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Show Peter Edson "Right This Way, Sir!" iffsTf that requests for vol unteers are nearly 10 times great- er than the number that will be Corps been , 'the season of peephole driving is upon us. This is the period of the year when frost blankets the .windshields and rear windows of; auto- j J d, JS - ft Rhodes (Rates Attention in 1964 Picture now poses the single greatest block to Communist expansion! in Western Europe and an embarrassing reminded of Marxist economic failure at home, the Soviets may one Peace Corps g day find a and the them standing between unrest they . world poverty and feed upon. It costs an average of $9,000 to train, transport and maintain one Peace Corps volunteer, a fraction of the cost of keeping a soldier abroad. American missiles and GIs are guarding the peace, but unarmed Americans are helping to shorten the time they will be necessary. The Peace Corps' greatest triumph will be when the Russians want to s 1 f rW l- f & i.v last-minu- T rj NOPE! reason. For some Sunday afternoon seemed like a good time to shampoo my hair. INDIAN SQUAW? now-forgott- en Those who know me will understand that this is a decision not United Press International Gov.-ele- ct WASHINGTON (UPI) James Rhodes of Ohio rates more attention than he is getting as a man to be considered in the presidential politics of the Repub- j' Republicans elected four governors last month in big states with numerous electoral college votes. Rhodes was one of them, Political writers have concen-trade- d on three as likely or possible Republican presidential nominees in 1964. Rhodes was not one of the three. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, just is regarded as the front runner toward 1964. The other two are Gov.-eleGeorge Romney of Gov.-eleWiland Michigan ton of liam Scran Pennsylvania. fur-line- should-be-thrown-aw- re-elect- j ct Holmes Alexander ct Political writers are a sodality touched by the herd instinct and each with a yen for That may explain conformity. why they generally have ignored Rhodes as a potential 1964. Republican presidential nominee. It is possible, of course, that Rhodes is afflicted with disquali- fying blemishes or inadequacies not easily distinguished at a distance, for example of the shores of the Potomac where; this is being written. But, barring such disme-to- o Some Featu res of New Trade Act ; By Congressman Thomas B. Curtis (R., Mo.) With a final fanfare flourish, President Kennedy, on October 11th, signed into law the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. Although important, the act is hot, as hailed, a great victory for free trade and a blow at protectionism. ' It can become this, or l the converse, depend- ' r i ing upon how the President uses it. As proposed by the ' ':: administration, the bill contained nothing very new. It was the last a in or! tn tan tha Alexander in be token lowering to tariff rates practically nothing the high ,. Tariff contained in the Act of 1930. The United States has been and still is, the lowest tariff country among the major trading nations. The bill which emerged from the Congress, however, has some new bold and inative provisions which, if properly implemented, can result in a new trade ' policy. These important innovations are: 1. The establishment of status and power in the United States trade negotiating team by creating the position of chief trade negotiator, which shall be filled by the President and carry the ' rank of ambassador plenipotentiary. Rather 'than a. faceless, anonymous crouD of negotiators who must report to the bureaucracy in Washington for ap proval of their daily decisions, our trade negotiating team will now be on a par with those of foreign nations.: y 2. The creation of an Trade Organization, chaired by the chief trade negotiator, where all interested parties can establish the truth 'of alleged unfair domestic and foreign trade practices, both private and governmental. When violations are established, the act gives the President the power to apply - appropriate remedies, including the withdrawal of trade concessions. Industry in the past has had the escape clause procedure for relief from misguided concessions made by ' trade agreement, but now, for the first time, unfair trad practices apart from contractual concessions can be eliminated through this 1 . fair trade' machinery. the two these for provisions, Expect trade bfll is not new, but is simply a final extension and refinement of previous authority granted to the President to lower tariffs. In spite of what has been ciaimed, the are trade adjustment features of the bin redunare . not Innovations. Rathe, they dant and will cause confusion! and dam- l V m Smoot-Hawley- j kind of trade policy President Kennedy will shape up with this new trade, instrument. The failure of the administration this year to repeal Section 201 of the Agricultural Act, coupled with its actions in rousing it from its dormant state and increasing its scope by amendment, raises a question as to whether the administration actually intends to move toward a freer trade policy. This section, almost unutilized until this year, permits the President to enter into international cartel agreements in respect to agricultural products or products manufactured from them. This was used as the authority for the International Agreemnt on Textiles made in Geneva by the administration in January, 1962. The substitution for tariffs of quotas, embargoes, licenses and quantitative restrictions under international cartel agreements, . such as contained in the textile agreement, is a move away from freer trade. In addition to the two new provisions, the act wisely retains the escape clause and the national security clause and improves the prenegotiating procedures of the expiring legislation. American agriculture, business and labor have never needed, nor really asked for, protection from foreign imports. What they have asked for was the assurance of fair and reciprocal competition. In a large measure, the new trade act provides the machinery. We must wait .and see how well the President utilizes his new tools. (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) j . . So They Say Inter-agenc- The fact is, many people live through their whole lives in comparative .happiness and productivity . .! , and never ' ' really think at all. Dr. Francis A. Cartier, authority on communications, saying we should stop worrying, start thinking constructive4 - age to our present programs for relief for the unemployed and for business.. The game objectives sought in the trade adjustment provisions are attainable under existing unemployment insurance, man- power training, small business and area ir ly, , 1 party. For example, Rhodes has Rayj Bliss going for him. Ray Bliss is Ohio state chairman of the Republican party. He is the best state chairman of the whole lot. Bliss ' could be chairman of the . Republican National Committee any day he would accep the job. , Further, Rhodes has proved that he can get votes in the areas where Republicans need to get them if they are to have much chance to win the big industrial states in a presidential election. Richard M. Nixon carried Ohio in 1960 so Rhodes' victory last month is not so glamorous as Romney' s in Michigan or Scranton's in Pennsylvania. That is not the complete story. At a time when ; the Republican party needs to j regain the Northern Negro vote to win the big industrial states, Rhodes looks like the man who might be able to '. do it. In last month's election, Rhodes 'more ' than doubled Nixon's vote in the Negro wards of Cleveland. He carried the; city with 54.5 per e vote. That is cent of the 14.3 per cent better than Nixon j, y did in 1960. These figures 'are meaningful. As time goes on the Republican party - leaders may give to them a lot of thought. ri V get tills feud settled here and Attorney General Robert Kennedy helps settle Olympic Committee-NCAjurisdictional feud over track events. A ' Agriculture .will have to speak with a more unified voice if it is to, be heard (In Congress). Agriculture Secretary Orville Free- man. -- ' SSs j , build-u- p. ay pearance so I could quickly hand her the suitcase as she came back to the bus. Well, she made it and I crawled back into the car and I just hope any "foreigners" will jenjoy telling the story of the Indian squaw they saw in Provo, Utah. W. N. J. SAGEBRUSH SAGE SAYS How can a young man ere t a correct blood pressure in a hospital without a blindfold if a pretty nurse is taking it? PROGRESS CAN HURT I don't suppose I shall! ever drive through Lehi again without feeling heartsick. Several years ago, as a resident of that community, I joined the futile fight to keep the freeway from cutting up the town! more than it was then cut up. We organized meetings, signed petitions and met many times with representatives of the state road department. We all but pleaded with highway engineers who blandly informed us that they knew bet ter than we what was best for us and the rest of the citizens. So the freeway is butting through Lehi. Huge mountains of dirt block views. Roads which formerly ran along level 'ground now come to an abrupt end at a mountain of soil. Neighbors have been separated, and access from j j one part of town to another cut to a single channel. My friends and relatives in Lehi tell me the freeway has had strange effects on the lives of many citizens. Most people living in the vicinity of the freeway have resigned themselves to living in its depressing shadow for the rest of their lives. They know it would be virtually impossible to sell their property, and to abandon it would tnean serious financial loss. Who would buy a home which lies in a narrow channel between the state highway and the freeway? A little girl who played all the time with her cousiris half a block up thej street no logger has anyone to play with. A yisit to the home of her cousins is now a trip via the only access road available. Close friends living a stone's throw apart now find the access roads' tool lengthy for j i f , ; i - o ' i te prone to obsolescence, and lackwar ing in credibility." In all-ohe suggests, they; would be the first to be wiped out. I We believe our own jjgreat nuclear force, matched ajgainst all ut conceivable enemy targets', . ii wholly sufficient. But we would not oppose genuinely desired multilateral medium-rang- e nuclear force, provided it! could be harmonized with ouriown Imajor de- terrent, Part and parcel f " 1 of this notion. United States say officials, is out sistence that any multilateral force should not be discriminate foror against any j Individual member countries, anq should be so Integrated that nojnation can a purely pull out and ish j national deterrent. we neither nor advocate Though dlscour theTnedium sge actively range force, this country is presr ently advising other NATO lands on possible costsX problems of manning and so "on. And United States authorities say tiey believe- the tjiorny question of a NATO nuclear chain of command could truly be solved, though no one right nw is public ly saying just how. 4. July j j In the corridor , chatter on mi- clear force, these two countries .as nuclear nations likewise will figure large. j - The United States' position is generally clear. We disapprove independent national nuclear, de-- f terrents. McNamara has called them "dangerous; xpeniive, - Furthermore, American officials ire pleased at the results of the freer transmission of nuclear and other information to other NATO members. This practice was initiated after the spring - two-mi- le The Doctor Says Prepare Your Child For Trip to Hospital ! neighJborliness. It's going to take many years for the bitterness in Lehi to die. -- J. S. Z., Springvffle DID YOU KNOW? That the color jjof pearls Indicates their source? Those found in the Persian Gulf have a yellow tinge, those that come from Ceylon are a faint rose color but pearls that come from Venezuela and Panama are a fine gold shade. .. j' Newspaper Enterprise Assn. The first thing you must sider when putting your child who is under 5 years old in the hospital is the question: Is this trip and your doctor agree that it is, the soon should you tell the child. Two or three lays should be enough to pre ' r 1AXLJ ' ranasiaai J ; . and then afterwards we all sat in their living rooms and discussed different features of the home. Then we hated to go back to our apartments with portable electric stoves and ice boxes. I remember our car getting stuck in the snow after we left the' Andrus home. All that could fields be seen were " ' and pasture fences. Now, 15 years later, fhey are living in the, nicest residential seer tioh of the city. What a change during those years in the BYU campus, OakhiUs and the area on up North Canyon Road to the mouth of the canyon. L. N. B., Edgemont 1 snow-cover- Oh, how it did snow that winter. Well, we visited three homes, each on a "different night, and it seems we went Way out in the country to find the home on nice jj snowy nights, 1 cannot recall ithe name of the ..person who lived in the first home we visited, but the other two homes were tbej new; beautiful " i child may somehow get the impression that y6u ,ir, perhaps, God is punishing h&n- - for some past misdemeanor. Such an idea -must not be allowedito persist. Next to being calm it is essential not to lie to the child. It is wise to put, the major emphasis on the more pleasant aspects of hospital life. The child can be told that he wtUL have his ffood brought to him on a tray and will eat it in bed. He may be told that even ' going to tiie toilet jan be managed in bed thanks to that ingenious device, the bedpan. If the operation is to be a tonsillectomy and the child will be in the hospital! only. jjone night, it is a good idea to have the mother stay with him. if thef mother does not stay with him he should be left in a single bedroom or a double room with ho other schild. The presence of other children in the ward has a calming Influence that is essential to the child's adjustment to strange surroundings. If the child must be in th hospital for a prolonged, period the mother should visit him every day. Even though lie cries when she leaves it is better for him to be upset for a short time every day than .to 'think f thai he has been deserted or Is .being punished. Once a parent has left the ward a child almost always calms down qulcklyj r,; I do not want to leave you with ttie impression that emotional damage always resfilts from having to put a child in, the hospital and that the best you can do is to - try to minimize the injury. This is far from true; j With proper preparation a trip to the hospital can be a constructive experience in tiiat it will help your child to grow.jup. If this has been the case he will have no qualms about going to 4he hospital again should it become neces j ed ' BEARD ON GOLF COURSE Golf is a rood same. It gives a fellow a chance to bea pedestrian without the dan- ; ger of being run over. homes of J. Roman Andrus and Stewart L. Grow. Both families were very gracious to us. They took us' on a tour of their homes ancl threat has ever been made, the meet the nurses and children , unto any "parent j good idea to visit the hospital to ng Woe there aren't many these days who would be so stupid who has once told a child that if he didn't behave the doctor wlmld put hint1 r in the hospital, ' Even if noj ,such heartless mm ror. what is to conie. YT If there is no emergency it is a couple of years following World ; ed unnecessary woryi. pare : n. questi on. arises as to how front room, bedroom and bath. In our MIA class, held in the chapel built by the Wymounters, it was decided Chat we would visit some of the jLnew homes in the eastern part df the city. The reason for this was that the families of Wymount would soon be finishing school and getting established . in our own homes. This would give us an! opportunity to pick up isome good ideas and to see just what the j trend in was at this time a War ct necesreally sary? If you WHAT A CHANGE! Several days ago! as I was gazing out over the OakhiUs area, my mind wandered back to the winter of 1947-4- 8 wjhen I first vis' ited in that area. I was then living in Wymount Village on the BYU campus. Our apartment consisted of a kitchen, home-buildi- who are allowed to tie up and sit- ting at a play table.) A calm matter-of-faapproach to the whole business on the part of the parents is esfential if the ordeal is to be minimized. It should be explained, in simple terms what will be Idone. And it is important to allow the child to ask questions.! Many . children faced with a trip to the hospital get weird ideas thst should be corrected if they are to be spar- By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT ! I , j Shower for Groom-to-B- e Could Have Many Built-i- n j By RUTn MILLETT Sihowers for! the bride-to-b- e an old old story.. at these showers? Well, nothing are, . and girls about to be married love showers.' But the very latest thing. vis :h e prenuptial ihower for the groom. ;(Th is could result in a .! , t lot of. aoout-to- -. jj be m a r ried" young men" get- - Ruth Miiilett ing cold feet before they ever get to the altar).' r to make him feel like the gay, young bachelor 'he still Is, but everything to remind him of the duties and responsibilities he is ; about to assume. Tools of all kinds seem to be a favorite shower t gift for the That is sure to groom-to-bhim that in his future life mind he is going to expected to be a 1., handy man. know how to la. case he doesn't to get bound is use the tools, he how-t-o book. one more than They will explain how to do everything from fixing a leaky faucet to fixing a leaky roof. Not very Inspir el . The opinions and statements ex pressed by Herald eolnmnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of; this newspaper. .. : Ruth Millott .;. let's : city-wid- the emotion of labor and creative work is higher. !'..;'; 'H. v;:,. Or. Mikhail Tsentsiper, in Moscow's "Young Communist" newspaper. now. . ' Although love is one of the greatest emotions of life, it is unquestionable that '.,.- i qualifications, Rhodes should be' considered because he has much going for him in the Republican . taken lightly because my hair goes clear down to here and is also thick and heavy meaning thalt it takes quite a piece of time to wiry. Anyway, having made this decision, I got all dressed up in d some moccasins, a pair of jslightly battered corduroy jeans and a blouse. Then to the task. So, there I was a couple of,, hours later, still in this Sunday afternoon garb, with my hair split between some big rollers on the top and the rest in real squaw braids. And it was precisely at this point that my daughter Informed me she didn't have a ride back to Salt Lake and would have to1 catch the bus leaving in about two minutes! So, I grabbed my fringed leather jacket (well beloved, but not for going out to tea in) and drove her down to the station. We arrived just as the bus was ready to pull out. The driver waited a minute while she dashed for a ticket. I, after one fearful look about to see who might be around, slid out of the car-analong the side of the bus, trying to cover my ap. lican party. imitate it. 1 Herald Staff Off the Beat By LYLE C. WILSON far-flun- j By The Washington View with the European Common Market, which started as a dream and , capabilities, j with candid talk on relative burdens and ajiility to pay. We believe j a prospering Western Europe can carry a big, j ger load, j. Also due for presentation is t major report on the coordination for research and development efforts in support of NATO's mili 1 tary, functions. i France, with its' present woe fully insufficient NATO ground force, and Britain, witfhi inadequate conscription, hold main keys to any conventk)4sl arms p ? Busy motorists often dash to the car in the morning, scratch a small opening in the frost on the driver's side, and drive to work or to school oblivious to the fact that they are a hazard on the road. Despite care on your part, you simply can't do your best driving with only a peephole for vision. and rural redevelopment acts. It is still an open question as to what tu'' I Sir '. j j stock-takin- 1 4 The Paris meeting will hear a triennial review of menibers' financial contributions and defense ; : mobiles left in .the open over night. V ii warn fef X ' A i" " terms. mid-Decem- ber ex-eorps- A McNamara laid out relative East-- " West capabilities in the Ibluntest Newspaper Enterprise Assn. The WASipraTONj (NEA) talk in the corribdrs at the meeting in Paris is exbe )to pected heavily charged with the deployment over arguments and use of nuclear force. And looming over this three-da- y session of foreign defense and finance ministers- will be the puzzling shadow of French President Charles de Gaulle, a presence made more commanding by his recent triumphant election sweep. :,' j The general is believed capable of surprises. His support of this country in the Cuba .crisis outdid our other chief allies. Yet observers feel his strengthened personal Independence is likely to make him more, rather than less, intractable in NATO affairs. Officially, the Paris meeting g inter, shapes up as a lude. Barring changes the nuclear problem is not to be on th agenda though on the X of til.' minds Secretary of State Rusk and Secretary of Defense McNamara will hiake the 'principal United StatesV talks. Secretary of the Treasury Dillonr'is not billed. The United States, as it has so often in recent times, will urge ' of again the marked step-uNATO's conventional forces,' toward the established NATO goals. qkh4 Cuban crisis will be offered to underscore this need. v Undersecretary of State GeorgeBall struck this vote before NATO parliamentarians a month ago in Paris. He suggested that our blockade - plus - negotiation.de monitrated the wisdom of the "measured response" possible only through use of effective conventional force. This government plans also to urge upbn its HATO partners wider and fuller political consultation within the NATO framework. The United States sees thll as implementing the Atlantic partnership idea advanced by President Kennedy in Philadelphia on ; ' NATO meeting in Athenf, where - Most amazing thing of all is that of the first 2,500 volunteers, only 25 withdrew Only 10 candidates were definite failures.: There have been only a couple of ' minor, incidents though on the corps. reflecting ; The Peace Corps is the best response so far to President Kennedy's sometimes boomeranging motto about asking what you can do for your country.-- : The service is frequently rugged at least by American standards (yet over 300 volunteers are older than 50) and the pay is low. But already an unexpected divi- -. dend has come to these people, over and above the personal satisfaction gained from the job. . Because of their overseas experience, and women are bejng sought out to be teachers or to work in industry and some government agencies. The Communists have nothing comparable to ,the Peace Corps. As well-publicize- Peephole Driving -- 111 One Nuclear-Minde- d By BRUCE BIOSSAT ; th than sorry! .ft next year. Although are not asked to do so, every they host nation has contributed funds .and equipment to corps projects. 10,-00- . NATO Meet Will Likely "is. 1 available , Unless you can command" the whole view which the windshield and side windows provide, j it is impossible to be at your best when you are behind the wheel, For your own protection as well as out of consideration for others, be sure, each morning, to scrape the frost off the whole windshield, the side windows and rear window. This is important to safety. As with so many other actions of the motorist, it's better to be safe ! MJ wiU heQuietTriumph 18-mon- rr f Be WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1962 So' quietly and steadily is ;it at work that it is a surprise even to those who are a part of it to realize jU3t how far the Peace Corps has come since it was created by presidential executive order Mar. 1, 1961 (later permanently established by act of CongTess). On its first birthday, the corps had 700 workers in the field At the mark, there were 4,000 volunteers assigned or ready to be assigned in 43 different countries. Next year there will be 0 volunteers in 50 countries;. Emphasis 'currently is being placed on Latin America. At the end of the first year there) were Only 122 volunteers in three Latin American countries. This is now up to 13 countries; by next! June the corps will have 2,500 Volun teers m Latin America. So successful has the Peace ' Wh at does the groom receive :iut men need to be introduced ing reading for a romantic young blade who has probably never thought' of marriage in terms of home repairs. to domesticity in gradual and painless doses. A prenuptial Shower at j which he is loaded down with all the equipment for beinga handy man and outdoor cook Is enough to scare away a young man Ttefore he ever gets the ring oh the girl's finger. J And, of course; the groom-to-b- e is sure to get a set of barbecue a chef's tap, and a book tools, of " recipes for the outdoor grill. While these may all prove prac- ' tical, it may come as a shock to a young man to realize that in marrying he, is Bot only acquiring a cook, he is promising to learn to be one. ; Women know from the time that they are little girls that marriage means dishwashing and bedmak-in- g and cooking; and ironing. - . . For the years ahead: Ruth Mil-letbooklet, "Happier Wives' (lints for hAisbands)." Just send 25 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service, co The Daily Herald, PlO. Box 483, Dept. A, Radio aty Ctation, New York 1, t's : ! sary. . |