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Show -- , , - m- mr , - , .; , ,, , e , . - -- - - if'VS A Relief To 0 -- -- ('I . , 4 Get Pjd Of The Overcoat'1 , , - - . ', , grit . it al i ill, LI', ISA l' , " ,. , . , - , , A-1- 6 Two ' , eat,,... , , , ' 4 A- 7 0 , 'r.r..1- -1 , . , , " - . - , 20. - . et ', '; 4..i:-:ir--- .", - , ' . , r; , - -, -- , I ' 0 C:j , e " ,, 1 , , ,4,17-'--- , , The, Real Test Of Driving 'maneuver AMERICA'S TEENAGERS have a long way to, go before they can overcome their reputations 'for being risky drivers. Once again In 1963, according to a re- , port just issued by Travelers Insurance Companies,' young drivers had the worst safety record of any age group'. Although drivers under 25 comprise only 15 of all licensed drivers,' they were involved in 29 of the fatal highway accidents and 26.1 of the mishaps. an was demonstrated. be need not That -- -the past weekend in Utah at the - --Capitol, Skyline and Granger high schools ' That's where Salt Lake area high school . - students were ut p through their pace s in Teen Age Safe Driving Road-e-- os , --, are really tough These Itoad-e-o- s ' tests of driving skills. How many adult drivers could drive between a narrow row of rubber balls without hitting, one, and ' , non-fat- al ,.,,, . a curving obstacle course as ,,,--'- .- . , ' , ' drivhtg on the highway that so many of them do in driving on satetY test courses ' across the country. Their records on such courses prove they are potentially the best drivers.- - So-- does the fact that their re- S1EMS i are fast and heir physCal are sharp. BUT SAFE DRIVING is more a matter - of mental attitudes than of physical ability. ' And the ultimate test of skillful ' driving lts,not on the test course but on the highwai where the prize is not a by-ing cup but, rather, life or death. , - PRESIDENT- - ,, - , - -,- 1 - , 1 , THE BEATLES, as everyone knows, were welcomed with open arms by Amer!- va's younger set But could It be that the older generation which gave them cold shoulder treatment did them an injustice? This question is raised because of a report out of London the other day from the Christian Economic and Social Re. search Foundation. The foundation notes a sudden drop in convictions for drunkenness among Britain's young people which naturally is to be applauded--an- d suggests that part of the answer Is, of all things, the Beatles. Don't scoff yet because this line of thinking is, being supported by the Lon. . :: ' ' -- - - rt.j crroldlighbedbathcke , - turinat bog ;hiss anped ligirodisoctatimn geet, -- - - ' Jon .. N, ,' dal set. Moral exhortations don't,help, but another interest does; and' the Mersey interest" , so HIJRBAWfor. the Beatles. But wait - corn- tztantly ' , ..." 113Thneglittie boyI saw is terribly afraid of doing the wrong thing. a result, he will do nothing Very well All achievement comes from daring, from experiment, from the will-bobigness to risk failure when this psychic nerve is cut, we may. have a "dutiful" child,: but we cannot have a good one, in any creadve and joyous sense at the th word. and teaciiers, ' , short-sighte- his mistakes, when they make the right answer), more hnpor. tant than the quest for knowledge and good judgment. For visgelfhateatiV hieearadrn:rünfron11182 ether. . ..', ,'. '. (0 14) ' . , . FICTION ' ' g . . .' - By CLARE' , nocvrat LUCE , President Charles .,., ' de Gaulle recently 7, ; .... . ;''''1--,,, . told the French that i ..; ,,, 1), must build their, ,;.. ,, t, ,,,,," ; ,.., .11: , own nuclear. force at i ,47N , whatever the cost or ( , '' 4. ,$..., ) I ' . ,3t on "uncertain" . , rely States pro- - L - United tection. Pointing to . ' ,,the "ambition" of ,' r ., the U.S.S.R., which he said threatened Mrs' Luce. , the Free World, he said tliat,while this lasts France Is "In danger of invasion and destruction without having the ;certainty that her American allies, 'themselves exposed to death, would be able to save France from invasion and destruction." U.S. officials Indignantly rejected the ' , : ' " . . . ' -- , For Propaganda .....:.. . ., e.., Gaulle ..: ' ' ': I D. Alfred Marsh:all 7 Beaver High School 'Coach - - , , , participa- Monday is the beginning of grass-root- s tion in the political process in Utah. Members of the League of Women Voters of Utah urge all citizens, who will be qualified voters by the general elec. of tion, to attend the mass meeting of the - party . their choice. Call the county clerk or the county party quarters for the address of your neighborhood voting distdct mass meeting. You do not need a- personal Invitation to attend these public meetings.- --- - - - , 1 - 1 After that comparing rattlesnakes to Communists was being to the snakes. A rattler' will give fair unfair. warning before be strikes.-- - Not so a Communist. While suppossedly our best friends, Communists , through espionage, obtained our secrets of the atom bomb, enabling them to blackmail not only us but Also the rest of the world. After-tryin- g tmsuccessfully- - since-- the end of World War 11 to collect even a token payment on the billions Ibiggia owes us'for our lib. eral politicians granted them credit for wheat They -have shown their appreciation by shooting down , every American plane that inadvertantly strayed across the East German frontier. Without even the warning - snake would give. ' , , Lynn .Gordon ' . - .. ''''''',, tk''",,,t.2t1.N40,5',Y4',,Z:,..,. ' ; .,,,z64,6e4,,,,,4e,,,,,,,,.:,!,,,.$,,,---;,,- : Park 2 ; aiy ZIMEMI ,,,,,4 -. , - - ,,--- , GUEST EDITORIAL. ,,, - :,--- ' - - . . . , , ,. -1,F- ROM,THETOLED0,- OHIO,- BLADE - .......a of 'Linea. le "pr. as power and money mad, mentally unstable,. Soviet ruler a death-swa- p Wheeler-Burdic- k i $ A group of angry Mothers has'been ruffling the feathers best seller,. "Fail Safe" (to Strangelove," the successful US. bomber hits Fascist-minde- d .,' monsters. ', ':,''' : : ' be released this fall), are bound to fortify De ' a Rusadan defense of intents the the Whatever Soviet the pro. of personal complex housing toy manufacturers at their 196415 showings in ,New York qaulle's view of the unreliability of America Doomsday Machine. 'Ibis is then detonated and i ducers and authors of these two pictures, -t-.prItilit against the military trend in toyland 'theta , aikan ally in the minds of an . entire: certainly not to make propaganda lot Del-''' :','days. ,, ' . ' i' see them. t ,. , But in. !Pail ,Safe" Moscow alone i s de-- ,Gaulle's nuclear force, But by casting doubt,. ''' t. -- The mothers to a preponobject ired-:Mothers,- f, Alas- - '' , ........ thrti-ug.. of small arms, machine guns, Tilt STORIES - of f , . movie.: on effect , be the' European' Strangelove" are remarkably similar. In wherenioón the President of tile United States guerrilla idts, nuclear cannons, atomics , g each stosy U.S. nuclear bombers, flying on the 711 craft, hand grenades, and the New to U.S. bombers of the President orders "After all," they ask, "if, bimself destroy like which the toy makers are pros alert, receive false instructions to destroy So- . the U.S.A. Is willing to knock his own bombers : Yórk atY Toy Trends Ilet Russia. 1,1' million Ameri- of massacre and out the sky This is a standard material re , In the Wheeler-Burdic- k story, the attack bs 1111111, SAFE" ends as the President "nobly" cans without warning to call off a Russo-Ame' launched by the accidental breakdown of the action everywhere. Mothers have always worried, we recall, i even can should to 14 Americans risk Americans million such, blows war, why kingdom over what was to become of little boys who spent their time "fail safe" system. In a 'Dr.- - Strangelove," a 4, nmi., m ooze the soviet leader a war to save Parisor Romeor West BerI : playing cowboysand-ktdian- s koolde or Air Force general de-- cm. instead of from lin bvasion?" liberate-1launches the attack. ; that the Moscow attack was purely accidental, ' Free 4luthors" Biblical or playing , producing pageants. speech, a precious ideal of American : And In both ' plots, when the Presddertt learns whereupon the nudear holocaust is called off bas been our happy experience that these perfectiy , It , makes But abhorrent - democracy, censorship -, , of the attack, he makes frantid by mutual consent and futile normal youngsters turned into perfectly normal, responsible and discretion, especially in ques-- ' efforts to recall all the U.S. planes. When this murder mass to this refers The President adults, and not one we know of from earlier years actually tions as important as national security, are became a cowboy, an Indian, a xobber, or even a cop., fails, he gets the Russian leader on the "hot without warning of millions of his arbitrarily , ideal. an also American surely ' line"- revealing to him vital U.S. military chosen fellow citizens as the "sacrifice of Abra-- ' IT IS THIS ideal that the producers and auThere was one item on the market during Easter season, secrets (getting none in return) and this ' '.tharn.'t In both 'Sr. Strangelove" and "Frail that did seem to be out of place. It was a however, thors of 'Tail Safe" and "Dr. Strangelove" green,4112-inch- enables the Soviets to destroy all but one o- f- Safe"- - the warns Russians( to-- - have Easter- - egg selling- - for $7.95.iWhetropened, 7, not for of Moscow-the gold our own planes and their crews as they cross -- - seek safety, but issues no Amuse warning to but ofbetrayedfellow citizens. this egg disgorged not rabbits or chicks but an mill. All the cynical, their the Russian border. money-ma- d characters on the American scene tar7,14 complete with tanks, a 'tank carrier, a troop truck. Another similarity is that when it becomes And in both stories all the U.S . scientists, - We think whoever designed this as an Easter toy made are not, it seems, in the government or the who seek' to dear that one U.S. bomber but eluded destruc- a , mistake.It should 'have at experts, and the traditional Pentagon.-tion and is on target, the President offers the &re shown , , , C wae , , ive,aelet purple, not the green of Europeans-whedestrOye-th- '. - ' ai ' .., : , ' , ,. 11.!"-l- IS THE FRENCH view of America as an unreliable ally right or wrong?-- The part American motion pictures released abroad play in creating attitudes towards is not scientifically measurable - but certainly it is great Two motion pictures, Vr:StrangelovenAre-- , .1 . , - - ' -- - ' 1 Unfair To The Snakes receiving a post card today, I realize ,;, 1. , .. I - 1 - ( . ' ' ...0 , .1 ' , ......- ...they .. - side: , , , l II lased this siring) and the picturkbased on tho ' , . , - - , ir , . ' ! i ,,,,,,''''',41,4t."4"' , , too d when woefully they try to protect the child from are '- I - lemeavre Politics At Grasvitoots significant , . : : standing the reasons or grasp ing the consequences of being km-solvi- . Will you please have the kindness to print my in order that I may In some way unravel a letter, , assopuzzling problem that has been bothering my ciates and me. My main concern is with the restoration of Saltair and the fulfillment of existing ntshorelands surrounding Saltalr. Moss Having been notified by US. Sen. Frank E. that rehabilitation of Saltair has to be undertaken 'am by a private concern or by the State of Utah, I in receipt of news from MaxC. Gardner, director State Land Office, which tells me otherwise, on account of contract issued to Dr. Thomas C. Adams by the members of Greater Salt Lake Authority. Previous to this announcement by Max C, Gardoffice ner, I was advised by the county attorney's -that a lease WU issued to John C. Silver, on shoreland at Saltair. I wish to know who the parties were who gave Mr. Myer his lease. Is the pending bind- ot.lease now held by Greater Salt Lake Authority said revert or rehabilitate Saltair big upon them to lease to the State Land Board? Joe - Fisher , 164 N. 7th West. J. Harris - a minute! Though Britain's teen set may be drinking less and enjoying life more, has anyone bothered- to dleck 'on' whether tippling among the older generation, whose presumably matured musical. ears are being assaulted by repeated doses of the Mersey sound, Is up or down? 1 ) What About Saltair tease? 0 1964 parents I --'- to do is pre sent Beave's there is no justification of this thing. . pare President Johnson w i t hPresident Kennedy will continue to be disappointed. He will never kiok and act like Mr. Kennedy. He. will always look and act like ' Lyndon B. Johnson. seven-year-sl- , Politics is every citizen's business. Pardcipats you inass meeting. , Mrs. Paul B. Porter, president ' of Women Voters -League take over he would be as strong, or stronger, politically than his predecessor. This is further dence of how quickly and corn- pletely Mr; Johnson has come to occupy TllosE wito -- , 6,. -- - , N The Value Of Making Mistakes Perhaps the most precious a village was once asked how he freedom a growing person can came by his wisdom. "I got it ' have is the freedom to make from my. good judgment," be - mistakes. ciffldres who are de- his answered. And where nied - this freedom, or severely - good jodgment come from 41 I restricted in it, can be emotiongot it from my, bad judgment" ally crippled for life. It is surprising and depress- I recently ran into a woman Ing to see how many children, I have known slightly for years. in and out of school, are d She was with her hever told the value of maldng boy, who looked worried, nere - mistakes but, instead, are and utterly defeated by filled with fear of failure, of be-, vous, life. And I remember having ing wrong. Doing the right thing, 6 seen her once on the beach when getting', the ,right answer, be- the boy was about two years comes a dead end in itself, rath- old. She would absolutely not al er than - a means toward matur- low him- the freedont to make ity. ' . any mistakes. Her hawk's eye Man has been defined (and I she think properly) as the "pmb- was on hint evey minute n animal."-Athought she was - "protecting" -- life is him, but actually she was forproblematic. Learning the bidding him to experiment in wrong wsoMmettesdlainfulg growing, In learning z-- which is is - id' saY,71n making mistakes. ' ' though told ' more valuable than being A famously with old man in the right way, without under.. ' I'm trying ' ' : wentNwell. , - . thus maldng the community and the Beaver school look like the "big bad wolf." -- , .., '' it shouldn't be blamed all on one side, , However, thidy. He ha s just addressed both the American Society of Neyispa-- per Editors in Washington and the Associated Press in N e w York. (Most presidents address either one or the other.) He has just held three press conferences in the past week, By Sidney ,- Actually- Tice - 1,10hineghttehthowee attileneets them alone. In this case it was adults from Milford who incited the boys to a pitch of arudety that needed relewhasinagt. The publishers meeting in New mostly Republican thought Mr.. Johnson would run even stronger than President Kennedy would have run. --den- t. F. ew Politicians or Palma writers would have held this before Nov. 22that if the ; It')seve-l-t 1 - -- - York - , s , , THE NATION'S newspaper editors meeting ashingMn mostly Repubhcan ,..,.thought mi.. would win - , . ' ; , It - - ' ton. Jolmson wM rate as.,aPrest But it hi amply evident that he torhigs - a Modal rambi- nation of qualities rarely ent in one inn at the same thne. He is the most politically resnureeful President since Franklin Roosevelt and the most zestful prekdent since Theodore stands out above all other is this Mr. Johnson has not merebyacceded tcOthe 'residency; be has seized the presidency with unequalled energy. , - tion Daily Herald. Young people, the Herald reasons, "mostly get tight because they are bored, and because drinking is the thing to do in their age group or se, sound Is a pretty powerful , : - -- - IFIC. ' --- ONE thing width to me nation of President Kennedy. Mr. Johnson is looking ahead. He is no longer appealing to Con-gress or to the country to accept his measures as a tribute to the memory of the late President He is asking that everything be judged on its own. This is no time even to at-tempt to judge where Lyndon The Beatles Reappraised - , - - 1 , , ' .k ''t 1 atHtheeistragmedynwhiger Incidentally,. , . - ., - ' , Inciuding one big, live televised press conference in the State Department auditorium a la '- ' ) - , - Over - - mpetently, . - - ,, The most significant fact in Washington ,,,;11 , ..:..' , Is at is transitional government today that 1 ' an end and that Lyndon B. Johnson is corn1,,, ,, kolov. , ---pletely in charge.7 1, t.,. -It has been accomplished more '4.', ,'N.;.. more smoothly, more rapidly t4n ;:z.,,..,, 'i t ' .! v,,,,,,,,, di anyone would have believed possible. ,,,, The Johnson' Administration is now on I i its ownmaking its own deciqions, creating its own initiatives, and cultiv, Ing ilk own Mr. Drummond s image in its own way. ' - , , - - - , anti-polluti- - -- -- Joheibli:-T66-- By ROSCOE DRUMMOND , ' -- ENERGETIC . EVEN THOUGH A EECOID $820 million an annual nationwide report of pollutionwas spent on municipal treatment fa. caused fish kills. The idea is that the cilities during 1963, the nation's battle first person to detect water pollution is against milder- - pollution is still far from , usually the fisherman who finds dead fish over floating in his favorite stream or lake. Often those fish kills are the result of The Conference of State Sanitary-inpolluilongineers reports there are still 5,744 cornBut unless the fish kills arcreparted munities needing new or improved sew. the agencies, the source of the age treatment facilities. That doesn't evento-one-- of ' pollution will go unabated longer than is begin to include industrial waste treat- ment needs, estimated to be at least as necessary and those responsible for violaws may go lating great as those of municipalities ' ' punished. Considering the staggering magnitude of the problem, what can the individual VTAII FISHERMEN will be doing them- do to help fight the battle against water selves as well as others a favor- - by 7 pollution? ffsherman. when making such reports be specific The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and about the name of the stream, location, the TJS., Public Health Service are cooper- time and date of discovery, number and ating with state fish and game agencies species of dead ,fish found, and the color, arotmd the country to compile and publish o'dor, and turbidity tit finAs ,17a.1 I - -- -- -- - - , , . , N e'iAeci: Pollution Detectives . - - 1 '' 11",, - - - -- eel, two sides to every did any swinging of fists and these were boys from ., Milford who were out of school (graduates) and a ' couple of Beaver High School students. , The incident wouldn't have happened if Chief Bolton had been on the job and had met the Beaver students at the railroad crossing, not allowing them into Milford. He knew they were coming at least two hours in advance. I knew about it and warned,. the students that I saw to stay home. I also in-, formed the Beaver County Sheriff who In turn noti.. ' did Now he let them in Bolton. Chief fled why , ' the done town?' A ,,sirpleKoadblock would have trick , , . , ,Another untruth was The time of the occurrence. : The boys from Beaver were back in town (32 miles ' from Milford) by 9:30 p.m so how could theyhave, ; - Is, been brawling on the highway outside of Milford ,in the wee hours 'of the moraine! As a matter of - fact z , they did go outside of town on the highway where the - students of Milford High and Beaver --- have a peace treaty and for-, High both decided to - There-wa- s not one blow struck their grievance&-- . -- 96 - ., '' , that there are ,' ,. a, 4- I . -- - ",,,,,;x. - .. s ."P '41 - A - ' . -- i . Stateof -- --- . - . , , well as so many of these young motorists ' "did? Probably not many. ,,, Instead of being involved in almost twice as many accidents as their numbers warrant, America's younger - drivers might well be involved in fewt,r-- if only they would put the same thoughtful care into , - :.. i' ist 11 these do not help Is or e. .111 , , schools. . , , , Most of the Students involved and cited by Chief Bolton were only watching. Only four or five ' , - iLem , - , I . . , ' . Sino-Sovi- et between, am two 4' . -; the - st story makee for good journalism. Here are some ' truths to the story: ' . Rivalry 'between the two areas has been going on for a long time. So has the rivalry between other , i ) I ,i, , - iaear To realize -- . , -- s ' Brawl Story's Other Side , - mtheimirelaties.tiPaPi, -- --,- - , t, :- - . 1 Publication of articles su'ch ,,111"1 ' ' ti - . - , -- -,-- qaaeA -- - , ' N , - - .it , - , -- - 411Mlb . - -- , ' 04 , article In reference to you about "The Brawling Teenagers of Beaver nigh the scholastl"ekw:h;lilsetra jed ournalistrits ot"r,ensaoflailfr4tional- -' talks articles frora of proportion margin. The: factsand there were a few' in the articlewere so cluttered with untruths thatI believe the Deseret News should print a retractithi, or investigate the incident before publication and defamation of - . . , . N . ------- . , 4 . - ... - - , 'ld , . - - ,,, -- ryff ;a I :i . - - c , . tt , ist , ) '''. - ' ., ,,,,- I 0 -- -. s - -- . - , Sitio-Sovi- ' ' ,,,,,,., , , t . --'i''- , , J b, . 4 1 that-whatev- s, .' ,,, A- . 4 ed - - , 11. V '' 1 pared to only 20 in 1959. That really ' 4int i Romania with hurts Russia, whose trade ' ' .99. ' ' , ' 40,' ' -4,t has fallen by ir 40J1 ' eItem No. 2An9ther measurable re- ,,'''''' ,r, -or' w -444, suit Of this growing serse of bdepend- Ks, '''' ' ence of Moscow within the Red bloc, Po. . es , , lan,, d, Hungary, and "Wmalds no longer k ' I , Jam our Voice of America broadcasts, amatak, i ' bt, ' . Item No. 3Many satellite countries Ck ' I are travelAstrictions on own their to easing be is off . their , shrugged ' quarrel apt up '".a.''' f i' I . t : with the attitude that it's, too , bad but ' VitiFsns as well as' on outsiders i . 1 ' : i A 41lb' 1. are esPect. , some . not very significant. tat , , 1 rg ' .' ' , ed to travel to .., countries. 16:: On the contrary, it's extremely s1gffI- 11, ' , (i 1 The same thing is happening in Hungary. cant. For if the split ever is ,. . I ,, And '' . , t repaired, free Men everywhere may well ,e,fit al ' ern tourists. r lose some definite gains that can be count- 4,,s,.......,.....0,44' 11111110P t " This increased travel and freedom of I ed in very concrete terms. Among them .,, ,0,,,,..,, ' , ' - ," communications should enable more Iron . are these: C Curtain , peoples to see and hear for them.' . ,., A .....- -t, 14s-di ; ir ' 1Peking's sUccessful dell" - selves what life in a free, open society is ,''anceItem ms. ' : Sit of Moscow has encouraged other Iron 0 . . ile roally like. since the cold war is to a 00 d 41, ' I' Curtain satellites- to go, their own way extent a war for men's Minds, the ' great with impunity., As a result, the Wall s. - be not these to moves is ,of , importance , , . 4 oiesfat ' Street Journal reports, "The new Commu- ', :, , underrated. ' -. , ' ' has just about nist nationalism , 4 DESPITE THESE GAINS, the cold war wrecked Russian plans to build Coniecon, Ar , 'far is still from being won, of course. a nine nation organization, into a sort i.i. '''' 4 " . or' . a Common The World to be Free still has Market" , of Communist prepared 40.-Iiils- ,', I , for treachery at all times. Even so, the ,...- - "L'" ,' That's no small matter. At a result, 07e) "eb T c ir according to one survey, Romania has - national communism that the x - ,3 ,....-111;44J, . ' t00.447,-..,- k .. ,, million is and still a $400 of worth step away plant split . makes possible bought , ' - . equipmenetrom Western companies and - from international"communism, and once ' 40011"1"totitat, ,,,s-,, , i '' ,A , ' busi35 where such tell now does who can its start of international , steps they , ' g. ' . - ,..,,It !Is .4. nations corn- ness with '. .., might end? rv , klis4 TO MOST ' AMERICANS - the , Ideological dispute between Russia and Red China is pretty academic stuff. Most binders the of us realize , World helps the Free World ' In some vague sort of way but we're not , always sure exactly how. ' So the past weekend's news that Rita-sie and China are going to bold bilateral talks next fall that could ultimately patch , , possible as. s a , , ' ' J,,,14,6S1P'1, ao ' . . , . ana.......- We Stand For The Constitution 01 Th. United States Al Having $oon Dnely Impired. ' ' ' ' ' , EDITORIAL PAGE iviONDAY, APR!!. 27, 1964 - , Letters To. The Editor . - : , . - . -- -- . , , - ' - i ' ' - . I- , e . ' --- , , , - e - 1 r ri , - self-contr- ol , darkl nt , -, fromst-hi-s-cour- , leths Ii |