Show i53!L ' ?' -- II ' J I 1 ji : - i TONE’ MILLION OF OUR nation's youngsten between the ageSof 16 and 25 are adrift on our city streeteMoet arc school V v-unskilled unemployed Is plight desperate their future bleaki ? &£ How did thia situation arise? What can be done to help this 5' growing crowd of Whom we cannot now find Jobs and whose ' ranks are expected to swell to 7500000 by 11 iV"" 1970? V '? Wf? C 0'-v0-- OO 3P 0 tf'i n ‘iv- - u ‘S i BRUCE GITTENS places a crown of flowers on Coy Andersen’s bead? proclaiming her queen of Mendon’a annual May Day Members of the court are Dixie Larsen Martin Ms- Peterson Nancy Larsen Bobby Richards and seated in front Karl Edlund and Reed Yonk flower girl and crown bearer There were 32 maypole dancers T today are responsible according to Mri Tullier As society becomes more and more highly mechanized certain jobs disappear The remaining Jobs ai Well new ones that are created require an Increasing degree ' f skilL That U one factor in the picture lhe second is a human Almost all of the youngsters Included in file current legion the unemployed are dropouts students who 'eft 'school beforettiey7 earned a' diploma Theirs are the faces that were missing from the high school yearbooks M0:XAi matters stand today 40 out of every 100 youngsters in nKthe United States either fail to attend high school or drop out Mbefore they have finished If this trend continues says Abrs: kam Ribicoff former Secretary of Health Education and Wat $vfgire the number of unsduoled unsUQod and unemployed "'youfiis win hava soared to the 75 million marie by 1970 TheywiU represent roughly 30 per cent of all the young workers who ars expected to enter fits labor market between tedml-msfi- A :v J® Skilled Occupations are: fxppoted to provide ' 4 X - '- 17 million ad new Jobe would lhan absorb the 75 million youngsters who because they wiQ lactlskills end schooling wifi know want in the ' 0-midst n o! toe Und Educatioiial requirements job are higher any vioday' than ever before' According to moet persooad diroe tors they irifi rise n notch or two each year-fr- om hwo on out vseture to predict’ says one ‘‘that within tfae next 10 posUdh achool education for two yeara-- at a junior e technical Institute— will replace the Ugh school dip fpjinMU as a baric requirement" FTODAV A HIGH SCHOOL diploma is the least most d accept for even a job One midwestern n firto hM an Irondad rule that even its mail sorters and mas 'ifenger boys bo Utfi school graduates Many firma are not '' 'satisfied with just a diploma either They carefully check the s ffraduda’a wod record and Insist on betterthan-averag- e before hiring i 'Few companies will pay attention to n dropout The per li eonnd director of large sted plant in Pennsylvania says: ‘'We want youngsters who are capable of climbing from the foctoryfioor into an office seat or into our sales force And we 01 Idont want them to str there Somewhere among them— we like to believe— is a future coofoany prerident" '& r Ha pauses and his lips tighten “If our company’s executives are to come from among today's youngsters why should we hire those whose school records show they were interested only in getting by?" k lcdlege low-lev- semi-truc- : - “mild-manner- if ! SAY MOST below-averng- $1 M-' en UAR MAGHAGHA (CH) The death toil in Saturday’s capsizing of an overloaded Nile River ferry may exceed 200 ' authorities said todayv" A total of 102 bodies ' had been recovered by this mom-to-g' Authorities believed scores of other victims weft trapped inside and under the doubledecked boat s which is resting sideways on the bottom of the Nile with only seven inches of the hull visible above the wat-e-r y f : ‘ l - - £—42 1 U- Families of about 100 perstill missing anxiously awaited news as divers continued to probe the wreckage Rescue workers were waiting for the arrival of cranes which are due to lift the boat out of the water tomorrow ’ll sons C0 "''I-CI A i ?T- - i- farckose aC Your i 1 - - w woof Traffic Hazard 0) i PETERBOROUGH England jA - - ' f ' - f‘ 'S' V J 1? ' ( l 712 botties soldl M49 :44 out 50SHitoMofe' ' - Taste wfay more and more people coll for thia extra age Kentaeky Bourtsoii again again and again! i Rear Dick's Cafe Lagan J p ll vil ANOTHER ' I E JENSEN PublUM (vary PUBLISHER arailng Monday and Sunday mor HUNDREDS THI MEMBER Audit Bureau at Circulation Uni tad Praia International NEA Strvtca NathMal Advwtlatng Rapraaan' SUBSCRIPTION BATES ' - through Friday Ins by CMhrVaUay Nawapapw Uo pany 78 Waal Cantar Logan Utah Entarad ai aaoood elaia aaattar at tha goat atflea at Logan Utah ' TERRIFIC VALUE ON KO’I’S ANNIVERSARY SALE The Herald Journal f - y VALUES THROUGHOUT OF OTHER STORE FOR ALL THE FAMILY a! this now lay-aw-ay special low price Nampapar Adaartulns 8arvlea Co - S LS Ona aaanth earrlar SUE Ona yaar carrier tea rear Bill outalde Caeha M00 valley Ona yaiur nail (In Caeha Valley) 1M0 Ona year icnrlocinan and a itemftei aaaaaoaooaeaaaaa UaOO NOTE THESE IMPORTANT FE&TUBES Green Stamps WITH 0 PURCHASE EVERY Hood Zip-O- ff Heavy Nylon and Cotton Knit Collar - Button Closure Collar d - O Nor pole Nylon Shell that's water proof and wind proof a Double Cap Shoulders Storm Cuffs rvarGrow Cuffs i HEYBURN Idaho (CPU -Dhoped through labor- ' " Hsavy Welt’ Sockets ‘V ’ V- 0:0 : 100 cotton combed wovon plaids 8 chocks full linod linod MV bock 14-o- £ ' v sleavts body Sixos 35 Quilted z Lining vont to 44 j— - Talon Heavy-Dut- y zPPr button 3 Cantor stylos j1 f'i i'”!''''-inside Elastic Waist - - ’ i - - -- f 1? t Sizti 4 to 14 in Balt Grani‘r'Z Diplomat Grey v- - MEN’S DRESS SLACKS and-- w Clay Coal Blue I- ' ‘rf v ' "a is special at s JUST SOc DOWN AND SMALL CpQWH Rag 891 Fortrol and rayon blond Plain or plootod stylos Colors block otivo and brown Sixos 28 ' ‘ - : T to 40 J YOUR SELECTION ON UTAWAY 89 4 v MONTHLY PAYMENTS HOLDS ' - I mSf - r SSERVICE miles was frustrated today by police who told Mm hovwould create a traffic hazard fife Cornelius a guard had planned to walKT-a50 miles on Ms bands octors V uiuHvmt FOREIGN ? i (On — Walter Cornelius’ ambition to match President Kennedy’s challenge by walking 50 Girl Found Dead I -(- win iaw ihhwc pirnum iTasmiGcALLiw General Jailed ? ' ledepeadeat Grocers j i - A Lafan Prodact Fladst Qitolity 'k - SPORT COATS Hey-bur- V ‘W - ' ueb ir dlceCreum 'fV'- : Missing Burley atory tests today to determine what caused the death of Sandra Heward 13 Burley a missing girl whose body was found in a slough near hero yesterday The girl had been missing since April 25 when she failed be contacts that suggested to return to her Burley home made with their family doctor school Two young fisheror local public health depart- bom Steven Osborne n 9 men ment four or five weeks after and Dale Smith 15 Oakthe final clinic to arrange for discovered' the body of the the makeup vaccine No more ley fully clothed in a slough public clinics will be held for girl the Burley-He- y near burn' the Type I end Type III vacbridge cine They notified authorities who Polio chairman report that found the girl’s schoollater the sites and times of clinics books scattered around the for the final round wiU be area practically the same as last The area where the body time Most oT the 5000 volunwas located had been search-- 1 teer workers also will be beck ed thoroughly by those looking to finish the job for the girl earlier An autopsy conducted late: failed to turn up sq yesterday obvious causa for the glri’a TEHRAN Inn am — Iren’S death so laboratory tests were first fouMtor general was sen- ordered Law enforcement offtenced to two years to solitary icers declined to speculate Confinement Sunday for cm- - whether the was victim of girl vbozzlemant foul niav -’ J '- ed Vaccine Campaign Is May 18 19 The third and final round of Utah’s KO POLIO campaign is scheduled for Saturday and ' ‘i£r Sunday May 13 and 19 t 'hi “We’re Just one sugar cube away from a wonderful victory W to this battle with e vicious foe and we’re confident that we can finish the job” reports Dr Atoo P Macfarlane state polio riieirman for the Utah State Medical Association More then 90 of all Utahns have nhw' been immunized for the typo andTYpe III virus r V and it is hoped that everyone f wqilj complete the job by getting the Type ' II vaccine reports Dr Macfarlane “If wo do that Utab should be the best immun- lzoj stats l In' America - for “ bo reported !"‘r I:'v polio Foe those who:' have missed cm of the previous clinics it fa r ! Round 3 In Utah Kayo Polio V 1 BeriSn D-Da- MEN’S better-than-avers- 'j J-- 'C ’V " £ m I Ryan ts the author of “The story Day” the EuroftheCAUied invasion ope June A 1944h ' ' Ryan said to Paria on Ms a rival from Moscow that the Russians told Mm howtbey disposed of Hitler's body but he refused to : elaborated He said “You'D just have to read it in my book” 3 ' k Western diplomats expressed surprise at the unprecedented Soviet effort to make secret military archives available to foreign moareheregov One possible explanation was that the Soviet leadership has been extremely resentful of Western accounts of the Soviet Germanyrar writtenabnost exclusively from German Sources They now appear ready to 2ND BIG ANNIVERSARY SALE experts the dropouts can be split e stutip into two groups Group one takes in dents who cent seem to get the hang of reading The words make no sense Yet reading is the heart of modern education the fundamental skill Arithmetic too is important but it adds up to zero for some youngsters Simple sums throw them for a loop This slow learner group includes 15 to 20 per cent of the entire U S school population They form the bulk of the dropouts Group two is made up of youngsters whose learning ability Is normal or even Seventy percent could finish high school if they wanted Between 6 and 13 percent of ithem are bright enough to do college work r M car-truc- ’fiondljobbyl970v ImpBcit js the fact that these 97 million 0 GENERALLY - Chris-tlons- is another irony Because e( automation and (yThflro devices' professional and tedmical Jobi Ira going to grow fire decade1 about ’ two-ca- He is caught In a squeeze play "JJiiaUa to qualify Jar the skilled jobs that art open the supply of unskilled jobs he might be eWe to fill Is drying up StoQUotfHir about 40 per j-- - dear ilijDb’igi'''clericBl and' sales Adds will grow by boat! Ray Sweeney 30 Spokane owner and operator of the craft was rescued by an unidentiALBANY N Y BPD— Monty fied party as he dung to the overturned boat Woolley the bearded actor Wade was killed and five famed as -- “The Man Who other persons were hurt lh a Came to Dinner” died today r collision Saturday in Albany Medical Center Hos- night four miles north of Pres74 ton on UA 91 pital He was S Woolley had : been ' on the - Reported to critical condicritical list since April 6 with tion were two passengers in a heart ailment He was mov- Wade’s car Stanford W ed to the medicial center from and Edward S Burnton Saratoga Hospital about' 90 both of Downey Christiansen miles north of haw' no bed was treated hr a Salt Lake lived to Saratoga Springs N City hospital Occupants of the other car were Mr and Mrs Y for the past few years ' Bora Edga r Montillion Wool-le- y Robert ' Murray' of Preston in New York City he They also were hurt taught for 12 years at Ida alma Miss Kuna died yesterday in k accident in Rex mater Yale before heedtog to a bufg Five other persons were Broadway Because of Ms chin foliage hurt me critically The other he was nicknamed “The Injured were Doug Roe 18 Beard” His most famous role Victor Donald Duke 19 Vicwas as Sheridan Whiteside to tor and Kyle Tonka 19 Vic“The Man Who Came To Di- tor who was In critical condiLess serious Injuries nner” He originated the role on tion were suffered by John Odom Broadway and later portrayed 30 Billings Mont and Gene Whiteside to the movie version Norwood 35 also Billings Of the play State said the accident It was a role Woollpy per- occurredpolice when a car driven petuated for years to the de- Duke failed to stop for a by stop telelight of movie radio and sign at US 191 in Rexburg vision audiences — that of a The car was struck broadside white bearded patriarch with by a k Oddriven fierce blue eyes ’at times om The truck and carby then danching a cigarette holder plunged onto the lawn of a between his teeth nearby home Woolley built his reputation as an irascible curmudgeon on the stage and screen But he tijgtari he actually was and easy to get with” along That was in 1955 when he came to Hollywood to play Omar the tent maker in “Kismet” his last major venture in the movies before retiring to New York ' Woolley bom Aug 17 1888 enjoyed e long success as a distinguished actor on stage end screen in spite of or perhaps because of Ms long and unusual beard v$i THEPROBLEM HUT THE unemployed dropout facea ccnb-tiur- ing apparently as the : result of hitting the wake of another ey TDes T becomes painfully VH 1 1960andl970 14lheo ‘' v - 12-fo- ot ed '’ -c A for the year to 52 compared with 64 at thia timoVa year lV Vs-- Meantime Robert Potter 28 Spokane was missing and presumed drowned as the result of a boating accident on Lake Coeur D’Alene yesterday Sheriff John - Bender said Potter was me of two meorih a boat which flipped over in Rockford Bay about :20 miles west of Coeur D’Alene ei it finalasssult on Army’s Longest Eastern ' Idaho traffic accidents killed two more persons over the weekend while north Idaho waters appeared to have claimed another drowning victim i '4 The traffic victims were Has-pWade Downey and Linda Kunz 19 Victor The deaths increased Idaho’s ' traffic toll &!two prinop x£fai y- '' - two-wee-k bookfc ifS :tj-x- Their plight has been described as “the great American Sir' 'tragedy of our time’ sr" jft- Ryan’s Research is for a new L : - v -- AMhe future of these youngsters according to former Secre- - One Lost In Boating Accident Labor Arthur J Goldberg is potentially the most dan £ fv tary of social condition in America gerous - Mar-sha- 4 ' ’ groups accounts of World War U may follow the Russians claim that they recovered Adolf Hitler’s burned body1 to Berlin at the end of the war Western observers believed today It was disclosed Sunday that the Russians bad broken 18 years of silence end said they found Hitler’s body to Ms Bert lin bunker when they smashed ' into the German capita? The official Soviet position heretofore has been tnat the Nazi leader may have escaped and fled to Spain or Argentina' iTbe Soviet ' admission was made by Marshal Vasily Sokolovsky Jo Cornelius Ryan American ?juithor who s recently study of completed a top secret archives of the Red - ? Tullier senior editor of The World Book Year Book reviews the situation in a series of releases entitled “Hie ' H'sV-With Mr Tuiiler’i permission' we ’jwill give some of his Views and findings t There are some' unpleasant facts i The 4 United States prides itself on its educational system— it spent an estimated $13 billion on education last year and on its related ability to provide Jobs for its youth Yet the million young people without' the make up jobs' biggest single age group of unemployed m 'workers in the nation Unemployment in their bracket is at least twice as high and rising at a faster rate than la older 1 f£ Paul Soviet ’Fresh ( j- Hdf — m 'MOSCOW it In what diplbniats consider major academic breakthrough- 4':Ryan was permitted to Inter- view ail the surviving key So- viet commanders during the t make their own version avail- - Battle ot Berlin except for the abfoto-WesteMarshal Zhu---schoIarsr'eS' iv the connection to with pedaDy He photographed scores of ' coming 20th anniversary of vic- classified documents and clos-y: tory to 1965!'-?- ' ely questioned about’ 50 top ls Sokolovsky was M a rsh a 1 ranking officers Including Ivan Konev Konstantin Geor Zhukov’s chief of operations during the Battle of Ber- Rokosovsky and Vasily Chlu lin and until recently was chief Vmi - ?®ThcTPfdblem fTt staff of the Soviet armed for- - ! noughts and : Of A vL i ’ ’f ’ ' y '' f ' ' F '1 : - J - r - " ‘ : |