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Show The Salt lake ; Tribune, Wednesday, January IS, 19G5 t. . Utah Float Spectacular Inaugural Parade: Short, ? By Sue Crook Washington Post Writer WASHINGTON The 1965 inaugural . rade, slated to be the shortest in modern ' By Hank Ketcham Dennis the Menace LBJ Details Bold Plan For Schools - pa-- . his-ma- y also be the liveliest oos from above die Arctic Circle will dance --down Pennsylvania Ave. And a skier from Utah will make the same trip on his "'own mobile mountain. : Some 15,000 military and civilian marchers, more than 20 floats, more than 50 cars and a miniature train will whisk from the Capitol and past the White House between 1:30 and 5 p.m. Jan. 20 if inaugural planners can sustain the nonstop tempo that now character: ; izes their hectic headquarters. home of President Johnson, will lead Texas, the state entries, followed by Minnesota, home Hubert H. Humphrey, of Vice President-elec- t the District of Columbia, then states and -- territories In order of their admission to the, Continued From Page 1 The Ascent to National Prominence of this one billion dollars would go Lyndon B. Johnson will be the theme of the to public school districts and be 30 by Texas float,. replica of the spent under plans prepared by local school boards. LBJ Ranch near Johnson City. fRiver,-sad the Pedernales have OT even An Assurance It.wiy Earl C. Hargrpve, whose firm is deHowever, Mr. Johnson said signing and constructing jnp.re. than , a dozen foe money will be granted with state floats. He is more excited about Utahs the assurance that it was spent real spectacular. for the benefit of all children Ice a have an mountain and, Itll within the apea served, includmaking machine and a man on a rotating ing those who participate in belt actually skiing, hasaidr VI just hope shared services of other special f educational he doesnt break his leg."' projects. : . Hie real floating triumph "of the 'parade,2 xhe money can be spent to in Hargroves opinion, wont be a float at alL pay teachers salaries and for model of the Lady Bird some classroom construction. It will be whistlestop special campaign train, an entry However, the main emphasis from Georgia. will be on spending or special services for disadvantaged chil, i , ; :;,:' . yi:. lT I might is well wash it off. EVERYBODY knew me! and secondary jects. They can provide special classes for economically and culturally deprived children and special instruction for gifted students. Carver ti CiiiyffW.TW Pm Associated Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON The ef-forts of a deaf and blind Salt 'Lake City woman to obtain .U.S. citizenship have been dt-by the Justice Department ; among the moat unusual naturalization cases of 1964. ; This wain disclosed Tuesday by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett .(RrUtah), who Identified her - v head-sta- W as Mrs. Aslaug Vaieland, -- a Norwegian native whoktudied 'for months for her dtizenship examination and although foe 'court suggested Waiver of the 'oath requirement, she Insist-d. ' As a result, Immigration officers in Salt Lake worked a special arrangement ; .out 'between her and the judge, said Sen. Bennett As he 'read foe oath, it was translated Into sign language and tapped out on her hand. The senator prised Mrs. Vaieland as a true American .In the flnesWtradition of our : . country. Committee Okehs Connor As Commerce Secretary - across-the-boar- Viewpoint ft d) ka mjL 1 & Ford Risks GOP Prestige, Mpl Urges .New House Whip V rate a Approved They also seemed Connor's position on ' trade. . Chairman Warren G. Magnu-so-n By Geoffrey Gould immediately put the endorsement on foe Senate . Associated Press Writer calendar hr hopes the full cham- ' WASHINGTON-Ho- use ReFrf- ber can publicans cleared the ground today for another "painful ends the outcome as sup, as of Tuesday. tos- Forts public endorsement of Frelinghuysen lays his own newly won position and prestige on the line. '.familya If Frelinghuysen is defeated, squabble it would be a stinging setback that infight for the new leader, who narrowvolves the presly defeated oldtime Charles A. their of new, tige Halleck of Indiana for the job leader, Rep. just last week. That vote was 73 Gerald R. Fort to 67. For this reason alone, It is of Michigan. felt that Ford will bend every Fort Tuesday possible'1 effort toward seeing endorsed Rep. that his man wins. " 7 ' Peter H. B. ' At . the same time, . Foyd of Areods pledged to Arends his secret New Jersey as ballot chance to keep foe' job. his personal choice for his or House whip. Arends, who said anything can But foe old whip, Rep. Leslie happen in a secret ballot, in C. Arends of Illinois is fighting turn has pledged full loyalty to to keep foe job he has held for Ford if he should win. more than 21 years under two House previous Republican leaders. 143 South Main - Dial all-in-t- an (? a iin D 4 undersecretary-designate- AuodaUd Pma Wlraphet John AT Carver Jr. . . . He vein. can locate jugular p im ; - t7 Exciting new Wonden of World" scenic for armchair travelers who prefer puzzles. 28x21 picture in full color are told exclusively at WOolworths , foe chairman said he didnt think the usual executive scission diligent and adept public ser-wnecessary and foe commit tee voted unanimously to recommend Mr. Carvers continuation. Sen. Frank Church said that when Carver worked for him he quickly demonstrated that he had foe Intuition to locate the jugular vein of a diffi- ; 1000 piece adult puzzles Chairman Henry M. Jackson presided at foe first session of the Interior Commit tee of the 89th Congress and praised Mr. Carvers work as assistant secretary. After all members had had chance to question and priase the V "Wonders of the World Puzzles" A WOolworth's Exdusivel ar - as ar . -- 1 rt These funds, however, will be in the Jan. 20 Inaugural parade. Pavement, as part of the war on pospent wet from melting snow, reflects trains care. verty and are not strictly part of foe education program. Mr. Johnson also proposed at a first-yecost of 45 million dollars establishment of regional educational laboratories and other facilities to train teachers and develop new teaching systems on the lines of new science courses already . "develWashington Post Service day, the" day Secretary Luther oped by leading scientists, WASHINGTON The Senate H. Hodges is set to retire. College Students ' Commerce Committee approved Connor told the senators he - He recommended- - 10 million John T. Connors nomination as backs foe Trade Expansion Act dollars in grants to state educaOf 1962 and finds himself in Secretary of Commerce with- "substantial tion departments to help them with out objection meet their new responsibilities Tuesday after United States agreement in the negotiators bombarding him for two hours under foe impact of his over-al- l with advice on how to run foe present Kennedy round of tariff plan. talks In Geneva. The President will request department Members appeared wdl satisEye 59 Per Cent Cot $260 million for aid to higher fied no conflict of interest is inBoth the 1962 act and the education, but the exact allocavolved after the Merck and Co. negotiators have as their target tions for specific programs in president said he will place his a 50 per cent d this field have not yet been large, stock holdings in an Irre- tariff cut " vocable, trust and disqualify himself, from commerce decisions on the drug firmd patents and export controls.- . ' j 7 John A Carver Jr. won unanimous approval of the Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs at his confirmation hearing Tuesday for foe position of Undersecretary of foe Interior. Mr. Carver, who has been as slstAnt secretary of foe Interior for Public Land Management for four years, was nominated by President Johnson for the $27,000-a-yeInterior post. The committee action is tantamount to Senate confirmation. Jackson in Chair WASHINGTON--Idaho- Wlrephoto .Miniature trains off for trial ran Tuesday. The little locomotive win be Georgias float , (non-aci- By Frank Hewlett : r Tribune Washington Bureau pre-scho- V t slkalina your plates.Tbla powder bolds false teeth more firmly and mors comfortably. No gummy, gooey, pasty tasta or feeling. Does not sour, rh-c"plate odor1 ..(denture breath). Get PAS TEETH today at counters everywhere. drug Job - Tor-Interi-or Nursery Schools The President noted that his new budget will include up to 150 million dollars to be spent on nursery school and programs for . children usually deprived of this educational 44 . More Firmly In Place Do your fslss tssth snnoy xnd embarrass by slipping, dropping or wobor talk? bling when you eat, laugh Just sprinkle a Uttle PAS TEETH on al community. Such supplementary centers, the President said, can furnish special courses in science, foreign language, art and other sub- , FALSE TEETH U.S. Senate Panel Okehs tary education centers which would be shared by public and private - school -- students in a . How To Hold The Birchers and their allies have been active for sometime in my state of Utah. They tried out their muscle several times The West in Washington school population. . The message also requests 100 million dollars for federal assistance to create supplemen- tp- ADVERTISEMENT. ry- Education Centers Administration sources said that perhaps 15 per cent of foe 100 million dollars requested for this program would go to par6-chischoql students since this is the approximate percentage of such 'students in the nations : well-inform- well-mount- pubUcAndpriuate--nonprof- it' elementary schools. hand-to-han- . -- chase textbooks and library books for student use, to be made available to children in in d combat with tha Utah State Legislature." - - Sen. Moss said he fully agreed' with his colleague that the radical right is still on the rampage. He also predicted its activities will Increase. What we must do is 9ee that the moderate view gets more attention,! said Sen- - Mosst Fop every John Birch Society and every Minuteman group, we need . counter organizations of and intelligent citizens to expose foe tactics of fear and fallacy upon which foe haters thrive. (D-Ida- dren. Mr. Johnson also requested a program of grants to help pur- t Tribune Washington Bureau Sen. Frank WASHINGTON Moss E. praised Sen. in a Frank Church Senate speech Tuesday for his masterful discussion on foe influence of foe radical right In the recent electjpn campaign The "right wing1 lost the last election by a decisive margin, said Sen. Moss. It lost because of the many, many people in Utah, as elsewhere In America, who used knowledge and reason and understanding. But it took Herculean efforts on the part of thousands of these sensible people to turn back, at the very gates of the election the rightists campaigns of distortion and fallacy which had been started years ago. And the American electorate Suffered through one of the ugliest campaigns in our histo- union. ; fUnusual Oath Honors Utahn Moss Praises Idahoan, Lashes at Right Wing Bennett Asks End to Aid (D-Ida-.) Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Foreign aid funds would be denied Indonesia and the United Arab Republic under balls cosponsored Tuesday by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett (R-Uta- . " The Utahn said President Su karbo of Indonesia and Prime Minister Nasser of the UAR have voiced contempt for American aid. Sen. Bennett also pointed out that Indonesia now has renounced membership in the United Nations, increased its attacks on Malaysia and is continuing overtures both to Red China and foe Soviet Union. Meanwhile,. 7 we now have been subjected to the same sort of bellicose conduct from Nasser of the UAR, Sen. Bennett said. cult problem. Adept Servant " He has been a remarkably diligent and adept public servant and his many talents have demonstrated themselves in abundance since he came to as my adminisWashington trative assistant iiT 1957, Sell. Before that he Church said. was a successful lawyer in Boise and - a person whose friendship I came to cherish. 500 piece adult puzzles mt More variety in Wonder Of World puzzles for whiling away winter hours i j with sunny fun. 21xl3Vi f&Pietyiu,iriKe include the Acroppuzzles x olis, Mormom Tabernacle. -- - Moss Seeks Dam Tribune Washington Bureau; A bill to auWASHINGTON thorize construction of a dam and reservoir on Mill Creek In Utahs Grand County was introduced Tuesday by Sen. Frank E. Moss preschool, childs or junior 100 piece puzzles (D-Uta- at Shapiro's . i U L Sail - PARAGON AUTOMATIC TIMER 11.95 enjoy the of . radios, coffeemakers, decorative and protective lighting. Economically priced, unlimited, uses lets you come home to a lighted house, substitutes music for your alarm dock, lets you tiwaken to freshly brewed coffee, many others. easy-to-s- magically automatic convenience of automatic control SOUTH MEZZANINE HOUSEWARES Moil ood phono ordort filUd. For frto iolivOrj, iiol 7 m in Soli toko, m Provo, Zmitb 737 M outlymi ortti. Mod ordtrt to Box 1465, odd 48 , t tolot tox in Utob (112). Po stogo plot 3H 328-116- 8 . 825-160- Old, 374-278- 0 . : TRI-TAPE- R TOURISTER LUGGAGE furry inlaid pnsisf fit tykes who like, to put things . together. Fishing, Child's Sardta and other parent approved funtimers for ages 3 to 6. Stawsway, Nurm Aid and mors. 14x11' fascination for boys gjilant 363-15- U Showdown Thursday The Issue will be decided Thursday morning at a party conference ballot. Arends, 69, a genial politician of the old school, is banking on a large fund of personal friendship and respect he has built up among his - Republican colleagues over foe years. He is not foe type to step on toes and make enemies. Frelingfauysen, 48, is a New Jersey blueblood with an Ivy League background who in berit-e-d the political bug from distinguished forebears. He has a reputation In the House as a scrappy, argumentative adversary against Democratic labor and education legislation. Late Outcome Tossup Republican sources most closely involved in the battle between Frelinghuysen and Ar by-sec- Make your bom AMERICAN ret Established April 13, 1871, Issued every momins by the Kearns-TribuCorporation, Salt Lake City, Utah. Entered at the poet office at Salt Lake City as second clast matter under act of March 8, 1879. 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