OCR Text |
Show '' I i, , !' - '!. ' v - ' ' ' ' ' ' , :V! . ; ' j ' ' I 1: " - - .1 I j , . "' i . r ' the Drawbridge. 'y- i: " ':y -- u. . The Roporf Ted Kennedy With Senate Opposinq Administration On Proposed New Gag Rules I ; -- I '- ' Allen-Sco- tt In f I ' i Let Down j ! i SUNDAY,! OCTOBER 6, 1963 : : ' ! est moral principles fand to coun try above loyalty jto persons, party or governmental i depart-ment- ." V..'.:- I j By ROBERT S. ALLEN I and PAUL SCOTT ' Look for Ability-t- bt i who-canno- nt, : i that thanks because this is Nation- al Pharmacy Week (Oct. Moat of us take the pharmacist for granted. He is always there in the prescription laboratory. He takes! our physician's prescription order: compounds the ingredients and 'dispenses medication ready 6-1- 2). i for use. f. Today there are 124,000 dedicated! men and women in America who ihave spent years of study, preparing for a career of service to the community and the medical profession. health team would be greatly impeded) in curing disease, preventing pain, prolonging life. Few careers demand such a varied study of the sciences. Five, and often six years, of concentrated study in chemistry, biology, pharmacology, pharmacognosy and other specialized pharmacy courses are required for a ,pharmacist'3 ' i degree. Also the pharmacist must serve f an internship for a year before he can taKe xne ngia. proiessionai examinations necessary for the coveted right to say : "Registered (or Licensed) Pharmacist." As new drugs are added to the ; ' y. Inventory of medical knowledcre-- 'almbst 400 every year the role of the pharmacist increases. He must keep abreast of all new medications and often advise your physician of the jdrags and their uses' ! j Your, physician is responsible for prescribing the drugs you sponsible for dispensing them in . tne prescribed manner. He's an team. Let him know you him. . i - appreci-caf- ci i success he has achieved 5uto-committ- businessman or lawyer; an ampuf tee- school (teacher; a paraplegia machine ot electrical shop opera, j tor. I Many o these have "made ij; on! their own," with little or no outside assistance, except the en couragementl and loving help of their families. Others particui larly jin the past decade or so itakenf advantage of the services of thelUtah State Division of Vocational Rehabilitation by way of training; or Through! this program, a polio victim ha4 become a competent refrigeration mechanic ; an ampuf-tee- , a- business machines operator a man with a ruptured disc, a technician ; a paraplegic, a stock clerl; a man with a nervfe condition, a barber ; a person hard of hearing j an IBM operator. Ur Lost Opportunities ! j The listf could go on. The division is doing a fine and Another arm of the statie work, goyerjnmenit the Employment Security Division is working to find employment for trained and rehabilithus persons hancf-ih-ha- nd x tated I j These agencies and the people they serve need your help. They need yourf cooperation yoUr willingness! to hire people with ja disability and give them a change to be! normal Americans and with their j families enjoy the humab dignity to! which all are entitled under the jOonstitution. Gov. Gebrge D. Clyde has asked Utahns to" observe National Employ the Physically Handicapped Week Oct.6-1- 2 and focus attention on cooperation in this program the ... . Street Journal wej re b e 1 1 er dressed, drove better cars, bad better homes, and ate in better; restaurants So he read The Journal and in creased his in- - from come $9,000 to $14;000 a year. Nnw von see how simple it sis to get ahead It may be difficult for some of you to get up to 000 a year, but after that noth- ing can stop you if you read a paper that carries the sweet scent of money. Today, the Herald pays me about the same amount I was making when I was herding sheep forty, years go. Had I read t$ie financial papers, not lived in a log cabin and dressed like a slob who knows how rich I might have been by this time. One must keep up appearances. ; A lady in Las Vegas who has written a book she tbinksyis fully equal to GONE WITH THE WIND asked me for advice about pubit lishers. She answered," . . was quite a shock to find somej year-groun- d one 'frank enough' to criticize me." She had used a green ribjit's a worthy program, deservand I had vn- bon on elite ing of your full backing and " tured to pointtype, out that the publishsupport. I ers I knowj prefer black ribbon on pica type. The lady replied that she used the green- ribbon to match the letterhead on her which it did beautistationery fully. Since the lady is president of some sWank style shops in a styli ish iiistrict down there I bow jto but swallow camels!" her superior taste.! This lack of Obviously it is impossible even for a elegant stationary on my part is whale to shallow a full grown camel, probably why my manuscripts co Jesus was using extravagant exaggerkeep coming! back unsold. ation to dramatize his point most vividly. Speaking of neglected opporjlh rhetoric we empldjr the term "hytunities I have Just received a letperbole" to indicate such extravagant ter from a young friend of mine 6tretching & the truth. in the aimy who complains bitwhether fa Every good story-telleterly of not getting letters, from be a fisherman or-- narrator of "Goldhome. His friends he thinks have ilocks and fee Three Bears" should thus forgotten him, and it is a general be able to higWight" his ideas by apcondition in his company. Once r a week he gets a letter from his propriate exaggeration. friend who always encloses HgM A cartoonist or artist likewise stresses a copy of the Chopping Block, and the impression he wishes viewers to in to show how bad things are everyby siniply highlighting his subject, body in the company reads the thus mildlyj distorting some aspects and column. I am going to write; a minimizing f others. letlter to this boy, and if you It would fbe wise if theological semhave friends in the service; I inaries alsd included a few lectures Ion don't believce you could show how jto use humor and hyperbole! your patriotism any better than jFor many clergymen are so prosaic by writing these homesick boye. and precise, they can't even evoke! a grin from their congregation. President Kennedy received a A superb parson, however, always ovation in Salt Lake.j It great tries) to fprovoke a little wholesohie was a grand exhibition of good laughter dtiring his sermon, as Jesus feeling. He touched the hand that did when he said people "swallow cam- had touched the band of a man - ! that had touched the band of the founder of the John Birch Society. (Down injSt. Petersburg, Fla., there is another topnotch clergyman named tr. Paul R. Hortin, whose sermon formula I is this: ("Make the congregation laugh; mak it cry and make it righteously indigj j Congregation Likes a Sense of Humor ' Br GEORGE CASE 42-46- 6: W. CRANE, Ph.D., M.D. Cecil; Bumgarner is typi- cal of the avid rooters for Florida. Inifact, he is much like those devoted fans of Texas and California, too, who never cease' to laud their home states as ah earthly paradise. Earlier this year I had been invited to , Fort Lauderdale by Dr. Samuel Orlandi d to deliver an address in his annual series. Church lecture Presbyterian Sec-en- I j r, a j i ! if. 6b-ta- . On Saturday, however, Mr. Bumgar- ner escorted me. around the city, which has lover 250 miles of canals and, thus, j deserves the title "Venice of America." When I commented on the speed with which new buildings were going up, Mr. Bumgarner paid: j "pr. crane, yesteraay i arove pasi a vacant lot where they were just starting) to pour concrete for the' foundation of a new apartment! building. "And that very same night when 1 returned. I saw the sheriff evicting ja family from that same building for be Ing! behind in their rent!" fell, Mrs. Crane and I laughed at this grossexaggeration. urged Mr. Bumgarner to enter the Liar's Contest, for that one j , was a whopper! But it Illustrates a common ingred-fen- itof humor, namely, gross exaggeration. Indeed, Jesus employed similar exaggerations to clinch has had points, too, thus proving that Christ ' keen sense of hunior. c Tor Jesus remonstrated with his by saying, ",You fctrain at gnats. " ln-fa- ct,l .. , I J nant!" 1 aud-ten- ' I non-polit- ic !!' j ....The ways bf the law; sometimes passes understanding,! or at least mine. Up in Idaho one Theodore Thomas Dickie has just been sentenced to two ;consecutive terms of life imprisobment, and the prosecution made an impassioned appeal to: havje him sentenced to a third term. Young Dickie, you may recall, is the youth who caie forward and confessed his guit for la sex murder crime for whch a young airman had been foun,d guilty. He. also admitted guilt foif a couple of similar crimes. The question in my mind is how he is going to serve both these sentenices?i Ser(e one, then resurrect him, maybe, to serve the other one? Someting was said about rehabilitation. "Cnder which one of the life terms 0 they propose to rehabilitate) him? The. prosecutor undoubtedly had in mind the thought thai it couldn't so asked be done in two lifetimes, ' for a third one. When the young man ws s sentenced he proposed a 'deal, Maybe they should bavej listened to him; his proposal could hardly have been more complicated than what Was done. Theyj might have agreed to Jet him srve iut his first lifetime, and drop th; other charges when he was;! dead, In prison Dickie wjll be a man of distinction. The j other prisoners will be making bets as to I j I - i (Always! write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, (addressed envelope and 20c to cover typing and printing cost vhen you Send for. one of his booklets.) . - ee. J ,. Security, questioning the validity of the charges against him. Citing chapter and verse of numerous instances of the department's laxness in handling security risk cases, the senators listed wliat they described as "untrue" statements made to the subcomimittee by a 'high department official while under oath. Before joining in the decision to send the explosive memorandum to Secretary Rusk, Senator Ken- nedy, a member of the full judiciary Committee,! a r g;U e d against hasty action and suggested a delay for further investigaj Former MICHELET, Algiers Algerian Vice Premier Hocine Ait Ahmed, warning his rebels that PfpmiAr AhmoH Ron balls would use force to try to quash their uprising "Yob know how to shootj and are just as courageous you if not more so than I amji The best of your sons, if they 4saped deathJ are now in prison; ; tion. after meek plea this However, failed, young Kennedy later sup- ported Senator James Eastland, chairman in his request to press the showdown by sending to Rusk. WASHINGTON Froni "a statement of U.S. policy": j remains the policy of the United States in South Viet! Nam . . . to support the efforts of the peopli of that country to defeat aggreksion and to build a peace ful and free society." ' " Senator Eastland, who is also chairman of .the International Security Subcc4nmUtee, demanded 'collision with the the head-o- n State Department after he learned that- - Rusk had silenced Otepka, his subcommittee's star witness, and was preparing jto oust him because of information he had furnished ihe senators. ; I ; WASHINGTON Former! Cosa THE UUSK GAG According to 'the memorandumj, the gag is contrary to Title V- Section 42, of the code which, states that the right of Congress shall riot be. denied This law was passed by Congress in 1948. t It also states that the order is in violation of concurrent, resolutions of the House and Senate in. 1958, which provide; . "Any person in government service should put loyalty to the high . Nostra soldier" Joseph Valachi, describing the mobster killing of his boss: Maranzano "(Salvatore) got wise and weat for his gun. They got Hm." - " .. Yankee manag er Ralph Houk, on the Wor! d Se ries defeat by the Jos Angeles Dodg ers: You can sum up the en tire gamd in one word: Koufaxi" ... The recent mob jactivity used in trying to discredit the Activities Committee is after the "student" demonstrations during the mitteei hearings in San Francisco in I960. In both instances the goa.1 was to disrupt and ridiicule a duly aiuthorized House committee hold patterned ALGIERS Mohand Ou El the leader of Berber Imoun-tai- n Hadj, fighters-whhave rebelled agahjst AlgerianPresident Abmed Ben Bella's one-ma- n rule: j "We are the last chance for Algeria to get on the path to democracy. For that, we are ready to sacrifice everything - o ing public hearings and gather-in- g informat- ion Dodgers second ' j World Series: not "We're throwing in the towel. Teams have lost the first two games before and won jthe se , these j State Sen. Eben Hopson commenting (on an Arctic storm with freering winds up io 80 miles an hour thai, left two dozen families stranded: "It's been a hellftva busy dayfor jevery one heret We'rt ;poolmg our resources to save wnai-X ever we can." i whether he will live long fenough to serve both terms,' and ;one of them will probably bump jum off to win a bet. Every neighborhood ought to have: At least one father good - who is at "fix- ing" things and has the patience to let the neighborhood j M i j chil dren "help him in his workshop. At least one older woman or Rath MiiUett teen-agwho is available as y' sitter. :T "'nV".' "I-baby' er At least one wifel and mother who doesn't lose . her head in emergencies, and who does whatmoments of ever is necessary inj ' crisis. , At least one extrehiely sociable homemaker who ses to fit that the neighborhood gets together now and then so that they really feel like neighbors! instead of, just so many families lilving in f the same block. At least one large family where children are always welcome., because a few more don't make more than the ordinary amount j 1. ill ,lS'isi sub-committe- j hearing, taking voluminous notes. fis reported Jia ,an earlier col umn, leiuty Assistant Secretary of; Security John F. Reillyj a close V..M v.V Attorney Gen- eral Kennedy, is one of the central figures in the department's sur- ;: , veillance of Otepka. rtiis operation Of Reilly was arranged tnroujgh the "office of the j Attorney General by Assistant Secretary of $tate Harlan Cleveland, after he discqyered Otepka was investigating a' number of persons Cievelano (had brought into the Sate Deiartment Otepka, one of the department's outstanding security officers, handled the controversial probe" of Fieoreign Service officer William Wieland and his role in our disastrous Cuban policy during the late '50s and early O0s, . jThe Wieland c as e,; which i uhder investigation by the committee, came to a climax last yi&ar when President Kennedy personally defended the State I i nationally televised press conferj ence If Secretary Rusk doesn't comply wth the jbenatorsl memorandum. Senator Kennedy mil face another "moment of truth s ; ; ; . denied. i,j The Senate Internal Security, subcommittee report of Sept. 12, 1963. that Communist spokesmen made talks at 30 campuses last year, and will make an even greater effort this year. Gus Hall, general secretary of the Communist party of the UniJ eannot ' bj "spon- - fi.tate j Ir. Gardner YnaJA one's troubles without passing them along as gossip. ,j At least one gardener with a green thumb to inspire the rest of the homeowners and jto diswhen asked pense free advice on gardening problenisj At least one. yard that is big enough for a baseball diamond, mind who dori'ti owned by . . . parents . . sucn. as serve having it At least one calm grandmother come.- younger mothers that the children they are worrying about today will make them proud in times to , ,J , ' ... ,, :.r ,;. Not all neighborhoods have all these human assents. But 'those that do are lucky? for, they ; are good neighborhoods to live in. : 1abt to C0.000 American college Students jduring the past ' six months, ;.j j So, since the Communists have, J. . . reached the students, the next question was how to use them " to the best advantage. '. j TurniiigNnit big crowds of heck-- t lers has certain propaganda valu but it soon loses jits punch as the public becomes hardened to' such jacuvityj inerexore, someching more daring was needed. .!, j At a party meeting! on May 20 I960, Archie Brown: iWest Coast commi leader, disclosed a plat) yor use siudents as j targets lot police brutality" as a rallying j jcry.to afctradj sympathy. And a commie handbook des. cribed py the internal security subcommittee gives directions for provoking police into action thai can be distorted to brutality. 7 This tactic was demonstrated a the recent hearings in connection o with the visitors to Cuba. While police t conducted themselves with usual restraint, ana wieie was no oruiamy 01 any kind, tine rioters screamed tot doctors and claimed to have been r 1 ' j . J It is hard to understand how college students j who should have a reasonable amount ;of intelligence,! can be so gullible as to allow themselves to be duped, into carrying the ball for commies. Perhaps it is because the com-mdhave been .willing to make an effort to sell their poison to ' ' ": the student.j : j .; But it is because likely nofej we havie been derelict in present-- . ing the facts of lift fee them. j es .? Ruth Mil- J"or all parents Mail lett's "Tips. on 25 cents to Ruth iMillett Reader t. Service in care of The Daily P.O. Box Radio 489, A, aid, City Station, New York 19, N.Y. Teen-Agers- ." Her-Dep- vm that kxken tie had , who if ed a major campaign in 1959 to . 4et to, the youth of America. j The FUI report" states that on May 30 and 31, 1SJ59, a small group of Communists from the major cities met in New York with party leadein to devise a program to attract young blood, j. The plan selected was to invade the college campus to win converts. That It has been successful 4oA tanious" demonstrations. In the first place, there is no such thing as a spontaneous action. People from all parts of the country Just doh't decide upon a course of action that by mere coincidence dovetails with the action of others. Since, the primary purpose of all these demonstrations at committee hearings is to prevent action that will uncover Communists or fellow travelers, I would like to present some data on the part actually played by the Com-' munist party. A report from (he FBI notes that the Communist party launch- - of noise and confusion. At least one "listener" who can be counted on to listen toil any .j e':i 4, evecutive. sessions. ffhen ore, Rate Department employe, wjho used to work in the office of President Kennedy when he! was a senator, was questioned by! subcommittee members,' Ted- df was on hand for the entire ) to Live any Human Assets; Good canPlace assure the ' v ' j j Los Angeles victory in the BARROW, Alaska -- states on Commu- nist activity. With these two d e monstirations for openers, it is a good time to look behind the scenes, for the manipulators of LOS ANGELES Ralph Houk, manager of the New York Yank ries." Un-Ameri- can ! i f : Subcom-mJtte- e, he Used his privilege as a jmember of the full Judiciary Committee to isit. in on! the Student Demonstration Participants Red Stooges i the International (Security If Seems to Me NElW YORK New York City Detective Lt. Mario Biaggi speak or ing before 'in Italian-America- n ganisation in criticism of the Sen ate fcrime hearings in Washing ton: ''What we are now subjected to is neither a trial nor even a' hear ing but a disgusting political; Ispec- of politically inspired phar-; acters seeKng an opportunity to project themselves into the Homes and meeting places of people of all ages, all stations, all j inter- - after " J NEW YORK ees, I . pro-Castr- He develops each sermon to coyer -- . Ruth Millett those; three emotions, namely, humor, pathos, and righteous indignation. Dr Samuel Orlandi also wakes up his audiences py dramatic oratory for be ended his morning sermon the day I was there; by telling of Elijah's contest With the 450 prophets of BaaL ur- orlandi s final sentence was: "Make upH your minds! Either choose Jehovah and worship Him, or follow Baal and go to hell!" approaching shovAiown between the congressional and executive branches of government presents thej three Kennedy 'broUiers" with one! of the most delicate problems of their political careers i, 4s the llnei are now drawn, thej controversy pits "Teddy" against his brothers, Present Kennedy and Attorney. General Robert Kennedy, since they', are jprivat ly supporting the State Department. Despite this embarrassing position, Senator Kennedy h&s sec retly kept jboi h f h's b:o 3er informed as best as c?sl. of the Sefiate investigation off State Department seevrity problems. AjthoujjJ: not a member of the j chief of the evaluation division in the department's' Office of j j ex-cess- ive . l, ait. - THE WORRY CLINIC ... Because of that, and because the Senator . speech vas Bennett, Dr. Wilkinson.i Ezra Tatft Benson and J. Bracken Lee tiave not as yet asked for equal time to answer fawn, though some parts of his address must have made those gentlemen cringle. Mr. Kennedy gave physical evidence of the toughness! of ins job. I'm sure he reads The VVall Street Journal, but I can't believe he puts himself through 111 he does just to get a raise in $ay, seeing that he is already a piillioiiaire, though not to do so makes him somewhat The President attacked the idea that America must isolate itself from the rest of the world His speech was an analysis of recent history, ar.d a survey of what the future may hold. He xinted out that we can no longer have our way about everything. He frknkly admitted that we won't like it, .but that other countries have the right to defend their own interests, and that we should try to live with them in mutual help and respect, and not merely seek to impose our will upon' thenk. No one has yet given us a jdeed to the earth in fee simple, j It was a statesmanlike appeal for international !. uncle rstaind ing not based on prejudice and conceit. It was an affirmation of ideals, and a repudiation jf the belief that our only safety Jies in all , but retreat. It was I have ah idea the neit presidential campaign is going 16 be fought on pretty much this issue. We are going to! be s part of the world, or witherj on ou r own little vine non-politica- ... United Press International . By FRANK C. ROBERTSON I WAS TIRED OF LIVING ON LOW PAY ' So I Started Reading The Wall Street Journal VOB.K was jtne caption of an advertisement in a recent NeW " '"d Yorker. The! man had that men who read The WalJ .. Quotes In The News i i j al . ,..-,:- 48. PHIiJaDELPHIA DAILY NEWS y T.;, y i ,-- Ooiu. Reveal ing a Vista aye mej-chanic- JERRY The Chopping Block -4-h- re-traini- ng. :i i ... -- -- '" . : j sil They demanded that Secretary Rusk personally haty the depart-ment- 's move to oust Otto Oiepka, doctor, j n' hand-delivere- physically-handicappe- I These rongreissional actions and lawk have become the focal pont in the senators' head-oconflict with the State Depiartment's re-futo oper(ate with Congress, and in the Pepartment's handling of the 0epka Case. J, ,y : This Aj FAMILY PROBLEAf 10-pa- ge j Central Utah's pharmacists de serve an expressions of appreciation for their unselfish devotion to the protection of our health. Now is a good time to extend - disability has put a mark upon! j them, Yetrstudies, have shown that a! handicapped person physically often (makes the best employee j His disability, which may be no handicap at! all. in the performance? of many occupational functions has taught fhim important lessons of life whidh others less tempered may not have learned patience J devotion to duty, dependability,! willingness fto perform any task and desire to do his best. J the: Right here in Utah County 4 success of down responi persons in holding in been hun4 has proven sibje jobs all of instances. dreds of Nearly us lean cite a person with a dis ability and testify to the unusual j : J r. Central Utah Notes Pharmacy Week i - . WASHINGTON Senator Ed ward j 'Teddy" Kennedy has reluctantly taken his first politically explosive stand against his brother's administration, The youngest' of the Kennedy brothers secretly joined other members of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee in blasting the State Department for its lax. Ity in handling security cases and withholding information from Congress "MeIn a confidential morandum of Fact," which was d to Secretary of State Rusk, the senators bluntly challenged the department's banning of recurity officers and other Statej Department personnel from testifying before the Senate Ju-- L diciary Internal Security t find remunera- women time employment simply because a handicap .U ... aj an injury The jf reedoms of our great country should give every man ? the opportunity to earn a living. The f o r employment opportunity should! not be denied any qualified person because of a physical handicap. The individual's ability, not his disability, should be the first consideration in determining his capacity for, employment. These facts should be but too ofteiv they are not. There! are today many men and self-evide- Disability ' j j r : ". |