OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES Children by Choice Coal of Booklet The idea of having children by choice instead of by chance is more widely accepted today than ever before. And for all religious creeds there are acceptable methods of family planning to guarantee each child his first to be wanted. birthright A New Chapter in Family Planning, a Public Affairs pam- phlet just released, discusses the latest developments in both attitudes and in methods. The pamphlet is available for 25 cents from the Public Affairs Committee, 381 Park Avenue South, New York, N. Y. 10016. The author is Elizabeth Ogg, who has also written other popular Public Affairs Pamphlets on family relations, psychology, and mental health. A New Chapter in Family Planning stresses the contribution family planning can make to stable, responsible family life. This is reflected, too, in the fact that an increasing number of health and welfare departments now offer free choice of method, and that Congress recently appropriated money for birth control clinics in the District of Columbia. The author explains how oral one of the newcontraception est methods, known as the pill works, and presents the evidence on such important questions as its safety, reliability, and cost. She describes a number of other methods of family planning, too, including rhythm and mechanical and chemical barrier devices, comparing their AMC Mining Show Set for Las Vegas The 1965 Metal Mining and Industrial Minerals Convention and Exposition of the American Mining Congress will be held at Las Vegas, Nev., Oct. J'. Allen Overton Jr., AMC executive vice president, mining organization, has announced. Overton said that plans for the combined convention-expositio- n are going forward rapidly under the general direction of T. A. Snedden, general manager, U.S. Mining Dept., American Smelting and Refining Co., Tucson, Ariz., who is chairman of AMCs Western Division. The important post of national chairman of the program committee has been accepted by William L. Jude, superintendent, New Jersey Zinc Co., Gilman, Colo. Under his direction, a committee representing all mining areas of the United States will be appointed to develop a comprehensive program dealing with the industrys problems in matters of national policy, together with new developments and progress in the fields of mineral exploration, underground and open-p- it mining, minerals and health and safety. More than 170 manufacturers of mining machinery, equipment and supplies already have made arrangements to display their products. Overton said. 11-1- . Public Affairs Pamphlet series, which includes many other distinguished titles covering health and science, social and economic problems, family relations, and intergroup relations. More than 365 pamphlets, plus revisions, have appeared since the Public Affairs Committee first began issuing these concise, popularly written booklets almost 30 years ago. A New Chapter in Family Planning will replace earlier titles on the same up-to-da- te 4 byPHYlLIS'JOY 4 ti LINGERIE HAG HAP A STRANGE History? women's 'Dnper-praweWERE FIRST WORN BY MEN. IT WAG rs NOT UNTIL THE IZTH CENTURY THAT A KNITTER GARMENT LIKE AN ELONGATE? STOCKING OR TIGHTS (CALLED vs OPERA PRAWERS OR CALECONS). WAS DEVELOPED FOR THE WOMEN OF THE FRENCH STAGE & B V The IN EUROPE WAS IN TRIPLICATE. THE OUTER LAVER WAS CALLED A 'AYCDESTITHE SECOND;! WHICH OCCASIONALLY WAG ALLOWED TO SHCW-TH- E "RASCAL; N ANP.THE INNER if M M SKIRT, THE 'SERET jfi g( .'t&T KNOW IT EXISTENCE PUETO THE NEW PRESS OF CHANEL AND VIONNET SLIP AS WE ONE-PIEC- buying Today... when LOUNGE-WEAAND E R. LOOK FOR THIS LABEL . . .THE SYMBOL OF DECENCY, FAIR LABOR STANDARDS AND THE AMERICAN WAV OF LIFE Wonderful Begins in S. L. Salt Lake area citizens have Governor Calvin L. Rampton will be one of the featured the opportunity to study Japaspeakers at the statewide wom- nese brush painting under the ens conference at the University tutelage of one of Japans skilled of Utah, Friday night, March 19, artists, Mr. Tatsuo Saito. Mr. according to University an- Saitos paintings were recently nouncement today. hung in the Salt Lake City PubGovernor Rampton will dis- lic Library where they created cuss, the need for industrial de- wide interest which led to revelopment in Utah, what the quests for a class under his direcLegislature provided, and how tion. The artist is also a diplothe intends to implement the matic representative from Mat-sumot- o, program. According to Grant R. Holt, acting dean, Division of Continuing Education, the conference will be held in the new Law School Building on the University campus Friday night beginning at 7:30 p.m., and all day Saturday, March 20. Dr. James C. Fletcher, president of the University, will being greeting to the Conference. Other speakers Friday night will include Dr. Theral Black, professor of sociology, Utah State University, on population; Dr. Edward O. Moe, director of the Bureau of Community Development, University of Utah, on New World GLAMOUR GUIDE, e I ILki.. toConsurner Service of Lingerie and Loungewear" In color. Write N.Y. 10001. Division, ILGWU, 275 Seventh Avenue, Japan, the sister city to Salt Lake City. The class in brush painting will be given in 11 sessions from Monday, March 8 to Wednesday, March 31 on the University of Utah campus, Art Building 441, Room 200. It will run Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Registration is now taking place at the Uni- versitys Division of Continuing Education in the Annex Building 114G at regular tuition rates. Utah Travel Total I2 Million Miles Daily Survey Shows million Utahns travel 12 miles daily in motor vehicles, according to J. E. Johnston, Deof puty Director Highways for Planning and Traffic. Two publications just released by the Utah State Department of Highways, Traffic on Utah Highways 1964 and Vehicle Miles on Utah Highways 1964 indicate the high traffic volume. Motorists in Utah burn over a million gallons of gasoline each day and travel the equivalent of 26 round trips to. the moon each day. Assuming the average life of an automobile is 100.000 miles, Utah motorists wear out 125 cars each day. The Highway Department travel study publications indicate traffic on Utah highways increased 4 in 1964 over 1963. This is a normal increase in traffic. Seventh East and 21st South is the busiest intersection on Utah highways with more than 63.000 cars per day traveling Mr. Saito is accompanied on his American visit by a young daughter, Mariko, who is an accomplished pianist. They will through. Fourth South and State visit Washington, D.C. at Cherry Street is the 0 runnerup with Doroand Dr. community action; Festival time, and go from there cars per day. The busiest thy Strawn, Dean of Women, to New York City before return- Intersection in Ogden is WashUniversity of Washington, Seat- ing Matsumoto. Boulevard and 24th Street ington tle, on continuing education for cars with 36,000 per day. The women. busiest in Utah is now highway The Conference is open to all inate the Senate Amendment a of section 15 just Interstate women in the state. Registration giving the Government title to of north the Salt Lake -- Davis fee is $3.50 which includes a such contract patents. County line 39,000 luncheon on Saturday. ApplicaTo make a patent available cars per day. averaging Twenty-eigtions should be sent to Womens to is to make it avail- cent of the traffic in Utahper everybody is Box P.O. Conference, 200, Salt able to nobody. The of within Salt Lake County. Fifty-fiv- e policy Lake City, Utah. denying a contractor the fruit per cent of the total travel of his own inventive genius be- is within the four Wasatch Front cause he happened to be under counties of Salt Lake, Moss is Sponsoring Davis, a government contract at the Weber, and Utah. Auto Safety Bill time he perfected the invention, inThe greatest strikes a shattering blow at our crease in traffic proportional Senator Frank E. Moss road-day on a single has joined in sponsoring patent system. is to Park City where travel legislation which will make manBy our short sighted policy, has increased 33 per cent. certain in features we would deprive the nation of datory safety all new automobiles manufac- the golden eggs of future invenConceit is the strange malady tured for sale in 1967 and later tiveness by killing the goose of which makes everyone sick exyears. invention. cept the one who has it. Senator Moss said with only a few changes in the design of automobiles, thousands of lives TRAIGfrT BOORBON WTftStnr 86 PI00F DOT MJTILlflS 60, 1.T, IT. could be saved. The legislation which he is cosponsoring would extend federa safety standards for Government cars to all cars manufactured for, sold or shipped in interstate commerce. The proposal would require 59,-00- ht (D-Uta- h) several safety features: collapsible steering wheels, shoulder harness safety belt anchors, specific types of safety glass, smog removing exhaust systems, standardized transmission controls to avoid confusion, a(nd uniform bumper heights. Senator Moss said a second proposal in the registration would authorize funds for development and testing of a prototype safety car. 31 Until the 1920's the petticoat IWE VMS THE OWTVPEOf PUSjER LINGERIE Japanese Art Class Governor Will Talk At Womens Meet These proposals could do much to save lives, Senator Moss said in joining sponsorship of the bill, It is contended that over the next 15 years, 640,000 lives in America could be saved with a few, relatively inexpensive safety features added to the family automobile. petticoatofthe I7TH CENTURV 20-pag- 4, bene-ficiatio- n, reliability and costs. For families at all income levels, the author emphasizes, family planning gives parents freedom to choose the number and spacing of their children, and so to plan a rational and rewarding life. A New Chapter in Family Planning is No. 136C in the subject. 1 Page Five FRIDAY, MARCH 12f 1965 Rep. King Battles For Patent Law Representative David S. King, Wednesday played a in an unsuccessful role eading ::loor fight to amend the Appalachia Bill to give private contractors title to the patents developed under contracts awarded ah, through the program. A patent is worth nothing without the accompanying exclusiveness guaranteed to it by he constitution, Mr. King told the House in an attempt to elim- - S Ask the man fori &"0LDEEXif , that is!) |