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Show 3 jirtfWmwfcmwB iii iiqwimmuj mmu m Shams And Shames: Our Election Campaigns Ko'? p rar e5 T'lere has in th s Pre Vnckn s a icr f y - 'iCf ward L caned I Capital consensus: "Our presidential election is in trouble. If it continues its present course, it will degenerate into more and more of a burlesque, and the public will increasingly tune out the noise in favor of escapist entertainment." By JILL'S ABELS When Sen. Barry Gnldwatei was inated for President on ihe Republican in ket in July, 1904, it was generally antie-patethat the nation, nr the first time mice 1936, would see a battle of philosophies, a contest for the Presidemw between a liberal and a conservative candidate, rather than between a Democratic liberal candidate and a Republican candidate. 21 Mist to.iiiiimtfl TS: irr Ll d Lit ' vi nii s v acfeTawi 1 4 - 7$ L? m r name-callin- After the election, the Republican National Chairman Dean Burch, in an art:-liin the Satuidav Evening Post, said, The Presidential election of 1964 was a mockery of the democTatic process. At best it was a waste of time, money and energy. At worst it was an absolute sham. Repeatedly he tried to draw trast between lumself and a e His opinion was widely shared. Goldwater never got around to explaining what goaLs his conservatism w'ould envisage, what it might accomplish in his administration of the Presidency. His philosophy broke out in shreds and patches, scoldings against centralized government, handouts, etc. There is, to be sure, a cogent conservative case that can be presented to the electorate. The trouble in part was Goldwater himself. Many Goldwater enthusiasts of 1964 will admit today that it was a setback for the conservative cause over the long term that its protagonist in that election happened to be an Intellectual lightweight. There was his prize statement during the campaign, quoted in The New York Times of August 13, 1964, in response to a question of a European correspondent, "I think that Germany originated the modern of peace through concept strength. years later, in October, 1966, at Jackson, Miss., Goldwater said, Harry Truman was one of the greatest Presidents we've ever had because he didn't lie to the people. For Goldwater to say Two this of tiie standard-beare- r of the Fair Deal would be on a par with Hubert Humphreys calling Herbert Hoover one of the greatest Presidents we have ever had. In December, 1966. in a press conference in Washington, the putative author of The Conscience of a Conservative a under A heretofore secret report written by is about to sur- M.D. Dear Dr. Molner: My doctor thinks you might give me some information about my trouble: Intermittent claudication. What is the came, and the cure, if C.C.H. ein? - Answer: Intermittent claudication is a cramp which occurs off and on in the leg, usually in the calf muscle, while v alking. The usual cause is lack of sufficient blood supply due to gradual hardening of Hie arteries. (Severe loss of salt, as can occur in hot, humid weather, may be a factor at times.) Several tilings can be done lo ease or prevent these walking cramps. One is to walk more slowly, or for shorter distances between rest. Sometimes Buerger's exercises are helpful. One method is to lie on Hie edge of a bed, raising one leg, then lowering it to the floor. Try to hold the leg in each position two to four minutes. You can repeat the cycle for as many as 10 times. And move to the other side of the hod and do the same with ihe other leg. its purpose is to put gravity to work letting the leg empty thoroughly of old Mood, and replacing it with fresh blood. It can be remarkably effective at times. J Orarionally medication des.gned to dilip dip blood Iesseis helps your R doctor perhaps has already discussed that with you. tf ' favor of adding lo the zoo . . . A special election is to be set up tot sometime in l. m nud-Apri- And if you tlnnk it is silly to vote for a bunch of dumb animals, look at some ol the jieople who ate running In the November elections! -- name-callin- - y, f. Vice-Preside- 1 OUR MAN IN WASHINGTON to manufactured goods. Whiie added this would amount to $250 million a year for manufacturing plants, it would be far below the inflation in w'ages of six per cent in the last year that already was experienced by U.S. business. harder to pin down, cost about $354 million for manufacturers and power companies, which works out to be just slightly more, or .16 value added. Thus per cent of the taken together, pollution controls are estimated to cost under a third of one per cent of the value added, i.e., should affect prices or profits by an almost negligible amount. But. the panel warned, certain plants in certain locations might well suffer more than average costs for reducing air or water pollution. Obviously, an inland plant will have more trouble with water pollution than one on a lonely sea coast. The report said it saw no reason why BOOKS industry in general should be given large to reduce pollution, but it did recommend that in hardship cases special grants be made available. Long-te- i in loans could well be used, the report went on, where companies were faced with stiff capital charges and short-terrepayment periods. subsidies An important point made by the study was that the cost of pollution abatement would be far greater, by as much as 50 per cent or more, if legislation and regulations were written too broadly, thus forcing everyone to cut down on emission of pollutants when only a small fraction was causing harm. As an example, a nationwide rule that would prevent a power plant from spewing dangerous amounts of sulphuric smoke into the smog over Los force a similar plant on would Angeles to Cod spend money that might Cape benefit only occasional passengers on a acid-lade- n chance ocean liner. Prevailing winds could cause the Los Angeles smoke to valley, while simgather in that bowl-lik- e ilar winds would blow the Cape Cod smoke harmlessly out across the Atlantic. Lake Valiev, certain winds tend to clear out the refinery and smelter smoke, others keep it locked in the valley, blotting out the sky, bringing discomfort to many people, and damaging paint and exposed metal surfaces. Laws written so as to force measures only when needed would face far less opposition and also cost far less to implement. In the Salt The Carlson study will go the Interior Department for implementation, chiefly in the area of increased federal antipollution research. In general, the point of view seemed as refreshing, almost, as the clean air and water the report seeks. Here was no new cry for federal billions, but a recognition that federal encouragement could do a great deal toward cleaning our rivers, streams, and skies. Granite Arts To Offer 'Surprise How To Control By JOSEPH G. R10LNER, vole house mole animals. J W YOUR HEALTH Claudication the people who smart would Carlsons y Dai you see where ojx'i.ue llogle Z hi are hoping to expand? They ate going lo ask Ihe people to h Air pollution, a direction by group of experts from most of the e a binet departments, including Health, Education, and Welfare, Commerce, and Interior. One of its chief recommendations is that federal aid to industries required to undertake pollution control be strictly limited. The group said its studies showed that po'lution control was not necessarily very expensive. W7ater pollution, for example, was estimated to cost only about one seventh of one per cent of the value trigger-happ- HARRY JUNES first By GORDON ELIOT WHITE Deseret News Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON a con- Uy Goldwater. On August 12 he said, Some othets are eager to enlarge the Seriously, I want the people of our conflict. They call ujxm us to supply wonderful City of Salt to get behind the American boys to do the job that Asian zoo program. boys should do. to the I have had On August 29 he said, the zoo is place, advice to load our planes with bombs its own making and to drop them on certain areas that I wav. borThe think would enlarge the war, and result rowed money will in committing a good many American be repaid by adboys to fighting a war that I think ought missions and profto be fought by the boys of Asia to help from concession its protect their own land. And for that reastands. son, I haven't chosen to enlarge the A. Lamar Stans-wortwar. has such On October 21 he said, We are not chimps, going to send American boys nine or ten to maybe they could thousand miles away from home be trained to drive city buses if the bus fight in Asia. is taken over. Does it not impeach the democratic line second thought, If chimps get to On process at its heart if the candidate for the highest office is not frank with the driving buses, one might get srrfart ' electorate when he asks its vote? enough to run for the commission ! ", "! llogle Zoo Is one of my favorite places, Franklin D. Roosevelt, who pledged mu again and again and again in the 1940 but I wouldnt like to have an animal In the 1964 named after me. Harry is too close to presidential campaign, President Johnson eagerly "pressed the flesh" and often shouted, campaign that he would not send American boys into the European war, and Hairy to suit me. "Come down to hear the speakin', bring your children end family to hear the speakin' " Woodrow Wilson who ran in 1916 on the I shouldnt have said what I did about He Kept Us Out of War slogan, might members of the monkey family driving told the astonished scribes, world which had been deserted in favor People get little to say of substance, though the tone both have claimed in their defense that buses or running for office. Monkeys of of his remarks conveyed the thought that called liberal, moderate and conservathe ultimate decision for war was made, aren't like people. When a monkey looks be to too tive but no one has ever explained what irresponsible Barry was Although his plea was addressed to not by them, but by the enemy. into a lirror, all he sees is just a plain these words meant. entrusted with power. both parties, no doubt he had Goldwater The great unanswered and possibly old monkey. When a man looks in a mirmore in mind when he said, Ignoramus, In a speech before the United SteelAs for President Lyndon B. Johnson, unanswerable question is whether John- ror, there is no telling what he sees in crook, warmonger, demagogue, trigger-happhe never descended, or ascended, to the workers of America convention, Johnson son, in September, 1964, was unaware of the reflections. vote-thiesome of the These are of the situation in Southplane of issues. Denison Kitchel later referred to Goldwater as a raving, rantthe I always thought a parakeet was an terms bandied about by candidates for eastimperatives complained that any debate was out of ing demagogue. Asia, as seen by the State Departcanary until Mr. Farnsworth ar.d of unripened the President the question, since we couldnt find an ment and his military advisers soon aftIn turn, Republican speakers in many me kind in What straight. the world. greatest country opponent. We were punching a pillow. erward. Was he unaware of what might put ways implied that Johnson was a person of madness is upon us? And it is more true today than eve. beIn his campaign swings, the President lie ahead? It wras only a few months of shady ethics, who had used politics to Senator Mundt notwithstanding, the later, in February, 1965, tha" United fore what my grandpa said once while accumulate a fortune. In a speech in the eagerly pressed the flesh and shouted, continued for the States Marines landed in Da Nang. unabated visiting tiie zoo. A zebra was braying mudslinging Come dowm to hear the speakin, bring United States Senate on September 23, loudly. your children and family to hear the Republican Sen. Karl Mundt listed all the rest of the campaign. Next: The barrennesi Of Issue In the 1949 end 152 Tolerant people should always re-- , In many elections the statement is election campaign. speakin, but when they came he had grave issues facing the nation and member that a zebia would rather hear another zebra bray than listen to the Pollution Report Asks 'Moderate Spending White House staff Utahn Jack Carlson face here and will likely add to the controversies over pollution of the air and water in the environment. The report was p r e pared No Monkey Business In April Vote . me-to- o f , . jJ The expectation of a contort between opposite liberal and conservative philosophies was to come to grief. In the campaign all nope of testing positions was lie t in a Donnybrook of words, a bedlam of charges and OUR MAN JONES a- Honois si oio a'xiul e on ( u October at P.kess illo. Md Golduator seemed tn iliaige Johnson aith tming a etouk To l.vmlon Johnson, running a He said, . busing and bludgcountry means li moans get'ing a TV eoning vote monopoly and building a pi rale loi'luno It moans surrounding hmiseif wuh com panions like Bobhv Baker, Billie So! Estes, Matt McCloskev, ami otlioi liitoi esting men. The most disturbing aspoet of this Residential election, as the supieme mandate made quadrennially in our democracy, was the reference made by President Johnson to our policy in Vietnam, where at ihe time our participation in manpower was limited to advisers nom- 3 Tuesday, March 17, Y963 nit made about a i ai.il.il.tie u ' 'w E - a i imi cl 's mini! is ,ni epicd g campaign made of hi Ihe i.is' ol l.uldwaioi lie had In fu e abuse on tlieihaige mat hi' was In oralis and chilli alls insane. Demon am oiators saui as nnuh. Many limes in Ins campaign stops he fated borneis re.al ing, "In sour ga's, soli i.imw lies mil'. ,t rrP ' cam,.ai 0 t ' n a re bock to be cobhsnec n Apr d, Vah n?on ecnm ar r 'er jd s , acni idn, s k5 a cnUai luck 6 our " nem 41 ac? or m-nerv erd tre distortions cf 5ue? it p'jjUve h a 0 cais upon 'eadmg Vvd5h rofon poi Deal ccmrr'eprs-tto assess various plans ter reform ins .s m t'i! imfallmem of a senes excerpted from Abes Tff Degeneration 0' Cur PraeM ai E c hock fc KE" DESERET OUR MUSICAL WHIRL By HAROLD LlNDSTROM Deserpt News Music Editor An excellent suipiise recital for our most faithful music buffs be presented tonight (12) by the Arts Association in High Granger even will Granite An- i t say surprise," because it is really a to hear surprise these three s local d niusi-cian- on one program : William Brown, pianist; Lenora Ford, pianist; and JoAnn S. Ottley, soprano. This is one of 11 conceits that these winners cf the Utah Concerts Council Competition are being presented in. This marks the fifth of the six conseason. certs of the Granite Arts 1967-6The final concert, April 4, will present Irene Jordan, soprano; and Nicholas di Virgilio. Tonight's concert begins at 8:15 p.m. Tickets can he purchased at the door by those not having season tickets. The three young artists are: William Brown, who was born in American Fork, tie began his piano studies when he was 10 years old with Robert B. Smith of the BYU Music Department faculty. He has appealed with the Utah Valley Symphony and in numerous recital'. In 1965 he was the winner of (he Utah and the Western Regional Piano Competitions spunsoied by the National 8 i Salute to Youth concert sponsored with the Utah Symphony Orchetra in 1967. 3690 o rimn. South 3600 West. I il Federation of Music Clubs. William was also a guest soloist in the Deseret News lie will play Mozart's Sonata in C Major for Four Hards with Lenora Ford, and as solos: "Valse Oubliee by Liszt and one cf tiie same composers Hungarian Rhapsodies." Lenora Ford, a freshman at the University cf Utah, is majoring in music performance. She is a student of Gladys Gladstone. In addition to being a winner in the Deseret News sponsored Sterling Scholar Awards, she has also been second place runnenip in the advanced piano division of the Utah State Fair Competition, and soloist with the University of Utah Chamber Orchestra. She will be heard in the Mozart Sonata in C Major for Four Hands" with Brown. Her solos include: William Liszts Paraphrase on Themes from Polonaise in Rigoletto,' " and Chopins A Flat. JoAnn S. Ottley, Tabernacle Choir soloist, is one of Utah's singers. A native of Woodruff, she is a graduate of West High, and has attended BYU and the University of Utah. She lias been soloist with the Utah Symphony Orchestra, and won first place in the Utah Stale Fair Music Competition in the advanced vocal section. She ua also a winner of the Utah division of the Metropolitan Opera Auditions. Only last week best-know- n she completed singing 12 performances of Nicolai's opera .Merry Wives of Windsor for the Salt Lake Chapter of in the Salt Young Audiences. Inc., Lake junior high schools. Mrs. Ottley will sing: Schumann's Dein Ar.gesicht, and Er ists, Schubert's Du bist die Ruh Verdis and Gretchen am Spinnrade, Merce, dilette, anuche" from I Vespri De dondo, venis, Siciliani, Rodrigo's amore?" and De los Alamos vengo, madre, Duke's Just Spring and The Miranda. Bird," and Engemans Auf-trag- Bonnie WinteUon wall Ottley 's accompanist. sene as Mrs. Winner of 30 THE SOLID BEAT national awards, sponsored by the U.S. in a of State Department Mexico, and invited by President Johnson to play at a State Dinner in the White House, the North Texas State University Laboratory Band (one of 30 on campus) is the most honored collegiate jazz band in the land. And it will lie presented in concert this Saturday (16) at the Uriveisitv of Utah on its way to the National Music Educators Conference that in convention will hold its five-daSeattle beginning Sunday. (The BYU symphony will also give a concert at this convention) Proceeds Irorn the Noitli Texas State U. Lab Band conceit will go into jazz scholarships at the I '. ot U Bruce Fowler, Salt Lake's nationally acclaimed college trombonist, is' a mom her of this hand and will be featured in Saturday's concert. The concert is being by 'he Musicians Local Union, No 194. and tie I'tah Stage Band Directo-- s Association . . . y great Caruso." Twiggy Rides A Skyrocket Hawthorn TWIGGY; by Twiggy; Book? Inc ; 157 page; $3,95. A few months after dropping out of Lonhigli school at 16, a spindle-leggedon Cockney girl was making more money than a prime minister, turning down $2 million movie offers, and being chased down New York's Fifth Avenue by thousands of screaming fans. d Twiggy! Twigg-y- ! they chanted. Twiggy had never been so scared in her life. How did she become an international phenomenon overnight? Was it the work of smart publicity men who knew a good gimmick when they saw one, or did her own disarming charm have something to do with it? In the book the story is Twiggy, In her own words, claim of how she grew up, the publishers met a boy named Justin, got a job modeling and skyrocketed to success. simply told It was Justin who, from the beginlooked after the whole works. ning, To be honest, she says, I think even Justin was a bit knocked sideways by it all at the beginning. He's always had a head for business, but his g schemes had involved pounds and shillings, not hundreds of pounds. And of course it was to get even bigger. How much money, she never guessed in her wildest dreams. Her own explanation of her sudden fame: I probably just came along on a white rabbit at the right time and met " the smile on the face of a money-makin- Anyway, what I started out to tell you in the first place was an incident at the . Hogle Zoo last week. Two cute little gals approached the" entrance and asked Mrs. Dorothy Evans, ticket seller, if they had to pay? Children under six are admitted free and others pay 15 cents. After being on the job for 12 years, Mrs Evans is a pretty good judge of ages. The girls withdrew for a strategy meeting. I'm six and she is five, one of the ' girls said, approaching the ticket booth for the second time. Mrs. Evans knew both girls were closer to eight or nine. She let them in free, but said they would have to pay the next time. Two days later one of the girls threw a folded piece of paper into the ticket booth and ran. was . Important, open, money, scribbled on the outside. Taped to the paper were three dimes and a nickel. The message read: For telling you we were five and six when we were eight. Sorry we did that. Five cent3 extra for climbing on the fence. A zoo will bring out the best in kids every time. Thats why it is important that you supper the expansion program. . Wit's End: In this election year, I hope the candidates have WORTHY causes instead of just WORDY causes. ' aiiniitiiitiiniiiiiiiuiiiimuiiiumiuuimuujiumuitiiiiiimtiinniiiil BIG TALK tiger It wasn't until she arrived in Amenta that she realized just how overpowering pieople can be. When the Americans take to someone wow, dont they really take them over? she gasps. She escaped the Fifth Avenue crowd by ducking with her bodv guard into a church. A policeman had to stand guard at the door while the verger led her out through a hark entrance. Despite the mobs everywhere she a circus went, being treated like freak. with hands stretched out to touch her, pinch her, stroke her, snatch at her hair or clothing, she seems to have enjoed her U.S. trip. She saw as much of New York as anvone could with five bodyguards lik? gorillas in daik suits and white shirts and a licet of five Cadillacs and live chuiifteui v She h inks Ameruaiis are liysicmal alxmt hygiene, spending all lliat money on soaps, colognes, attei shave lotions and (leodoients. Funny thing is, she says, the smell's the same in the New Yotk rush on our suhwav as it is in Pans on the Metro and London on the tube " . Joanne Bells (tb) "They say that since tfie Britdevaluation, Twiggy is just ish a splinter!" bv ei i4 News pedlar Lknt 39 V iy BdDy WcNeel y tor fh Birthday tNtkr. f |