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Show public Program Monday Nighf ringvi lie's Guardsmen Hearing On In Training Interchange With Army iviunuay 95 7 National Art Exhibit Opens Monday at 9 A. M. 1 SP RINGVTLLE Springville's 1957 National Art Exhibit will open its doors at 9 a.m. Monday, April 1, and close them at 8 p.m. April 30. The formal opening program is scheduled for Monday at 8 p.m. In the Art Building. The public is invited to the Monday evening event. Principal speaker for the', program will be B. F. Larsen, revered Utah artist, enthusiastic booster of the art program in Spring ville, a favorite exhibitor e and head of the art of faculty Brigham Young University. Music will be furnished by the Springville High School A Cappella Choir under the direction of Glenn A. Montague, and vocal duets will be sung by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Woodard of BYU, accompanied by Robert Brownlee, also of the "Y" LEHI Eight members of the Lehi National Guard are now at Fort Ord, Calif., taking the initial phases of a six months regular army training. They will undergo eight weeks basic training, then will receive an additional four months of schooling or training before returning home to rejoin the Lehi Guard. Taking part in the training are George Brian Bone, Ronald K. 'dark, Larry B. Erickson, Lynn M. Nielsen, Nile E. Peterson, Chris A. Petersen and Jerry B. Zimmerman of Lehi, and Vard G, Swain of American Fork. long-tim- Kolob Conference v a m SPRINGVILLE Quarterly conference of Kolob Stake will continue today under the direction of President Ernest A. Strong Jr. Representing LDS General Au- fac-u't- y. Conducting the program will be Paul K. Walker, presi'dent of the Art Board and principal of the Springville High School. Special student assembly programs marking the art opening will also be held during Monday afternoon for students of both the junior . and senior high schools; under the direction of Roger Nielson, mayor of Springville high school who is also a member of the Art Board. The school assemblies will be highlighted by colored slides of the pictures and commentaries of the artists by Mrs. Mae Huntington, secretary of the Art Board. There will also be musical numbers. The program for the senior high is scheduled for 1:45 p.m. followed at 2:30 p.m. by the junior high program. Also on display during the month will be part of the $300,000 permanent collection on the ground floor of the Art Building. The galleries will be open all " Civil Defense Women's Council Slates Meet The Women's Council of the Provo City Civil Defense will meet Monday, April 1, at 7:30 p.m. at the Utility Center, 251 W. 800 N. Cortinuing the home protection exercises, emergency action to save lives in any disaster will be discussed by Gregg Fisher, rescue squad chief, and George Larsen, director of Provo City Civil Defense. Anyone interested in this timely and important subject is invited to attend. wn day from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. each evening including Saturday and Sundays. Guided tours and special lectures on the exhibit will be given Monday through Friday evenings during the month. Groups who may wish to take advantage of these tours are advised to make arrangements with Paul K. Walker, but individuals and small groups are welcome any evening to hear the lectures. cs Workbe treated as need families day hospitals ing where they can leave their ill for treatment while they work. Night hospitals aje needed for able to work but likely to relapse from loneliness in a rented sleeping room. Need for Information Need for information about mental illness is acute, the 1956 Western States Survey indicates. The mass response by teachers, doctors, attorneys, clergy, cops and welfare workers was due to the fact mental v illness plagues their own professions. School administrators said "10 to 15 per cent of students need special help because of adjustment or learning problems;" but less h had counseling or than psychiatric referral programs. One day in four is spent with people they have "neither time nor training to deal with," lawyers, clergy and doctors fold the survey. Worse, they didn't know where to refer these troubled out-patient- s. ex-patie- . IT ISfrh Coupsg. UUh 72 to 71 Workers Accept Thermpid Wage Offer by 1 Vote jcr A public SPRINGVILLE to air plans concernhearing theing proposed highway interchange ' to be constructed south of Springville near the present underpass will be held Monday, April 1, at 10:30 a. m. in the City Hall. Plans include a relocation of highway 88 from along Fourth Bast in Springville to a route which follows the D & R G tracks from the area near the Evergreen cemetery on down to Eighth South in Springville, where the interchange with highway 91 is planned. In addition to the plans, other matters to the economic effects of the proposed interchange will be discussed according to Clarence J. executive secretary of the highway commission. All-re- NEPHI Acceptance of a company wage offer was voted by a margin of a single ballot, 72 to 7f, at a meeting here Saturday of Thermoid Western workers who are members of Local 1663, International Association of Machinists. e cent increase In rates. For workers not on piece-wora straight three per cent jncreae. Union officials 'claimed about 250 of the more than 300 jtotal plant k, Spanish Fork Art Exhibit force belong to the unioW The union is working under a two-yecontract with Thermoid which has another year to run, but which carried the privilege of reopening after a year on wages only. The year was up March 15, SPANISH FORK Under spon- and workers have remained on the sorship of local amateur artists, Job since then while wage negothe annual Amateur Art Exhibit tiations continued. begins here today. Entries have been received from adult artists throughout the county. Hours of the exhibit will be 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays and 1 to 9 p.m. on Sundays. A reception and tea will be held as a kick-of- f event today with Ruth Long, Brigham Young University stupresident of the local art group, and her vice president, Mrs. Iris dent, William D. Marsh, stranded by Kansas blizzards last week, Crump, receiving guests. Artists who exhibit paintings found himself a member of rescue have been instructed to have their crews working out of Qberlin, The names, the painting title, and the crews evacuated motorists trapprice on the back of each canvas ped in stalled cars. The Provoan believes he was entered. School groups, clubs and others wishing to tour the show first motorist ' out Of Kansas. may contact either Mrs. Long or Heading north on Highway 83 out of Oberlin he sighted across a Mrs. Crump Jov arraogfiments. drift" ""the long, a truck load AxtistsTrom throughout - bound from south of soldiers, county have expressed interest in . the exhibit and many entries from Nebraska. all Utah County cities have been They shoveled through the drifts, received. Chairmen of the com- which were one to six feet deep, mittees in the local art group are from both sides; and Mr. Marsh Elmo Braithwaite, Margaret Gard- continued on out of Kansas to 1 Provo. ner and Beulah Larsen. ar Opens Today d, Student Gets Caught In Kansas Blizzarcf Former Price Resident Killed. ar Union President ' ' EI wood HaB said the company acrorjiingly will be notified the union is, accepting the management offer of a wage increase as follows: for piecework employes, two jcents per hour increase plus a three per piere-worf- Calif. (UP) ALHAMBRA, Mrs. Athenas Kanakis Bertlesen, 26, a former resident of Price, colUtah, was killed in a two-clision near here Friday night. Mrs. Bertlesen had left work at Alhambra and was driving to her home in Monterey Park when the The evening meeting, to com- mishap occurred. Another woman mence at 7 p.m., will be under riding in her car, who wa& not the direction of the stake MIA with identified, also was killed. Superintendent Wilford Manwar-in- g of the YMMIA and Mrs. Vir- Family Living; and a demonstragil Hansen of the WWMIA in tion of a typical, home night will charge. The program will fea- be presented bjr the Erwin Shefture short talks on "Successful field family. Park," and right, Florence Ware's "Winter Majesty." yards 1 I It's Collection Time For Herald Carriers Herald carrier boys will tour heir routes in a day or two to make their monthly collections. They can earn a bonus by turning in paid-u- p bills by the 7th. In order to help the boys qualify for the extra bonus subscribers are urged to have their $1.60 subscription ready when the boys call, avoiding' the necessity of call-back- s. Perry Youths Admit Charge of Attempted Rape Karl Dee Kimber, 19, and his brother, William Keith Kimber, 20, 1000 W. 6th S., Provo, charged in Fourth District Court with rape with "force and violence," withdrew their plea of innocence, and "to the included offense of attempted rape," pleaded guilty. Sentencing was set for April 19. A third youth, George Curtis Kinsey, 18, 78 S. 8th W., Orem, will face trial May 6 on charges of "attempt rape." to forcibly . i y COMING ON MONDAY Egan, newly-r- e appointed director of the Utah State Fish and Game Department, will address the Provo Footprinters Monday at 12 noon at the China City Cafe. Director Egan will talk on law enforcement in relation to fish and game. ordered Behavior (Research) Project, declared: "In 45 years, the annual cost of disordered behavior has risen from 50 million to almost 20 billion and most of it is ameliorative rather than preventative." "Disordered behavior" means becoming a public charge. It includes the mentally ill and defective; the delinquent ; the criminal; the unemployable; abused and neglected children; and divorced or deserted, if the families go on welfare. Research into cause of "disordered behavior" at San Mateo; Winona, Minn., and Hagerstown, Md., followed the St. Paul report in 1948 that six per cent of all its families helped by government and voluntary agencies took half of all services. Multiple Problems w i i SAM HILL'S Footprinters To Hear Egan J. No. 17 fin xji s Fear, Ignorance Barriers In Mental Illness Fight out-clini- thorities at the conference are Carl W. Buehner of the presiding bishopric and Arben Clark of the general welfare committee. General sessions will be held at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the Second-Eight- h ward church. A special invitation to Aaronic priesthood members and girls of the corresponding age (between 12 and 19 years of age) to attend the sessions has been made and a front section of the chapel will be reserved for them at both morning and afternoon sessions.' AMONG PAINTINGS AT EXHIBIT Here are two paintings artists among the by well-knohundreds to be seen beginning Monday at the 1957 Springville National Art Exhibit. Top. B. F. Larsen's "Trees at Vivian SEQUEL TO 'SECRET SICKNESS' Continued from Page One) but people still panic at supposed stigma of seeking psychiatric help. Their fear is compounded by isolation of state hospitals and lack at regular hospitals. of A majority of patients in. early stages of mental .illness could best Continues Today 4 t SUNDAY HERALD commit The three youths enticed a coed into their car, she testified, by saying they had come from California, Speaking before Community and insisting she personnally diChests and Councils of America at rect them to an upper campus Detroit last year, Charles Birt, di- building. rector, Greater St. Paul Council, explained that the who remained public charges were families overwhelmed by multiple problems, such as social maladjustment; ill health; dependency. Chronic "unemployability" is considered by some social workers to be a form of mental or at least emotional illness. "Emotional" compulsions distort thinking so that the victim's beDoctor's Comments havior under stress is about the psychiatrists and family same as landing an aircraft with urged need for more psy- one brake out there is a high training in medical schools probability of ground-loopin- Sam Hill's coming! Who's Sam Hill? He's a myopic, heap of with a genius for putting the "R" in Science Friction." Sam Hill is the freshest comic strip entertainment in a long while. It's science "friction" loaded with frustrated females, fuming government big shots, and confused spies. And our "hero" though isn't handsome enough to worry Clark Gable nor 'brave enough to tackle a carload of spies, there's a certain fascination about his altogether human frailties and charmed life. Read Sam Hill. The new comic starts Monday in The Daily Herald! six-fo- brain-musc- 2-pie- ot le 1 suit dress ce sv for spring Navy blue or black faille j&i. ft)) i J j "ss ) f 'tm 14Vi to 22V2. 1 f j Madrigal Group To Present Lenten Oratorio The Madrigal Singers of the Provo High School will present a Lenten Oratorio, "The Seven Last Words of Christ" by Theodore Dubois, Sunday, April 7, in the Provo Tabernacle. Ross Brown will be conduct" ing. six-percent- ers one-fourt- people. " Both doctors chiatric and suggested physician graduate training with stipend. Half the doctors wrote they didn't understand commitment procedures in their own state and didn't know what treatment resources were available in their own communities. Several judges were still concerned with "protecting the tights" of the iH by keeping them out of hospitals, rather than securing medical care for recovery. About 85 per cent of public and private welfare agencies said their clients displayed "symptoms of emotional maladjustment." Cost Staggering The cost to taxpayers oi disordered behavior short of total mental breakdown is staggering. Addressing American Public We Heakh Association, Lake Sett in City test sumBrandx, mer, J. M. Wedemeyer, resident director, Sao Mateo, Calif., Dis stern g. Grown-U- p Delinquents Police don't use the word "emotional disturbance"; but they deal with it daily. Annually, 1,000,000 juveniles are arrested and Alca-tra- z is full of grown-u- p delin- quents. "Both number of severity of offenses are increasing," Richard Heany, youth branch supervisor, Bureau of Prisons, warned Western Probation and Parole Conference in Salt Lake in 1955. He said .federal aid to states to set up treatment centers for "seriously disturbed delinquents" was advocated by the Kefauver Senate subcommittee. Professional men from a dozen fields not directly concerned with mental illness are pleading: "Give the frightened, the troua bled, the can where be treated place they then inform us so we'll know where to refer them. I i Qlk MORTUARY 18S IAS? CENTER - PRANKim VI V . You and Doris Dodson's 1 I I I mm JUNIOR U " f . plumb-straigh- 3-1- " p t ; ensemble of plain n' patterned rayon and cotton. Plaid sheath is tabbed for a high Empire line . . . tabs again on the mandarin-collare- d coat front and back. Sizes 9 to IS. ' 840 ; " - ' , i . J ' 'l ) f . ' |