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Show DESERET NEWS, Thursday, 2A iheeir Cal ifornia educator Wednesday criticized the bit of Puritan ethic in us" that says its somewhat sinful to sit down and read for sheer pleasure. Absolute pleasure is the one reason to read, Dorothy C. McKenzie, assistant professor of English at California State College at Los Angeles, said in a speech at the University of Utah. Mrs. McKenzie is on the U. of U. campus this summer as a visiting professor of library science. Adults can discover pleas on the part of adults to categorize books as childrens, juvenile, second grade or eighth grade literature, she said. Most books are ageless, she said, suggesting that every literary work must stand on Its very presumptuous its own and must answer three questions asked by the German author Goethe: What does it say? How well is it said? Is it worth saying? Mrs. McKenzie said, "Often if its worth saying for a child, its well worth saying argument that books should bs Included in mans cargo to earths nearest neighbor, said, Theres no substitute for fiction to discover the infinite variety of adventures that befall human for an adult." Books on fantasy, she said, are usually thought only for the very young or very old. Referring to The Hobbit, .. fantasy by J. R. R. Tolkien, she described herself as a her Hobbit fan long before Tolkien was discovered by college students. beings. She quoted Negro writer You think James Baldwin: on Speaking Important Books in our Baggage to the Mrs. McKenzie exMoon, pressed concern that all we have heard about lately is your pain and heartache are unprecedented in the history of the world. But then you read . . . . Mrs. McKenzie also spoke what elements man has brought back from the moon. There's little talk about what man will take to the moon. Mrs. McKenzie, or.: Poetry. If you have kids, CPA Candidates Pass State Exam : 27 fo'ISead eosomi IPleosyire-Qini- e ure in many books Libeled Mrs. childrens literature, McKenzie said. By KATHY CRACROFT Deseret News Staff Writer A August 7, !969 keep a book of poetry on the table. Then, when they go to school, they will already love poetry. Book clubs. Id sooner let someone pick out my food for me than pick out my books. If one Speed reading. loves to read, he will teach himself to read faster. One way is to realize every a and the isnt Important Read for ideas, it speeds you up. Book banning. I dont believe in censorship at all. When someone wants to ban a book, insist that he read the book he wants to ban. Here's some of the books Mrs. McKenzie wants to take in her baggage to the moon: Except for Me and Tnee, The by Jesamine West; Sound of Mountain Water by Wallace fitegner; ' The Lessons of History by Will Dur-ran-t; The Golden Treasure of Poetry edited by Louis Unterjneyer, and books by and about Henry David the American author who spent two years at Walden Pond. Tho-rea- u, Utah candidates who passed the Certified Public Accounin May tants examination number 27. They are: Gardner M. Bacon, Orem; Richard C. Baldwin, Orem; Jack D. Barratt, American Fork; Carol W. Brown, Salt Lake City; Brian O. Casper, Bountiful; W. Gordon Chris- Paul R. tensen, Ogden; DeBry, Salt Lake City; Barry A. Erickson, Bountiful; John E. Fowler, Bountiful; Worth H. Grimshaw, Cedar City; Blame V. Hancey, Jr., Logan; Cynthia Harris, Trf monton; Robert D. Hazert, Salt Lake City; Frank ChM Hsu, Salt Lake City; Andrei S. Lane, Ogden; Robert X Lewis, North Ogden; Jerry 1J. Salt Lake Citjj Madsen, James M. Mantle, Sandy; Kenneth M. Miller, Bountiful; Terry B. Morris. Salt Lake City; David E. Nelson, Sap: Lake City; Tim Puhr, Provo; Robert L. Schouttn, RivertoiJ; Lewis R. Tarbox, Murray; Roy O. Westergard. Bountiful; Dick E. Willden, &K Lake City; and Thomas Mb Wolsey, Orem. defending Retracts Plea In Slaying; New Hearing Set Aug. 20 YERINGTON, NEV. (UPI) Glen Lucas, 47, Reno, Wednesday withdrew his plea of no contest to a charge of being an accessory after the fact to murder in the fatal of a Susanville, shooting Calif., man. Lucas told Dist. Judge Frank Gregory that he had not entered his initial plea voluntarily. The judge then ruled Lucas could withdraw his plea. A new' hearing on the case is set for Aug. 20. Lucas is accused of the slaying of Keith Belt, 41, lowed the reduced gross felony charge to be filed. Franklin did not appear at the hearing Wednesday but was represented by his deputy, Ray Little. Court observers said Lucas had apparently entered his no contest plea in hopes he would receive probation on the gross r felony offense which carries a 5 year sentence. But they said Lucas withdrew the plea when a probation report recommended he be given the 1-- term. maximum five-yeIn the past, Franklin has indicated that if Lucas did not enter a plea to the lesser charge, he would be tried on the murder count Sugar Home and Bountiful e, Calif., whose body was found buried in the desert in October 1968 with three bullet holes in the skull. Lucas was Initially charged with murder. But Dist. Atty. George Franklin of Las Vegas, hired as the special prosecutor, al- - Death Due For Killer special selling OfS.LTecn BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -RC. Welch, 27, San Antonio, Tex., Wednesday was ichard formally sentenced to die in the San Quentin gas chamber e for the murder Sept. 25 of a Utah youth and the attempted murder of a California girl. Kern County Superior Judge P. R. 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