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Show 'There Wasn't Much Meat on Thar WASHINGTON NEWS NOTEBOOK Party Pace Doubles When I ke Out of Town ? ; PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, APRIL, Northeast Road-PIbhnir- be exact, or better than three quarters of a mile (Eighth North to 17th North). Several years ago, when a maximum KAftft nr so students was envisioned for vf understood BYU, university officials were east-weroad to an airreeable fn he some point throucrh school property at But Lane. of apparently south Phillips action to ti6 up nobody took any definite the road. . Now, with enrollment at 8000, an increase to 12,000 forecast in the next 10 program years, and the school's building has BYU's hoominir. viewpoint changed. To help chart future growth, the called in expert planners from the The section of Provo's Ninth East; along the east boundary of the Brighamj Young University campus .has become; the center of a knotty " road-plannin- problem. . j : . ac4 The problem, involving devel4 cess to and from Ninth East, has oped as a result of BYU's tremendous campus and housing expansion. With! spiraling enrollment and concentrate i j stretch Ninth East for a 17tli at to road a projected (Eighth North North) except for a couple of circuitous streets through the campus. ' At present, the only public east-wesroad between Eighth and 17th North is narrow Phillips Lane (1430 North) on th edge of a hill, with no potential for widenf ing. Heavy traffic, much of it stemming ; , t it. S A- - Arm .behind-the-scen- . es , : . " - . -- . -. ; I'll- ..' campaign. The pink champagne project was launched at a hufcre g reception which saw untold gallons of the consumed. stuff pink They had a table lull 01 chicken sandwiches, caviar and shnmp. At last reporf no one had seen any pink elephants. IT'S GETTING so that party crashers are welcome here. We know. A hat checkgirlat the Sheraton-Ca- rl ton into-thus a bum gave tip other evening and we walked wrong party while trying to find Kronheim chamwine-tastm- j be closed to through traffic as .soon as 17th North is opened up. In fact, closing Phillips Lane is in the over-a- ll - program envisioned by some planners, What with BYU contemplating a huge dormitory development north of "the street. We are told planning boards have made no of ficial decision! on the problem as yetbut action is anticipated very; Thus, any citizens who oppose shortly. the present trend of official thinking or who have any workable ideas for solving the puzzle had better speak up now. j At a public meeting last week; there was evidenced considerable' agitation road through the campus for an east-weat about 1320 North. Residents claimed a road through the campus was "promvL ised" years ago. V iDne thing is certain opening of a wide thoroughfare at 17th North, as now contemplated,! should be an absolute must of the decision on any other regardless east-weroad..- - Planners; envision a boulevard-type road that .will not only connect Ninth East .with the Provo Canyon Road but continue on west all the way to the Geneva Road. With vast residential growth to the northeast assured, this road . will be sorely needed. a tt ii. - TTi.i. l; ;j xxie: x t xjx acuon, uuixi vxiunxy nuay, C3ommission decided to make an immedi-at- e written request to BYUr for easemenf jfor the 17th North street from Ninth 'East to the Canyon Road. University officials, favoring the road in lieu of one farther south that would bisect the dormitory area, reportedly have said they would recommend to the board of trustees y land be contributed, as that the school owns the property. ' , As fine and necessary as the 17th North road will be,it still leaves a mighty-lonstretch of Ninth East ' without access to and from the west nine blocks, to ; " st .iJi an j as officials began to envision the "sea of students" that would be traversing the dormitory and academic building area on foot. The idea of pushing the road to 17th North, beyond the dormitory area, was pressed. While the university has located the new family living units in such a way road through the that a wide east-we'7 , r , .,' . V campus would now be difficult to achieve, many people still think a public street should be. opened up at about 1320 North, circuitous campus road courses where . between two of the living: units. This THE CHOPPING BLOCK be straightened by road, they say, could y a through some condemning connect witb could and private property izm iNortn ax a point near wie present x were buut witnout Draaes. j? no- of a tree with all the branches coming off the west end of Phillips Lane. By FRAN C ROBERTSON tion to control them was provided hehind the waeon or sled, .;' feasible This seems to us the most Sometimes I think the most over r the caulks in the horses' shoes.' j from the campus itself, has congested thi$ country lane until an acute safety probi lem has developed, especially for children! 1 ! I t r Week. ! Only event to break the monotonous hilarity was the arrival of the Daughters of the American Revolution for their annual convention, AN OLD PAL of former President Harry Truman has launched a drive to get Washingtonians to drink more pink champagne. He's Milton Kronheim, the biggest liquor dealer in town and a political . j power. Kronh elm's protege, by the way, is F. Joseph Dono- hue, national campaign manager for Estes Kefauver. It'i said Kronheim is a heavy contributor to the Kefauver west, coast. A linn view agauiau spuuuig the camDus with a major road emerged nine-bloc- k, i.t Pan-Americ- ; university is opposed to splitting the cam f pus with a major road. . If the trend of present thinking by! k:ey city, county and BYU planners is put Into action, there ultimately will be no, east-we- st roads 1 extending west front r . ' - j : . . st east-we- st S By DOUGLAS LARSEN and KENNETH O. GILMORE , NEA Staff, Correspondents WASHINGTON (NEA) It may be pure coincidence, but when the Boss, Ike, is out of jtown the party pace of administration officials doubles, While Ike was golfing: and signing; bills in Augusta, for example, you could have mustered a respectable cabinet meeting at any one of a half dozen parties for visiting Foreign Minister of Spain and Senora Martin de Artajo. Same tot a raft of parties thrown to celebrate ! g! ' I Gohtrpyersy ig i i 56 22,-19- pagne. Man ; .! . :. , at the door shook hands as though we were e i. , ! smile. But Sens. John Butler and Andrew were drinking bourbon and that was Schoeppel ' Miirnoriries iviosr vverrareu reupic right-of-wa- -- (R-M- d) (R-Ka- the ton. jwo I i cross-route- tip-of-f. n) . ,vt ' . They werie sorry to see usigo. Turned out to be a on by the Committee of American Steamreception put' ' Lines. ship "We'll be sure and send you'an invitation next year. they nromised. j ONE OF: THESE REPORTERS just returned Irom toiir of radar bases in the Arctic, was astonished to a discover that the standard cuisine for the workers up there compares favorably with the buffet fare along, embassy row. Good food, theytye found, is one way to help combat the lonely Arctic life. For example, at a: typical lunch at a radar station mess nail there s a choice oi turkey, ham and roast beef. A green salad and three vegetables is standard. Coffee, tea and cocoa are the. drinks. And the dessert invariably consist of )two types of Danish pastry, pie, cake, or Big difference between the Arctic sites and embassy row, however, is no cocktails. Liquor is not allowed for I the; workers up north. As a result the region is loaded with reformed alcoholics.'. , FORMER SECRETARY of State Dean Acheson has been doing more these days than keeping up his private law practice.? He V helping Democratic congressmen call the plays on the t foreign policy issue. session Other afternoon Acheson had a two-howith a dozen members of the House. He covered the whole range of problem spots that affect foreign policy. Acheson also pointed out to the eroutr that the sec retary of state should keep close to the White House and be an intimate and personal adviser to the President. NOW TFS going to cost congressmen .money when their pictures appear in the paper. At least that goes for members of the Chowder and rated people in the world are the by I never saw a buggy that didn (Bold face mine.) We can understand BYU's reluctance of any must admil "authorities" have' to on went say that that a brake, and you back a to split the campus with a major public field. Most of us can be wrong The authority long my memory goes . provided ways. On a was it anybody, except stages were sometimes road, j Campus planners throughout the without hurting with a sort of shoe which the camel if But ourselves. that people a foot brake up possibly country try to avoid this type of thing who call themselves experts, driver applied to whichever wheel usually. ve On floor. the! larger (although many of the biggest campuses specialists or, authorities, go wrong was needed in case of necessity, through hicles it was a brake lever atitne in the country are bisected by main .thor- a lot of people can be hurt especi- which was seldom, since. the stages side which fastened In notches in a never achieved greater speed inclined most are as , so comb people j thai one could apply ally oughfares). twelve miles, per hour. st than, to in blind faith have authority. desired the to pressure. And you; ap It isn't hard picture large numbers The illustration that, comes to If it's possible to be more than the pressure equally on both plied of student pedestrians moving back, and mind first is the medical profes a nunarea per cent wrong uus rear wheels. forth across the campus, with a growth sion. You hav eto trust your, doctor. guy was. The fellow was thinking I practice a trade that Is singu to "12,000 and perhaps 15,000 students and if he makes in terms of present day automo larly cursed by authorities . j. . V;f 'N"-.'.": .'..V Because a car traveling at "Purists," they call themselves. contemplated. a mistake you're biles. 12 over paved I have never know even the rudimiles ' But on. the other hand, with the conthe one who is roads is per hour safe he ments of grammer, but if I had! the comparatively ! stuck. And don't stantly increasing use of automobiles, it would toe true character in my fiction speak as same the figured tell met doctors is easy to contemplate, also, a great trafI flAft'ffnoVa miff. with horse vehicles. Beyond that the purists would have them their st fic problem unless provision's made for guessing and guessing conversation would be unspeakably I takes. The same he was i . ' facroads.1 BYU and wrong. student suited and dulU adequate goes tor lawyers, this to should take like will I to I hold with the late Clarence cars contribute i expert substantially and such people ulty over-all number of vehicles. the mechanics down a mountain road benind a Darrow, who said, "Even if? you as four horse team attached to a learn to speak correct English. We are not city .planners. .We speak piumoers, stage without brakes. He would be do I i who are you going to speak it to? i wo am x zrequen-- i only as lay observers. 'But we feel car a in in more than going danger Jacques Barzun, former literary tly suspect of from. Eighth North to 17th North is A rut, a critic for Harper's,. says, "Speech, that hour. miles I per eighty mistakes making xor a sharp curve was all it after all, is lit' some measure an too loner a stretch of Ninth East to be deliberately. It's rock, to turn these vehicles over. expression of character, and flexi needed I east-west to .too closed to through traffic. We easy just The rigs were high, and brother bility in its use is a good way to extract money think; that time will bear' out this belief. could tell your friends from the robots. get hurt. you y Robertson from people who The community should cooperate Mr.Robertson wildest ride I ever took was Suppose I were to write, "Utah The with the university. Everyone is proud of are childishly innocent of know when the brake-pol- e broke when is a healthy state." Tou wpuld its great growth and advancement. But ledge. It's ; really rare when the I was coming down a canyon with know what I meant, wouldn't you? in the planning there should be give and experts agree, so it seldom pays a load of wood. I remember riding But a purist .would hold up) his with my father when he used to hands In horror. A person cai) be take and the convenience and needs of the to have blind. faith in anybody. haul wheat down - to the wharfs healthy he would say. but climateThere are fields, aside from must not be subordinated. those public general on Snake River in the state of must be healthful. It might jsurare mentioned that right-of-waThe officials who must make the cluttered up with above, Half way down we prlse you to know that in a poll. but Washington. authorities, final j decision : on this many-side-d prob which you j don't have to accept used to stop and pour water on 26. out of. $3 editors, 6 out of 7 lem have a tough assignment. We hope on, blind faith. I was reading, a the brake blocks to keep them reviewers, ,9 out of 11 hcollege Angeles paper the other day from catching on fire." A pair, of professors, and 20 out of 31 they i will come up with a solution that Los on accepted healthy as cur Republican congressmen during the 81st Congress. which they have an expert who brake blocks usually lasted three authors will be for the best, in the long run, of rent usage. So, it's usage. were When to answer accepted assumes the parany question pitches days. At their last weekly luncheon .Rep. Pat Hillings ALL concerned, not the rules, that really correctly which readers send in. I ticularly steep , we used to rough- - and offered a resolution that any member whose piccame upon this question: "Is it lock, which meant chaining the count. So, say what you want to ture MATURE PARENT appeared in the home town paper of another memtrue that buggies and similar ve wheels so they would slide. I've say, and let the purists moan. i loslnff is a firfiL . ber, would have to pay up $5.00. hicles had no brakes?" , roughlocked many a time in the Theirs The expert hauled off and gave timber, and if we didn't do that There are people who sing with j-- It all startea Bill when a photo of Rep. Ayres this answer: "It is true. Buggies we attached a drag, in the form great fervor, on ran local of the front newspaper Hillings' page "Oh, when shall I see Jesus, r .' . And J with above dwell Him recently. on When her. camp "adjustment" By Mrs. Muriel Lawrence She said, "I Mon't like it here. I he And rush right out to see a doc said firmly and pleasantly. DR. BRADY'S COLUMN "They wanted to charge me $5.00," says .Ayres, w nt to come home." The spring that Jane j was to tor as Him off "btit put I claimed the motion oouidn't be retroactive.' not seeing just is "Jane this for ready as eight, her father said to j "her Her father! said, "AH right. If experience," quite are authori possible. They long his accepted ' mother, 'Let's send her to camp you still feel like that by the end decision with they ties on the Hereafter. admiration instead RUTH MILLETT SAYS 111 of this week, drive up to your of criticism. this summer. Her mother said, in"I suppose we should. It will camp and bring you home." And By WHXIA5I BRADY, M.D. most Americans Is degeneration crease her confidence to discover at the end of the week she came It's probably fear of reclaim dietr that is. it inevitably leads to ing a child from a camp he does- The corrective-protectiv- e, X reduc premature decline in vitality, that '. T home. Marriage-Minde- d she can survive separation from ; like mat n't makes the in outlined original diet basic ; health us." tion, to physical degeneration which ;r The' following summer she decision 10 sena mm to one so Little Lesson 16, The 7 Keys to is, is manifest as decay and loss of . Foi three months, they investiBy RUTH MILLETT nard. Uncertain i that heUl "ad-- Vlte, (for which send 35c and teeth, pyorrhea, rheumatiz, hardw Jane. for uwwer camps They Vj aujusuuwi gated camp. Taken from the Files of Know we may De com' stamped, self - addressed enve- ening of the arteries, 'premature After only a few years of marriage almost any wife could tip talked to fdirectors, showed Jane Her father is a - noted social just, we a to him r also called Herald be re off : mitting The may lope), single girls as to the qualities 'and traits that are" important misery. v jPrOTo pictures and brochures, f and worker whose specialty is chil- If our fear of criticism by the juvenation diet or a regeneration sendlity.: 1 1 1 wearing a husband. ; . e la (c Degeneration J a bit romantic but visited several cmps recom- dren. Because of his reputation, -- .. ... e Twenty-Fivdiet. constantto authorities forbids on Ypars not .us and out camp's jThey and sound'prosalc may Ago goes they bedying) mended by friends, finally choos- the first camp' authorities did rescue come we of to the once over. Is have ourselves the him; mighty important The diet as outlined totals 2,100 ly in the body, but peak honeymoon ing one to which one of her play- not suggest that his removal of a coniuci. uut wnen we can calories . April 22. 1S31 Take the little not matter an adult of neatness. and for Unless a girl wants to spend development growth enough physical Jane was "qverprotective." mates was going. was win Mrs. the Fred life 35 our make her Taylor a man to after 40) minds (proand we up that who confined is picking up have regeneration (age trying to be a good housekeeper The Sunday folowing Jane's Because of! his respect for his the blind ner of the first tourney new had golf she. to of unbetter one who is neat and orderly. duction rescue choose to him, him pace cells) despite or from keeps bed ( right chajr. v. carefully prepared installation at 5v . . Mickey Walker, women man the Then , fo' there's and no with The it matter accordingly how is dependability. young man who keeps a girl It "(happiness . uuenaeoj camp, she telephoned homeJ authorItiesT merely as or woman is or should be at his former middle weight champion guessing maybe fascinating as a date. But he will only cause her c Dear to a. pat-- ) or her very best la every respect prize fighter, was separated from we regain control of our decision tern on which) grief .as a husband. , whomhe his ;! this at GLANCES GALBRMTH i age. bride, to. build your Sociability; Is Important in a husbar.d, too. Few women find Br SIDE; along with control of its As we live today, largely on married 23 days ago . . Duane sitting home night after night with a tusband who, never wants own diet to suit j sequences. food robbed of its Anderson was elected president to go anywhere or have friends is a satisfying existence. d We do not develop a child's your, particular! and vitamins minerals, our vite. of the Musikino social unit of Adaptability Is a mighty fine trait in a husband, too. The man needs. dare:; I emotional strength by overstrain or to who has to have his dinner ready at six o'clock cn. the dot and who our dead, . . not replace BYU rext the the j capacity here,for it year more print than .we promote ing it any new out witn cells worn young The state department announced gets upset over times and never wants to take a hance or make a his muscular power by asking without reading, to earlier and .decline cells L begins proof myself. the formal recognition by the change Is sure to be dull to live with. him to life , weights. are so persons obviously many Dr. Brady United States of the new repub ANOTHER KIND OF SKINFLINT Our motive in removing a child People looking 35. . reach before an or they to vite cut a for aging short easy Ganeroslty ranks high among the qualities that make a man lican government of Spain from an unhappy experience is the health basic Besides to liVe with. It's not only important that a husband not bt flesh using to of slacker easy way redispose. Notre Dame completed , its the question. If we will probably for diet your when with money, but that he be generous with his time. The man building, interest pattern lose stingy to carry on the work remove him because of love's no own everyday diet, you may re organization who never has any toe for his wife is Just as much of a skinCist is (1) there discover that they K. unf rightened .understanding of refined no ceive considerable help from the of the late Knute of Rockne, as who is stingy with mbney. man the and (2) carbohydrate C. Jesse his limitation, heprofits. If he's appointment man a cocoa in the diet. pamphlets Wheat to Eat and with the as has a high regard for; women that's a definite asset. If or coffee tea, director of athletics For the man who removed because fear drives us But Folks and Old Folks, Harper wish l'ounr who has a low opinion of women in general Is rare to anyone merely to overprotectlon, he doesn't. es to build a good everyday diet either of which is free if you pro- . . . Helen Keller, who has won wwiub vnum u mi vine s ooa s ce discovers en fame as an author and lecturer Isn't much different from all other women, after all.tuat see really to live on can fatten the caloric vide stamped, count by adding plain wheat as velope. If you ask for both, in despite her deafness and blindSo ness, was scheduled to broadcast suggested in the recipes la the close 25c. she over a national hook-udon't if other On the hand, you Wheat to Eit, for which The parole of a prisoner is not pamphlet vi read cue you you iuncnea at uie en believe everything nouse, send an act of coddling, but oa the velope.stamped, may argue that by. adhering re contrary is an extension of the As for tea, coffee, or cocoa, any ligiously to this regeneration or state's supervision while he ii one over sixteen years af sge rejuvenation diet one ougnt to himself in may take one or two cups of any outlive (Methuselah. That's a fair trying to , net assumption. The .only trouble is By HAL COCHRAN of these beversges daily society. to taxes are, it's hardly The Chief Justice Earl Warren, cniidren under sixteen. cared has way try enough nobody T for a girl to marrywhile , worth, i: a diet the health it, basic Calling . & ANSWEI13 for . We are not wild men. We are regeneration ciet may well re-- ; money. QUESTIONS Thi nam is your giMt'to DrTENDABLE tnrk C R I not antiwestera and we are not mind us tiat the everyday diet of Call It Flease from tout to coast hostile to the United States, How Ml First thing I have to report is Ant electrician' strike In the y Ii can I be hostile to a country that Sirned letters cot more v that an endless succession of south; left some movie house has produced Mark Twain? colds has stopped since I started goers in the dark. .Just', like than one pare er 1C3 words iodine ration . . . some'ol the movies. t Solomon Bandaranaike, newly- - Ion; pertaining to personal- ' taking your i P.J eiectea premier of Ceylon. (Mrs. M. disease diagnosis or treat. Answer Thank you, Ma'am. A You can be mirhty proud cf ' tetltb ar3 h. not to titzs, f cr.t America will remain strong t. tnc-good many readers report seme jour blood oxrelations when ti.sy will ba aniTrered by T43 it to the' Red Cross. r;f-rno- vo uciT experience. I dont toow give some only under law and order . . . Dr. Crady if a stamped ' ' I v . Ht on. I Tjm. or coincidence. icdia is it cannot achieve its great promenwhether it la eBTelope A drug concern ofQcal says tie ise unless mutual problems' are closed. Adiresf snrb I kr.Dv coly that it can do no I desire for better health fiend he never r::hlic's circumstance. settled in with good will bv all any t3 Or nilllita' harm hope ".My father has a terrible temper to Ezr-lenvclcrs the .;ads drug sales of about i people, regardless of race or .Craij. co rir Da2y i. starred, storms ki hero raving about a bad report card! - half a bUlioa anaually. We think I color. BAIODIN TIIE I for, tniiilet ProTO, UUh. Ufa wort it. r . Sea. Estea Kefadvcr (DTcsa). O TION. ; - vM' i'!" - ..' ; ! ' j , so-call- ed one-seat- er j ; f- ! I ! , j : v j - r . . j f J i lino V . w m j - - j ; j I : I ur t . ! I ; 1 I g j -- i If Camp's Unhappy You Can 'Reiscue Child' IMt . (R-Cal- if) . 1 -- . 1 Degeneration, Regeneration ; Nov History i : 5f,Ut?y. Check, If Once News ; . j . I v ' ? ; -- r j 'Zft; r' j - ; . ultra-refine- ) i 100-pou- nd - all-import-ant ' self-address- TKey Say . p, self-address- ed Barbs -- re-establ- ish ed , ! bt : 1 - ; , ! : i . ; . 1 "" . , ? seii-address- ed mm?, ecrre-tvozi;z- zs , self-address- ed ; I : f !:5T0-t55T- a :;.c:s (R-Oh- io) , |