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Show July 2, 1970 The Springville Herald Page Three MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS Stanley F.Yolles.M.D. Director National Institute of Mental Health Chad R. Black, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Black of Spanish Fork, will celebrate his first birthday July 6. His mother is the former Claudette Bertoglio of this city. iff s 4 Richard Jensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jensen, celebrated his first birthday on May 22. WORTH ABOUT In our own individual way we can become an effective spokesman speaking out for our country, telling its success stories, selling its ideals, and merchandising the dynamics of its future capabilities. So to the old question that people have been hiding behind for years "What can I do?" I suggest that the answer is "What will I do?" Will I believe be-lieve in America will I work for America will I sell the American ideal? If our answers to these questions are "yes" if, like the man that Thomas Paine envisioned, we demonstrate our willingness to accept our full citizenship responsibilities re-sponsibilities we can and will build a new and greater America Amer-ica a better America for all Americans a better America for all mankind. James H. Binns, President Armstrong Cork Company REVERSE ART NEEDED "Taxation is the art of picking the goose to secure the maximum maxi-mum amount of feathers with the minimum amount of squawking. We appear to be living in an age when the accent ac-cent is on spending rather than saving. At every level of government gov-ernment there are those who spend sleepless nights attempting attempt-ing to think up ways of extracting ex-tracting more money from taxpayers, tax-payers, many of whom have already reached the limit of their ability to pay. Let's spend some waking hours giving some thought to ways of spending spend-ing less, thus obviating the need for additional taxes." Rep. George Goodling, (R-Pa.) Seashore Saver A new concept has been successfully suc-cessfully tested to provide a permanent solution to preventing prevent-ing erosion and the rebuilding of eroded areas. Gray Tech Industries, Inc., in cooperation with the Coastal Engineering Laboratory of the University of Florida, in Gainesville, uses a natural balancing bal-ancing of h;. draulic forces to obtain a resultant deposit of sand and to stabilize in-place sand. The sea erodes huge areas of the coastline by tidal and longshore long-shore currents, backwash, and undertow. This Conquik method may prove to be the scientific breakthrough needed for a permanent solution to the problem. IheOldlomvt CRIME AND DELINQUENCY GET RESEARCH ATTENTION The twin problems of crime and delinquency are the subject sub-ject of a great deal of attention from many kinds of organizations organiza-tions of both public and private character. The National Institute of Mental Health, for example, has always had strong interest in attacking these problems; and is devoting several million dollars each year to research and demonstration projects seeking new knowledge and useful use-ful ways to combat crime and delinquency. These amounts, large though they are, pale beside the enormous enor-mous economic costs of these problems. Recent figures show that the annual cost of crime and delinquency de-linquency exceeds $20 billion with more than $4 billion being be-ing consumed yearly by police, legal, and correctional activities. This is to say nothing of the psychological and social toll they take all over the country. The nature and size of these problems indicate why we are, in cooperation with other government gov-ernment and private agencies and the Nation's colleges, universities, uni-versities, and other educational and research agencies, devoting so much effort to understanding causes and finding solutions. Through activities ranging from basic studies of aggression aggres-sion to the development of community com-munity treatment programs, we are working toward the containment con-tainment and reduction of antisocial anti-social behavior. Demonstration projects show that community treatment programs pro-grams for adolescent delinquents delin-quents are proving not only more effective than institutionalization institution-alization merely jailing or putting the juvenile into an institution in-stitution but also more economical. eco-nomical. But the roots to social problems prob-lems such as delinquency and crime often lie in early life, we know; and so scientists are continuing, con-tinuing, with some real successes, suc-cesses, to pin down and define factors in the child's early environment en-vironment that so markedly influence in-fluence his maturing and later behavior. Good early treatment has demonstrated success in preventing pre-venting intellectual and emotional emo-tional problems and has led to beginning development of effective effec-tive programs in behalf of the child's mental health. Such programs, and still newer ones, must now be tested in a variety of settings and more universally applied. Only in such ways, through painstaking research and careful care-ful development of programs to aid normal mental and emotional emo-tional growth, can we get at the deep and troublesome causes of crime and delinquency. DOES LSD CAUSE MENTAL ILLNESS? No drug has caused more controversy, with the possible exception of marihuana, than the strange compound known as LSD. What do we know about it? Here are some of the questions ques-tions people frequently ask about this mysterious drug. The answers are factual, not preachments. preach-ments. The answers are based on current scientific knowledge. What is LSD? It is a powerful man-made chemical, lysergic acid diethylamide, diethyla-mide, generally called LSD. It was first developed in 1 938 from chemicals found in ergot, a fungus that grows on rye a common grain plant. LSD is classed legally as a " hallucinogen, a mind-affecting drug. It is noted mainly for producing strong, strange mental men-tal reactions in people. It causes striking distortions in their physical phys-ical senses: what and how they see, touch, smell, and hear. Does LSD increase creativity? creativ-ity? Some users believe it does. But studies of paintings, writ- -ings, and other works done by drug users have failed to support sup-port this. In many cases, works done by people under LSD influence appeared noticeably poorer. Is LSD dangerous? Hospital and other reports warn of definite dangers: accidental acci-dental deaths, panic, temporary but possibly recurring paranoia (suspicious fear), and the possibility pos-sibility of acute and even long-lasting long-lasting mental illness. "Future generations will be born free, equal and in debt." SiN' jf BEEF flll)tyc3 swift's plump, juicy, all-meat I W t? Wm. i Morrell Shank Al SZJS SMOKED HAM WHOLE FRYERS LB. lb. 47c CDAMIC ... kUJ f LINK SAUSAGE . 69c Swift's Premium Brown 'n' Serve 12-oz .I. . v V U & III , s i Morrell's Center Cut HAM SLICES . lb. 98c V Vs . i I j WWW !' ' i 1 1 1 i I n Sliced BOLOGNA lb. 69c 00 QUDD GDCDO 0 (XlD GGC CjGGDLXD OQXD' 00 OOGO GO GH08GG) WiL Jim MIRACLE WHIP f :Z H KRAFT IP J, Miracle QUART JAR C? lUl 5 Whip Jj JJ T psEl M-D- 12 rolls mm T0ILET w BBal tissue fljl uMTA QpJ CANNED POP dg2 DIET OR REGULAR " "'O' 5"S Certified Salted 14-oz. TOfUOTH!' 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