Show 4 f : And also the greatest paradiot of his administration For in the field of education he Ls a practical dreamer and it may very veil be in the end that his greatest achievements will be recorded precisely in the field of education where Ms WASHINGTON — PreSident Johnson ts working on what he calls an electmnic "network of knowledge" for the United I and States world i on a — trans- eventually rnit hiforrnation by satellite over large I 1 he has been mast severely criticized The Elementary and Seconardy Education Act of 1965 Is probably the most adm gni istration For in this he found the political formula that broke through the rhureh-statbarrier and enabled the federal government not only to help neglected children in poverty areas but to provide supplementary services to poor schools regardless of religious affiliation university that will store and areas of the :': j t ' r 'drw I i world' s surface I "Think of the could !Ives It he re- change" In –- -the narked Mr Reston Fast Room of the The student in a small White House college could tripthe research resources of a great university The country doctor could get help from a distant laboratory A famous teach or teaching hospital er could reach into a f classroom so that no child need be neglected And such a system could involve other nations too In a partnership to share knowledge and enrich mankind" i !:f ' far-of- - President's Consolation This Is Lyndon Johnson's consolation in his running battle with the intellectu thwpite Vietnam War the Despite the war In Vietnam extent of federal aid to American education in the last three years has been unprecedented The federal commitment for education and training ha risen from 1700000000 In 1964 to 12300000000 this year And in the last three years Congress ha passed more laws and committed more funds to education and heatlh than in all the preVIOUS history of the federal government The President's latest achievement In 1)r T R Van Hellen Typical medical problems are easily solved especially when laboratory tests confirm the diagnosis Treatand ment trsually is r 1 — ' when successful are instructions followed carefully The art of medi- eine enters the picture when there are many noncon- trlb utorythe83rrop- toms and physiclan must make a diagnosis from a mass of confusion 7 : - N 4 1 Dr Van Defies Many of these patients have complaints involving every organ of the body from the top of the head to the end of the toes Some are disturbed and unable to give a logical story of their illness The impatient doctor may throw up his hands and refer the Individual to a psychiatrist Frustrating Experiences Experiences such as these are fruse Trials and Tribulations By Florence Palmer K his papers - Twelve-year-oJohnny delivered was pedaling homeward one evening when he collided with motorist Chadwick in the 4 middle of a busy Is t Se-I n tersection : to'-- 1 kovo It verely bruised and his bike ruined - - to the young physiCian Under the circumstance the lack of tact and the artlessness of the adviser do not solve the problem The victim is diagnosed as trating having hysteria or neurosis especially when all laboratory tests are normal art that is not learned laboratories it Is dependent upon personality experience maturity and security of the physician On the other hand it takes two to tango" and people vary in intelligence education and personality Rard te 'ralk Medicine is an In textbooks and They may not trust or be able to communicate with their medico If frightened the victim misinterprets questions or leaves out significant symptoms habits or contributory experiences Frustration and depression ensue because the person is certain no one believes or can help him What is their problem? The majority have hidden anxieties and needs that are not recognized either by themselves or by the medico In time they develop a "chip on the shoulder" become defensive or just sit back and wait for omniscient words of wisdom Resentment sets In if a consultation with a psychiatrist is suggested Best results are only obtained when there is full cooperation and the physician is skillful in communicating with his patient ld -- N- ' the 158-0 I t t 1 L- -- - l' I ' ':b4 4' Mrs Palmer you ngster claimed damages from Cadwick "Not a dime By state law any- body riding a bicycle must watch out for traf- same as drivers of motor vehicles" the motorist argued in court ''but this Juvenile speed demon came through the crossing like he was fic the and to heck with oncoming cars Frankly I don't know what he was thinking of to be that careless" "Come now you have to make allowanee for the bly's age" Johnny's attor"After all rey rplied indulgently Johnny is only 12 He thinks like a child and in an emergency acts like a child It just isn't fair to hold him to the same strict accountability you would a person of mature years So pay up" Now here's the point of law you must decide — do Johnny's tender years exempt him from the care required under traffic safety laws? Study the evidence carefully then mark your ballot before reading the court's decision YES( NO( ) CAB writes: Mow does rheumatic fever affect the heart? REPLY: The Aschoff body is the basic lesion of rheumatic fever These microscopic bits of inflammation are scattered throughout the muscular wall Inner lining and valves of the heart The valves bear the brunt because they are residual scarring thin and delicate (leakage) results C W writes: I read an article about a famous plastic surgeon who discovered a new and painless way to slim down Little rolls of wafer thin rubber bandages are wound around every inch of flesh over the area that is fat This prevents circulation of the blood to this area The fatty tissues just dry up and die The method is supposed to work so quickly can almost watch a person "defatting" before your eyes Have you beard anything about this? REPLY: No and I doubt that It works The bandages do not curtail the flow of blood and in this regard the rationale is faulty that you 61-t- Both vulnerable I I I I I 4Lose Y14 I I ' -- J ' I f1 Civi 41A15 VI II I I SOUTH ( 1 at4AQ110 VA 47 2 4 PC 1 41 0 1 1 Q K1091 f) I i V98 A8713 41013 V7651 4 (165 4(11098 I 1 nee'' &ovemol A 8 3 2 471 'I Fhe Lf -- eh orin't be2n) EAST WEST s12-fe- 1 11 I! " am 10 tv 746114-e40-- : ) !I Trial's Answer Yes It cannot be said as a matter of law Oregon's Supreme Court observed that a boy of 12 had the Judgment to appredate the full extent of danger at this Intersection "The standard of care for an infant old enough to be chargeable with or capable of contributory negligence is that ordinarily exercised by children under the same or similar circumstances" the court quoted from the rule "and that at least until be has reached the later years of infancy a child is not bound to exercise the ettre required of an adult" Ctfp ' ' 1'476 - " - "P 4 I ' 1" I t'-- - f i ‘ ':i 1 )s ' i 0 '7' '' 0 1 'ii I :sr "41' - r dil!c:‘1 - 4 -- f'4:4 It ' I ' et ':' N47t' t Ait it 0 ' t PI ?ty(! ''$:''A a 1 t I ""!:‘ j ' 44 k 1 "444 ' - '''' :0 - ' i0k 7- --- t I1 11!'''-'- i i 901?-- e4 ri :' --) 4 C 4 6 ti- 116Aown4i Wbmbi loal -att t'lk i:' 4 r:4( Fighy the president of the Octopus Corporation uses an unorthodox grip!" North 14 l'aNs IA ram 5 V 6 A 4 East Pass Pass pass Pass V 1 4 Pam Pass Opening lead: Ten of 4 Quick thinking and accurate counting by East were essential ingredients of an effective defense against South's six spade contract - ''''' ' West opened ' 1 the ten of clubs I and the ace was ' played from South dumm y ( I'' 14' : -- s k ) frump in three rounds cashed the ace of re-- -' '''' I hearts and then 1i overtook his queen rlh it ::'4 with North's king ii- i-in order to run the Mr Goren suit two clubs and one Declarer discarded diamond from his hand and then led the drew 5 ír 'it' Jr' '7f7 1 - (--- 4 ''" NA li"i) " - ( 'r y ki) ''' ' - 1k0-It- e 11 IP ) LC "According to our Industrial espionage report Mr V- -I "Your allowance Is really a dollar a week But deductions you only get twenty cents" after Charles Barden Come' the time has come" he said "to stake another claim in the name of all the people a claim upon the combined resources of communications The time has come to enlist the computer and the satellite as well as television and radio in the cause of education A wild and visionary idea? Not at all are dreams strangest Yesterday's today's headlines and change is getting swifter I have already called upon my advisers to explore the possibility of a network for knowleige and to draw up a blueprint for achieVing There is something very quiet and moving about the President when he talks in this way All the yearning of the old frontier comes out in him He wants the small and lonely colleges to have the best teaching available He sees education ILI the ultimate hope of race and poverty and he looks to modern communications and federal aid as the means of achieving equality of opportunity This is something he really cares about and he has already started something in the schools and in television that will go on long after his other controversies with the intellectuals are forgotten believe Candiodian Prince a Master in Art of Balance PENH CAMBODIA — With ri INOM came to be happy than any ruler Aa In tenets Pdnce Norodom Sihanouk can world a - the about balance Ile- - bal has anced Washington and Peking in diploma- - stand-o- ff but cy s - art of the lot ' less this Is ! gnificant than his balance of the and old to struggle the his new - keep from past Mr Bartlett swallowed future This Is being an effort that no the leader has made and Cambodia Is already unique because the other by other Asian cultures to subside have Just Try and Stop Mc into total of Splendor Senator Soaper Reception Elliott Nugent still shudders at the opening of a memory of a new comedy at which soon after the first act got underway a drunk in the audience began to grumble ''This is the worst piece of junk I ever saw in my life" He repeated his criticism at regular intervals — a little louder each time At the first intermission the outraged female star of the production screamed at the stage manager "Why don't you throw that objectionable bum out of the theater?" "I can't Miss" mourned the stage manager "He's the producer" Sign Here: In a Brooklyn delicatessen: "If you can't find what you want on our menu try our Los Angeles branch" In a Chicago tap room: "Things to do today: 1 Get organized 2 Talk to your wife 3 Get reorganized 4 Talk to your wife again 5 Abandon entire idea 6 Talk to yourself" In a Maui discotheque: "Not responsible for dates left over ten minutes" At the information desk of a Flatbush hospital: "Please do not discuss your operation in the lobby" Interest It with new the in be Smart kids know that there is a scient- for the coloring of the leaves in the fall but they politely refrain faith In from shattering the grown-upJack Frost and hbs elves ific explanation past fascinating to watch the skill which Sihanouk blends the old and Ills welcome for Mrs Kennedy at Ls s' 11v-K- e cornpletely '1 ) In this constant minuet with change' Sihanouk is assisted by the Buddhist rev erence for tradition by the popular instinct to resist alien cultures and by agricultural resources which enable farmers to keep doing what they have been doing' for generation after generat- 44 ion Change to Survive But change is nevertheless the test by' which Sihanouk must survive Nis elder son went to college in Peking at a time when it seemed wise to propitiate the Chinese Even then Ghou i warned candidly that while the Chinese would always respect Sihanouk they might find It impossible to hold him In office against the revolutionary pressures Now Sihanouk's son is back from Peking and the Prince has put him In tight charge of the newpaper published for the resident Chinese 11 there are any iSIMI In Cambodia the Prince wants to be sure they are Sihanoukisms The people's growing taste for foreigti goods indicates a need for more tourists This will be easy for a nation as intrigu ' En-la- ing as though it means newthe old charm Eut- work it out As one of his "The Prince can do any-- -' Cambodia hotels and a Sihanouk will subjects said risk - to thing" NEW HOOD SMOW TIRES p WEI PULL A 775x14 Excise 1123X14 Excite Tax 188 Tax 209 to t r !4y PER PAIR Plus Excise Tax ERMAIL LONGUE WEARING I IAD COMPOUND RANKAMERICARD end -- 1 " SKI RACKS z ' rif t 4- NAT w 8 - ACCIPTED CABLES ViHEELS 7 YEAR TO PAY' BOOSTER USED -' WALKER BANKARD 0 MOUNTING FREE 249 98 Reg MOMS TO PONT COMPACT As Each c LOW CHOOSE imam CONTIRTIBLL AS: P795 j a"p so t lu BATTERIES° BATTERY' sun orp BORG-WARN- spades East concluded that the only chance for his side was if West held the queen of diamonds and declarer was subjected to a guess in the suit When the jack was led he therefore played the three without a betraying hesitation A Winning Decision South was called on to make a winning decision lie reasoned that East was more apt to have the queen than the ace when he ducked and on this basis declarer permitted the jack to ride West was in with the queen of diamonds and a club return drove out South's remaining trump A diamond was ruffed in dummy however East took the setting trick with the king of clubs If East had located his diamond control by doing his thinking after North led the jack and then ducking — declarer would havebeen alerted to put up the king from his hand After ruffing a diamond he is then in position to concede the other diamond inasmuch as he already has his 12 tricks - in Jazz years ago and felt himself I" o I3ut now the part of the avant-garderpool rhythms have caught the fancy of his young Ile can still push the ballet and folk music and write modern songs self ' Congress declines an invitation to re-- duce Its own payroll The list of people who have cut their own salaries can found engraved in large letters on the head of almost any pin The splendor of the reception for Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy is an example of the Prince's response to the situation He is not welcoming her as a pawn in his dealings with Red China He Is glad to have her because she is a celebrated figure with Et n attraction for the young and an By Bennett Cerf The al else like everyone though Sihanouk Is a modern man and he grasps at modern things when they embellish his showmanship He lives in a big new place that Is a clever adaptation of contemporary design The old palace Mrs Kennedy's lodging has been modernized and vividly lighted without sacrificing its ancient dignity Both places manage to be tastefully restrained begun modernity Balancing the old and new in Cambodia is no small trick because Sihanouk cannnt run a nation of five million people including restless students and dissithe dents way the Rockefeller s run lie has to let the bop Williamsburg bands play and the motorbikes roar His people want to taste the winds of change (Copyright) they are exceedingly dramatic Prince has had to cope gracefully with the intrusion of new forces even in his hobby of music Ile immersed the airport had the red carpets gilt chairs strewn flowers and splendid soldiers in the gold "costumes" of another day But the Prince is more of a poll ticlan than a potentate and he turned repeatedly with Mrs Kennedy to the crowds so they could share the glamour of the occasion Phnom Penh combines the best of three worlds The Prince has kept the appealing vestiges of the French including wide boulevards long gardens with graceful stucco houses But the city is centered upon the striking palaces and temples of the Khmers And it Is administered with a modern discipline which keeps the streets spotless A Modern Mat more it" of The bidding: West South 1 Foss te : 14: ek 0 c - ''''114"1' )i'1 ' e-- -7 0 !!! g " 4 c) "r ( ' C (''Iv-- - ea ':ert- 4 I - )4 " : ' - 4" 7 t 1!'1 4 0 0ril k f 7v 4 ' 0' 1 Of' tio 4-- T001'5 711 t ih6 :at ! 41A 1 t '' A ru 1A0 c: ''''‘ f v '—" 1 rot''1" t A1' i - :i p064 ' jig t to 0 ) '' 's I Objective of Legislation The objective of tbe legislation was clear enough It was to create a noncommercial television network that would be free of the tyranny of the advertiser the mass audience and political control But it came up during an economy wave in Congress and Mr ohnson misted the main thing was to get congressional authorization first and leave the question of financing it to some later and more propitious tune here again as in the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act his knowledge of Congress paid off The project was authorized by both houses without any dispute over money and the pros pect Is that once a distinguished and re the new sponsible board is appointed Corporation for Public Broadcasting will get the necessary funds through a supplemental appropriation bill his mind is now going Accordingly forward to these other projects for modern scientific developexploiting ments for educational purposes from dummy East had been following the proceedings closely and on the basis of the auction and play he was able to reconstruct declarer's holding with complete accuracy Discarded Clubs South had started with four spades two hearts three clubs and therefore of which had just four diamonds been sluffed on the long hearts East realized that if he put up the ace of diamonds on the lead from dummy and declarer held the king which seemed likely from the auction then the defense would take no more tricks South would merely cash the diamond king and trump out his remaining diamond with the king NORTH K 9 65 ) I I- I I 1 fo( tt avertv(s to i CP om a 211 By George Clark ' Q I 1341 By C en en en deals jack of diamonds South A 13 : rz4z011 t - o 1 Goren on Brithre still lifoo o tidily The Neighbors By MI ?jitt -0 Illas November Wednesday D-- 0 VKI1032 i Bear It 4- "I Heed Doctor's Advice Get Well Grin and this field is the passage of the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 This was what he signed in the East Room of the White House Tuesday and if he had not taken it In hand personally it is doubtful that this legislation would ever have gotten through Congress Time RI - 4i ne Salt I4 rr Mune New York Times Service ' 'of LBJ to Score Highest on Education? 4 1 I - "e james Reston 3 i: io- I I 1 v y el IN-CA- R The STEREO World' s Finest Stereo - - itsitmovo r 4--'11 4 44P 'Pew '''' - -- -- tau 7995 M9995 4 NR- TIRE CHAINS r 7-7A a SALT tAKE :i lig lac ri r rm 6-V- 1 t I 12-Vo- PM 10:00-2:0- 0 1946 MAIN STORE - Guarantees " OPEN SUNDAY r71 I r 1 EMERGENCY II Stares I Miming ibrprionc Ody t ir 36-M- Aldo S t - -- mimic Oh year St ids toot cartridge tad litho to am b woes Moo of woortisof olliront Ilt 7 oftimmood "mms1 oft lowtsols sorted the slot Is 388 1a 11 Writing t 12-FO- 4 '''a- : :75:"--------- UtObOrt Rttl A 4 (1 7 CHARGER TOW CHAINS ER : :3nIneed SO STATE ONLY Pori ) ri 1Z-1ra OGDFN 0 COTTONWOOD lt -I I ANKÄHERICARD a 788 1288 " i ''4 WALKER BANKARD GUARDIAN CHECK SERVICE tr :5 I : MAU 1:'::: i - 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