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Show Tremonton. Utih The LEADER The Road Report Thursday, February 25, 1965 only a couple of strong campus contacts and has himself been working on campus with the rebellion leaders. .. Wy Df. L Imo The Young DVCATtOM ftOClAW Alliance was also found to be active in the disorders. The,' YSA follows the Trotsky FREEDOM TO SPEAK OUT line of Communism and The question might be leans toward Castro. It is a asked why more of our branch of the Socialist Workers Party, once cited by prominent national leaders Attorney General Tom Clark do not speak out whenever as subversive. The largest such events occur as the recent turmoil and student faction, however, was found rebellion at the University to be the W.E.B. DuBois of California at Berkeley. Clubs of America, advocating the Moscow line. Ostensibly, the fuss was National headquarters of about freedom of speech. this group is in San FrancisYet, most American leaderinco. An East ship, which we hope has a cludes UC Bay chapter students and prosane and balanced position . Their about this kind of Marxist fessional hangers-onis advisor "Micky" n practice-rufor revolution, chooses to remain silent. Lima, chairman of the ComMust we ignore the danger? munist Party for Northern What's wrong with speaking California, who was photo- -' graphed on campus during up about it? Somebody besides the student orators at the FSM demonstrations. UC had better exercise the A New Facade privilege of free speech, it Aware of this group, FBI seems to me. Director J. Edgar Hoover The turmoil at Berkeley said last October: "This involved only a minute facacademic year will undoubttion of nearly 26,000 stuedly see intensive Commudents. The dedicated stunist Party efforts to erect dents and scholarly faculty its newest facade on the largely ignored it, according nation's campuses to draw to reports. And even of those young blood for the vampire activists involved, relatively which is international Comfew are said to have any munism. In its continuing direct ties of racial, political drive to attract young or Marxist nature. But Ed Americans, the Communist Montgomery, reporting for Party U.S.A. spawned a new the Los Angeles Herald national Marxist youth Examiner, found that many organization in June 1964 were being duped unwittingthe W.E.B. DuBois Clubs ly or otherwise by trained America." These were of agitators, most of whom were not students at all. A spawned in San Francisco, NAACP coalition of named for the action and into founder, put foreign ideologies, he recause. Communist the for ported, was behind the Within six months they were Marxist dominated demontrying their wiles in Berkestrations. ley. A Few Can Agitate These tactics are likely to Even President Clark Kerr be tried on other campuses of the University said that also. Agitation may not most of the demonstrators center around FSM, but the were not students and that ultimate objective of recruit"up to 40 per cent of the ing youth for Communism is hard-cor- e leaders" were adthe same. DuBois Clubs are herents of the Mao-Re- d being formed on other West Chinese Communist ideology. Coast campuses. With the These agitators were traced help of the PLM and the by Reporter Montgomery to YSA (and funds from Mos- the Progressive Labor Movecow and Peking), prorevoment, a fairly new front that fessional, is making quite an orbit lutionaries are ready to be about the country. This outcalled in as soon as some fit in Berkeley is headed by kind of cause can be dis- Mortimer Scheer, who has OF THE PREVAILING SPEED Socialist WHIOIKT-NAT10- NAI BY ARBA IS THE SPEED THE SAFEST Looking Ahead . . . TRAFFIC FLOW on r t - a 20 M.P.H. THE ACCIDENT RATE FOR io well-organiz- ed non-stude- nt HELD OVER THROUGH SATURDAY An unusual motion picture experience! ......... llTM ;fi - x.- - iieisfr i ... v :: .... WAIT DISNEY Those allowavs TCPUMPni nr iLniuiiouLun 0UYy fXMuclont l4 WM CAPITOL LOGAN. UTAH Continuous shows after 1:30 Adults $1. till 2 then $1.25 Children 50c IS 100 TIMES THAT OF 65 M.P.H. driving on main (Daytime DRY CLEANING , vn t highways in ... AMERICAN ROAD BUILDERS JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM of the South Bear River Stake is this group of players from the Thatcher-Penrosward. Front, David Jensen, WesMichael Petersen, Paul Wight, Hugh Newman, ley ASSN. e Traffic safety takes imagination, all right, but some of the ideas that have cropped up lately . . . Well, judge for yourself. A citizen of the state of Maine pointed out, very logically that since a person will do anything he was told to do under hypnosis, it follows that the hypnotic suggestion to drive in driver's safely, planted minds, would make it impossible for them to cause accidents. Anyone want to try it? Supervisor Kenneth Hahn of Los Angeles County recently proposed talking traffic signals. devices, he Recording could be synchronized with signals near schools so that at the instant a green light appears a voice would say: "Look both s ways, children." In Idaho, the center lines in advance of some stop signs are wavy they look as if the man said, more quickly for the slop. Traffic engineers for the Illinois Tollway have tried a similar device. They've painted lines from curb to curb for 50 feet or so before toll plazas. The purpose of these "transverse optical illusion lines" is to make drivers think they're going faster than they are. As a result, it is believed that drivers slow their cars more quickly for toll plazas, if their rate of speed reduction is The Michigan De- deer. road-hoppin- g B.R. Hoopsters Upset SkyView To Win 70-6- 3 test - a foul. And he scored the last point of the game - a foul. High scorer for Skyview was Jan Hall with 14 points, closely followed by Jeppson and Carlson with 12 each. The Rivermen led throughout the entire tilt. However, the tauted Bobcats came withfour in one point with about minutes Skyview remaining. was forced to foul in the closing minutes of the game and the Bears won by seven. Bear River will trek to test tomorrow night to the Ogden Tigers. The Tigers being tied for second place in claim Region One, superior and a balanced rebounding by Lynn Rose A Sky-vie- 70-6- 3 s, team scoring average. The tilt at Ogden tomorrow is scheduled for 8 p.m. at Ogden High School. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii 4TH WARD TREMONTON ELDER'S QUORUM g 1 n I I presents its I ANNUAL SPAGHETTI FEED FRIDAY. MARCH 5TH I South Bear River Stake Center Serving 7:00 p.m. Program 8:00 p.m. $1.00 per plate tt i- .UIIIIiJ& - - "M iImmJ Bear River Wrestlers pinned Sessions of Ogden. He ventilation developed hyper prior to his final match and was forced to default to Enter State Competition of SkyView. Region honors went to Box Elder, whose wrestlers massed a total of 82 points. Bonneville finished second, with Weber and SkyView placing third and fourth. Bear River, with 45 counters, placed fifth. Since Coach Petersen loses only three lettermen via graduation, he expects a great season next year. Of the seven men to qualify for state only Nicholas and Nelson the sen- Mc-Nee- ley who weigh m at 123 and 157 Seven Bear River High pounds, also placed second in School matmen will be vying their class to gain a go at for Class A wrestling honors state competition. this coming Friday and SaturGaylen Udy and Yale King, day when they test their mat juniors who compete in the skills against the best from 115 and 168 pound weights, other regions at Hillcrest High. finished third to draw the nod Last Friday and Saturday at for a chance at coveted state the area meet held at SkyView titles. these wrestlers placed among Bill Flint, a 136 pound mat-mathe top four in their respective slot gained a fourth-plac- e weight classes to qualify for as did Leslie Hansen, a 183 state competition. pound grappler. Bruce Roderick, a sophomore Hansen, who has looked imwrestling in the 98 pound class, pressive for Coach Don Peterwon a second-placslot and the sen's squad all season, played right to try for state Class A in hard luck. He pinned Zundel honors. Dave Nelson, team , of Box Elder, lost a decision to Hamilton of Weber," and captain, and Howard Nicholas. e Everyone-Invite- .it. 257-715- ...... . ft Hi i innif ii;mi ijjji The Bear River Jr. High basketball team closed its 1964-6season with a decisive win over the Intermountain Indian School. Thursday. The game played on Intermountain's court anneared to be a defensive battle as neither team was able to score with any in the first q uarter Bear River. which ended 5 CATTLE 9-- AUCTION CHARIOT RACES Bear River Valley Culler Ass'n. i OGDEN UNION Ogden, Utah V 1:30 P.M. .A HOG AUCTION EVERY PLYMOUTH TUESDAY Admission $1,00 2R-1- The third and fourth quarters the Jr. Bears shot an uncanny fi7 percent of their shots from the f'eld. At times the Bears forced ahead as much as 30 points. The final score was 57 to 35. The Jr. Bears record for the season in league play stands at four wins and five losses. search 12:30 P.M. STOCK YARDS SATURDAY, FEB. 27TH During the second quarter the Bears rebounding, coupled with accurate shooting pushed them in front by a score of The American Heart Associaaffiliates have tion and its channeled about 100 million Heart Fund dollars into re- THURSDAY ! Holland, and Perry Crozier: The Rivermen have a season's record of 3 wins, 6 losses, and 1 tie. Junior Bear Team Wins Final EVERY ! iors. Other Bears to show well in season's competition are Nolan Bourne, Gail Godfrey, J. V. Christensen, John Salas, Leon Game at Iiitermountain School BROS. Tremonton 9 Howard Nicholas. Back row, Billie Flint, David Nelsen, Capt., Gaylen Udy and Bruce Roderick. Seven members of the Bear River High wrestling team who will enter state competition are, front row, i 'to r: Leslie Hansen, Yale King, Og-de- n AND HATTERS Phone i: SB : g , Highway partment and the New Jersey road-edg- e Turnpike have installed mirrors in areas where vehicles sometimes collide with scrappy Bear River basketball squad upset the last Friday Bobcats maoperating the night on the local fives' home chine should have been ticketed court. for drunken driving. But, there's From the opening minutes of a reason for the wavy line crucial game it was obvithe it's supposed to impart a feelous there would be no easing ing of motion to drivers and off for either team. encourage them to slow down Wayne Payne and Richard Jensen, two Bear River cag-eroutdid themselves to the covered or concocted. Those who dismiss the rebellion at tune of 24 and 28 points, reUC as reaction against the spectively. Jensen tanked 10 field and Payne added "factory" impersonality of eight. goals The two local hoopsters the big university are going both added 8 points from the to have to revise their view- charity stripe. The pattern for the game was point. set right at the beginning as How Silent We Are the Cats, in pressing Jensen Knowledge was general of too closely, fouled him with Communist participation in only one minute played. He the turmoil at Berkeley. It sank the. first score of the con has developed, it seems, that Communist agitators either here or abroad are safer from U. S. scorn than almost any kind of mischief maker. Are we so mesmerized by Moscow, Peking and Havana that we have nothing to say? One would think that the President of the U. S. might well have taken the opportunity to show native Reds his Texas mettle. Is he restrained by political considerations? Or has the line tied the tongues of our leaders in high places? If our leadership does not speak out, there may come a time when it cannot speak at all. Or has that time, in fact, arrived? Petersen. Center row, Lloyd Allen, Bruce Jensen, Bryce Petersen David Burton, Nord Petersen. Back, Stacey Little, Claud Christensen, Larry Petersen, Monte Andreason, Barry Roche, coach. D. Almost any driver would rather collide with the rubber guard post that a rubber company has invented than with a steel or concrete post. The new versions bend like a rubber band and brings an errant auto to an undamaged stop. PECK FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY v DRIVERS. NO EXTRA CHARGE BEAR RIVER CLEANERS a DRIVERS moke travel fatter, Modern roodt speed up traffic flow $afer for everybody. y, MOTH PROOFING i m rural areas) Ful-brig- ht Cling Free! Lint Free! t i 12:30 P.M. and Norman Johnson set a new state record. Dr.vid Archibald placed first in 100 yd. breast stroke. Bear River tankmen took honors at a state swim meet last weekend. In the free style relay, Don Anderson, Ronald Thompson, Robert Petersoa Summing Squad Gains Third Place A strong squad of Bear River swimmers copped third place in Class A tank competition last Saturday in a meet that featured outstanding swimmers from Utah high schools. The school's freestyle relay team established a new state record by cutting down the previous record by 1.7 seconds. Swimming in the relay were Ronald Thompson, Robert PetNorman Johnson, and erson, Don Anderson. David Archibald won first in breast-strokstate in the 100-yar- d wfnners gained gold medals for their achievements. Thompson also placed third in the freestyle, while Peterson paddled to a third-plac- e 200-yar- d win in the 100-yar- d style. Both boys gained freemed- als. Archibald and the four relay "ry" Bears medley finished JOIN UP.-JOI- M N by fvey fourth. Swimming here were Douglas Ficklin, David Archibald, Brent Wood, and Steven Stokes. Steven Adams placed fifth in the breaststroke, and Don Anderson was sixth-plac- e winner in the freestyle. Cypress High won the meet, whiTe East finished second. Tooele was in the fourth-placslot. d e This year seven state legislatures will consider bills calling for reflective license plates. If the bills pass, the number of states issuing the plates that glow in headlights at night will total 24, plus the District of Columbia. Twenty-thre- e 28 squad state of Bear River's members were in competition. These boys dominated region competition to qualify for the state meet. ' Since Gerald Simmons took lover duties as swimming coach, the Bears have shown much progress. They have dominated region swim meets for the past five years and have brought Bear River's swim prestige on a state level e to an high. . |