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Show Jf Experts Warn Syphilis To Spread Like Forest Firej Unless Controlled i HILTON HEAD, S. C. (UPI) .'- . five-da- y venereal diseases sponsored by leading health organizations. She said that syphilis, far from being conquered, is "a serious and worsening problem" . and three is evidence of a "chain reaction" in the spread of the t infection, especially among teen- agers. Isak COPENHAGEN, (UPI) '. who wrote Dinesen, 77, haunting , stories of Gothic romance land supernaturalism under a pen name which means "he who laughs," died of cancer Friday at her estate on the Danish 'coast just north of here. Despite a comparatively slim body of work, Miss Dinesen won international acclaim as one of the finest short jstory writers of her generation. Born Karen Christenc'e Dinesen, she became the Baroness Blixeri- finecke in 1914 when she was married to her cousin, the Swedish Baron Blixen. As a young writer, she chose the Hebrew name "Isak" as her nom de plume because, she explained several years later, it meant "he who laughs." Dinesen has a similar meaning in Danish. a firm believer in aris,' She waswho .never accustomed tocracy' herself to the tempo and swiftly changing attitudes of the 20 th - i century. She once said that if she had "been wealthy, she would have liked to own slaves and that the horse, as a means of travel, was preferable to the automobile. Miss Dinesen first gained recognition in 1934 with the publication of "Seven Gothic Tales," a group of subtly written stories dealing with death and mortality. ' Her favorite book, a volume of memoirs entitled "Out of Africa," was ' published in 193? and $ix years later she came out with another collection of stories, "Win- ter's Tales." Other books include "The Angelic Avengers," 11944); her only novel, "Last Tales" (1957); and "anecdotes of Destiny." (1960). surgeon general of the U.s! Public Health Service to a rising incidence of venereal diseases reported in the by-t- he , past few years. She said aggressive , VD control measures during and after World War II brought the U.S. syphilis e low of 3.8 rate to an ' 100,000 population in 1957. Americans leaped prematurely to the conclusion that the problem was licked. The reported rate rose to 3.9 per 100,000 in 1958, to 4.7 in 1959, to 7.1 in 1960 and to 10.4 in 1961 an increase of more than 132 per cent in four years. And, Dr. Baumgartner said, the task force found convincing evidence that the Jiumber of reported cases is less , perhaps only a fraction of the actual inthan a third cidence of the disease, s ... Alarmed by the rapid bounce back of the "conquered" menace, Congress has already sharply in creased appropriations for VD control. But Dr. Baumgartner said money alone won't do the job.' Presenting the task force's unanimous recommendations, she a "gen said the first need is Ifor eral- - public awareness"- that syph ilis is again a dangerous and to threat public widespread health, and "that we are going to have, td be tough in handling this problem." Trans . 2 imh ! . i , : j j j See Next Sunday's Herald -- For The Most Fabulous ... . -- I CT A rriTie CPXT A rnTTi CAL J d. y iJ Vs. Ever Seen jrayuirllllJk DEMOCRAT i ' i j - I - l him r m mm immmmwm.ii mm m iii ,i . r , r u wl ::ft:Sx::5s:ft:.::::::: i v--' -- ' w y-K-- 43rd.BIRTHDAY SALE , I ia SF . - " ' ! ;j is handsome S I and versatile V W addition ' fA lv " Mf W I (if yur j -- j -- tody for iX , l I tus from $49.95 suit with. ld coloi-coordinat- S S A I ILurex liiilights dtity 'Cordia . . layers of ;felte4 cotton iwith quilted sisal pad, MONDA eeeeoceeeoutooooooo 000 0--0 0 'box springs In matching cover Heavy-dut- y - a. .!!.-- ' . 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" 'yi" IffA J color-coordinate- You Will Find Luxury er Today you lead a more acfnm Kfe than your counterpart of years ago, your ideas start (Suit plus In Central Utah 1 v 11 GRAND OPENING 4 REPUBLICANS Louis Go!,dsmith E y. Elect one of Utah's I ablest lawyers to represent uou in the T TXTTrT,t1T " i II . ' j . L -- 1 J (UPI) "As former Utah vice chairman of th ceremonies for the University of Utah Medical I have been' active III Center .wili be held Sept. 13 on the Republicarj Party, school's upper campus site, above politics for) 18 yean. I have worked with . Fort Douglas. all the leading party candidates. None Speakers will include Dr. A. Ray e been more qualified than Wallaci Olpin, president of the Universin D. Roy-dety; Gov. George Clyde, Bennett! whose record shows him t G. Derrick, chairman of the Board of Regents, and Leland B. be a determined aggressive fighter." Flint, a University . Regent who is Pd pel. ad by Volunteers, for Bennett chairman of the Medical Center Fund Drive. i Dilworth S. Woolley, The medical center, to cost an estimated $10 million, is schedulSalt Lake County Chairman ed to be completed in the summer ftx . n HELEN BROWN 1 !j coi-sum- Soviet-America- CITY LAKE WVWWWWWVVWWWVfWWWWWWWWWWWWWWVWWWWevwvww-wwww-- i -J. i Cornerstone To Be laid for 'U' Medical Center JVorld Airlines has asked the Civil Aeronautics Board to approve a special Christmas holiday fare , for. American military personnel and dependents stationed overseas. The fare, about 51 per cent under regular rates, would apply Jan. between ', Dec. 1, 1962, and coverwould 1963. It flights 31, from points in Europe to. New York, Boston, Baltimore, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San of 1964. Francisco and Philadelphia. r dJ-man- all-tim- per and the detractors of Madison Avenue and salesmanship seem to casually ignore,' the publisher said, j He said American salesmanship and the future of its economics and politics are directly linked. ?There jis no longer time to wait for a better appreciation and understanding from Washington of what good salesmanship and advertising mean to this country at home and abroad. Time is running out," he said. j He suggested that President Kennedy do three things to improve America's image abroad. First, McClure said, "select several of America's greatest salesmen and then give them the toughest selling job we have overseas." Second, set up a sales training course to train key perIn the State Department sonnel' never stimulate consumer, and overseas staffs on the oujj' "We've seen savings a land techniques of sellpsychology counts soar, while the business have to sell ideas, the ing. "They barometer dipped," McClure sail. Buil-ingto- n to sell in the toughest! the' things of McClure is publisher he said. he sugworld," Thirdly, (Vt.) Free Press. gested Kennedy supplant his jhat He said the stimulation of desires must be done in Jin confiof business atmosphere i dence, "Thatfs something the arpi chair economists in Washington -- Warren McClure, president of the Newspapppr Advertising. Executives Association (NAEA); said today that unless, advertising aid salesmanship are stepped! up according to their true importanc ;, U.S. productivity and employment will fail to keep pace with tie population during the next de adei "The answer to increased consumer demand will rest in the future . . , with American industiy producing more and better thinj ss at lower prices and backii g th'em with mass salesmanship -and good old-fa- s advertising American salesmanship o stimulate the consumer's desir s to buy," he told a meeting of the NAEA of the Carolina. He said that tax cuts alone w 11 near the Black Sea resort of just like a horse trade." "You don't know this, but the The dean of American letters reason I came to the So Gagra. Frost returned here was politics, f viet capital today. J explained he was tired when he said Frost. His visit here 1 under "I sat on the edge of the bed reached the premier's villa due cultural ex went to his strenuous stay here. He the and we had a good talk and ' i said he had gone to bed on the change program wasv scheduled to at it," he said. Frost said the Berlin issue had advice of two doctors Khrushchev end Sunday. He arrived here " :. Aug. 28. been one of' the things he dis had sent to examine him. Frost said Khrushchev, sat on a "I told Mr. Khrushchev, the fucussed with Khrushchev, "Idid say I hate fit. I hate it chair near his bed during their ture of the world for the next that a small matter like that talk, which he described as "very hundred years or so lies between the United States and Russia." could decide the fate; of the free and congenial." world," Frost said, "I told Jiim there might be university professors and theoretical advisers with a set of top U.S. something we have that he wants sales executives who have proven and there might be something their ability to handle internation- they have that we 'want.; ; al, selling problems. "We could trade and settle it MOSCOW (UPI) American poet Robert ' Frost, 88, said today he had suggested a "horse trade" to settle the Berlin problem during a bedside chat with Soviet Premier! Nikita Khrushchev. "He didn't say anything," the poet added. 'We talked politics," Frost told reporters here in describing iis meeting with Khrushchev Friday al the premier's vacation retreat Cornerstone-layin- g PLANS SPECIAL FARES WASHINGTON (UPI.I I. ; Dr. Baumgartner was chairman SALT i ' ol a special task force appointed cases Stepped-U- p 1 " . FrpstioK; Urges Horse !Tf ade On Berlin Crisis 1 1 Advertising, Salesmanship , Noted Danish Writer Dies At Age 77 SUNDAY HERALD Economy Needs WASHINGTON (UPD A public undertakes a "tough" control pro' l '!.'' health official warned today that gram. will like a forest Dr. Leona Baumgartner, New syphilis "spread fire", unless this country quickly York City health commissioner, issued the warning at the closing forum on session of a ': 19f2 No Finance Co. Involved PR0V0 FR r s 4-18- 77 We Carry Our Own Contra its! ' 00.0.0.0 0 0000 0A0APAPAPJQ 0 0 0 0.0A0A0.0AMMA0AAAAJgt r. vm m I |