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Show w - if m Li. ffm w ii -- iiitiw mini- mill iurr mi aiy "a nm ip mini fc'1 'n nr pii wm -- v ' ' : " : I,-- ,. ;i :s,'-- j : : ' I v r ; . ' - Tho. . SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 1963 t i Plans of the S. H. Kress Company to expand its Provo store will be welcomed by the business community and the valley in gf neraf. Now observing its 25th anniversary in Provo, the Kress Company plana to extend its 'store jto the south and establish an enparking lot plus a new south . trance. 1 be wi additions ia Among the j of the counter. Many new lunch expresent departments will be ' U. panded. ' time a at comes The project when Provo is putting a (lot of stress on modernization 0f the downtown business district, land into such jects a shot inr the ;arm f in I plans. ' The Kress Company opened jits present building in Provo in 1038 and has 'been' a key part of the business community; everj since. In its decision to expand the Provo store, the company is expressing a great deal of confidence! in he future of the valley as a shopping center. TTiis? is theMcind jf faith and confidence! needed to achieve the! progress this area needs, nj vir- - S The most; extreme right wingers go beyond this. They argue that men! of the Javits category1 do not in fact jsupport Republican principles but are either socialists, liberal ! Democrats, or unprincipled voterseekers. Some Vmodern" Republicans return the jfavor by declaring) the ex- treme Sa whkt Wife of Educator Appeals to Legislature To Increase Funds! for Teachers' Salaries off the party -- right-winge- rs it amounts to is that i Editor Herald: "Does: your family deserve the best?" Just last .week I 'heard this statement over the radio by maior element in the GOP thinks it is now applying) Repubar.H lican principles with unique effect. 1 ;. i Heart Fund drive. Immediately the thought comes to mind "of course my family deserves the best." j j. Does your family deserve the best in education? Of course, you Neither the ReDublicanslnor. the Democrats have the singleness of say! But saying they deseijve tiie and getting the best for besjt them are two different things. Right now the Legislatuije and the governor arej setting pp the funds for education for the next biennium.' From the looks of things education 4s going f to go Tho Chopping Block l -- A View Throudh Picket Fence and I think active farmers feel the'sam way. The government ' p V pours out volumes of aiausucs rexaung vo the! condition of the people, and Usually you , ! ' ; ii curity taxes from our employees. The government reports that our annual income per family is far below. that of the average wageworker. The only jpeo-pentitled ' to consideration are th I urban dwellers. ; I wonder now we got that way.. Farmers built up this country and fed th nation. Now they are told tha they fart useless, and a drag on the economy, fhir offense: when ,the government! Implored us to work harder and produce more food we oyerdi4 the thing. Now is a blot on the! economic escutcheon because Wer hay e produced! 'too muchK' Even the housewives, who are supposed to know values are concerned only with the kind of package the food comes in, and1 care .little about V; the quality of what is in the package. U This state was built up largely bj? its farming - and livestock industry It couldn't- have been done without , the free range.-Nofarmers, who are pavto survive, kre called a time hard ing if names hard they want to turn a ;cow on thje range. The range, they are told, should be used only for recreation; purposes by the city, dwellers Secretary ld 'the. farmers, in effect, Udall has to keep their stock off the National- Forests until the range can be 'restored." I doubt that any farmers jare being fooled. They. know it will never be; restored to them.; Recreation will always come first. I read the other evening that recreation is Utah's sleeping giant It is the thing ' that is going to make us i rich. ' .i I wonder about this Word. 1 hai several definitions,' One meansj creating anew. The more popular j definition means refreshment by means of some pasttime, agreeable exercise or the iikc It '"actually means, to playj Herding cattle or sheep: is work, while killing deer is play. So we must get rid of the cattle and ' sheep and turn it; all ! , ; -- : , come j ; ; ! i f try', . So They Say j I j I I O ' . The opinions ' and statements ; : ex- - pressed by Herald, columnists fare their own and do not. oecesr'Jy reflect the views" ot this newspaper. ' ' , of the peopie, by the people, and for the peopie? Big business, - that's what. ...."''" .. j Have you, the pother tnought:'any thought or legislatuife, given consideration to jfche .tourik trade you are' trying ui build im? Tourr ists are big business to. Maybe: we dont need their -dollar business, whici brings us back to the beginning of this alwais raise letter you$an N our taxes. The space center could be Jas import- " as " coal ant to western Pennsylvania " was in the past, I Dr. Edward H. iUtchfield, chancellor oi U. of Pittsburgh, on plans to build a $30 'million space reseatch venter. f ! 4 . -- ? if ' - ; million- Mrs. IBoward D J Pliipps, Pleasant Grovel '1 Chinese Cdmmimists while flying over the mainland. This unexpected show of power by the Chinese Communists, Which brought to an end the hit and miss U-- 2 surveillance flights over the mainland, convinced U. S. intelligence officials that Khrushchev had turned his first SA-- 2 missiles over to Mao. This suspicion" was fully week later when a specially launched Samos satellite, passing over the same area, took the first photos of one of these SAM bases in China. Since this Samos mission rocked the U. S. intelligence community, another 20 sites have been located scattered along China's vast Eastern seacoast and near the largest and most important inland military bases. Also, the U. S. learned from other sources that, these missile sites were constructed by Soviet military techcon-flrme- dia could a j ' i m '. of? I feel that my family; deserves the best of everything including education. But if Utah continues to do r such a disservice to their teachers .they will be forced to put up with mediocrity in education. . To my way of thinking it's not worth $528 a month to be en-- j gaged with anywhere from 30 to 40 children 6 hours a day 5 days a week. Always in every class there are a few children who have been taught absolutely nothing, at home about respect for others. Always there .are chil-dren who have gone discipline-- i free at1 home who create a class-roo- problem; I would lifcr to see some, of the supporters of the theory "teachers are getting all they are worth" turned loose in a class-- i room for a few days to teach not only the three R's, but social studies, history, spelling, science, physical fitness, art, music, good citizenship and good sportsman- -' ship. . For once when Christmas or a birthday rolls around I would like to buy one of my children a brand new bicycle or a brand new pair of ice skates, and not have to hunt and scrape to find something second hand or of inferior quality. But the way it looks now that day will never come, unless -.',' By United Press International GREENWOOD, Miss. Wiley A. Branton, director! of the Voter Education Project, telling Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy that other integration groups will help register Negroes in a county where a civil rights worker was ' shot: "We are notifying youi in advance so that you can provide at once the necessary federal protection to prevent violence aid other forms of intimidation against registration workers and applicants." BATON ROUGE, Dis- La.-j- .S. trict Court Judge E. Gordon West, condemning Court's . 1954 the U.S. Supreme desegregation deci- sion: "As far as I can see, Jail that has been accomplished (by the decision), is to create discontent and chaos without any real benefits. Even! more regrettable is the fact that; almost without exception, trouble has resulted from the decision." nicians. TAKING ANOTHER LOOK ; This latter discovery along with the missile findings has touched off! a sharp .debate among the President's chief advisers over the accuracy of government : policy estimates of the ' Sino-Sovi, et dispute. One group, headed by Director John McCone, of the Central Intelligence Agency, is using the new intelligence to challenge the State Department's policy assessment that there is a deep split between China and Russia.! While recognizing the existence of idealogical differences between Khrushchev and Mao, the . Mc- - SAN JOSE, Calif. Foreman Richard K. Nelson, on behalf of the jury that voted for life imprisonment rather than a death ! j If ; . j ar print "thought"; for? leach thatj week gave me a few second thoughts.; viae s e c o n a, $ thoughts are in! ' parentheses.) The beat time to put the Rn WiOlett children to bed is when ypu can." '(Of when you ican't stahd them any longer.), j "A rood idea that ii shared - : ? iH with others will live forever." (Especially if you can make others think it was their idea). "People who live in glass hous- es are ; interesting neighbors.' Better draw the draperies on that picture window.) "When all is said and done, it's best to leave it that way." (Also, it's time to say "good night" and go home.) "The wise can learn by listen' ing to the ignoant.', (But vica versa is safer.) "About the time you catch up with the Joneses, they refinance." (But, that's one thing you've probably already beat them to.) , chine to oppose the U. S. These officials foresee ho open i 'break. The other group,f headed by Dr. Walt Rostow," chairman . of the State Department Planning Commission, contends that "the antagonisms between Moscow and that Peiping are so we cannot foresee any, genuine reconciliation of the dispute, at least while Mao and Khrushchev deep-seat- . ed hold power."! contend that the Soviet They missile help to China is inconclusive and that the delivery of MIG-2- 1 intercepters (only six) to India bythe Kremlin a is counter-proo- f is defp split. thatjthere President Kennedy Is reportedly undecided whichj clashing views ' to; of two the follow in his in the policy making, although past he has leaijed toward the Rostow group Which includes McGeorge Bundy, his special adviser in the White foreign policy House. '" NEW CLUB MEMBER???? Within 600 miles! of where the Soviet Union teafts its atomic bombs in Siberi. the Chinese) Communists may have touched off their first nuclear explosion: on the "roof of the world." f This suspected Atomic test, reported out of India early In February but not confirmed, may have taken place In early Jan4 uary at the same time the Russians were- winding up their latest series of nuclear explosions. ' Reliable Japanese sources with contacts on the China "mainland ' reported to U. S j intelligence in Tokyo last month that the Chinese Reds detonated a very low grade nuclear device in the northwest corner of Chang Tang" province on the great Plateau of Tibet. According to this Japanese report, one of their Chinese contacts actually witnessed the ex plosion, Including the formation of the mushroom cloud. Previous ? information from China furnished by this source has checked out to be very accurate ; The Atomic Energy Commission inis now making a world-wid- e to if the determine, quiry explosion, which was not recorded in the U, S., was registered as an earthi quake by any other country. Since - - the Russians set off a large nulit nearby Siberia on the same day!, U. S. official! admit that! radioactive material from the Chines test, if it occurred, could hav become mixed with those fallou samplings and !t gone undetected. clear explosion ; Dr. Geza sentence for wife-slayde Kaplany: "We feel he is a sick man at Seems To Me 4. er present." We Seem to Have Lost Oiir Sense of Values In U. S. j CIA Director WASHINGTON John McCone, describing the training in Cuba which Latin Americans have received in sabotage and guerrilla warfare: "In its j professional tradecraft, it shows guidance and training by experienced Communi$t advisers from the Soviet block, including veterain Spanish Communists." ; By DAVID GARDNER WE SEEM to have lost our sense of values. Accomplishments that were once considered im portant are now considered secondary. Ed t io PLAN JOINT EXERCISE; joint aminvolvexercise phibious military aind UnitChinese Nationalist: ing ed States? forces will be held in southern Formosa on March 15, according; to an announcement here. ' It said; the: exercise,! dubbed "Silver Blade, will be "routine and defensive in character." TAIPEI (UPD A ; j i toy husband leaves the teaching profession. For once I would like my children to have a new coat when they need it instead of a n one. I aik, why should a man and his family have to suffer j financially beckuse he happens to like teaching and is a good teacher? It is ray sincere hope that if the teachers don't get a fair f'shake" lout of the Legislature this term' they will all band together and stand up and openly revolt come next September. Emily C. Allred 89 E. 1st N. hand-me-dow- j j . Springville u' c a n, scientific now V sacrifice I rate1 no nore than EVENjniE SCRUBS who mere- -' ly sat on the bench at Chavez ; Ravine "earned" more than that. - And the players rrf'the teaip that won in the World Series received ach for their contribution $9,882 to the advancement of tne nation-' - -- discov e r y, inventive genius or per-- sonal not stumble over over molehills." but mountains, also kids' roller their (And, skates aiid toys.) "Few men have ever jrcpented of silence." (But their wives have sure been bored.) ,1 comes long before "Morning are it." for (And that you ready double for Monday.) goes "A contented man can't be sold a thing.'; (Who's that contented?) "A bachelor Is a man who thinks twice before saying anything." (Except, "Well, I'll be iseeing you around.") "The person who has every- thing should . be quarantined." "Men do , - Xs j a,-- A i'itJ' stifled yawn Sir. Gardner when balanced against the things of current importance. This sad fact was brought home to me during the playoff between the Dodgers and Giants to see who would meet the Yankees in the last World Series. While one of the games was being playedj Walter Schirra was it transit of making his six-orb- space.' Bui was Ithe nation's first thought of our during astronaut? Hardly I v j, While national' television gave complete coverage of the games, including the kind of razors and toothpaste used by the "heroes," the progress of our, space capsule was given by brief bulletins during the day. Tor performing his feat of der-j ... . (But you'd still have to try to figure out what to give him for Christmas.) "Budgets are not merely affairs of arithmetic." (They're also something nobody seems able to stay within.) , ring do, Mr. Shiira received the ;i magnificent jsumj of $35.31 normal day's pay. And even this pittance is more than his normal pay for it includes $7.42 for hazardous duty" pay. ' 'Second TFpughts Complete the Picture; Give You Both Sides After using a desk calendar , t for some time,'. r" I happened to notice in 'fine? i - ! Ruth Millctt ! i . j portunity for organized recreation, even though the school buses take them to it, but I can't; They don't have to work half as hard at working, as their cit cousins have to work at playing1 A lot of people still like to farm. As a char- actc.- jin a j recent book of fiction ex- claimed in astonishment, "A pot of neo- pic) seem to like poetry . . . they can't. ain;be idiots." But people who pe to farm these days dome close They are as impractical as people who like poe - j f nt , ; ; i program the T v- h , hotse windows he has broken 'during ! i ; !' j the summer. I don't blame the kids. To become masters, of the art jof recrea-ti- o they should "be; able to display some ingenuity. We are oh, so fond of that phrase, "it Is a challenge," aind vandalism certainly offers a good lone. if suppose "i should feel . sorry for farmers' kids who have so little op-- i i an' idol before his fellows he should.be able to brag about3 jthe school-- . - taxes. Wej can't breath. ii The Utah Legislature isj gradually taking awajj what te4t rights ;! we have left. I'm referring! to the f Sunday closing law. They want fall grocery stores closed and for their excuse they us the ol clicte that it' stops people from going to church. If f , K people don'tfgo to chfrcJi it's because training; in the hqme and at church have failed, notpecause the sfores are open. Th4j public isn't ad dense as tha$ They know it's ithe bigchaih stores who are bringing the hressure o bear. WhaW happened to govern-me- ! iugri-cultu- re ; :: , wfoere teacher go on a teachers salary? My husband is in his eighth year of teaching and this year his salary is $5040 or $420 a month. By the time be reaches his 14th year of teaching he will be making $528 a month. Isn't that something for Utah to proud be smart enough to know when to stop ithe pressure of taxes on 'taxes.j Is so much constitutional? The small working marj is always the one to feel the blunt end of it. Sure, we've had raises in wages, but taxes and! rising prices always eat them up. Well, Mr. Governor, are you smart enough to figure janother way to get the extra fuads you say you; need? We, the 'people, are fed iip to the teeth wifh ever-risin- g j le But i 4 we. are required to keep an .! elaborate set of books to prove that we! have 'deducted withholding taxi, and 60ciall se- to better himself professionally, or working to better himself f Mr. iaiton is so ngnti if a man is smart enough to bf elected governor we expect him jto i ' Jaxes g Editor Herald: i find this division. We, it seems, are not. peo-- ,' mi V kmmtr .at least we are f pie not' importan. enough i Robertson to count. In the body politic we are j the handicapped children who , peak out i between the pickets of the board fenc . while the adults go scurrying by. i As wage earners we' make slightly! less than unskilled shop girls, but as employers i Ever-Risin- . m i With Trend pf ; ; read that they refer to people. On reports of unemploy- ed people you always non-far- People! Are Fed Up i ' nd I oveif, to tfce deer. A man who jjvorks up to fftrty hours a week needs ta play. A farmer who works seventy hout? a week needs to Iwork. I wonder if Brleham Youne had play in rairid when he brought the lormons ( here. If !he did I have mi4fead my l history. A little play he always; thought was:; a good thing, but working so that : "there might be abundance in the land," wasf Uppermost. I wonder if if his pro- phetic vision be saw the time when play- ing iwould be so much more Important than working; when thrift and! industry. tne vworas ' ne usea so mucn, would oe : nasty, y Still, maybe, things haven i changed so jnucH.j Spoiling the Gentiles was once a populalr phrase; Jnbw it has j changed to 'spoiling the tourists. If we can tell them how much recreation we Can provide, for them we can get their money. It amounts to about, the same thing. Otoce When I was asked to give my occupation I told them I was a writer, and they would say, "Yes, we assume you. can write, but what do youi do for a living?" I: was an object ofiscorn, but they made me feel important j compared to What it Is now when I tell them I amf a retired farmer. If they pursue the subject at all it is to ask howj much the government pays me ndt to raise crops. If I tell them I have never been smart enough i to .get even that they lose interest: The only way I could eyer regain anj respect is to tell them that I am a miglity hunter of deer, and that I take my family to the mountains jevery day I for! a picnic. Neither being true I must joini me coiony ot uie aamnea, mat doesn't work at recreation. ) I( is all, we are told, for the dear little kiddies. Yet the more playgrounds we have the more vandalism we get. A kid who lives on a farm and milks the' cows loses face. If he wants to be- . do all that is needed to be done in a school room within these hours! I am speaking first hand. I'm not a teacher, but my bus-bais. He can't even do all Ithat he feels needs to. be done ifor his class in 9, 10, or even 11 ihours, let along Vi hours. Then comes the old hassle over a teacher having three months off work every year summer school L f ; wanting again. Any raise the legislature might hand the teachers is' going to be so slight that it will hardly show up in the monthly paycheck. On every band is heard the many arguments as to why teachers are getting all the pay they are deserving of. There's the bid argument about the 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. working hours. But seldom is heard anything about the hours a teacher puts in prior to 9 a.m. and after 3:30 p.m. I have yet to see a teacher who is a real teacher that can Gov. Clyd in connection with the Ir any event, the differences are certainly more than "fine j distinctions." The facade of unity Nixon calls for would of necessityjhave to be a pretty frail structure) outlook he suggests. f In The News v,Y. i - !:. r ; Q I ' By FRANK C. ROBERTSON Though X ' give ray occupation ap a retired farmer f get a little j tired, tot being treated as an unwelcome cbSd, ' ; t: surveillance . ! . tic launched last September by Air! Force after a Formosa-base- d , U-- 2 plane Was shot, down by the tual socialism. j separate S A - 2, missile sites similar to those that the Soviets are-no- w operating in Cuba, have been so far by high-flyin- g photographed U-- 2 planes and Samos satellites. At each of these SAM sites, the ground-to-a- ir rn i I reconnaissance cameras spotted anywhere from 40 to 60 missiles and their telltale launchers. This alarming missile discovery was the direct result of a sy ste- f ' - . Javits believe the party tan es- pousie broad welfare measures without tossing- out the principle Nixn labels the "primacy) of the individual." But to strong con- off-stre- et ' '3 Cone group argues Itbat the Soviet missile assistancef clearly indi- -, cates that- - the ttyo Communist leaders are working closely together in building ia military maSoviet-Chin- a Twenty-on- e , ; servatives, such measures kre missiles to Com- missions. 1 . ed Russian help in building up Red China's air. defenses was uncovered by U. S. reconnaissance satellites and surveillance planes flying over, strategic areas of China in recent ; " ground-to-a- ir munist China. This secret I Kress Company's Provo Expansion ' and; 1 ' highJv-publiciz- Soviet .Premeir Khrushchev from sending a thous- ; , r hasn't stopped tional," liberal from conservative. He urges 'an end to such "hairsplitting" and a reaffirmation of faith in basic GOP principles. j f Few.Republicans probably, would quarrel with the lofty tone of Nixon's statement, which undoubtedly Hs one of the few public ut-terances ion politics he has made since his defeat. The trouble is th,at Republicans of aQ political colors MieVe. they are already adhering to sound Where they difpartiis principles. fer on how to implemeni them. And (not even the loftiest words whether from Nixon or an other, seemj to have much effect in erasing these differences: ;Men like New York's Sen. Jacob busy thinking Republican thoughts. Recently he turned' out a guest editorial for the Southern Republican, a party newspaper published in Louisiana. It is 'a vigorous hortation for party unity as; a necessary base tor presiaeimau victory in 1964. He warns the GOP stalw rts to cease their "favorite indoor sport of intratartv cannibalism. j ' And he adds that there has been j j That but questionable split between Moscow anod Peiping WASHINGTON too mucht argument over the "fine distinctions? which set off) "mod- -, era"; Republicanism from ("tradi- One would think, from listening to' some folk, that Richard J Nixon fiai gone to the Antarctic since h?s ,1962 defeat for the California governorship. Actually, he) is still ; By ROBERT S. ALLEN And PAUL SCOTT Heart; crt Report Soviets Send Missiles To Aid Communist China 'i: Nixon Still Was GOP AHon-Sco- tt . ,; . I "No news is good news." (Not1 so with Ruth Millett's booklet, . j'How to Have a Happy Husband.") Just send 25 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service, co The Daily Herald, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station,-NeYork 19, N.Y; j i (All rights reserved. Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) V Not long before? that, the heavy 'welfare. . weight champion fighter picked up five million dollars for a few minutes of his time in Chicago. Lest I be accused of being completely out of step with everything that is pleasurable, kt me points out that Jl find? no fault with sports, amusements or those who work at these vocations.1 My lament is! tthat we have placed values on these activities that are riot in keeping with the we are nctf woractual worth X ;f shiping false, idols. I SAW A TV panel show recentboy ly on which ,i "stumped"' tl4 panel with his 'secret," jwhieh was that he wrote a newspaper column. The column was one of advice not advice on. how to play marbles or fly kites, but advice to parents on how to rear children. And the panel moderatojp told his listenj jr. old , ers that ;30 papers .carried the 1 column. secFunny men, disc jokeys, ond - rate singers, burlesque queens, bar tenders and other "celebrities", are now looked upon with the sarnie awe and admiration formerly jreserved for, men and women "of legitimate attain' ! .1 ment. "I i WE llIESE PEOPLE FpD speaking out as authorities on subjects from domestic morals to international affairs Bux of eVe'n ' greater jmportithce'we find" too many persons listening to this ad- vice. j.'1 What are we to think of the mentality vof persons who accept such "words of wisdom" as be. -- ; J ' i ing substantial?! When we finl adults perverting values it is not surprising that their children I would not recognize what is Important. It is asking too much to expect children to - have a sound perspective when. Uieir elders have lost all sense of direction. . j |