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Show Page Four FRIDAY, JANUARY 21 , THE SALT LAKE TIMES Combined with The Salt Lake Mining 6 LegeJ News Published Every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah Entered it the postoffice at Sait Lake City as second class matter August 23. 1923 under the act of March 8, 364-84,711 South West Temple. m Telephone - 64 1879 GLENN BJORNN, Publisher : "This publication is net owned or controlled by any party, dan, clique, faction or corporation " f . Volume 45 Number 34 : M Sheriff George W. Beckstead ' ' . , (Continued from Page One) In addition to his devotion to law enforcement Sheriff Beckstead was active in numerous other fields. His work with youth and in support of sports and athletic programs was widely known and many individuals and organizations benefited from it. He also lent his time and talent to civic and fraternal organizations to the betterment of his community. The Salt Lake Times extends its sympathy .to the members of .Sheriffs Becksteads family. . 'i Parkinson's Now Law: Take a Cold Bath . i , . .i 1 THE SALT LAKE TIMES 966 Utah Symphony to Present Two Contemporary Concerts The second contemporary music festival for this season will take place January 25 and 26 at Kingsbury Hall when the Utah Symphony Orchestra perforate comworks by three modern-da- y posers. Appearing as guest conductor of the Orchestra will be Mr. Aaron Copland. In recent years, Mr. Copland has been increasingly active as a conductor. He has led more than thirty major symphonic organizations in England, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, the Soviet Union and other coun- ' tries. J Maestro Abravanel has sched-uled four contemporary works for the concerts, two of them by Aaron Copland: Appalachian Spring and his Symphony No. 3. Appalachian Spring is characterized as the apex of a development in Coplands career, in terms both of technical means and audience appreciation. It bespeaks the generative influence of Martha Graham, for whose use the original score was written,' and whose name appears in the subtitle which reads: Appalachian Spring (Ballet for Mar1 tha). Professor C. Northcote Parkinson, author of the Mr. Copland began to plan famous Parkinsons law work expands to fill available his Third Symphony in 1943 time revealed his newest law for the married women of the western world for those days when everything but everything is against you. Named Mrs. Parkinsons Law, the new principle as published in the current issue of McCalls magazine, maintains: Work under pressure produces heat which expands to fill the mind available, from which it will pass .... only into a mind that is relatively cooler. The, Law takes effect when theres no one around to listen children are at schboL and husband is at work and the days sequence 'is dilemma, disaster, and dismay. Then heat and frustration build, Parkinson said. The toaster jams, filling the kitchen with black smoke. The coffee boils over. You break a valuable piece of when he received a commission from the Koussevitzky Music Phone . ; . ; objects. ; Dr; Parkinson advised women to learn to cope with Mrs. Parkinsons Law; by recognizing the symptoms of stress and applying the following rules: (1) never look at incoming mailuntil you have time to read it; (2) never answer the telephone if you are in the middle of something you cant easily interrupt; (3) .stop work, switch off, sit down, collect your thoughts, and pull yourself .i, together. If all else fails, there are two final methods for lowering your temperature, Dr. Parkinson said. Rub a tub of cold water and submerge' yourself to the heck three times. Dry yourself with a rough towel. When you empty the bath, much of your heat will go down the waste pipe If this is impractical it may be December and a friend and ask her to come for you. in QuebecV-Hca- ll coffee in a half hour. During that time, Parkinson said, write a brief report on the events that you have disturbed you. Dont make any. decisions. By the time your friend arrives, you will have begun to cooL By the time you have told her the story, you should .be back to normal, lie said. oOo The noblest contribution which any man can make for the benefit of posterity is that of a good character. The richest bequest which any man can leave to the youth of his native land is that of a shining spotless example. 363-765- 1. Coryza Causes Annual Loss Of $5 Billion Every Year If your nose is stuffy and you have difficulty breathing, chances are youre suffering from pne of the most widespread and prevalent of all diseases coryza. and Chilling overheating make a person particularly susceptible to coryza, which is why it is so prevalent at this time of the year. There is no known cure. china. Although it is relatively minor, coryza causes an annual loss At those times, he said, all evidence points to the of more than $5 billion each year existence of a conspiracy, which might be defined in sci- in the United States alone in entific terms as. the inveterate malignancy of inanimate terms of time lost from work, . Foundation. Mr. Copland has written of this Symphony: One aspect of the Symphony ought to be pointed out: it contains no folk or popular material. During the late twenties it was customary to pigeonhole me as composer of symphonic jazz, with emphasis on the jazz. More recently, I have been catalogued as a folklorist and purveyor of Americana. Any reference to jazz or folk material in this work was purely unconscious. MexThe music of present-da- y ico is a fusion of Indian and Spanish elements. It has remained possible, however, to compose music for the concert hall which draws almost entirely ' on the earlier and indigenous expression of the Mexican Indian, as differentiated from the mixed or mestizo music. Carlos Chavez has done just this with his Sinfonia India, which will be performed at the contemporary concerts. Also on the program is Leonard Bernsteins Overture to Can-did- e. This music is light and gay. The breezy music moves at a lively pace and is not without its satirical humor. Tickets for the two concerts are on sale at the Symphony Office, 55 West First South. wages lost, and the cost of treating the disease and its the-L- EA i1." ..i i S ED ii ; J:. . Establishment of a state crime commission will be discussed ,by, County Commissioner John Preston Creer and Gov. Calvin L. Hampton. The Commissions aim would be to upgrade the police , work. ?. Commissioner Creer said this week he learned of many, mod? era methods for improving police departments while attending a National Crime Commission meeting in Washington, . D.C. . ti . i M. i Three Salt Lake City employes have been selected to serve on the citys Appeal Board for two1. year terms. John Mads$n will represent the Water Department; , Kent Broadhead, department,, and .. Pete Parks Department. ; ' j, Smith, Streets-Engi-neeri- ng . William H. Call, 2269 Hollywood Ave., has been elected secretary-treasurer of the Central Utah Federation of Labor, AFL-CIto fill the unexpired term of Mrs. Patricia Woodruff, who resigned to become field representative of the Utah Employment Training Committee. Mr. Call, a delegate from the Office and Professional Employes Local 31, also is financial secretary of the Salt Lake Typographical' ' Union 115. O, , . Support for Utahs bid for the Winter Games was Persons of all ages are suscepthouses of the Utah ' ible to coryza, ; according to given by both this week. Both, Legislature World Book Encyclopedia, but houses resolutions supadopted preschool youngsters seem to be statics bid. the porting most susceptible. More than 30 million illnesses each year in Vernal City Councilman Dr.. American1 preschool youngsters Dan Q. Price this week was inare caused by coryza. stalled as president of the Utah William Henry Harrison, ninth Municipal League, succeeding President .of the United States, Mayor Verl G. Dixon of Provo. delivered his inaugural address on a cold, windy day and caught The Utah Parks and Recreation coryza. This developed into pneu- Commission this week voted to monia and he died a month later. obtain a six month option to buy Coryza is what keeps handker- 804 acres adjoining Deer Creek chief makers and tissue manufac- Reservoir, land it was forced to turers in business. It is popularly turn down five ago; beknown as the common head cold. cause of depletedyears funds. The land would be an integral part of the planned Wasatch Moun- - , tain State Park. 1972 Olympic ! . : : ; . A resolution by the State Aero- nautics Commission was sent to;... Mayor J. Bracken Lee this week-.-,- ' uring that Airport No. 2 in. Salt Lake County be retained. for; aviation purposes was presented to the City Commission .this week. .. , . ; Z I 0 . , : - Robert S. Winthrop .' ; Dont throw that license away,' spokesmen for the Department of Fish and Game reminded the Utah sportsmen this week. . With the advent of the 1966 angling season and the tremen- nities remaining for Utah anglers in the coming winter, the 1965 license must be possessed and visibly displayed whenever afield through April 15, 1966.. . Under fish and game law,, the license year is. set to run from April 16 through April 15 of the following year. Juveniles reaching the age, of 12 years, or anyone having lost or destroyed their 1965 license, must purchase a "new or dupli? cate issue if they are going afield prior to April 16. . , . qOo The highest reward for a mans toil is not what he gets fqr it, but what he boomes by it. ; , : . -- -- ' j dous number of angling opportu- f Utah employers who have not yet given the .wage. ' and tax statement Form W-- 2 to employees are reminded that Form ; . - . I ' ki |