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Show The Salt Lake Trilmnp, Sund.u. 2 I .Ju!v l'CI 1. f Marilyn squabble irks Mailer: publisher insists its plagiarism 1 Jewish book Kc('rN: falls short Gimmicking car of promises unearths shady mechanical tvork History of the Jews In I ah and Idaho," by Juanita BrooksWestern I pies, 252 pp lin'S Bv Donald tom " Public ( ilicn's Action Alami.il." by Donald Grossman Publishers, J5 45. pi tnlrd hi pcrmix-sioiof publishers In most halt's the repair iri'tust rv innituls and rcgu ale that the repair kill' ilself 'ihe icsulls of this po! 'rai bet." as il is bilteilv known b disgiwnlli d (onsiimers, ha- - bilked Ihe u iis .it of billions of dollars a yr.it in ("sar work 1 Ross; i v i oe esainple pooi! trained nr mi-- i pipnlous inn ban s'lll'-lun- e e H ,l it H II s (id bud- leu, 111 hill' 'I be null' or rijs Ihe i at III bn rep ei .mil ll'r 11 e. Ki'n pi'ks !' 'il the lor I'm a uirk and ret. mis it wild a lirity ii.il fm I '(V Bv F.ric Pace New York Times W ,t la In . N $7 15. Fneountenng friends or relative',. Utah's Jews are often and somewhat humorously, asked, "ilow does it wistfully feel, being a Gentile''" Happily for the Jews who migrated to or have been bmn in Utah, fewer of the written nr unwritten restrictions delimiting their social and business lives have pi evaded heie than those that have and are borne by their fellows rKruheie in Ihe nation and world Forgotten I ra a ole from Fortunatelv problems all (.entile businessmen conflonled in Ihe almost forgotten era when Brigham Young established ZCMl and fostered a native form of communism labelled the I Order, slab Jews have never been fotced to "accommodate" and bow to an establishment with which thoy were not in aecoid hack of numbers in no wise meant lack of success Keen ihough the "Jewish vote counted a scant few thousand, a heritage of education, ability and probity helped provide the state a Jewish governor and a Salt Bake City mayor whose terms wen hailed as models by 1tahns who felt a need for a progtessive. liberal leavening of legislation in an essentially conservative state be (nod Repair Cars w in Rood as s repair can be gininiu the following keel in 'dead'' b.dteiv Remove one of the batters Wipe an insulating material on ttie batters post (ties! is some of Hie while or blue Mibstanie found aimiml Hie battel v post of an older ear) lieplai e tile eable. but do no! tighten it too ima h 1 'Ihe rallies Clunk sour ssork In Irving to start Hie car the engine should not turn user II the mechanic does not hei k tor his condition first but tries to sell sou a new b,. Iters or starter, lie fails Ihe test 2 Ignition pmblcms adjusted ignition points usually ssili not disable a vehicle, but they ssil! make it mn very poorly Remove the distributor tap and make the ignition point gap either loo nanoss or too '.side (mi that they Uat barely open on the high side of the tail1 or b.iir-ldose (in the low side) This will not mils (.arise the point ttei gap to be off but sstll throw the ignition timing oil adjusting, do not tighten the holddown surw ans more than necessary lo barely hold the points m plan Badly ar tuned . If the mechanic tries to sell a tune had the car timed a tew months ago ( up sas that you ami that it tiist recently hegan to run b.ulli II he ssm.t do a uuk ilmck ot the ignition adtuslmerds or if le ( aiumt m,.ke the ini run rigid in a couple ol liumdes lm Hunks Carburetor By tinning one or bo!l of the idle miv or seseral turns too far open, ture screws nearly do-e.1 cl you cun nrke the vehicle run very poorly or stall at idle The mechanic should be able to diagnose and fi this m l or to reabout one minute flat If he wants to tune-up- , flunks a he do or the cartmietor. place 4 Defective parts Obtain a defective part an ignition capamtor. starter solenoid, regulator, or what not Install it in place of a part in good condition This tests the mechanic's diagnostic ability, although he may take mine than a few minutes to find the piohlem Bewaie the mechanic who merelv begins replacing parts without making sure the part b ung replaced is b,.d over-hau- Some final points it is best to have your own mechanic disable your vehicle so he can fi it again if the mechaAlso. when the vehicle is unnic you are testing cannot lived. don't leave telltale signs that it has been tampered with you may have a very angry mechanic on your hands if he suspects that you have been testing him. Finally, be prepared to pay all charges Reducing I ost A recent study by the Federal Trade Commission showed that the. pharmaceutical industry is one of the most profitable in the United States This is not a new phenomenon nor is it surprising Americans spend over five billion annually for prescription drugs alone Wli.it accounts for the high cost of prescription drugs' First is the fact that dctoi are bombarded with "detail men" (ding salesmen) and pi emotional materials for specific drug pioduets leeent survey in Washington D". showed one biand of PHI 2)0 mg I .Oriels o! b'tt.n ulme (a common an tibiotie) selling tor '1 40 ami another In amt ot 100 tables selling tor So 00 rut-e- Basic Truths the volume at hand brings out these basic truths concerning Utahs Jews, it does so awkwardly, haltingly, and with a lack of tritely style and a confusion of errors that is at once sad and surprising in a book by Juanita Brooks Mrs. Brooks who wrote the definitive book on the Mountain Meadow Massacre. and who has a considerable and, deserved reputation for her works on Mormon themes, flounders in embarrassing manner when called upon to deal with a culture not her own She confronts the reader with the recot ds of Temple B'nai Israel and Congregation Mnntefiore, cemetery rolls and a roster of Jewish participants m two Hoi Id Wars. Il is as if an unwary visitor, knowing little of the Latter-daSaints, attempted a history of Salt Lake based upon the rolls of the Relief Society, a listing of past and present bishops, plus a smattering of information garnered at the church hi.donan's office While Sharp Mind Brooks Mrs Obviously. knew she had tackled more her usually than diligent researching, sharp mind and able pen could handle. She reports working on the protect then dropping it in since after completing eight chapters With its Haws (someone is the guilty of reproducing same photo twice) the hook is a beginning - a bare bones stait toward filling a vacant for those who wish to know more about llah than can be mind in "official" histones Creeks Catholics. and now lews have begun to point with pjsiifiable nude to those vvhii preceded tluni. Hhets Appetite Mrs vvliels Brooks the appetite for more nfm mutton en Governor Bamberger and his clan, cm the depaituie of the Ransohoffs and their stoic for San Francisco, on the role of the .Auerbachs in the community Solomon Nunes Carvalho, the with the Fremont expedition, was in Utah (nearly perishing of cold and hunger) m ls"ij Where are his drawings and photos'1 Does the Blocks on State Street a' Rin.id-vvasomehow relate u Jul.us .itd Fannv Bricks. who set up shop m Deseret's largest city W hat m Is")!" forces ate w en king upon today's Jewish are youngsters and oldsters members of the new generation departing their faith, intermarrying, migrating to to become Israel How did and do orthodox oldsters make do without kosher foods in Utah's or large cities' small towns What prompted Jews to leave the eld world in Dift (the deteat of revolutionists in How did Austria Hungary-- ) Jews fleeing (7. tils! Russia in sb PHD find the funds in bv pass New Ymk's slums and bead west to t tah" Del haps what M's B'ooks volume l.o ks is an ins. ght and a warmth. J'w ishno" n cdrcl to p1 iinb met Plan 'ho hue lti, nnd-cours- e shelf-plac- Generic Drug The mam reason that a bottle of ton 2 ft mg tablets of tetracycline coss si go while aimthei costs met four times as much is that one is the gem tic drag ami the othet a biand name Generic refers to all dings wih the '.me active components There will be a single generic name such as penicillin. for a drug which - sold under seven al biand names Brand name refers to the catchy title given to a drug product bv the manufacturer, such as Pentuls or The brand name is designed to stick in the physician's memory and inspire him to prescribe the drug Is That Brand Name Necessary? your physician to prescribe onlv generic drugs If he icluses. ask him why ha pieiers btand names, even though ihev cost you more Consider switch. rg to another physician if his answer is unsatisfactory. s Brand Name A'k your pharmacist whether he favors substitution of generic for biand names If he does, enlist his support in repealing laves that prohibit thm practice If he opposes it. find out why Feint out that generic subst.tution will permit hair, to stoik larger quantities, of fewer items and thus save money by avoiding a latge inventoiy. t Do comparison shopping Assuming you can read the often illegible prescrmtion (if you cannot, ask the doctor to rewrite it It gtbly), phone or visit several pharmacies and ask the pharmacist the price of lie prescription. Keep records of the drugs you take and what they cost If prices (if the same drug varv significants over a short period of lime, a'k vnur pharniacM why Compaie these prices with oilier pharmacies n rmtjii no If ftr Th nrnl VO'tr rhofii p0r lak Trifyor P 0 h Sr.d prir I 11 C h nun 4 pn'n o dPijn "ton. vtf i"1 ordered to of mnneir o"1 r On v not q 0' 9T hook mo money 0 k hftnt nf ' ino"r yrtur fihrory ihrmicth tv Kv Fork mpm 'ey vt the i sf of p tnq f the Arid or-- AS No' ce''s - YORK London rij c 11 It nkf Ndrman nt Mailer, in an angrv s.iit-missued through his libuatv agent thieatened unspeciited revenge against those who callc d him a plagiai 1st "No one is going to call me a plagiarist and get a.vav a it h do not ned other writ-etit words oi though' to make mvself a book" Mailer said after Maik Gouldcn the 11 of U chairman Allen, which has two published biographies of Manly n Monroe. insisted last week that Not man Mailer was a plagiarist and knew he was one This was his immediate to reaction the statement Mailer issued in New York saying "no one is going to call me a plagiarist and get away with il " Repeated ( riticism Goulden reiterated his criticism that Mailer's "Marilyn" had made unauthorized use of of "Norma large sections Jean" by Fred Laurence Guiles and "Marulyn Monroe" by Moiince Zolotovi. both pub'He lished by Vt H Alien does not want anyone to call I will," Goul-ciehim a plagiarist (Tribune Book 1 Reviews chairmar of W 11 Allen, a Buti'h house, publishing (bulged that Alader had sections impioMiv "lifted lawks bv two o! lie! w i M.u dv ii. in lor mi h.s foi'lu otnitig vvoik about M a n M oie oe fi oin ' s v 1 hrealens Suits laboiatmg on the . are a' n fnmwi for their abilit to turn a n irinr lllalllilK Hull into a minplite cm ilia'll or lb" t eplat enient s stems or ol maim such as Ihe (aibilietm. batter starter sislnn lo (b lepeine ulietlnT a hand is treini; per' petrated a (at ill goiid iimdition (all Inst be p;nn m n k'(1 and then taken in tin a lepair estimate I UW I sl.de-t- ent Mailer's I a w e r , lial !es Rend). O', s,ud, "W bat it means it ti.it unless Goal den makes a full apology Norm in Mailer will sue him for libel . the suit vv ill go on 111 gland, and he will k damages lawver for the publishers of "Vuiilvn." Crossct & Dunlap. said the tom thought it h.oi acquired woildvvide rights to iis(. the coniimer'idl male-rial- . lint (hat il the pel missions pioved not to be valid worldwide. "Then we have a tec lum al problem which we will s(i( bv getting Ihe lights fiom the right purtv " (Rioted ( npinuslv Mailer, who was in Washington last Tuesday also had this to say in his statement A "I made it c lear on many a page of "Mmlyn" that I looked to (tin too other vvoiks) for a great nun. hot of mv facts I quoted liom them copiously and the autbois were paid moie Ilian the customary rate for pel mission to do so "'ManlviC Imwevei its style, spirit, and mterpi elation does not rest at a'l on these gentlemen or other authors In fact, it goes very much in other directions, as am one w Ji be able to tell who compares the text " in 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Breal lost Of Chamoiois 2 Vonneaut Once Is Not Enouqn I Svsann "he Odessa File 3 Forsyth Jonathan Livinaston Sea 4 aul1 Bach Facing The Lions 8 Wuker The Matlork Paper L"d!um 6 Evening In Bvzontium 5 Shaw The Summer Before The Dark Lessino Law And Order. Uhnak 13 3S 62 2 10 2 6 10 Mac S'eeDmg Beauty Oonaid 9 5 GENERAL Dr Ak ins Diet Revolution A'kms 2 3 m O K. vou're 0 K 4 Harris The Jov of Sex Comfort 63 28 3 4 5 6 7 Loucihing Al! The Wav 2 Ho.vor 9 Svb'l Schreiber The Best and The Brightest HalDersam 6 The Imoiosion ConsDiracv Nucr 8 9 10 8 5 31 Vv Young Yeors Rubin7 stein Hour of Gold Hour of Leod Lmdberah 8 weiaht Watchers Program Cookbook. Nidetch to 3 (Coovnght) (Copyright) nation's known authors of ju.emle books will be guest faculty members at the seventh Intermountain Conference on Children's Literature at the University of Utah Aug . v (he only conference in the country which devotes an entire week to the study of literature for children, the biennia! meeting is designed especially for librarians and teachers, but will be of interest to anyone dealing with children. Guest authors will include Lloyd Alexander ("The Four Donkeys"), Nanny llogrogian Ritom For One" ("Always More"), F.ve Memum ("It To Doesn't Always Have Rhyme"): Baibara Walker ("The Spirit and Ihe Magic Farmer Penelope Gifts"), Summer ("The Birds"). Diana o kste n W (''8.000 Hoods Slones"). George (A ibrationV), Spencer Shaw (editor. "For Storytellers and Dr Landau observed Miss Hogrogian Mr. Alexander Storytelling"), and Antonio Frascom (illustrator, Crickets and Frogs) Dr Elliott D. Landau, con- ferenee director and professor of education at Utah, estimated that fll percent of the schools (list pets in America are without planned literature programs for children "Instead," he said. "A j optimist They have been motivated or courage, desperation circumstances to a higher level than the others on the desert around them Usually they fail, but the effort, especially in "Runaway Horses." endows them with a nobility that modern man all to often lacks. Janies B. Steele, Knight Newspapers. by e the 20th Century was largely overlooked in Hunawav Horses" is the second of the four lo be pubAnd like lished. "Spring Snow." first of the tetralogy. J hap-azar- pro- an spanning Japanese experience - - "i j: exists." which may gram result m a possible "dehumanization of our children " Bunging good books and 'J. iis'ioa um..uiWLmi.m nzv trrr-m- GIANT SELECTION NEW AND USED fPgi . LOWREY r HAMMOND WURUTZERS CONNS O THOMAS GULBRANSEN a r I KIMBALL e BALDWIN HAMMOND col u Sovf S3H0 1,425 NEW LOWREY SI 85 Model Rhyhfn b Oi Rs belis tope otayer autd 1,405 ' NEW 388 USED HAMMOND Full Console A l'Y) We New r t(An Mtviyd.iu.e po'u'ps 2 5 G'; Tbe Pfcr! DECISIONS FOR USED THOMAS Mony deluxe feo Co t over s 4 000 o g now only SUCCESSFUL $429 LIVING by Pres'dent Haroid B. Lee USED GULBRANSEN HAMMOND ORGAN suoo ' HAMMOND ORGAN S2 i1" Modal with rhythm I ooly $Q APA J Y3U I $300 Pfa ' . ixj IMHf S Open daily Mon A Fri 10-1 o-- A - -- ooe v.as a basc issue lieaen and a v.ar in de'ene Pre- - Lee, n to c' an uncomprommg manner, demonstrates tnat the gospel of Jesus Christ forms the basts for every correct decision In tl e light of eternal principles be discusses tue problems of and the companionship, courtship, rramage of or This choices is the wrong right everyday to the and success. key guideline, happiness DESERET MAKE OFfER 9 11 2233 South 7th East rgt or freedom in the grand council heazen v.as foust m its CONN ORGAN 1 ' While his act immediately-unleashespeculation throughout the literary world the tact Mishuna had just delivered to his publisher the final pages of a new work This year, participants will explore literature aimed at through lumor high schoolers and will include many modern literary topics, among them: divorce, homosexuality and racial and family pi oblems As There i a loathing of much of modern day Japan in all of Misluma s works. He was not Final Pages children together frequentlv and regularly is one of the to humanization of children and to the eventual creation of a better adult world. l tJ N4 Isao is the personification of much of Mi'luma's own philosophy. the archetypal man of action who is willing to stake everything for his beliefs. Regardless of how one might judge Mishima's characters. they are all willing, for good or ill. to take detinue steps that change their lives After castigating the organization for spinelessness. Mishi-111quietly bared his torso and plunged a knife into his abdomen in traditional Japanese suicide Confab features juvenile authors best Customary Characters "Runaway Horses" aNo has the customary Mi'lnma chartoitured. anguished acters and always expertly drawn Uao with ills cold commitment to act. his power to enlist olhers in his cause. Ins consuming obsession, is a literary triumph It was with a good deal of shock and amazement, then, that the world received the news of the abortive raid he and a group of followers led on the headquarters of a Japm anese right wing group Tokyo on Nov. 25. i)70 20-2- 1 Some- - of the Like all of Mishima's nov els. "Ruruiwav Horses' 1' su perbly eonti oiled and organ ized He was a master al e tabh'hing tension and dtama and in "Runaway lloi'C'" a sense of doom and foreboding grips the novel from the otart A usual. Mishinia has not wasted an ounce of prose in telling his story. n "He has taken nearly one of Mr Guiles' book and lifted it without requesting permission from the publisher. He has gone behind the publisher's back and tried to sneak in via the author. " 14 1 He was happily married and the father of two child! en. He had built his once-tluboriy mto an imposing physical specimen by strict devotion lo the martial arts And unlike some writers who fade with Mishima'.s time. literary power seemed to grow with each novel quarter 17 5 ! "Runaway Horses" is a masterpiece. The central character is Isao. an intensely dedicated who g Japanese young alaimed over crowing political and economic corruption in )!(K Japan The son of a high Japanese civil servant, he was educated in law. but turned to unting His lean, dramatic early prose won him worldwide recognition and brought him wealth most writers that never attain on Mailer's Commenting statement tha( he had paid the authors handsomely. Goulden said Guiles had told him hy letter that ho had no payment "That goes for Mr Zolotuu too." he added 31 i? Horst's Runaway Horses," by Yiik imo Mishinia- - Alfred Knopf Inc.. 421 pp.. S7. 45. By almost any standard, the Japanese novelist Yukio Midi ima, who committed hunkar: on Nov. 25. l'Cil. lived ar full and good extraordinarily Ine (.real experience "He is an author of great and he knows experience, damn well that you do not apply to an author to quote from his books, yon apply to the publishers who hold the rights No one knows this better than Mr Mailer. 10 JkkJ-- l. New Misliima novel called 'masterpiece spokesman at llodder and Stoughton. Ihe British pnolish-e- r of "Marilyn." maintained that its position remained that the book would be issued here Od 8, as originally scheduled "He are in discussion with AV 11 Allen and have nothing he added more to say Goulden said lawyers for his company were now trying lo set a value on the damage dune by Mailer's "plagiarism " !l is very difficult, he added, ' because Mr Mailer has helped himself to so much of this material " 8 4L. ukio M.ishima lum. tvvnv A New York Times Service This oncuvs's is based on re ports obtained from more thon 1S bookstores m 64 communities on Ihe United Stales FICTION This Weeks Lost Week Week On List z.it 4(fc.n asserted m:sr si:ij aims (Copyright) At U. An 2. Service Muk cuuiden, New York Times riter n BOOK O r t,r 'oi rj 6C East South Temple. Sa't Lane City. Utah 84110 rP icjt :,V 1 p 4 ,r) 0 , - r'.x 41 - d' , 7- rl 4T3 4 11 10 |