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Show Kjf DAVID Dedicated to the Progress And " Growth of Centrol Utoh & SUNDAY;SEPTEMBER 10, 1967- J, OESTREICHEB , for iht . fame time in American military history, "the United States has decided to use the ancient tactic of an elaborate defensive wait to help win the Vietnam war. The. Pentagon plan has added the know-hoof the electronic age to a battlefield ploy that dates back tohe days of the Roman --- - -- Strike Guns Roar at Huge Cost Somebody ought to write i w learned about responsible" " economic citizenship? The workers want only their "fair share" ' of the industry's earnings." The industry wants only what it considers to be reasonable profits, which are basically .;. dependent upon production. costs. In the end, when the casualties become too oppressive and the am- munition, runs low, both sides will grant each other what they want not every thingi but aa much couldshave agreed upon fore war was declared, if they had had a will to agree. But what will they have really have book e Gui of.tember. called The actions or better, the absence of constructive actions in the daya and hours preceding the strike United Auto Workers' sug- Motor Ford Company asrainst mucn as me so tw gest notaing most teisuray iau build-u- p to World War I described in the beat seller of a couple sealant back, The Guns of August.' nations of Like the war-ba' half ago, both century Europe Aht&ironiata in this contest came Their ammunition w VAJ "IMtiTW resolve not to grant the enemy an inch of around- like the generals who inarched their singing troop off to glory in 1914, both anion and company official! seemed almost impatient for the battle to b joined. "Let them strike," a high executive wai quoted as saying after the UAK rejected the industry's proposals for a new contract. "We're ready for them." 'They're asking for it," said a onion spokesman, "and I'm afraid they're going to get it." This is 19671. This ia how far we have progressed in the art and repractice of lational This is how much we . Empire,- The record of wall fortifies? ' ,. " q . f m 30-fo- ot . something you didn't This year Is the sesquicen ternal o the velocipede. ..sfTri n rnrnirsir nMe' if vi -. .... - . By-Li- i I, ii n ii jm f mhhm run nr in ,,ni m 1 1'jfi'.W. I By B. - 91 - ss Utt-SSiJZFZ- -r .U... k.it i. tk. r ::;. U .'iv1' AtwV7 I- - 4l!ll 1 2 mm 1817. Thi first bicycle wai nrttw ly named. Velocipede means "fleet foot." Since it had no pedals, one more or less walked sitting down. A lot of ihoe leather w&i worn out between then and 1853, when mother German, Moriti Fischer, earns up with pedals, chain and . iprocket. Then in 1838 in Irish veterinarian named Dunlop got into thi act by introducing inflatable ... f tires. Further refinements over the yean, such as coaster brakes, gear shifts, newspaper baskets, etc., nave resulted in thi handy vehicle And children's joy we know today, when nothing goes right air nave We mem-burw- hat r rvi-.- M 1 , ., I " . . Who was h that said a dollar is only worth about 38 cents today? Well according to the New York Mercantile Exchange, the price - 111 v-- - I - for 1,000 uncirculated silver dollars has reached $2,S00- -or $2.50 each. Even circulated silver dollars are. selling for $1.98 each. OK, that's what silver dollars are selling for. Now what I'd like to know is how much are those dollars that say, "Federal Reserve Note selling for? 38 cents? A sixteen-year-ol- d girl in Norwalk, Conn., has written her first book titled, "How to be a Nonconformist". From reading some of her comments, which are accompanied by sketches, it's bound to be a big seller. Here are sdnw'Cher incisive comments: "Nonconforming boys wear their hair long and nonconforming girls wear - them Short. Their bangs art so long that the probability of their having eyes is questionable." "Nonconformists take particular pride In singing somber songs that no on understands i including themselves." "A boys nonconforming uniform consists of tight pants, a ' flowered shirt and vest, and any tie that clashes." A girl Is not to be condemned for long hair. Some people- Just have to be different" ''Nonwnformlsts-we- ar sandals even during the winter. A true nonconformist prefers Caesar-typ- e sandals, but it doesn't make any difference as long as your toes are cold.". ' Report From Washington Burton Raps; Practice Of 'Pandering to Negro Voto1 Timely Quotes a day . unit. tbtwoiWty!ryr.lW (Bye) JENSEN p. w. ed States builds five million., Germany leads In one statistic, however. There are about 70 bi 'cycles for every 100 families in that country which makes Fret herr Drais invention still pop. ular at the television set. t do you do about them. Do you go back to bed and stay there the : rest of the day? Do you isolate vourself from the rest of the. world? Or do you just grit your' teeth and watch-thingget pro-- -: gressiveiy worse as the day wears on? 1 was. Having one of those days when a iriend of mine offered : some advice to help combat my troublesome day. He said, "Cheer up Bye, things could be worsel" So- -I took his advice and cheered-uSure enough, the advice he had given me was right because as the "day wore on, things got worse . . . much worse ! . But I've "often wondered if anyone has come up with a remedy for that kind of a day. If so, I wish you'd let me know 'cause - anticipate Jnore of the same. Not too soon, I hope. Wa are indebted for thii intellt-knogenes to the FederalvRepublic Information Office, whicll adds "that ... .fat. west Germany tunas one mwion th. 85 million Ufri-W- -M lii .nitimw of ne s iml m f-A'- . -- or notnin? seems ts so fieht? J off another inflationary, spiral throughout - the" ' economy. That ve What do you do when you have " It is not that the strike will set - made-extensi- to That One, Key Vclocipcdo Still Running Strong Here'e sive operations in both big was wide enough 'for a' column been The coin . has of troops to stand guard on the .wars reversed la vietnanv ramparts.- "McNamara's Wall."" as the U.S. forces in both World War American barrier is bound to be I and World War H use of field fortificadubbed, is a far less ambitious tions but American commanundertaking than either ,the ders never built anything of the Maginot or Atlantic lines. Its., scope of the; barricade- - already, value may Be . in' the "highly which under construction in Vietnam. sophisticated devices' Such barriers are normally built .Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara announced would be by defenders, and VS. troops - . ' were' largely engaged in offen- - built ey , labor-manageme- nt . :: is already well under way, aa recent wage and price boosts in the rubber and steel Industries" testifyX And even the effects of these ta -- creases are paltry compared to the continuing and intense infla- tionary pressure of the war in Vietnam. But the auto strike will certainly do nothing to brake this familiar cycle. In the end, all of us will pay for the firing of the strike guns of September 1867. Not for the war, but for the peace. -- fcigb-erplosi- and barbed wire entanglements. Adolf. Hitler's "impregnable" -Atlantic and Siegfried lines with -their rows of steel and concrete "dragon teeth' fell to saturaand tion allied " air raids artillery .bombardments. The most successful use of the lactic was by the ancient ' Chinese who built the Great Wall and used its heights to hold back the Huns for centuries. The 1.500-mil- e .wall ItlJ Lead Right Into the White House!" M,-th- waU-prepare- d. in filed "If We Can Find the T nt jt modern, warfare, k with luccesset , and since , the advent of dynamite and1 bombs field com jmanders have" rarely pinned all the ability of" their hopes on ' barbed wire and concrete to bold back an enemy. During World War n. ' the Nazi juggernaut broke through toe French Maginot line with UnJa end planes, riding rough-shod o'er a network of piiihoxes tions Today In The author, Elissa Jane Karg, sums up her comments with, . "And that's the way it's done. Follow these steps, and you can be a bonafide nonconformist . , like everyone else." HistorK 7 I53fd day of follow.- While at the Relations outing last week (sponsored by the Prove Chamber of Commerce), the subject came up or down, depending on your point of of mini-skirview. Someone asked me if 1 like them and I told them yes, " as long as they weren't of the mini-min- i site. Phil Knight, who was sitting next to me, said, "Oh, e'mon Bye, yen know dan well you like them no matter how short" well, if you anew rail yoi know be klnda likes to put a guy on the "spot". And being the truthful, outspoken guy that I think they're I am, my only reply was. "As a GREAT! As a father, I abhor them!-- y' ty ' Today is Sunday, Sept. 10, the 1967 with US to . ' - .- ts N - 1 Democrat friends disagree with The moon is to its first e aid to . . my support for federal Don't we have enough quarter. teams out here without bringing in one education. But my point Is that i The morning stars are if we can train the poor so they war wears White Shoes and Saturn and Venus. Jupiter, uniforms? .are capable of finding employ The evening stars. art Mars California State Sen, George Moscone, 'meht, we make them taxpay" and Saturn. ers Instead of the lone dissenter on a resolution lav Born on this day in 188 was . or Welfare rolls - arid poverty lng a move of the Kansas City Ath So now it's out, I have never thought of myself as a ' American " author Carl Van BURTON LAURENCE letics to Oakland. and funds and public housing REP, J, but maybe I am. And if I am then I'm a clean, wholesome Duren. slum clearance (urban renewal) . . . lust like all other men. On this day in history: the major reaI and child suprent and in the subsidy loss the first In on 1813, tor. discontent sons racial 'such a wide and riotous scale port and many other social history of an English Navy . squadron occurred when Amerithe past two years is because, welfare spending programs somebe could cut and y maybe defeated the, can Capt.-Perrtod many politicians have been day, not even needed. British in the battle of Lake pandering to the Negro vote. " But to do this, somewhere the Erie. X,f Therhave promised the Ne ' By Howe cycle received C. HORERTSON many poverty hopeless Ellas In 1 I cannot 1846, gro many things they find themselves in has a patent for the sewing deliver. That is one of the Negroes to be broken. In 'my judgment, . machine. major issues facing the admin to give them hours of th winter time after the In 18, Empress Elizabeth of. By FRANK C. ROBERTSON istratlon's Great Society as it the best place I have here a copy of a letter swallow" the pain and not com the opportunity to break the y closed because I had no money to was assassin, prepares to enter an election writing this on Ubor Day.buU was. sent to President' plain. of educa which Jirtnwejieid rcycli: ated by an anarchist. " " year; don't know whs it meansetcept with schools from a mother in Syraurban Johnson tion killed 44 wer 'But now our boys 'ere or- good in a J.962, an euipiuymcuk mil, persons the irum uuy for the That blame is jou why nobody is supposed to wotk. It might betaitd programs like "Headstart". to find that there was an agreewhen an Air Force Jet tanker y cuse, N. Y. Perhaps the White" phaned by their own country, . only riots rests to a certain extent . And I think it's time fof those ter bi called thi" day of unrest and ment between the foreman and the with the While near Mount Spokane in ' House ignored iti I can't. Percrashed "Andy had suchjontsraj part of society. of us in ' of political haps more than any of us, Mrs. places fine ideals the Washington state. farm, labor shark that employees Ware to be fired Many Negroes have been exillughterThls being A.F.S. deserves to be heard. I A thought" for kind of pride in Ms country and as soon si they reach the Job and an pecting that the Civil Rights sponsMlty to stop trying to oft the same Is usual. Cousins Rob foesand Ruth fiam ritnrtt VMrtArrfn each quote: nrl novelist Thomas in his mSkeC--ordefnHora niwwuuouckers. bills we have been passing in out-bi- to and the Wolfe once said: "Most of the "Dear Mr. President: ' Negro vote. get NowM search the faces of iiiere were no unions wen, nor any gov , are sandmg the day here, which seems . utIm thMir&t thaw linn't met ntit nt mnrh '.ernment that gave damn Whether I ltherOJiajnk it's time to time we think we're sick, it's all "We sit here Side by side to oro-my other sons, hardly more than start telltag our feBw citizensta the mind.' man starved or not. labor. Robbie got up early, got break night, numb, defeated, broken, babies, and Wonder who goes in the Negro community, "We fast for us and mowed the lawn, and Maybe Mr. Lee would have come up scarcely ame to irusi ourselves forth to these Unending slaugh equal cars, equal homes, equal arl going to do everything pos- I'm sure that is all' the fiver to talk. Wearejtwaiting the ters next. : Rum is hap. with some magic formula, but I'll bet salaries, equal everything w fetting lunch, but If they're sible to see that yoii get, an ''whelming majority of them hmecoming,.of-ou- r Would had first he have dollar son, Andy What wl art actually talking my last WiUl it be young Richard py about tt I certainly am. eduto a fine and want OPPORTUNITY expect anyway. Jr., with the laughing face, happy- everywhere one turns there seems to to eat a generous portion of dung. I don't about is equal opportunity , ' " "' "We' cannot sleep. We cannot cation, In OPPORTUNITY to ? be strikes, or rumort of strikes. Honest blame people for thinking that the relief and that's about all anybody go4ucky, filled with the joys The' opinions and state eat. We are filled to the brim rolls of today are better. can really expect from their git I good Jop, an OPPORTUNissues, or collusion, makes to differ ITY to vote in our elections ments expressed by Herald - with hurt. " ences the fact remains that it is the Saw? True, I never quite starved, and I courrtry.Theri is - no doubt "without fear, an CPPORTUNTY columnists are their -- O wn ' r""This was a day long, long ' "Must it be Matt; bright, but knew who I is never asked for the and in bills, whatsoever in toy mind that public charity, paying to happiness. Once we give you and do Hot necessarily reit was to be a anticipated the people with fixed incomes are go plenty who had to. I have been fortunate. thi past tha American Negro' sensitive? flect the views of this nlws these things; what you do with day of I million things to say , ing to have to tighten their belts. Maybe , The greatest asset S man can have is - it - be - precocious" "Or-w- ill " r to is hap-a of them paper. overwhelming day up you." It is a power struggle between capital pride. A young friend of mine, Louis' tunlty, in most cases, to go to filled with trust i And do you know something? piness and joy. But now we will Christopher, so Kackos, and his Wife and baby dropped the .fine schools and colleges and labor, but we are told it is Ameriand love? know bittersweet the never in to see me yesterday. He is a graduate that most other people have hsd. canism, and that there must be no com " "And I keep thinking maybe agony of waiting for his key in of Brigham Young University and has He has not been able to qualify pulsory arbitratiofl. - BERRY the lock. The key he asked for. it was the ten thousand dollars BY IAMES O. BERRY'S WORLD -To me it seems on I par with a police his career pretty well mapped out, but for better paying white-collar g in his last letter. On the outside Koexweu Kent sent to tne man standing hick and matching a rob today he Is working in a bolt and nut or executive Jobs. There are which paid for till, bullets .. o fthe envelope he had written has or He areas where he will uner because has succeed he eery romnuneo, rerusmg n factory. many other that snuffed out (he last breath '77 days toore!" fere in a fight because someone's so. pride, and had a father who saw to it, been held back. This is unfair, . of our Andy. Mr. President, we are ' that he was well equipped He has his "Now, - tailed rights may bs Invaded. and completely "We are sick, Mr. President, sitting here dumb and stricken ' Still, there are larger things Involve! . degree, and has filled an LOS mission, unwarranted. for his coffin. We ache over What is hannenint to our waiting Automaticm is throwing people out of not Most Negro Americans; like bad his but what of those who have finest boys in Vietnam, Why. so deep with unshod tears.' - their white counterparts, want Jobs end the enes who suffer most are advantages or his intelligence? whili must ihpv dW "Never again to hear the rise-anmaster sew who skills. those ana to, ana expect to earn what they can't cannot sit Unlike Mr. Lee,-for biased laws leave of Ms happy laughter as fair loopholes : The roost foolish statement of the gloat-ov- er my good fortune, I have geLbut they certainly deserve his younger brothers tease, the sleazy ones who run and ' was summer made, not unexpectedly, by simply been' lucky. Scarcely a week , and have every right to expect hide and burn draft cards and 'Flex your muscle, Andy; the Honorable J. Bracken Lee who said passes that some former cherry picker 'thi OPPORTUNITY to get it desecrate their flag? Iemmehitlt!M . ... oft thi same basis as any other that he had never seen a man who doesn't drop in here to see me. Vaster "The tears are coming now, "No more telephone calls in' couldn't get a Job if ha wasted to work. day, a Mr. Malstrom of Sandy, Utah, citizen. no more ad- - Mr. President I can't see to meals, terrupting I wish I could have had the gentleman, his wife and two grown sons saw my , I firmly believe the road to vice on "Corsages, loans until write much more. But do let mi with me during some of the earlier years name on the mall-band stopped to equal opportunity for the Negro payday, slapping his hand out ' congratulate you on the birth of ;,se me.' He said he had been reading ".He! in the field of education, Wi of the cookie jar your precious grandson. . which al Lwanted to work, and my brother and the Sunday Herald for years. Hi hadThat U one taason why ! have .ways seemed to empty as if rejoice with yoii in this' though had to support our parents. Usually, been froien out of the fruit business. He ' supponea teaerai am to eauca we will never t knowLjhe-Jo- y by magic when he passed. tion. I am disappointed that, we did it, but in the course of looking is older than I, and witad shared "Never again will he stride of Andy's children. Never. because of the impending huge tor wora i nave swoa wnn nunareas ot similar experlencei.iHe'has never-le- t down the street with his young"Sleep- - well, Mr, President, ; my jellows looking over fences at signs old age get him down, and by reading budget deficif, only about hall est brother on his shoulders: though some of us cannot until ssymg. no mm wanted. I liave my books .and' articles he gave me a Of the $3.9 billion that Congress Who's your best buddy, Kip?' this carnage is brought up full- a 41 IV ah ova knAf . walked for miles from ranch to ranch lift, and helped to make mi feel that my authorized-fo- r this purpose has A VII scale ana all our sons over there WV) (U1UJ ; and having farmers threaten to set their life has not been entlralv wasted. been appropriated. "No, ,no morev no more, no are backed up with all our pow The bulk of his money goes' But I never see a broken-dow- n bum mere for he died Just five days er all the way or until you dogs on me. I have ridded the rods and had policemen run me out of thelrjjwhs that I don't feel like savine. "Then, but to upgrade the educating of the after he wrote that last letter get them out of there and bring them-hoas a vagrant after they had used their - for the Grace of God. to I." I commend ' poor. Because of thi) cutM in, Mr.- - Pre side ntr we-a- re killy-cluacross me bitter. If this war had even the j "Thank God, our. Andy died who think" their t. grading education in the ghettos rfmy "Htrr you chcktJ to b sure thtn art m and purpose of the war sUll believing you surely would, is set .behind. success entitles them to sneer at the wake me up when I was utterly exhaust dignity ' ' iithinihivattir his daddy. fought, we could' Some of my Republican and 1 1 have walked the streets in the earqr, unionunate. "Goodnight "Mn President' Editor's Note: In the following statement, Rep. Lao rence J. Burton gives his views on solving the problem of racial discos tent. bush-leagu- . (it-Uta- green-and-yello- w girl-watch- er " ., limkrbf . r V Chopping" Block , ' . Paul Harvey mm LVLl . Austria-Hungar- X re' :i -- se C)Sgfllrhlcb4Jwveu' i fffo?L7LSX(Sv .. from-Vietna- '"'' . -- - -- . viei-con- -- . V d 1 x ;t -- .. , -- r ' mr sei feetlo-TIirshouli- l"tothoss anti-Maoi- J -- - . , i vv vr X V st ,VV 1 J.T r |