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Show rj 4 f THE SCRAMBLED REPUBLICAN WnsmnT Mows 14 A .. &dl && iyizzxszi Saif talc City, f as "having been divinely ins ire J. 'TASlHNGTONr D.Cr . - sym-to-eleef- jjere js now things have been turned around; Sen. Goldwater, who until - wav. the uncommitted andis today the popular second-runnealmost wholly committed - ttake , Gov. Scranton . new 'favorile son' -- front-runne- Gov. Rockefeller's political health that his most sympathetic diagnostician will say only that he is recuperating." He doesnt even say that Leis recuperating-satis- Is such -a -- -- factorily. s A political poll shows Mr. political stock going up rapidly- and Mr. Rockefellers going down. Gov. William- - Scranton, the able Republican politician who broke the back -- of the Democratic Party in Pennsylvania and who has beerrsay-- . ing. that he would .not be a candl- date.is now letting it be arranged so that his name will beput forward ss favorite son Gov. George Romney ofMichl- able .gan.-ih- e Gold-water- - ' . a , Sen. Goldwater - now front runner is finding others as. a serious candidate. ELL, THEBE IT IS. For me it hr too soon to get even near tota guess how it's coming pub,..But you might be interested to know w hat-soof the political professionals think. I have talked with a number of Republican pros recently and this is as near as they come to a Co- .. me long-rang- that the-si- de -- . - Goldwater will get themomination. He" has four sources of strengthr His- - wide personal popularity, which has spurted ahead of Rockefellers in recent weeks; support from many conservative groupawhich do not normally work with the party; fail- ure of Republican moderates and rttkevtibctals-Xlo-. centerTsn a single- - can renewal. . But 20 years will have elapsed from the time the project was foe redevelopment unjjPcomplet ion. This v time lag is a distressing feature of marry urban renewal Projects and one of the reasons urbarfrenewal Is under heavy fire. For, once' an area has come under the planners eveirtually all hope for pri-'- yafe rehabilitation ends. - V . ... "" - ed-' -- ON THE-HEE- the current disenchantment Kennedys visit .there, Frances don t Ch a rlcs de Gaulle is in Germany on what has all the appearances as' did the Kennedy visit of an election campaign, Both leaders give the appearance of trying to woo Germany by speaking to German crowds. Both spoke or are speak- course De Gaulles ing-t- o leaders, visit is ostensibly to exchange with Chan- - ' Adenauer retiieations the Treaty signed in Paris last January but both have or are makeellor-Konra- d Frcuij'O-Germ- an -- con- ' sumprion. Why? Because Germany ha? become -- such an important piece in-t- he struggle between two concepts of Europe as repre" sented by France and the U.S. The Paris Treaty is probably the last -- ing major speeches for broad' public - - - the-lowe- FT3 - te, tirement. It is- fthvavshtdDiul tota Ik, these mat-has" ters over and the visits of undertaken to step down in the early autumn. Its meaning for the Germans "both Presidents Kennedy and De Gaulle can be counted as pluses from that should not be misunderstood here. As the But whatever theemotional impact r Zeitung :has.pointed..out: - momcni, j?Cihea f tee- - the- completed May e effect of electioneering" in reconciliation of the two nationson both front of European crowds. sides of the Rhine, it Is no longer possible to isolate Germany in Europe. ADMINISTRATION officials profess to But the Paris TreaTy bjr no means believe the visit may have been a the Federal Republic to the inward Ing point away from Gaullism and tow ard closer cooperation and unity across the looking" Europe of De Gaulles vision. -- Iadeedy the ratification with a preamble specifying doubt tell him the opposite, and it will re- the treaty cannot Interfere with Ger-- " main to historrto'chaik up the final score. manys fidelity to the North Atlantic t. - . turn-bin- ds afier-th-e deatbof Beiy-Ki- d 30-ye- ar , By RUSSELL COME Paretwho-wa- years after his death, Edmund Burke is a greater in- flueneeih these United States than eVer he was before. Also Burkes ghost frightens some people espe-- " cially those who hawTT read him. Recently the president of Seton a Hall University Catholic institution -- ient " athletic or w hat not w hich 1 - precautions are injury. Says Teachers Not Oppressed dif- - ferent body the John Birch Society? A S I STUDYthe UEA situation National Review, incidentally, has in this state zl. it lends support do to with either organizanothing to a suspicion I .have had for some tion. time that might is stronger than If a univeisity president objects where politics is concerned. In right Jo having his studcnlsxead National e governor Review," then for the sake of con- is and since might; to ban from his sistency he ought ! e governor does not have a power- campus . any speakers conceivably associated' with other journals "of lul well may yield to the wishes of the opinio- n- The New Republic," people of . the UFA a strong pies. .refused to per.--, America, "The Reporter, and The sure group. This would then be mit a student oNation. . 4 political expediency." rganization, .the Anyway, I hope that the prest-- ' . Personally I would be happy to dent of Seton Hall the Universitys may take see a compromise worked out, een - trouble to read something-o- f mund Burke-SocietBurke. the governor though . There has just been published an stands on solidbelieve chapter, to irjvite a . Truth is that ground. scholar to I collectJoiT admirable paperback reputable of the teachers are determined to have l ?B camspeak oirXhe Burke, edited by Dr. Peter Stanlis their way; and when a group of nu.Mnt pus. Edmund Burke: Selected Writings people are determined for someThe profcijior in question was Dr. - and Speeches.- - Herer in thfvLthcir' a'democracy Hng " -' Andrew Spiegel, of 'Post Ooliegep-one 'has the 'hearr'of that gi eafwav. learned in English history and in the thinkers work. And the president i strength In our ,0 -- law. But the University s president might take to heart this admonition state government. I sometimes won- sus- of Burke s: 3ten of intemperate recently made a bishop der what a leading proponent of mind never can be free; their paspected that the Edmund Burke Sothe UEA stand would do were he sions forge their fetters.1! ciety had something to do with that in the governors chair, pledged to lively weekly, National Review, The more Americans read Burke, uphold the rights of ALL the people agamsl Which ha -Uunched-a- n-. Jhlesammleranee we.--, will a en-.- . anathema counter. Political philosophyln the terest groups. ch Could the reverend nresident pos-tha- t " .great tradition saves us -- difficult, of fanatic Ideology sibly have confused the Edmund requires great skill and de- - I Banina iss NEA MetTo Discuss 3? Uf I a hIT e actiersFa y ' taker! against dealh"andT 1 QEVERAL By SYDNEY HARRIS READERS have written the proposals in various states to outlaw professional following,; the recent deaths of a few boxers. In all honesty, 1 cannot get exercised one'Way or the other about In our society. Assured- prize-fightin- prize-fightin- g -- JUamzing activity inot boxing itself, but its commercial ramifica as pointless as g 5Mr Stw Int sum) - S, 1933 Clark N. Stohl of Salt Lake City :the removal oL. $1,290,000,000 in silver bullion from New York City to the military at West Point. ( - 50 Years Ago of the National Education tion met today.in EarraU Hall to. chs- cuss teachers salat les, tenure and pensions. The report offered the meeting consisted-- of "328 typed" pages. tor Christensen, ! Py egT-ov to-- linist, returned from a years study in Brussels! He would appear tn fc recital at thp Fust Congregational Church TtnderJhe aegis 'of Fred C Graham. A VICARIOUS outlet for their repressed aggressions, and they can gratify their eaefroth- ers brains out, I see no reason to put an end to such spectacles. It is barbarous, but it is confined to adults who know what they are doinglike professional adto raeer- s- and are well paid for the chances they take. boxmg-4- s tti AgoDr. George W. Middleton, "prominent Salt Lake ph was appointed honorary ice president of the Oregon Trail Asso- - July IF PEOPLE NEED irf lately to (Prom 25 Years A BRUTAL, DEHUMANIZING SPECTACLE , ork' "Stste ev'' Oelnltm txpru Sr oMumnnH vtt tt M writers M ttii raft ar m4 not utouarttr Mm 1 TM Omn? Irtwt. An Qutlet For Repressed A ggressions . New- a certain praver for tablishes schools, the Court fofbTds it. 1 realize Communists hate 'Te- lig ion, and that they carry on a most effective whispei ing cam-- . paign: that they declare they will abolish the Constitution, abolish th states and have only a single abso- lme central government l that nine Ament ana out of.10 tojheir. whisperings willtout realizing w here me whispers originate, y toel sad that our Court has bv tliem. o. C. Dav yyyyyy li-t- en 7 on nf baseball Burke Society with that very 166 O s recently killed In the prize ring. Ring Magazine hasTisted 14 deaths among around the pFjose-o- f KIRK , fs. The miscalled sport of boxing also having iis more- pei than foptbUi. "iiirsrts to. Pan prote'Manal boxing picked up "momentum last year Americans Are Reading Burke PRIZE FIGHTING: .school football, 89 In college games; 201 'on the sandlots and 'ranks'. world in 1962. ThPCtmchesYAssocl.ltiori quTtd natural-.-- : 'Tariifipatfon- ly is worried and anxious to find a way youngsters of the eouniry has.alLbut at-- .. tawed-the-sco- pe to check, if if cannoTaclually stop, this of a national policy since should of and It athletes. President killing crippling Kennedy's VIGAH11 campaign." start with a tieheni-i- " of the rules orr We do not want our children to grow forearm blows, "spearing with hard up to be a nation of jppetators, he once said. We waift each of thorn to be a parplastic helmets, piling on after a play is inJsome form of vigorous activ- run, and improvements in protective ticipant ' . ity. equipment, Parents generally support this pro- High schools are found to be the chief offenders in sending out teams wearing gram and a crept the risks involved!- uniforms. Unless a high school beeeue they - believe - competitive sports funds to pronerly equip-i- ts contnbute importantly to physical ner, - . team, and hire a caaMe Tnach .and-trai, scrach football off its TH T JUST ABOUT SIZES up the whole . .athletic program. has-syffic- when -- ' .--V jrom-the-clut- knocked out in the 12th round of a. natiohally-televise- d championship match! with Emile Griffith. Omar Olive; Davy Moqre, Endzio Barelli, and Francesco Va- - -- OF FANATIC IDEOLOGY: -- Deaths And Injuries In Sports A .STUD Y,..j hst . complc ted by. the Arocri-can Football Coaches Association has disclosed that 793 touch and tackle play ers have died from injuries during the period 1932 to 1962, an average of "2b each year." V Of the 763 deaths, 424 occurred in high Epis-prem- -- long-rang- - THE CLUTCHES Jj e, Jlhcjn-Necha- ' Old Car Pool y 1 -- k 8 - sfand-poin- ' -- - chancel--lor-designa- "an - more durable cloth, across Adenauer to Ludwig Erhard, West Germanys and to the men who will work with Erhard after the Adenauer re- face-to-fac- " - other Western iics...and:.iiie,.caiisaGdaIidftu)f ..Europe-- ' Under French law, the treaty, was not- open to such modification, mud) as it was desired. .by De Gaulle's opposition. The German preamble referred to the fact that future German governments would bq bound to the treaty. Here, per- hapsrjs the rationale for both the Ken- nedy'and the De Gaulle visits. President go to Bonn to woo the.moso -' Gaulle De Nor is Adcnaucr. aging tivated. Both are speaking, ,as they will continue to speak in the months until the Western Alliance can Into -- Treaty Orga nlzatjon-lta- r-E- AS with' urban Tenewal "Concepts "must "have -- .- of President d i ing LS serves true appreciation,'! think" the facts of the matter indicate Utah teachers are not oppressed, LfIary Jane Groberg , the Jpws, whom the Supreme. rkiui t :.4448..Bioi-ning;-Avomentioned iri its lamentable "no prayers in the schools edict- - wcre .T9lCoyjrtff JUifuenca tisrWsecuted"h6r driven' about" TO JHE Supreme Courts deunder our code of Christian laws. cision on prayer, the ConstituIn school, when we want to praise the Creator of the world and tion says Congress shall make the express qur appreciation for its laws. In 178S, 10 of the 13 states had beauties! whom should we mention-establishment of religion. Three the devil? Or should rhad religious freedom Rhode Ispraise to the atheist, one of whom land, Pennsylvania and Maryland. told me, All truly religious people The people of America refused to " are crackpots. approve the Constituflbrpnntil the One of our mHkmen in Texas was FedcralistsagfeeafoaccepttheBill asked what church he belonged to, of Rights. and replied, I am an atheist, but I InNew England, the Puritan or the Community go to church, Church. They invite anyhodv. READERSOU Now our Supreme Court is tui n- na- Ing us lata a ."match tion, at the expense of our great heritage and lofty idealism,.. We had wet states and dry states side by side at one time. Why not let the states decide this issue in a - similar manner? Jf we, the people of Utah,-- should vote prayers and - Congregational Church was estab- ' lish,?d, and.everyone7Pald taxes nr. rnention of God ha-;:i'nto our e schoots Jhere isnt a thing the support In the South, the C0Pal Church was established. Court could do about it. And while Congress can pass na . .Iam writing while I can because law respecting one establishing of religion, th Supreme Court can; the "and as to schoois,"canprohibit free exercise thereof.- existing structures. MAYBE IT IS TOO MUCH to be hoped for, but there seems at least a slight possibility that our major cities are to the fact that the best way to do a job is to do it yourself. Piebl-...- .i N . HARD ' '. The - 300 years have flocked to .this country because they loved freedom, the Creator-anthe Savior v ert - wak-lngx- rp Cross-AtlantlclElectioneer- - Gratitude? PEOPLE of othemations for rpHE T T - moder&te-to-lib- SUPREME COURT PRATER EDICT: HowElse-To-Expres- s -- JLseems to me likely- --. . Workable Program. This left L.A. temporarily ineligible for federal redevelopment funds, scotched tiny- - new renewa 1 - pi an ts nin- al- Imperiled several-projecready under way. In Chicago, Mayor Rich ard Daley recently announced that his city would. eliminate wholesale demolition in fa,vor of rehabilitation and conservation first-mention- sIjP- - that the big state, -- det-ide rubbed off on Los Angeles itself. Early in May the City Council put off a decision to recertify the citys Urban Renewal glittering, dramatic triumph. for 'urban ,. to-ma- THE ear Project ikme-- of e era! internationalist Republicans, The pros-thm- k that Gov. Scran- - who have controlled every GOP con- ton Is putting himself in a position not delay bid for the nomi-- - ventlon.slnceJ93fi, .will anserious to Scranton or Rom-, either .. . , , turning i, -tmues to recede antf if the eastern a suf fcontestr to light a Gold---- Republicans ,(CmiV?niit. IMS) slum-clearan- -- Gov. Rockefeller . 'recuperating'- - , , REPUBLICAN PROFESSIONALS, who are not personally , are unsure about the impact of the governors divorce and remarriage. They know he has been hurt badly, perhaps fa- - .. tally. - They dont ruleoutacome--6- - nsensus. The odds are on Gov. Romney , didate as they did on Gen. Eisenhower in 1952. And, finally, the growing belief In many Republican circles that Sen." Goldwater has a good chance of winking because of the possibility that the whole South" " may- desert President Kennedy over the civil rights issue. .talking about him more fhan ever The Death and Life of Great American Cities 1196H that JrediyjkcMlstlngjmaps, and maps are accurate g prophecies because they are prophecies. 136-acr- - ?V scrambled Republican dentiat menu doesn't-reaat all ihe way it did a few weeks ago. YVTiat isnt clear Is wnether this is a bad accident, like humpty-dumptor a deliberate dish called the Goldwater blue plate which is going to be cooking all across the land before the San Francisco con- -- , -- Th e ' d national life, and the country has ken OF ALL THE COUNTRIES of Latin America, Argentina is in some ways drifting toward crisis. thei saddest. ..With great potential and It was felt that any election would risk modem fin eveh heavier Peronista vote find even haing long since emerged as a down-4n nation, it still finds itself bogged firmer military control if not an outright almost insuperable political military dictatorship. and social problems. But now the election is( at hand Whetherlrcan overcame its hardly i he fully democratic elec-an- d start moving forward again may-b- e ' tion Argentines rulers would have you determined this weekend. The prospects beiieve. The Peronistas have been ruled can hardly be called bright. off the ballot entirely, and some candi- Argentines go to the polls this Sunday dates even suspected of Peronista' new president This in itself is Apathies have been scratched.. - remarkable; six months ago you couldn't But that may not end the matter. Arhave found many Argentines willing to gentinas politics, with no fewer than 10 bet there would be an election held on political parties, are complicated major schedule. not easy-t- o understand. But it seems and Since March 1962 Argentina has been clear enough that Peronista sympathisers " ' politically. In elecdrifting in near-chao- s are still in thfe game. One, Vincente Solano tions at that time, followers of former Lima, leader of a coalition of three major dictator Juan Peron won victories irr six and .five minor parties, probably must- - be ..'of the nation's 22 provinces- It was the called the favorite Another, Raul Matera,. "first time they had been allowed on the Js a-- strong contender."ballot" since Peron was overthrown. The .Whether the military would step in and - results infuriated the generals who' are annul avicl0ryby-eithe- r of these men . power. always in the wings ready tn h Yhcn president Arturo Frondizi hira-, etf-thf first dftmocratirfdhrplpcted Presto "Ilf NTTiTOUGHTFUL: irr Argentina In 7 years rifuseifTdT ""felt thereTs no way out of the countrys dilemma short of civil war or emergence annul the ejection, they arrested him, of another dictator. But human intellireplaced him with "a military junta, and gence ought to be able to work outa better proceeded to mismanagefhe country. As a result, many government workers solution than this Sundays elect ionx ,vr5mfer mt in 'mfiKthCtnaff and Tand fhec5hsequencl.v shoTM1mjp'"defi'r. Other strikes have paralyzed part of the mine whether it can. INTERESTED DEVELOPERS have until Monday, July 8, to submit qualifies '"tfon pfopcisals'Ior develc'pnient of the first seven-acr- e parcel In Los Angeles Bunker Hill Urban Renewal Project. e Bunker By 1970, the entire is become to IIilL.Project supposed PICTURE: By KOSCOE DRUMMOND Out Of The Mess In Argentina? Los Angeles'20-- Y PRESIDENTIAL Golduoter Stock Goins; iochcfeUer Falters Friday, July S, 1963 Utah, IVi stand for the 'Constitution of the United States - r kl that daredevil racing July 5, 1888 Thomas"Adami of Pa row an was in the city on his return from, three years study at Ann -- Arbor, Michigan. j orator Professor T. B. Lewiswas of the day at thtf extensive celebration of July Fourth at Ogden. be stopped because some drivers are killed while at the same time, public homicide" on. the highway s every year with no effective program of pre- tions)-ty- et why waste any indignation upon it? vention. What is stupidly hypocritical about professional We live in an extraordiis the Insistence by its proponents that nary violent society. America it is a sport f any xort. It is nothing of the sort coun1 00 Years may be a peace-lovinAgo It is a legitimatizedlway of permitting the public to try in Its foreign relations 1863 5, is deal of spare to vent this its July everyone why instincts; grc'at savage give (though some might doubt . a- knockoirt which- - ts a tern poi a Avants at .LgiJ this toob but our internal re;' Ju5ycelebraiton in Salt Lake City. of death: fight to the-- pubiic; rm: rnatter- 'laTIons are filk'd .witlf rage, T'Mr. Harris maxi-m.uOn the evening of July 3 a grand ball which how one in the is conducted, tnexpeuly orrnrivif.tv and the kind bitterness, hostility, tha is was. given in the Theatre, w here the of punishment is- - given and received. nly a hair's breadth removed from physical conflict ParqucF seats had been over laved at not kYmaj-nificen- f Yoi safe are cities nightrNew Big THOE M HO ATTEND UGHT Want to withess. "with a fine floor for dancing; From Central Park, In .the heart of the citv. cannot death in tlHvring just as those w ho watch a high-wir" dawn on the Fourth, saluted bv can- be walked in "after dafk'-M-t fact which would shock fall. for When a this - non shots pci former arewvaiting fmnl Camp Douglas to and disgust not only every Ftrrojxjan but even mem-lltttc.iy .Ibat wiiat we ca If"' 'pri m i tIvF"srw;Kties. The Afneri-caVFjvtTnbTi!gH!7TFETrSensj! and delight Untilwe know this, wr do not know Balt Lake Citv showed thr!f " Ttn . metropolis has become more of a jungle than """wavci ' mgHevotion tdTive pimupltn..-rnodern jungle. (Cspyruht, JHU , - of liberty and freedc-nprie-fightm- g g -- -- ary--for- m -- e hap-pon- " - 4 . |