OCR Text |
Show si gnSjgmiijWiiiiMmWI Great X amc Mean lnvoheinent Rockefeller Cousins Offer Lives to Useful Duty (untiiiued From Iagr nomma-l- t Seven picked to liave l.iii. take a strong, stand dgniiiM the tidi. Sloven's views wete capsuled ;n an address in width lie said: "Lovdln out's tu own tion is a virtue, hut blind na- "The capitalistic sweni van the challenge." meet Rodman said. "I still think we aie not far from getting ol unheard commitments from the business sector." Money pa- earned "I find it difficult to explain the feeling or meaning." says Dr. Lucy Hamlin, who is an intern at Harlem Hospital in Manhattan, and receives the intern's typical pittance, but this is money I work very bard tor. Inherited wealth, by some mv tli, supposedly taints those who have it, making them wastrels or plavbovs or But in some way it has driven the Rockefeller men to be diffeient sort of models. "I think people trust me even though I've inherited weath." savs Jay. "It is nonsense to atgue that because cue inherits wealth he is precluded from knowing about or understanding problems. Dominant Force t.ue hatied lawless- - non-me- No One Dominates No one, by age or volur.e ol voice, is dominant among Us." savs cousin David, who is an arts administrator with ihe Boston Symptoms. "Jay hasn't turned iw into Demo-ciatSteven hasn't made us theologians. Lunching together one day, brothers Steven and Rodman talked of the Rockefeller role in aiding tiie plight of man. Businessman Rodman argued that Ihe business community, taking a cue ftom an operation such as IBEC which sought to stimulate socially inportant business enterprises in many foreign nations, could fulfill a meaningful role. "The profit motive is a tool we want to use to arromplish social ends, Rodman said. Steven had some reservations and then said: "I think that if business does not learn how to channel its resources into an effecof tive redistribution the wealth then the free enter s; appropriation' handling Savs Lucy Hamlin, plans to specialize in who "In our society, one of the dominant foi ces is the need to make money. That is absent from us. We have more money than we can ever use. Thetefore, it is necessary to replace that drive by achievement m other ways, or by creativity and imagination in the way we use our money for positive social good. I think my men cousins have worked very hard to do this and have found other forces, such as serving the society." If that has been the Rockefeller model of how man lor tne 'cv-er- Ilav-iii-- of Land Management, Geolog- ical Survey, Bureau of Im.iau Affaii-sof Water Bureau Reseat eh. Buteau of Mines, Federal Water Pollution Control Administtation, Bureau of Sports Ki'heiirs and Wildhle, , Buteau president of Westchesters Urban League, talks with wife Mary, the younger daughter of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. William St raw bridge, should live then theie also must be a model of how a man should die. And summons that the memory of Michael Rockefeller, son of Nelson Rockefeller, and twin of Mary Rockefeller Straw bridge. Never Seen Again "He : be 'iihiummiuoo the budge' really understood people, the governor told a New Yoik Times writer one day. "He was one of those intuitive people. There are a lot of sensitive people in this world, but so many of them are overwhelmed by their own sensitivity. He was oh- servant and selfless. An aspiring anthropologist, Michael was on an expedition to Dutch New Guinea in 1961. He and a compansion wete adrift in a disabled craft, and when it was 11 miles from shore in a storm, Michael set out to swim for help. He was never seen again. of Commeubd H .!.,n ovrr Interior Dep.utment ami related agenctf'. He succeed' Sen. Call who letaed at the close of Ihe Wth Congio". Intenor wiiih agem ies mii't go Moie Sen. Bible' their with subcommittee are the Nabudget teitiK-'t.- ' tional I'atk' Sevice, Bureau on someone's and we have a lespimsibility to mankind a a whole as well as to our own nation. "While theie ate some very belligerent Communist rations. our major enemy is no conunu-nism- . longer international It is (lenity puvertv, social ignoiancp. in)ustue. international WASHINGTON Sen. Bible. D Nev . ha- - taken chan nunship the of years." pnyioll Is held with special regard. It's not the same as money from investments and trusts. atal liess. (Jolla Million? Here's a Little Trinket interior Croup 50 triotism and cxtieme nationalism aie one ot the evils thnt currently plague mankind. We are all membeis of one wot Id meipopuhtion. A 1969 Tiiihiiic W.i'luiigton Bateau prise svstem will not last i-- for the piesidci.tiw! n. The SaJI I. a Hr Tribune, Sunday, March 2, Nevada Senator (ieis Helm ol Fish- ing, Olfice of Saline Water, and Bureau ol Outdoor ", J. R diamonds weighing 1J carat'. The SI milium pui chase juicp. 'aid Levinson m an mtomew. lakes the lot. and the first bidder to come ii v.ith 10 jirire will make the put i base. A'ked wly he doeideu to amiotnu'c the sale of the fabulous diamond In a new')aper advei ti'emeut. Levuison said: sell thing' that wav "Why, all lie time." this icweleis say Many 'tone is one ot the mo't per-letil the wot Id. Buicknet Los Angeif' Tuees Winer CHICAGO The Idol' one o! the iwi'l l.muui' diamond' m tl e vv oi Id. i' for '.lie to the tii't hldtlei who i an meet the .I'kmg pi u e. 1 'v e Chuago jeweler Ham who has owned the 'tone moie (H.tn v yeai'. plarnl one of hi' tegular ad v ei tisement' of gem sales in 1 the Cl. n ago Daily News, this time leading olf vvilh the Idol's Eye. li'tisl at a "sale 1tice" o! SI million. The 'lone, which was liiniei. lloh yeais ago. is a sky blue diamond ol what Levinson "collection gem (iiality weighing 70.20 catats. ll is mourned on a platinum netkl.ue containing 41 louml diamonds with a total weight ol 22 ill laiats and la baguette The Idol's Lye was mined the Golconda mines in India, which once produced the world's linest diamom.s. It was cut by ail unknown Indian diamond cutter who, Levinson says, i burly anttci-jiatemodem techniques and thus was about 300 years ahead ot his time in the art of gem Hitting. The diamond was nil in a shape, pcifettly faceted lo show oil it- depth and file. n It' fii't owner was the Prince Raliab, ttoni whom the British E.i't India Company seim. it in 1J07 lor jiay ment of debts. Alter this it was "lost" tor almost 300 years, them being no molds of its sale until it turned up as the eye of an idol in a temple in Tuikey, the piojieity of Sultan Abdul llaniid II in ldiHJ at d Pei-sia- Sv rian Mood Aid EXITED NATIONS. N.V. Sect eta ty General C (API Thant has ot tiered the pui-- i base ol 20.0 tents at SP'tl path lor victims ot Sum's Jami.uy Hood. The I.X. Food and calls Agiuultiue set ding : t nl t s to the is vvmtli of loud Oigamatum SOUO.OOO v ictmis Shop Monday Night til! 9 p.m. FIRST tp $ PUBLIC SALE NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER Simmons joins with Holiday House to offer residents one of the finest mattress values of the year! . . . genuine Simmons nationally advertised "Golden Value" bedding at fabulous discounts! Simmons cleaned their warehouse of matched and misBuy matched pieces . . . yours now clusively at Holiday House! 312 port Buoyant 100 Attractive long-wearin- Steven Rockefeller Holds Theology Degree David Rockefeller Jr. Believes in His Job Rodman Rockefeller Consumption Has no Meaning Pre-buil- coils for extra sup- adjustc-re- st cotton felt upholstery QUILTED Beautyrest cover is g borders crush-proo- f t, won't sag Complete c. and c. sets ;Kaf forty's Second Law New Programs Must Maintain Order By Dr. Max Rafferty California SuDerintendent of Public Instruction I'm gazing ambivalently at a press clipping from Seattle, describing a new program at Bellevue's Ardmore School. It seems the pupils there are being taught ungraded 1 ases. more No first, and s e rood third graders, for example. Purjiosp: To child to progress at his own rate in the different subject areas of reading, mathematics, aG, sHlling and the social sciences. There's nothing wrong with even eons the across geologic which seiarate me from mv own childhood, how good I was at reading and how abysmally had I was at arithmetic. A Seclal program then which placed me in a reading with the advanced and math class with the severely retarded would have lone me a world of good, and only wish one had been in existence in those antediluvian days. Parental Shock 1 No, my ambivalence isn't caused by Bellevue's use of Ihe ungraded elasMoom concept. It's hi ought on by something else entiielv. Amu din.' to the press dipping: 'Patents come visitirg and exji' d to see neat rows of desks wi'n quiet chibhen. Instead, they find children sprawled on the floor playing checkers, laughing and shouting, and playing with guinea pigs . . . loudly children teaching younger how to . . .tie their shoes. The reporter goes on to cite the shock felt by Ardmore School parents because Hie school had become so noisy and comunruly. They plained to their school board, which told them that the district's achievement tests showed the program to he ju.st as good at teaching the fundamentals as the more conventional kind of instruction. The board invited the disgruntled parents to transfer their children to other schools, which sevetal of them leluctantly did. The news story is concluded with a couple of thp usual "onward and upward statements from parents and children, attesting to the worth of thp program and hmv interesting it is for the enrollees. r Finally, there is a big new photo of one of Ardmcue classrooms, with kids sprawled all over the floor and nary a desk in sight. spa-pe- Order, Dm.rum Vital Ami right here, gentle reader, is where my ambivalence wakes Up, shakes itself and starts thrashing about. individual Meeting pupils needs does not mean that order and decorum must automatically fly out flip classroom window like so many peace doves fleeing from a summit confeienee. up an ungraded Setting not situation does ilass to the teacher tlnow icquire away the desks and let the pupils wallow around on the for all the world like on a had trip. And teaching children arithmetic and reading on different ability levels (Iops not necessitate shocking concerned parents with shouting, untidiness and plain old hoi sing around until they have to send their kids to another, quieter school. Years ago. I enunciated Rafferty's First Lav of Eduto wit: cational Research, "Findings which fly in the teeth of common sense are for thp birds. Today I unveil for your consideration my Second Law : Innovative programs which permit pupils to loll on the floor and yell at their ft lends should he strangled at birth." And the results of achievement tests, to misquote Gilbeit and Sullivan, have nothing to do with tlm ease. A PAIR OF ACES FROM o Whirlpool floor hippis "BOULEVARD" STUDIO SOFAS Converts to 2 twin beds Choose from 20 decorator and accent fabrics. Many one of a kind! Re9- Dial Min EJlabhshdApril 15. wC iued vary morning by tha Kearns Tribune Salt Lake City, 'Jtah Corporation, XW $159.00 LSE ISA 470 LOVESEAT 450 All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Salt lake Tribune are sent at the owner's Corporation nsk end Kearns-Tribun-e for their assumes no responsibility custody or return. SUBSCRIPTION RATtfS Carrier Delivery $ 3 00 mo Daily and Sunday 36 00 yr. Daily and Sunday By Malt Dally (Sunday by carried Daily only Daily and Sunday Daily and Sunday Ail mail subscriptions payaoie in advance. The Trlbunu It a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use ol reproduction of ell local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations, v Last O 5 Drying Cycles 3 Temps AUTOMATIC WASHER S A very special factory purchase brings great savings. Available in chosen prints, tweed, velvets and corduroys. ELECTRIC DRYER Whirlpool HIDE-A-BED- SPECIAL $13g Carefree Electric Living Reg. $299.95 YOUR SAVE $103 qhOICE $199 14110. Entered at the poet Mice at Salt Lake City a second clave matter under Act of March I, 1079. Th-- SIMMONS gbfgalt akrEfibnnr 143 Soulh - 5 Temp. Selections 2 Water Levels Magic Mix Lint Filter SPECIAL lay'Bpuse 2155 Highland Drive Ju.sf charge your purchase fur 486-757- V0 3 Shop Monday L Friday till 9 p. dus or take 36 months to pay! |