OCR Text |
Show Peter Edson Cross In the Deep Gluey I opic: Sticker Fee For Recreation Area Use It FRIDAY, APRIL 12,! 1963 i'i Provoan on National Scene Smith C o 1 1 e g e, Northampton, Mass. The citation mentioned her own life as a superb demonstration oi the complementary roles of education and work in the emancipation of women. At Cedar City last week, Mrs. Peterson was right at home because she once taught there at Branch Agricultural College, now College of Southern Utah. College and civic leaders lauded It was "Esther Peterson Day" in Cedar City last week", xand the guest of honor was none other than a former Provo woman who has made a name for herself xn the national scene. Esther Eggertson Peterson has piled up many honors since she left Provo, and now, as assistant secretary of labor and head of the women's bureau, she holds one of the top jobs for. women in the Kennedy administration. A fluent speaker with a warm personality, Mrs. Peterson has won many friends in her travels, around the country in her official capacity. Last February she was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree at special ceremonies at o Viol f vo a J fa with Lunik IV. they're only men after all. We have suspected it all along. So More importantly, maybe the Russians themselves will begin suspecting it. Perhaps they will even rn sr. f4n nno lav sta f r iirlrmf a never they have done. and if they do, they'll find out it's not so bad. No one will laugh at them. We know they goofed this time. But we're not laughing at them. r llllin ' :- Coolidge wasn't far when he wrong said, "The business of America is business," this column often bypasses national politics for a day and deals with regional industries where the big problems of "moving America forward" and conquering unemployment have their root., Thus I have recently written of West Virginia coal miners finding new jobs in Montana mines, of Wyoming's pasCare of the Aged sage of a home-rul- e whose spokesmen States Western of bill, and Governors have tried to save jobs and capital for the petroleum industry. Another of America's big industries, largely based in Pennsylvania, New York and New England, seems to stand in need of prodding at home and, perhaps protection in Washington. Over $500 million a year is leaving the United States for insurance markets firms in abroad, including Soviet-owne-d no .estiI have Britain and Germany. are mate of how many jobs thereby lost to American salesmen and office workers, but half a billion dollars must represent a sizeable annual payroll. The and Senate subcommittee on insurU.S. the is Monopoly investigating ance industry for other purposes than of inform- mine, but there is a fall-o. Anti-Tru- st ut pro- tect our dignity. Algerian Premier Ahmed Ben Bella, protesting French nuclean test in the Sahara. N . The change is good for Guatemala and for Central America. Preesident Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes of Guatemala, after beeing deposed by the army and exiled to Nicaragua. . The average John Bircher would not know a Communist if he meet Khrushchev face to face in Moscow's Red ' Square. Rep. Carl Elliot, D-A- la. The start of 1963 is as good as 1962 was bad. Walter W. Heller, economic adviser to the President. I have never believed that a spectacular dash to the moon, vastly deep-eriour national debt, is worth the added tax burden it will eventually impose upon our citizens. ' Dwight Eisenhower, ance companies which will not write coverage for such things as big catas- ng ., . Foreign News Commentary Mr. Edson Admission to most such places is now free. But a provision in the Kennedy administration's land and water conservation bill (now funds. House Interior Committees) would impose this and other modest user fees. The fees are similar to those now charged by many states in park and camp areas. BE CAMP SITES WOULD RENTED at from $1 to $3 a day for each, family.' Use of a picnic site or swimming facilities would cost 50 cents a day. The present tax on motor-bo- at fuels would be reallocated to recreational area use. Finally, all receipts front the sale of surplus government property, now amounting to about $50 million a year, would go to a recreation area fund instead of Wall Street Pope Struck Responsive Chord g Vfith Message By BRUCE W. MUNN United Press International " UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) Pope John's Encyclical appeal to jitrengjithen ths United Nations as a peace - keeping authority with ' power to negotiate and act struck responsive hord here. It . was the j first, time a Pope had spoken out directly in support of the world organization, although previous pontifical pronouncements have supported U.N. objectives and philosophy. The Pope extended his ecumenical principles beyond purely religious affairs into global politics in what was j interpreted here as a plea for political coexistence. He walked carefully down the line between the East and West Power blocs, departing from that path pnly in remarking that while a state must: be based on belief in God and human rights, "it is impossible tof determine once and j 1 ation which shows that foreigners are getting jobs and money which are much needed at home. Part of the blame goer to large disfigurement of actors, general illnesses and flood damage. This lack of enterprise and the reluctance to take a business risk creates what is called "surplus line .insurance." One witness, Bradford Smith, Jr., of Philadelphia, calls-- the business done by foreign insurance companies in the USA an 'invisible import." He told the subcommittee: "The total premium volume could well approach one billion dollars a year." Senator Dodd (D., Conn.) thinks it is probably less, but nevertheless considerable. An indication of the apathy Is this virtually every large American insurance company farms out some of its policies abroad. But at least one American firm has showed what Can be done. The Employers Surplus Lines Insurance Company of Boston has specialized in the neglecta ed areas with phenomenal success $12 million business built up in less than five years. On the other hand, Delaware, Alabama and Iowa have no provision for their companies to write "surplus and the business is lie" insurance into black market. the jJilven IThe large picture is that alien firms in Britain ,the British West Indies and continental Europe, with leakage into Russia, are getting this sizable drain of American gold. The Federal government, under both Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy has tried to stop the outflow of American dollars. One method has been to cut the purchases wnicn American tourists can take without paying duty, Another has sn to restirct the number of depend ents who accompany American service men stationed abroad. Not only are American insurance companies virtual- It unprotected from foreign competition, but Americans who buy foreign insurance are not protected from loose and ffaudulent practices. Food Fair, for example, has been clipped three times by foreign firms which became insolent and did not live up to their contracts. A number of Wisconsin physicians have gone unpaid for the same reason. Many of Mr. Kennedy's programs his tax plan, his Youth Conservation fall (fOrps, his Area Redevelopment Americans. head! for Jobs of under the Here is a corner of the garden that might, well be cultivated. Our Commerce Department has proved singularly dis--' interested. Secretary Hodges at this writing owes Acting Chairman Dodd a letter to explain the Department's policy, (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Herald Correspondents Hert axe Herald stair correspondents insur-person-al In the various communities of I lah County. Contact them U rou havo news. District circulation gents art listed also They stand ready to help rou wJ problems concerning d uvery ox tne :paoer trante Phone Community Alpine SK T Bertha Out American Fork SK Dena Grant SK Betty K. Spencer Benjamin Mrs. Re gen Peay 1 Edgemont Laura NI Bendlxseu FR Goshen. Elberta Marjnieriite Waterbury Hlciuand PO Cressi Greenland Lake Shore j . Alba J Anderson Lake view. Vineyard AC Mrs. Kent A Pro t Lehl PO Edna Loverldce ' Llndon Thelma Herrlck . . . SU j Mapleton Mrs. Preston Hooper HU Nephl 471-Mrs. Grace Judd Or em Office t Donna Mackert .... AC Mona 623-05. Agnes Myers I Payson Madollne Dixon Wayne Jackman .... (Circulation for area from Spanish Fork, south in Utah and Juab Counties) Pleasant Grove Mrs. Lois Melendez SO Guy Hillman sports SU Pleasant Vierw I Salem 5S 798-36- 39 274-33- 33 i 798-36- 79 9-5- W 3 57 465-23- 95 465-36- 17 5-3- 8-2- 1 Florence Sperry ..... YvonnelPerry ...... . J"R Santa quin f 754-39EstsUa Peterson Spanish Fork: 1 Frank 0. Kin Spring Lake 485-34.Tress Lyinan Springvllle I HU Josephine Zimmerman Lorene Savage ...? HU West Mountain Ruby Meredith ........ 768-240- Edward (UPI) F. Underwood of Ira Haupt & Co. finds the stock market's advance to-- be "broadening and acceleratan extremely rapid rate." at ing He believes that the next test industrials avfor the Dow-Jone- s will erage develop near the all-tiarea. highs in the 730-4- 0 And regardless of the initial outcome of this test, "I again reiterate- my prediction of many months ago that we will soon see record highs." Underwood also believes the moment is at hand for increased public participation. This "most powerful catalyst of all" would produce a sustained rise in stock prices and a belated rush to get on the bandwagon, he says. NEW YORK for all what is the most suitable form of government." Rights of Mankind "It is our earnest wish," the Pope said, "That the United Nations organization in its structure and in its meansmay become ever more equal to the magnitude and nobility of its tasks, and that the day may come when every human being will find, therein, an effective safeguard ;for the rights which derive directly from his dignity as a person!.. "A public authority, having world-wid- e power and. endowed with the proper means for the efficacious pvrsuit of its objective must be set up by common accord and not imposed by force." The Pope's implied suggestion for putting teeth into the United Nations is not new. The charter provides for a U.N.! military force to carry out Security Council directives, but the major powers never have been able to- - agree on its make-uThe pontificial appeal for negotiation echoes the pursuit of "quiet diplomacy"! practiced effectively by Secretary General Thant and his predecessor, the late Dag Hammarskjold. Thant's U. N. Creed Pope John's encyclical recalled the U. N. creed j enunciated by Thant at a news '(conference last j September. "I am convinced that this world is heading for a synthesis," Thant said. "If we may recall a little of history, I am sure you will agree with me that reljgious tolerance 200 or so years ago was regarded as a sin, and not only as a sin, but .as a closassal crime. But it is no longer regarded as such in the 20th century. "Now, of coursej; political tolerance or tolerance of political ideologies or beliefs is still regarded, if not as a sii, as some sdrt of crime. I belieye strongly that this attitude is also a passing phase... f "To give a religious analogy: I am a Buddhist; j I believe that Buddhism as a religion is superior to other religions, but this conviction does not blind; me to the fact that there are hundreds of millions of people who believe otherwise. I understand this, and because of this understanding I believe in peaceful coexistence." It will help a lot, come spring cleaning time, if ja wife sweeps 9-4- 168 9-5- 465-33- her husband out irtk 33 hesitation and consolidation before on recent marany follow-throug- h a ket strength, background seems to exist against which the market could make a serious run on e thhighs, now surprisat close hand, says Robert ingly T. Allen of Shearson, Hammill Si By WAYNE G. BRAN DSTADT, M.D. -- Co. Kenneth Ward of Hayden, Stone &i Co. says despite reasons for continued caution and the tax payment deadline just ahead, the market has quite clearly demonstrated once again that new buying power is plentiful and that investors are still very although on an extremely selective and discriminating basis. stock-minde- j UK ed d, Quotes In The News Ala. The Rev. Martin Luther King, after service of an injunction aimed at halting Negro demonstrations here: "No injunction nor anything else will stop the Negro from achieving full citizenship in the state of Alabama." . . j By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE Newspaper Enterprise Assn.! Did your; husband ever give you an electric: mix- iJTn, - er for ding J & a5 wed- Vr aniiyer-sar- y gift? l' token mingled le e It's a we receive; with .;' .. Though we say, "Thank $ ! I . i using ou per cent oi ine collected t fees, j'-' The; program for acquisition of mi ! m mm '' . more I federal recreation areas would, cost an estimated $560 million over 10 years. It would add aboutj 1.' million acres to the national parks, 4.0 million acres acres to f'ish and Wildlife Service preserves 7 .3 million acres in all. With $480 million advance appropriation over an eight-yea- r period.l jjthls makes recreation area development more than a $1 billion program. The proposed legislation sped-fies that! none of this money can be spent except by Congressional appropriation, so it Isn't a back door spending job. te " Favorable Is Written for Newspaper ' Enterprise Assn. Ulcerative colitis is a baffling disease. Its cause is unknown. It is easy to recognize and hard to treat. Although progress in the treatment Colon and the t .1 J without Jropej treatment, it Is a of hopeless one. Fortunately, much can b done for the Victims. Early in the course of the disease an attempt must always be made to control the process withIn many patients out this can, be done arid, even when operation becomes necessary, the preliminary medical treatment; puts the victim in a much better; condition to withstand the operation. Rest, avoidance of emotional upsets, and a diet without roughage are the basic requirements. Blood transfusions may have to be given. , xueaicavea enemas nave oeen tried, but have been abandoned because they further Irritate an already, damaged bowels Psychoanalysis has also been found to be of little if any value In treat ment of persons with ulcerative Children and o u n ;g adults. The idea that it was caused by a . ope-ation- germ or virus a s h e l d by some 1 of essential nourishment and lead to extreme loss of weight and weakness. Add to this a slow but steady bleeding from the affected area and it can be readily seen this disease is being made, it still takes the lives of many W Jl . authori ties, but has Or Brandrtad been abandoned, chiefly because there has never been an epidemic of the disease and it rarely attacks more than one member of a family. There is some evidence that an emotional element plays a part in causing or aggravating the disease. Direct observation of the mucous membrane 'of the colon in a victim showed that anger or resentment caused increased muscular activity of the wall of engorgement with the colon, blood, and small hemorrhages under the mucous lining. Few, however, believe that this is the only factor involved. The stress and strain of the struggle in young people to become economically independent may be a factor!, Recent studies strongly suggest that a food allergy may be an important cause. Whatever the cause, the ulcers - , colitis: I Cortisone and related drugs are often used for short periods, especially in preparation for operation. In patients with a severe . 4i - tucse V.- - J i aruKS mir am iuua abutv-In those victims whose lifesavlhg. disease: was 'found to be due to allergy,' eliminating the offending food from the diet was attended after several weeks by marked improvement, but not by complete cure. A recent study in England indicates that a new sulfa drug (salicyiazosulfapyridine) will control a mild attack, if given early in the cour of the disease. Eve4 with the best of medical treatment between 35 and 65 per cent of the victims have to be operated on, usually (from three to six years after the onset.. If an operation is decided on. nothin short pf removal of the diseased colon Will help. This means that . .1.1 wis pom 1 nw uive a new opening, an ileostomy, in the abdomen. The Ileostomy bag that he must wear has been so , vastly improved in recent years that this is no longer considered a handi11-- Awareness 1 , & - - - ' do-nothi- ng- The opinions and statements ex- pressed by Herald columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of this newspaper. ar . i J f - program, j The1 plan is to have these advances pi id back to the United States Treasury over a seven-yeperiod beginning in the Tho Mature Parent n CA- - j i By United Press International PHILADELPHIA Mrs. Manof the mother ning J. Harvey, the of nuclear missing skipper submarine Thresher: "I have great faith in God, and in my son. f He is a splendid nuclear man. If anything can" be done, he will' do it." Person-to-Perso- 3 . pectedjtofbe about 70 per cent to "state park systems, 30 per cent " to federal recreation areas. But ttoj speed development of more vacation fun areas for the growing xpulation, there's another provision in the proposed legislation for a $60 million federal appropriation for eight years, beginning jin the third year of the . Tales Bore Out of Chore With U13U1UUUUU OTCipgC in the that form J : all-tim- well-advertis- from conservation stickers and other fees would be plowed back into federal recreation area development. That wa the Kennedy plan in legislation offered last year, but Congress would have ' none of it. THE BIG PRINCIPLE in the new conservation fund bill is ti make the states primarily responsible' for development of out- door resojrts for the general public. Allocated on the basis of state population, area and neeL- For Ulcerative Colitis Victim be-so- BIRMINGHAM, 89 i Outlook Today performance. - -- The J Doctor Says p. . Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation dam site recreation areas. The stickers also would be good in Foresf Service, Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service areas, where admission can be Controlled. But fof the big national forests, grasslands, land reserves, and probably for the new wilderness if. Congress approves areas their establishment there would be no charge, since admission Some national parks and many rof the state parks now charge a small entrance fee for one-tim- e visits. Under the new scheme these fees might be continued. But they also would be counted as down payments on a sticker ad- - well-rounde- While there well may - to go. ket background should enable the list to keep going up with the probability that huying will spill over into the somewhat "lesser d grade stocks for a Simple Simon met a pie man and the coffee break was born. 798-685- THE CONSERVATION WINDSHIELD stickers probably would be sold at post offices as well as tat park sites. Every, purchaser would also get a guide telling where he would then be "free" Martin Gilbert of Van Alstyne, Noel & Co. says the current mar- 09 I pay-as-you-en- me Barbs 3U to general Treasury receipts. It is estimated that about $80 million would be raised from all these sources in the first year. , This sum gradually would rise to $180 million, and average $150 million for the first 10 years. The big idea is to put the great outdoors-- , on more of a basis, with those enjoying it footing most of the bill instead of asking all the taxpayers to finance it. Chatter Peace-Keepin- Doctors can't resist doing a medical survey-typ- e analysis even when it's just for fun. American Medical Association News has done a "physical" on the congresThe report: sional make-uAverage congressman's age is 52. Most of them are war veterans. The youngest is 28, the oldest 85. Congress includes 102 Methodists, 98 Catholics. By occupation 316 congressmen are lawyers, 39 are journalists, 158 businessmen or bankers, 61 farmers, 50 teachers, two ministers and two doctors. There is no clue in the report as to the reason for one tendency common to most of the solons: a strong desire to talk excessively. trophe risks, damage to theatrical sets, We have, mo re atheists in West Germany and in the Western world than there are in East Germany or Russia. -Rev. Dr. Martin Niemoeller. federal by luyi to all parks. mitting In addition, the stickers would admit tourists to Army Corps of can't be controlled. Only part of the money received 5 . So They Say - four-cent-a-gall- on I President V whole or in part 7 p;- " - 16 If nearing test Votes in Senate and More Jobs for Americans are ready for any sacrifice to visit ' - . Holmes Alexander We quired to buy an annual conservation windshield sticker at from $2 to $5 to outdoor recreation areas financed in l - ' ! that vfxl - iA i p. This When 2 . L m ii- r-. Trr Only Two Doctors? crashing Dunik II on the moon and then, a month later, photographing the hidden side of the moon with Lunik III, you don't "deliberate- - mistake. .mj,-- " t i i.;i-;i:.A- n I" 1"1 . a. a nr? "ttxmxi , HIT i, , iy-- son Day" Which included special ceremonies besides addresses by the visitor before college and high school groups. Mrs. Peterson said the best advice she could give young people the best is to get an education "And education get your possible. before marriage," she added. This seems especially good advice, because in this day and age,' education or training in the trades skills become more and more important in qualifying a person for his niche in life. Cedar City was mighty proud of Esther Peterson. Provo can be proud, too. She is a worthy representative of this city and state and is doing much to place her home town on the nationwide map. the For with their Sputniks caught They announced another rocket was on the way to the moon (they couldn't very well hide it from Western tracking stations.) This , thing missed. The Soviets, of course, let on ai xi li. i.i l anul uiat was inienuonai mis jnai all objectives of the mission were met. The informed part of the world knows better. Twr. I her highly during "Esther Peter- No Spoof, Space Goof once Russians have been t . By PETER EDSON Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. AnWASHINGTON (NEA) other question on which a lot of people may have definite pro and con ideas is whether tourists and v a c a 1 1 o ners 1 should be re- . yellow turnips? Why not a black chiffon negligee instead of this piece of general housekeeper equipment? What's happened to our awareness of each other?" fJust as we need occasional private with the man we love, so may the daughter need it with the mother who complains to me: j' "My girl is. supposed to take the laundry to the automatic laundry down the street on Saturday mornings. She doesn't do it. She lolls around in bed or her bathrobe until noon. It's nearly suppertime befjore she gets her own room straightened up so that. private person-to-perso- n give-and4a- ke , c A you, dear. it's just what; I've Mrs. Lawrence been longing for," we are actually thinking, "So. what I have, become to you is this household's mixer of family cake dough, your masher of communal potatoes and f , she can say she hasn't got time to help with my housework. We used to be close but this lazi- ..." Sometimes the young ness. find gen- eralized household chores boring. Sometimes a child who has developed resistance to stripping the family beds or taking every-- , one's laundry to the comer, needs us to say, "Darling, I need a. new black slip very badly; to wear with my new black blouse. My old one is practically rags. Would you go downtown for me today and pick one out? I don't want a tailored one but a prettyj one. . . ," Sometimes we can break through a child's resentment of chores that service everybody in the family by asking for a personal! and private servicea token of interest between person and person. To children, household chores done for the benefit of everyone, in the family can easily come to seem chores done for nobody's benefit. Just as we resent the electric mixer which subordinates a husband's interest in us as an individual to general interest in the family as a whole, so children can resent generalized chores. To make them palatable they need to deliver us personal and private services once in a while in order to feel concretely and specifically A f 1 11 1 cap.' " .J- - ., - tt helpful. The youngster who is bored by I the automatic laundry chore may be the very one to take special care Jin selecting our new black slip for us. (All rights reserved. Newspaper I Enterprise Assn.). j |