Eaton, U.S. ambassador stating aims at Geneva disarmament" talks. in my ppimon, is our unwillingness to set up list off international Apriorities and follow it. Instead, we bet a little on all the horses in the raceand seem bound to lose some of, our money: - So : nt "Should ether allies (after Britain and France) :; make their own?" General 1960, (Copyright Features Corp;) enormous stakes. Tinrtlinict snH Hnae MV.W question: U. S. still refuse' to give nuclear weapons to our allies or to NATO in order, to placate the USSR and risk seeing right. It remains a great gamble, with y. j. The ability to say no is perhaps the greatest gift a parent has. .). Sam Levenson, TV emcee and" comic. Honesty means nothing these days. It pays to cheat and fiddle. v ' Banker Anthony G. Clifton-Browwho broke Britain's money laws to back the bank at Monte Carlo: I " " probably take me three or four months to live this down. g Teddy Nalder, all-tiTV quiz champ flunks test for census-takin- g job. me money-winnin- $13-a-d- ay ' hand-wringi- ng Women7s Presidei)tial Ticket Might Save Us i j The more you think about women running our country, the more sense it all makes. It's no secret in Washington that in nearly every poltical office there is a woman By ED KOTERBA WASHINGTON Miss Thursa Ford of. Daytona Beach, Fla.7; sends a provocative letter. She wants the country to drawl up a Presidential ticket made up of women from both parties. The articulate Miss Ford writes: not "We need a women's party The Doctor Says simply a Republican or Democratic Easter Vacation Is Ideal For Immunization Shots7 We want women with abil party. ity." s , Then she makes this sensible point: "And not women who have achieved their ipositions because of wealthy husbands or fathers." There was a t me when suggest- img women f6r President was the cue for any more. Not so when you realize that women todays make up the major ity sex of America. Right now, for ihstance, there are 3,300,000 more women voters than men. creatures Too, these" strong-willeof the oppositioii sex live longer. And they've hadj more experience than the minority sex is running Like; ichools, budgets, things. vacuum sweepers (the kind that , cleans up messes), households not Sol we men. and why should, let them run the country? Who would Miss Ford favor as head of the womjen's party ticket? Margaret Ohasej Smith, the lady of Maine,- she sys. Mrs. Smith! Republican Senator since 1948. has jshown much wisdom in her appearances on the floor. Namely, she rarely talks. For my correspondent's choiicej is columnist Inez Robb. "She'sj traveled almost as match as Nixon and she would not change: her mind to suit the occasion," writes jMis Ford. "With her beauty and brains she could hold or her own with the Russians i d - , ! nt, anyone else.'' By Harold Thomas Hyman, M.D. We've been forcing some cuttings in our cellar and the brave little yellow ; blooms have just come out. This means spring to all of us And while for-syth- a'big 'bkly laugh. Not so Vice-Preside- J For Secretary , of State: Gracie Allen. "She can be so charming," says the writer " and at the same time confuse lier adversaries into forgetting what they were .complaining about in the first place." Honest feminii e Americans, says 'Miss Ford, could save this country jfrom the fate of the Roman Emp re. Like Nero who fiddled whiU Rome burned, she said. "The men are spending like mad while thej country goes broke." If the party ojt her choice were elected,' Miss Ford writes, "we'd out out waste in all branches of government. We'jd pass laws severe enough to put an end to juvenile delinquency and crime." She continues: "We'd put women on Federal and State Supreme Courts and put an end to mollycoddling. We'd make our country safe for women land children again, especially in the big cities in the North where it 'has not been safe for women out alone at nights." . There should bq other names added to'Miss Ford's roster: Mrs. Richard iNeuberger, widow of the Oregon Senator, as Secretary of Interior, to perpetuate her husband's philosophy in preserving our natural resources. Virginia Kellems, the business-lad- y " from Connecticut who's against Uncle Sam using private enterprise for collecting Federal taxes. She d rid our country of bloated taxes and bring about that sound dollar, won-derf- ul j Q's and A's j a ten - piece called a "dime." 5 A The word is derived from the Latin decima, meaning j t f " one-tent-h, ". ; Which lies nearer to the Old World,- North or South America? A South America.. Q j means spring wmm . widw many things to many persons, it means infectious disease to the physician, Despite the great ments miracle achieveof the. drugs in the cure of infections, the Dr. Hyman surpassing accomplishment of modern medicine has been; the development of safe preparations fori- effective prevention of bacterial invasions, Why don't you take adantage of the children's Easter vacations to bring all immunization schedules Probably your doctor will be: so busy at that time that you'd better try to get an appointment in advance. And you might advise him of the of your visit so he's pre pared with a fresh batch of immunizing solutions, Recent advances in manufacture have greatly simplified immunization programs. So here are some concrete suggestions for your various needs: For the preschool youngster: smallpox vaccine and the quadruple shot that protects against diptheria, tetnus (lockjaw), pertussis ( whooping cough) and poliomyelitis (infantile paralyshot requires sis), The. four-wa- y three injections at intervals of four to six weeks and a final booster at the end of six to 12 months. For the child entering school: repeat smallpox vaccine. Give the quadruple shot if it hasn't been given before. Repeat it if It was given more than three - , j up-to-da- te? jpur-po- se i i . ' years previously; For the school child from entrance to graduation: repeat smallpox every three , to fiv? years. Give individual boosters of diphtheria, tetanus, 1 pertussis or poliomyelitis las required by local circumstances such as th; appearance! of clinical cases in the school! or in the neighbor. hood. Tell Me Why ; Three shots, at weekly inter-al-s, of typhoid vaccine before a summer holidays away from home. If straight;; typhoid vaccine is available, prefer this preparation to the triple vaccine that also contains paratyphoid organisms The latter provide little protection, if any, and produce mostj of the symptoms of the redaction. . For children and adults without respect to age; for protection against known neighborhood ex posure, injections of influenza virus vaccine, mumps vaccine and Rocky! Mountain spotted fev er vaccine; boosters of previously given! vaccines, as required. For travelers outside the Unit ed States, according to recommendations! from the Public Health Service; injections of vac- -, cine si providing protection against cholera, plague, typhus fever and yellow fever. If you or your children have a family susceptibility to tuberculosis of if any of you are exposed through work in a; hospital, discuss with your doctor the advisability of having BCG immunization if your skin test indicates that you have insufficient natural defenses. And, last; but far from least, if ' your child ever had rheumatic fever or has any heart bailee of any sort,, ask your doctor for mouth doses or shots of penicillin (or a suitable substitute tf there is a! penicillin-sensitivitfrom now until . 1 ir occu-pational- ly j j y) mid-summ- er. ! Ruth Millett First Use of Cosmetics . By A. LEOKUM the Britannica Junior encyclopedia for school and home. Send your questions, name, age, address to "Tell Me Why!" care of this paper. Toj Win Working Wife, Homemdker? Steering Is Up day's winner is: Ronald Fung, maica. 15, Kingston, Jap Why do women use cosmetics? To make themselves attractive "beautiful." When is a woman considered beautiful? There is no way of answering this question without: considering ' the person to whom she is supposed to look s If you would rather see your daughter grow up to become a fulltime honsemaker than a working wife you had better get busy teaching her homemakirig skills. . , ever, certain definite standards of beauty have existed for thousands of years. And the first people to develop cosmetics to achieve these standards were the ancient Egyptians. More than 4,000 years ago the Egyptian women were doing things to their hair skin, eyes, and body, that are not too different from what women of today do to make themselves ''beautiful!" For example, the Egyptians thought that hair should be lustrous, that Mips should be that 'eyebrows and lashes , . A lot, of wives go to work be- cause they are more efficient as office workers than as homemak- : ers. Not that most who go to work for that reason admit it even to themselves. Instead, they say, "We can't get along on John's salary." Or "I 'went to work so that we could give the children more advantages." They don't say: "If I were a more competent homemaker, I could stretch John's pay check and make it adequate. But I can't ' sew well enough to make! the children's clothes or to make curtains- and slip' covers. . "And I don't know how to cut down the food bill by careful marketing and by cooking from ' ! j Not, all wives who work do so because they secretly feel they are inadequate homemakers 'or because they are not good enough homemanagers to get along on a husband's income. But such wives do account for a large number of women who don't really, have to work but .only think they have ' - i to ) . j 1 And this group, of - working wives is going to keep right on increasing unless mothers go back : " I I " m 9 v 9 mf 9" well-define- ; A d. -i s wV Great d, ' 1 . straight... superb in mixed drinks! good was considered very ' EE)CuV: , fig- - y ;?'.;id -- ure!-.'- s. .Yearbook by finishing this drawing. Just draw in the missing parts as you think they should look. Use this drawing, or copy it any size if you prefer. Originality and imagination will determine winners. IMPORTANT: Entries for drawing must be addressed Fun tihfe, Tell Me Why, this newspaper land give name, age, and address. people how- Among the civilized ' important and so was a slim scratch, because my cooking's based on opening cans, defrosting ready-mixeAnd I've never learned te budget money." Nor do these wives who go to work because they aren't competent homemakers ever admit that working gives hem a ready-mad- e excuse for not being as good housekeepers as they should be. Instead, they can always say, "If I weren't working housekeeping would be a snap.' t : In some parts of the world a beautiful woman must have large ears, in other countries she must be fat, or have scars on her face, and so on: And in each re- gion of the world women have used cosmetics of one kind or ' an- other to achieve the local stand- ard of beauty. It might be grease, or black paint, or white paint. be complexion r chance to win a Britannica, World " Atlas plus a Britannica A -- beautiful. ' 6hould to-Mothe- FUN TIME EXTRA PRIZE! YOU FINISH IT 15-volu-me well-shape- , cent ia j ! Q Why is behind every .man. So why not elect the ladies and put a man behind every woman? (Copyright, 1960, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) !" j It makes me look like a nitwit It'll v " Assignment Washington n, , rj f j VWhy is it that the U. S. govern ment fails to ICnd support! to the Salvation Army as ft does to the American Red Cross?" i (Raymond J. Vince, East Chicago, ' Ind.) Not my field. Write for information to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Fourth St. and Independence Avenue, S. W., Washington, D. C. y-- ' "A friend says y I have been in Spain under Franco and know what I am talking about. . going to, submit to British dictation , and .admit Red China to the UN?" (Mrs. ,Mi M., Washingon, D. C.) Certainly not at present. In a. March 9 7 letter to .Alfred Kohlberg of New (York, at State Department speaker scotched a rumor that we might. The subsequent arrest of Bishop Walsh by Chinese Reds has just ""about made any immediate concessions to them impos-- i v i i : ,. . ' XT -i r--1 ed--Kor- - :y-'- y.- Debates over the missile gap, By nOLMES ALEXANDER ' HOMEWARD BOUND Major and other scientific aspects of the military posture, have tended to General William C. Westmore v distract attention from the basic land slapped his flat stomach. of all warfare to date the unit iThere are no spare-tir- e waistlines infantryman. After all. if the in the famous outfit he comhighest strategy works out, and mands, the 101st Airborne Diviif our nuclear deterrent does sion. About 15 per cent of these A o v TTT TVro t r on f" fwt to wno came Puerto troopers soldier is very likely to come Rico for "Exercise Big Slam" . were landing for the first time v back into his own. It Is too much f to hope that men around circular in an airplane. Hitherto they had tables' at Geneva will dissuade always parachuted. Even the nations from fighting for their mess sergeant had over 100 homes, their borderlines and their jumps. As a big treat the paraown interpretations of manifest troopers were given time off for double-timed destiny. On , all of today's front a swim. They the where battles have actually join- whole 8.5 miles to the beach, and Egypt, Cuba, India marched 'back.. old same rules of ground the This is tough training, but it is f on. With have carried warfare the exception. George Washingto "USA committed the keeping ton's warning, that in time of some the sort of Pax Americana, we should for war, prepare peace of use bombs than troops, rather is difficult advice to follow. Aside ' is more probable and missiles, from the paratroop divisions, and than improbable with every new some Marine Corps outfits, it is ' world crisis. r next to impossible to produce a The which reportimpression battle-read- y . troops. er brings away from ihese train The subject was much discussing exercises is that the soldier ed by the press contingent that is more a product of his home covered the Caribbean operacommunity, than' of the armed tions. Unfortunately, it was widewhich attempts to train service ly agreed, military . training rehim for hattle. If the American gimes are not prescribed by the home life is as debauched as it commanders, most of whom are often iseems, then the defenders combat veterans of World War of this country are going to be a II or Korea. The lives of peace demoralized lot. If the prisoner-- , time soldiers are planned with an record in Korea was as ' eye to getting high bad as it appeared, and if the percentages, avoiding criticism reason was as ascribed that by congressmen and winning the Americans no longer had enough goodwill of mothers, fathers and certitude and fortitude, then we boys- are in bad shape for the days It is easy to practice ahead. over all this. But on or A modern interpretation the return flight from Puerto George Washington's advice Rico, your reporter read "Battle", would seem to be that the toThis Toland. John book, by preparation for war ought to gether with Cornelius Ryan's carry deep into the hone com"The Longest Day'? tells of glormunity which produces he' naious days. In the cruel, freezing tion's fighters. There is some reawinter of 1944 the sons and old- -. son to believe, despite almost er4 brothers of the Cold War soldaily reports of depravity and diers were winning the Battle of slackness all along the line; that the Bulge. Have the GI's changed a turning point for the better took so much since then? There is place somewhere . in the 1950's. this passage by author Toland: A trend n fundamentalism is "The battle was won not by discernible in education. The chance, not by force of numbers, Congresses elected in 1956-5- 8 have or by overpowering air superiornot been ashamed or afraid to ity. It was won by the GI, by his pass Loyalty Oaths, Labor disineffable qualities. The things ciplinary acts and to, uphold presthat made him" a poor garrison idential vetoes of spending cockisoldier independence, ures. ness, love of luxury made him Transmit these things which add up to a renaissance of Early finally a deadly fighter . . . the into the troops Americanism independence, which got him into trouble in camp, paid off in the Which we are training for battle. Bulge j . . Until - the Ardennes, Perhaps the modern GI is the the GI had. fought a civilian's same sort of mother's boy who war. Now he was learning to kill always made his enemies wish without remorse or pity. he'd never been born. To accomplish all this, the Egyptian woman had all kinds of help. She had an eyebrow pencil and a lipstick. She had rouge for her cheeks, and color for her eyelids. She shaped her brows and used a black pomade to make her lashes, look longer. Ip. fact. she had a regular palette with all kinds of Vpaints" on it so that she could mix the colors VAV.V.Y.Y.V. - 4 4 4 ; ; ,s-- -l ', . co no WET 4 -- : 4 - . 4 1 y just right! "When it came to perfume, the Egyptian beauty surpassed even many modern women. Egyptian ladies used as many as 15 different perfumes at one time ! And it was customary for women 'to walk about with little glass glo- jbules of perfume hidden in their ' dresses. ' . R1 4 4 ,! 4 TVVs - ; to the idea that every girl should be taught skills in her own home by her own mother. old-fashion- ed home-"maM- ng Ptmndy Difft. Corp. Osdii. CrvMt Brnly. 2S S4 ith Awt, Proof tY |