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Show Dohind tfio Day's Nov3 ws for' R WEDNESDAY, MARCH j ' WASHINGTON around the country the moonlighter - the man or woman who holds down two jobs at once - has been drawing more attention, and some fire. Typical moonlighting: the office clerk who drives a taxi at night; the teacher who . sells insurance; y the policeman who works in a store ; the farmer who tills his land in the late hours after he has left his, factory job. The ' notion is" widely held that ' most people hold two jofos because they need the money to''meet rising ".7 living costs. Actually the evidence is mixed on that point. Even if it weren't, some authorities in city and state government are now saying the ! the moonlighters should give up their second jobs to ease in the current recession. Let's take a look at moonlighting and see whether that suggestion might in fact tend' to spread the available work. 4 A quick review shows that most double is practiced among farmers, teachers, lower echelon government workers,1 including policeman and fireman, and construction workers. Most of off-dut- . . . others? - i , - sold a bill of goods.' This is the pattern of the years-lon- g effort to get Hoover, to cripthe FBI, to sabotage the reple some overseas areas may be found in information from export specialists in New York. A model of the "low priced three" retails for about $20,000 in Brazil, for lentlessly effective1 FBI campaign) against Communist subversion in the United States. This effort to get Hoover ebbs and flows like the tides. It is flowing" now. Hoover is a strong swimmer in such tides as these. Like the ' :" . price of the cari Shipping and other charges add about $500. The balance, $17,000, goes for import iV , four-year-o- ison. And r the; all-o- ut Own Petard Ed ld part I didn't Each time they entered the stairway, they gave up the effort only to return for a fresh oxygen tank for their respirators. At the same time, another team set up a ladder and was" entering the death room .from an ppper window to horn behind 3 "Toot!" OhJfor ctv. ing out loud buddy, don't be should get !out and ny! Mutter. lift! tny hood and really make him wait. 5. A bus takes two lanes. Grum- The people who ble; grumfr run these buses must take lessons on how best to block autb traffic. Move over, you (Naturally, you're not aware that you've become a fiendish Dr. Jekyll. But you've made sure your windows are up tight when you So They Say Smith's appointment that right-of-wa- means?. 7. Caught behind a the boy find the mother dead and ' burned. , badly Meanwhile! other firemen and neighbors sought ways to enter, the house,: trying to carry out whatever could be Salvaged, and this j was pitiK fully little. One man phoned this writer not long after ithe blaze; to ask if 7tnese unsung heroes, could be thanked or! at Weast meptioned; somewhere in a pews story. As I Stated: earlier. Imany of these couldn't be included in the things imuUi i ,fv.Vii-- trapped left turner; look, brother, next time, use your turn signals. Show a little consideration, will you? 8. Behind a creeping car on a curving suburban road: Hey, come on,close up that gap ahead. If you don't know how to drive, get off the road! I reflected upon this later', and I was horrified. I was ashamed. I buried Dr. Jekyll. My stomach hasn't growled since. And all it cost me was 10 minutes a day. I'll probably live longer now if some fool driver doesn't kill me first. , , (Copyright, 1961, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) " . is iJ" i - i ; : 1 i it '1-- . from The Daily Herald on Dr. Jensen and said that he "exempli-- . .fies the mdomitablespirit'i in American educators which has j i built our academic freedoms and opportunities into ' the priceless heritage which they represent to- , ,.. .uay. j All of his friends will agree, I'm. sure, that Dr. Jensen! is truly dek N.L.C. serving of this honor, . ... ;.: Florist: So. you want to say it with flowers, now about a dozen, roses? f Suitor: ' Make !t a half dozen. I'm a man of few The Monitor. words. ' . MAILER'S WORK IS DONE Virginia Evans, Herald society was saddened last week bv the death of her father, Joseph Lloyd, who for many years had been an. employee of the'. Salt Lake Tribune. Her husband, B. Davis ' believe that last names should be included in autographs. That makes it too formal. Anyway, I'm a lousy speller. Yogi Berra, Bc-cc-cce- p! . ;;;;; ;:;;;. the important thing I think r) we want to keep in mind here is the real desire of the President and Mrs. Kennedy to preserve the character of this particular area of Virginia so that life can go on in its own unhurried way.- - White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger, assuring Virginians that the Kennedy retreat near Middleiburg will not change the ' " ' area. war-make- rs. . ' . The rumors which have been spread abroad to the effect that there is a human being in this satellite are not in accordance with reality. Leonid I. Sed-oU.S.S.R. astronautics expert, on n Red sputnik. ' 1 ; The guiding principle of America is now, has always been and shall ever be "in God we trust" President Kennedy. - Q's and A's v, Q 7.1-to- ', p ' People are begging for jobs. I'm willing to pay for one out of my first pay check. Thomas Whitehurst, 41, of Mt. 0 Clemens, Mich., one of the state's unemployed. What was the original meaning of the word "carol"? A The word "carol" means dance in a ring. Q :!,.'" Q Has 320,-00- The opinions and pressed b; Herald their own and do reflect the views of statements : ex-- colomnists are cot necessarily this newspaper, j j j measure. . ! ' Ech of these words refers to a chemical fsub-- s t a nee jthat KILLS germs or bacteria (germicide, 4, baKbteri-cide- ). When the or Dr. Hyman bactericide is used to prevent bacteria from 'entering body tissoies, it is an antiseptic. When it is used to kill; bacteria that have already "entered the tissues it is a disinfectant. I j For example, when your doctor paints your skin with iodine before he gives an injection or makes' an i incision, he is using the germicide or bactericide as an antiseptic. And when he applies 'the tincture to an infected wound he is using it as a disinfecgermi cid " tant. f In everyone of these instances, ; ' ' How large a national debt was incurred under the Articles of Confederation? A Ten million dollars. ' By Br Harold Thomas Hyman, A high school senior, preparing a term paper, finds herself puzzled by the Words antisepticj, dish fecitant; gerinicide and antibiotic. "Do these fall mean the same thing?" she:asks, "And if they are different, how do they differ?" Let's take the first trio, to be- gm ..with. And we'll add bactericide for good J ( i i 5 --- ; . the song of its own? A Yes. mockingbird v a ';.-- Q Is Hong Kong an island? AAThe British crown colony Is made up of an island and cf za&iolaAd, i3 he is using a chemical to kill germs. That's where the "cide" endihg'comes in Just as in homicide or suicide. And, as you can easily, imagine, a chemical that kills living organisms in a wound or elsewhere in the body must also! threaten the existence of g cells. Therein lies the weakness of chemical 'antisepsis and disin-f liv-in- j . ; :. : , Evans, wrote the following poem of tribute, which, was read at Mr. ! a sort of Sadness - r Around the old Salt Lake Tribune; A permanent sort of fixture's gone There's . Out of the mailing room. Those rough old hands are finally still ;.'. This' mailers work is done; tied His, last mail order has-beJ His last edition run. ; . -- A en . not the same around here ' : Y...f boys," , I'm sure it will be said; "And what's the reason for the V : ' doom?" : For, if the germicide oribacter icide is not applied in sufficient strength, and for a sufficient length of time, to kill every, bug-othe skin or in a wound, it won't do much good since the remaining bacteria reproduce at a rate of about a generation every 20 utes. 'M; if-"; Lloyd is- dead." And so Dear God, now that you : - . You would then have accomplished a complete disinfection. But also you'd have probably killed off so many body cells that, by balance, you might be worse off than when you started. Now when we come to antibiotics, it's a different story. For the antibiotic (bios means life) actually does what its name implies. It doesn't kill bacteria. Hence it is no threat to body cells. It simply prevents the bugs from continuing their existence. It accomplishes this purpose in at least two ways: It somehow cuts them off from their food supplies thus starving most of the existing population. And it imposes a sort of birth control on survivors, thus eliminating any threat from future genera' tions. Now young lady, I hope you understand the meaning of the words that puzzled you. And realize why antibiotic are Tightly called mir- - :' SIGNAL HONOR A ; highly-respecte- d ." '.'',:'; I. have Dad Lloyd up there with you. He may get kinda restless When the day is through. He'll be up and be a goin y With the coming of the! night, The paper must be under way By carrier, truck or flight. Be patient with htm, Father, Until he adjusts his ways; . ; For nearly life hai yearsxhis " I 60 '- . v. been i: Night work, not days, Rest well, Dear Dad,, Iwe'll miss y"' you' v We're glad we knew you so. We want to be where jfovi are When it comes our turn to go. - , . .' - ..' j i Provo citi zen received commendation in Congress in a tribute read recent-- . - ; ; j n Ruth Millett j Thus, by the end of an hour, a single surviving organism has grown to a population of eight. By the second hour, the census rises 64. by the third hour to 512. At the end of a day, there are countless millions. And you're not much better off than when you started ;. treatment. Suppose then you increased the strength of the germicide and somehow managed to apply it until every last bug was bumped off. ' I. , "It's because Joe j ':: . "It's HE'S MARRIED, ALL RIGHT .You can always tell a married manJ But all married women know he probably won't remember..! . They Differ , ..'.'v.j:'. : .... . Disinfectant? Antibiotic? of - WOT. THAT IvAiUJSN rj:;. ' '. ; i 1 only due to the limited space and because, ai-- , available ' though undeniably heroic, they weren't strictly 'the stuff newts is made of. I know the persons involved would prefer no mention pi 11. pui x icua ana ao agree mat all these people who tried so hard jio help deserve the sincerest of thanks and humble recognition. i- F.G.K. : j - .i.J.v . The Doctor Says trip rush-hou- 45-min- ute home that day. It was no different from other days. I caught myself resenting peoHere are ple at 22 check points. ' some excerpts , . 1. At a traffic light: The woman in front of you keeps waiting after the light changes. Beep. Aw, come on, lady, let's not fall asleep. I'm in a hurry. Mutter, mutter, growl. 2. A car from the next lane slips in front of you, then slows down. Why, you imbecile I Get moving, you stupe! 3. At the intersection, another ; car pulls across in front of you on the amber. Whatsamatter, you Jtrk! Are you blind? You want to kill both of us? 4. The h'ght is red, and you're first in line. It turns green. The I don't et possihl?, cs.dsr present cis I kept a running commentary r sonality. Tribune de Geneve, expressing Swiss resentment' of Earl E. T. ns ; At a traffic circle. Say whas's the matter, lady Don' y you know what 6..' V. 20-mi-le . that thex There can be no doubt Swiss, people wall regret that Mr. nedy chose to send as amibassador to Berne ja man who is a controversial per- world-endin- , yell-- J - i . i - . ' ' ; ' like; this happened in the 1960 election. The race was such a near thing that the opinion of persons with worthless opinions carried the day for John Kennedy. The; result has not hurt Ms, as yet, and may have been a fartitudinous blessing like the apple falling upon Newton's head. But you can't count on this sort of luck forever! The seeds of destruction of the democratic society are there, ' Just the same. It will be asked, what can' be done? so-and-s- started . a avcu&avjr jyr .ououvc Let us suppose, as is increasingly possible, that jBertrand Russell's campaign for nuclear disarmament of NATO continues to gather momentum. Russell is appealing to toe type of mentality which is moved by such arguments as these: 'l: Polaris is a bad missile because it would enable NATO to pass from defense to offense against; Communism. Unilateral disarmament is' the way to peace. Nuclear arms mean that we are g war. building up to' a It would almost seem to me that per-sowho uncritically accept - these propositions are far enough down the evolutionary scale to warrant their loss of suffrage. If Polaris would, , in fact, put! Communism on the defensive, it would be a good thing, and the opposite of wickedness. Nuclear disarmament by our side would almost insure the loss of the Free World to the bloc. Nuclear arms, to date, have been s, the opposite of ' Granted that there is great complexity in all nuclear matters, and ' that any decision in democratic countries would be difficult and might be close, the could easily weight of the oyster-vot- e be decisive. I have fedt that something 1 Forgets Gripes; Fiiids Rains Disappear - egaili-taria- '' . Koterba '.' . ii it , ing summons into the wintry night air, doused the flames with water from windows and doorways. Two of them risked their lives repeatedly in attempts ;to battle their way up a blazing stairway to the bedroom where the two victims were trapped. . . 1; ly by Rep, ; David S. King (D. ', ; Utah). y.. iic is xr. umsien jjensen, pro-fessor emeritus and twice acting president of BYU, who celebrated his 80th birthday in February, j In remarks to, the House, Mr. King observed that "at different times Dr.. Jensen has served this university as an acting president and as an acting dein in the 13 yiears since his formaj retirement, . which he then imagined would close ah academic career that, al-- 1 ready had spanned 40 years, u Mr. King read into' the Con- - after sirens blasted their deafen- j , ; : ' mention earlier was the quiet heroism of firemen and neigh- bors who rushed to 'the scene j to help. ; The husband and father of the Victims, found dazed and semi- concious on a sidewalk near the burning home, was given emergency treatment by a physician who hurried from - his nearby home. This same doctor moments later climbed a ladder and entered the still smoldering upstairs bedroom in a vain effort to aid the young woman, then already dead. j Spanish Fork's volunteer firemen, who arrived within minutes to ireiuie uic uwxiiwaTatJiw j vote by restricting it to mentally qualified persons? Well, nothing much can be done except what Bertoand Russell was L WASHINGTON The trouble doing when he wrote' "A History of with your stomach, the doctor Western" Philosophy," from which said, is: "You resent" people." quoted a passage. The purpose of Ruswas resentment, he said, that It sell's work, as a mathematician and brought the pains and would soon scholar, has been, to reduce the scopey bring the ulcers, of ignorance in the world. This can be But I don't resent people. I done in two ways by bringing valid ' told him, indeed ideas to the attention of "intelligent to the was it people, and by stomping heavily upon contrary. ideas which are deceitful and pernicious. "All right," he Unfortunately," like so many men of said, "why don't talent: in science letters, Russell keep a enters a second cMldhood when he enters you check on yourthe umpathed jungles of initernational self today? Mowhere only the wariest and politics nitor yourself, imost experienced hunters manage to and we shall see make a! way. for themselves and their '.. ,S' '." if I am wrong." followers. I The wisdom of these men in their own a ivoierua fields is one side of the coin their fcheckingmy folly in unknown fields is the other side. " every emotion that afternoon. The doctor was right. I was startled (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate; to find that, unawares, I hated Inc.) two times people for 45 minutes a day. It 'came when I slid behind the wheel of my car for the trip between my home ;and Portugal was the first to airrive .as a office. I started to resent the colonial power and it will be the last 'everybody, and the acid of reto leave. Unlike the other colonial powsentment ate at the lining of my ers, color has meant nothing to them stomach. . . It's one of the greatest sociological For the sake of my doctor experiments of all time. British histor-and, as it turned out, for mine ' ian Michael Teague. democracy. RusseOl questioned the absolutism of democratic decisions b y questioning the intelleo-- , ,tual equality of men. air. Alexander It is difficult, he wrote. to accept the Darwin concept of evolu--, tion while also accepting the doctrine cf equality. y t f "At what stage in evolution did men, n or their ancestors, begin n to be aU equal? A resolute will find himself forced to as the equals of human apes regard And why stop with apes? I do beings. cot see how he is to resist1 an argument In favor of '.Votes, for Oysters." Today, 16 years older than when he wrote the above, Russell is hoist by his own petard. For the votes of the sentile, the Juvenile, the idiot, the illiterate and the pacifist on matters euch as nuclear warfare ar hardly as sane and inteJU-- , gent as those of oysters. It has seemed' to me, having Just returned from Europe, where we are 1 entering a new phase of the struggle against Communism, that the gravest of all dangers to democracy, is this ability to destroy JJcr.7 . j : ' peace-keeper- have its predecessors. American Communists will continue their loud and 1. public ragi-- 1 tation for removal of Hoover from the FBI. They will have ho im1V , ... pact. i ; ' er OH the Beat Recently, you might, have read half a story on the front page of a Sunday Herald. It didn't look like half a story and you couldn't have known it was only half of one, but itj was just that. I know because I 'wrote it, and had to leave! out the part that wasn't "I k strictly news. It was the report of a tragic fire in Spanish Fork which claimed the lives of a young mother and her iCUonsiianceB, cairn: Sino-Sovi- get-Hoov- i lord Berto'and .WASHINGTON, D. C: 1 is 88, at j Russcil who, leading British ; popular uprisings against installation of ova. rvo v I Russell Hoist By His . j HALF THE STORY . ... to Ameri- ' Holmes Alexander semi-huma- ' the Herald Staff" By : j . .Of this amount, $2,500 is 'the of i T Like. This One Better r ! subversion in the Department of . Justice of which the President's brother is undisputed boss. No trouble there. The FBI and its boss are functioning easily in the Justice Department pretty much on the same (basis of friendly informality' ?as , in other years, The future forecast is for more of the same. IThis tide will ebb as can institutions. No Friction Seen It is both interesting and baffling to note that the current re-- ; ports of, a Hoover retirement rest ' on suggestions that there is friction between the FBI director and Robert F. Kennedy, the attorney general. The FBI, of course, is 1 - ed Polaris missiles in Europe, "used to have much better sense. As , recently " as 1945. Russell was indirectly attacking the validity Communist - great sale of American cars in f rep-uta- have their information from persons of credibility who have been self-employm-ent . One explanation why there is no 4 s President and all of the Kennedy's, the FBI boss is long on physical fitness. He and the Kennedys also have in common an understanding of the menace of " No Wonder duties. pop-up- The newsmen who write that Hoover is on the way out surely do so in good conscience j they , . - example. asso- On oveiThto Sifay "SUBS. t doubt on Jobholders figures cast one month idea. In that surveyed cent 60 of the government, per by second jobs .were moonlighters' found to be in farming or various white collar occupations,1 with bulking heavily. In the same span,- only 15"per cent of the unemployed fell in these cate- gones. Furthermore, the long look shows that moonlighting rates, as a percentage of total omployment, tend to hold fairly even in both good times and bad. Seasoned appraisers thus ques- tiontliat ' to eliminate moonlighting would make any appreciable dent in unemployment ranks. ,; The fuller effect, might be to leave a lot of useful work undone, to reduce the flow of money in the already thinned out national stream, and to hurt those who really do need extra work to make ends meet. job-holdi- ng so-call- : n n . unem-ployme-nt . (UPI) ciates in Jthe United States will be displeased with this dispatch. They will be disappointed to read the following: not about to J. Edgar Hoover-iretire from ' his position as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Kennedy administration has no intention of seeking Hoover's v retirement, On the contrary, President Ken- - these fields .are generally thought of as low paying. But government studies don't support "fully the idea that people take on extra work j ust to keep bodyand soul together. Many poorly-paid people don't moonlight at all. And some who j do are reasonably well paid in their primary jobs, even considering living costs. The studies indicate that opportunity for extra work is a big fac-tor. Letter carriers for instance, can take on additional jobs because their work schedule allows it. One in every 10 does so. The same is true for many teachers, whose teaching day may be relatively short. Yet a lot of people could never find the time. Would unemployment fall sharply off if the two to three million moonlighters" suddenly quit their second jobs and opened them to , , Ameri- can Communists and their !i Li h v Moon he of f the By g living g All nedy stated gome days prior to his inauguration that he wanted Hoover to stay on the job to which ' he was appointed in 192' , by President Coolidge. The report ihat Hoover was on the way out has been popping up s are part recently. These of an old pattern. The source of these reports Would not easily be discovered. A f search, more likely b than not, would lead to some which area but gullible scarf ly could be suspect. That is part- of the pattern, too. r By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International 1, 1961 n Housewives: Take Pride In the; Job You're Doing , e housewives todayf seem to share one had fault. Most e themselves. They constantly as wives aind mothers they have come in is because it Maybe for so much criticism in the last few years that they have so 'little confidence in their ability. Maybe it is because they have used that phrase "just a housewife" so long that they have come to feel their job is no more important than the .1, phrase makes it seem. an all time the what easy Maybe hearing life they have makes them feel guilty for not ' accomplishing more than they do . . . however A busy they seem to stay. Maybe it is because combining a job and home- e making has become so common that have become shy about giving themselves Rath Milktt credit for doing just one job well. More than likely it is a combination of all. of these things that e accounts for the homemaker's obvious lack of. satisfaction with the job she is doing. , e The truth is that most homemakers today deserve to be proud of themselves for the job they are doing. , Day in and day out they make more important decisions, handle more emergencies, turn out more work, and come more nearly being indispensable than any. other group of women. But instead of thinking of themselves as being important and of accomplishing important things they call themselves "just housex wives" . .11 and constantly themselves. What started me thinking about this was hearing a housewife the c4her day say without any false modesty "I'm so proud Jot myself." She had tackled and finished a hard job and she was so pleased with herself she didn't care who knew it. The pride in her voice had a cheerful, happy ring and suddenly I realized what was a rare thing it has become to hoar a housewife give herself a well cUssrvcd full-tim- low-rat- 1 ' i full-tim- home-make- rs j j full-tim- ' full-tim- . , low-rat- e ; |