Show liPrtnptt tttittttlM4' I'V1 V DREW PEARSON EDTORALS OGDEN UTAH TUESDA Y EVENING AUGUST 20 1957 6A -- Irs United Nations Dates Session on Hungary ( Representatives of 81 member nations will meet at United Nations on Sept 10 to debate the Hungarian problem The Soviet Union will be on trial The complaint against the Russians and their satellite system will be the 150000 words in the report filed with the United Nations by a special committee which has condemned the Russians for their brutal suppression of the Hungarian people's bid from freedom The report of the special committee on the problems of Hungary is one of the most significant international documents made public in recent years It was compiled by representatives of Australia Denmark Ceylon Tunisia and Uruguay who were charged by the General Assembly of United Nations to collect "the fullest and best available information regarding the situation created by the vention of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics through its use of armed force and other means in the internal affairs of Hun " gary The report at one place declares: "What took place in Hungary was a spontaneous national uprising caused by long standing grievances" How the uprising was put down is fully described It is a terrible in dictment of Russian methods which the Soviet bosses will not be able to answer or explain away Giants Move to SF Dr Rutstein shows there are lots of things to do to fend it off and to ease its effects if the malady should strike Some of us in the West have followed the fortunes of the New York Giants almost from the time John J McGraw took charge of the team early in the century At the moment we do not quite know whether to weep over New York City's loss of this famous team or cheer San Francisco's acquiring the Giants We probably share the feelings of Giant fans everywhere and view the announcement yesterday that the Giants will definitely play in S F next year with mixed emotions The sports editors over the land have much to say about the Giants abandoning New York City but the significance of the event is too large for the sports pages alone because the move indicates the tired East is paying a new measure of respect to the bouncing energies and enthusiasm of our younger West It is stirring to contemplate the solemn fact that a solid group of canny business men are investing their future in the belief that a much smaller city will provide far larger attendance for Giant games than one of the three largest cities in the world There is a sobering aspect to the transfer however and that is contemplation of questions raised by the reasons for the move What will happen to the Giants and big baseball if San Francisco attendance fails to attain profitable marks? It is said that San Francisco is being put to a severe test This is true but so is big league baseball Preparing for Influenza Private Point Four National Planning Association tells us in a press release that U S business firms n countries operating in bring in new technique designs formulas and technicians They import the discover ies of U S research laboratories They sometimes engage in experimental research on their own part They diffuse technical knowledge by training their own Latin- American employes by demonstrating new practices and forcing changes on firms through competition This is what can be called enlightened operating through a private point four program that assist our neighbor nations to achieve social and economic development Dr Simon Rottenberg of the University of Chicago who made the study for the NPA suggests that U S firms in can make notable contributions by extending their programs by opening formal training programs in the U S to and generally helping to raise the level of scientific and technical attainment Here is a good neighbor policy that is a good business policy because as our n neighbors become more prosperous they will become better customers The business men who are doing these things are "selling" the private enterprise system in a region where the Reds are proclaiming the virtues of communism Latin-Americ- an i Latin-Ameri- ca Latin-America- ns Latin-America- GALLUP POLL "RIGHT-TO-WOR- Most Voters Support k Laws Right-to-Wor- N J If it were gin of 61 to S3 per cent left to the voters "to decide in a As a result of the Senate Rackreferendum whether the states ets Investigation Committee's dis" should have laws closures " laws not or the odds would heavily have been discussed in widely favor the widespread adoption of legislative circles as one of the the law remedies that should be incorA the survey by American Institute of Public porated in the revision of the Opinion finds that more than six statutes regulating labor unions Sen John L McClellan chairout of every 10 voters or 63 per cent say they wrould vote Jfor man of the Select Committee on such a law while 27 per cent say Improper Practices in the Labor or Management Fields has althey would vote against it This is not to say that the pub- ready sponsored as a civil rights n lic is Institute surveys bill amendment a national "right-to-worover the last two decades have law that would outlaw consistently found the public to all compulsory unionism With legislative proposals combe overwhelmingly sympathetic to labor's right to organize for ing up for action in several states the Institute assigned its nationcollective bargaining But today's survey evidence in- wide corps of reporters to first dicates that many people think ask the following question in tounions overstep their rights when day's survey: "Have you heard of state laws they coerce employes into joining k unions called or open Sentiment among union mem- shop laws?" bers questioned in the survey is While two out of every three almost the exact opposite of that voters said they were familiar of the general public Union mem- with the laws unions have done a bers say they would vote against better job of acquainting their " a law by a mar members with the legislation as PRINCETON "right-to-work- st k" 'Right-to-Wor- "Right-to-Work- I n fr - kcs WASHINGTON — J Edgar Hoover has been putting the heat on both Houses of Congress to pass the FBI Bill to reverse the Supreme Court in the Jencks Case He has almost made it a personal issue as between him and the highest court in the United States This is the second time Mr Hoover has stepped out of his role as an efficient FBI chief the previous quiet time having been his public political appearance with Atty Gen Brownell to smear Truman in the Harry Dexter White Case observers Many Washington have wondered why Hoover took this sudden jump into the political arena on the side of Mr Brownell As explained by his close friends here is the answer: During the war Hoover had placed agents with every American embassy abroad They had done a good job And after the war Hoover wanted to build up a super-sporganization to operate all over the world He had already had some brushes with Gen William Donovan's OSS which during the war was in charge of international espionage So when President Truman decided to consolidate overseas operations and replace the OSS with the new Central Intelligence Agency Hoover went to the White House to plead that CIA be put under him Truman considered this was too much police power for one man and limited the FBI generally to the United States He told Hoover he was doing a good job here at bSme and to stick to his domestic knitting This upset the FBI chief nt 2 fslgs jmm ill L ilji iNN Service inc ON HIS DOORSTEP is the problem of their changing JOSE PH ALSOP K Right-to-Wor- 'RIGHT-TO-WOR- K power status w Western Diplomats Face Problem: Alliance Showing Signs of Decay PARIS —Unnoticed and unde- bated an extremely grave question is beginning to confront the American policy makers Is it really safe to let the West ern Alliance the sole defense of freedom in the world decay into a mere loose confederation or worse still into a transparent false front? The signs of decay are plain to be seen by anyone who spends much time as this reporter has lately been doing in England and France There are plenty of these signs such as the prevalence of a vague but captious the specific and widespread distrust of the present American leadership including President Eisenhower himself and the al most universal personal detestation of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles (who is now the most disliked man in Europe since Joseph Stalin) anti-Americanis- m worst of all follies in foreign re lations Hence these surface signs of Western disunity might safely be ignored if it were for one practical point of high importance The increasing distrust of the American leadership is in creasingly causing serious policy divergencies among the Western allies Great efforts have been made notably by Secretary Dulles to plaster over the underlying disunity with an appearance of con cord But the policy divergencies are there nonetheless They are getting worse And it is time to ask the reason for this distrust of the American leadership that is so weakening the West ONE MAIN REASON In the opinion of this reporter there is one main reason The American leadership is now dis trusted because the Eisenhower administration has seemed so totally uninterested in the cen WORST OF ALL FOLLIES tral problem confronting our The desire to be liked is the British and French allies This VIEWS and NEWS By RAY WIGHT Why not a conversation like this? It would be a genial slow unspectacular sort of thing but it might keep the boys from exploding into actual warfare: Batter: "Well Percy old boy this here is absolutely not in the way of a complaint against that there ball which you called a strike which the catcher had to leap sideways nine feet to catch but ain't it wonderful what the government is doing in its schools for the handicapped these days? It makes me joyful all over to think that in your old age all you umpires can spend your reclining years teaching others like yourselves in them schools for the blind" Umpire: "Yes it is one of the big gains of our times George Other things have got to be done though for retired baseball players which have become too cross-eye- d to be able to find their way into left field or up to the cashier's window to pick up their pay checks or even crossing the street for fear of going two ways at once "It's a fearful problem too because the hermit business is already overcrowded and if you put a baseball player into an old folks home he would always be stirring up trouble by arguing constantly "By the way that was another strike the pitcher flung over the plate while you were working your lip Strike two! Batter: "That one sailed clean over the "catcher's head and up into the grandstand But I'm glad you knew he threw He tossed a coupla others that you missed entirely not hearin the thump in the catcher's mitt By the way is that your Seem' Eye dog on the loose out there pesterin' the center fielder?" Umpire' "No that was the groundkeeper walkin out to start cleaning up in right field on account of that last throw which was also a strike If you would like I'll engage to help you back to the bench" Father: "My daughter is used to getting everything she wants Can you give her that?" Suitor: "Well I can now anyway She says allright she wants is me" These two great nations once led the civilized world Today they are more and more reduced to powers of the second rank They and we too have to decide what to do about this decline in their power The problem comes in two parts The first and most obvious part is the progressive loss of the British and French imperial and PROTECTING THE PRESIDENT On top of this Hoover wanted to take over the Secret Service and its job of guarding the President This was encouraged by close friend" Gen HarTruman's colonial position Hoover has assigned oftVaughan ry Despite the glib slogans so en quoted empires are still pos- a special agent to Vaughan's ofsible to maintain intact — witness fice and investigated certain people Vaughan wanted investigated Hungary As for the second part of this which in some cases was playing Democratic politics problem of our allies' changing politics— Gen Vaughan in turn did his power status it goes even deepto best persuade Truman to use er It stems from the simple fact instead of the Secret FBI the econthat only a giant national Service and J Edgar Hoover exomy can afford the gigantic even House Appropriathe a got to maintain penditures needed Committee to earmark tions of modern complete panoply fully to protect FBI 125000 for the weapons ? President the As a case in point consider But Truman stopped this cold the British defense program as He to Vice got on the telephone elaborated by the new Minister and-tolhim d President Barkley of Defense Duncan Sandys since FBI wanted he the away kept This Suez crisis the end of the the job of protecting the program is squarely based on from President At Truman's request of United States the distrust blocked the FBI appropAmerica Sandys argued cannot Barkley riation be trusted to stand by her Hoovtwo rebuffs After these allies when American cold for hatred a cities are directly threatened by er developed time From Truman that Harry Soviet ballistic missiles with warheads Hence Britain on he never set foot inside Truto defend herself and Europe man's office Normally Hoover is too shrewd must sacrifice everything to thenno-nucleatake sides in a political to r possess her own But Hoover's friends wTangle deterrent Wre have got to make it clear say he was so bitter against Truthat we really are determined to man that he abandoned past practrans-Atltant- a Hoover Puts Heat on Congressmen To Reverse Supreme Court Verdict non-politic- al I wonder if one of the reasons the Hollywood people are reported to be so anxious to have the "Confidential" trial made more confidential is that they don't want the cash customers to find out that occasionally the romance you can see here and there around you in the theater is a lot more interesting than what you can see on the screen Bits of news you might not otherwise come by: The Canadi an dollar is now worth $1057 It has some relation with our spending too much money in Canada I gather Hi-f- i goose and - duck calls are raising ned with the ducks and geese according to some game experts in several states Resourceful hunters have made tape recordings of dulcet-voice- d ducks and geese then gone out the following table shows: to the hunting grounds and played them back over a sysHEARD OF tem which beamed them right LAWS? out across the flyways Genl Union The birds the calls in Public Members almost perfecthear fidelity suggestYes 66 825 ing in duck or goose language 34 No 18 that the food is extra good or Interviewers next asked the fol why don't you drop in for a social they ride the lowing question involving the job- - beam chat and to the muzzles in right freedom principle as follows: of the guns "Some states have passed Interesting but mighty hard k or open shop on the duck-goos-e population laws that say each worker has the What kind of noise does a right to hold his job in a com deer make I wonder that could put on a recording? It pany no matter whether he joins be would be a little heavy to pack not or If union labor the you were asked to vote on such a law all that hi-f- i stuff up into the would you vote for it — or against hills though it?" think anything needs Here is the vote nationwide and to Ibedon't said about this: In Texas for union members only: the human population exceeded LAWr? that of cattle last year for the time in the history of the first Genl Union state That's cattle only now Public Members 33 63 Vote for law Now that the Brooklyn Dodg 61 27 Vote against : ers and the New York Giants 6 10 No opinion are moving to the West Coast where language is more understandable it mfght be high time Founded Dy© Industry to work toward a little more Sir William Henry Perkin refinement in those little word founded the aniline dye indus battles between the umpire and i try the batter or the umpire and Such a change the catcher more women spec bring might Poisonous Ingredient tators through the turnstiles thus solving a lot of financial Nicotine is poisonous especially in its pure state problems 1 -- L?M st : anti-unio- 0'- Latin-America- 9 coast-to-coa- BABV fS8q y Dr David D Rutstein head of Harvard's department of preventive medicine writes in a Harper's article that if a severe influ- - Syrian Developments enza epidemic should strike our nation the Sir Harold Caccia British ambassador maintenance of essential services in each at Washington after a conference with community will be a major problem So he Secretary of State Dulles told newsmen he insists the first people to receive vaccine had some ideas for heading off Syria's drift should be policemen firemen and other into the clutches of the Soviet Union but citizens engaged in fields such as transpor- he refused to describe them lest he warn tation medical services and food supply the adversary 1918-1He recalls that in the influenza This was about the only cheerful note wave medical personnel were unable to in a dreary day of developments which saw care for all demanding attention transporthe Western allies watching the Soviet tation was interrupted and food distribu- Union gaining what seemed to be a foot in tion disturbed Life is more complex now the door in the Middle East than it was then the doctor writes Newsmen observed that the British am"Disabling illness in such occupations bassador did not say that Syria was a satelas operators of water purification equip- lite already He said Syria seems to be ment of the steam boiler in a milk pasteur- heading toward becoming the first Soviet ization plant of elevators in a city of tall satellite in the Middle East The ambassador figures that prevention buildings can threaten the health and lives of others" is easier than cure and Secretary Dulles The physician's article is a reply to seems to agree How it all will turn out rethose who ask why so much fuss is being mains to be seen but it is good to see Brimade about a possible epidemic because tain and the U S working closely together on the danger 'nothing we can do will fend it off" "Right-to-Work- mi 1 1 ' self-intere- ':p(lr ic H-bo- all our allies' interests tice and sat alongside Brownell safeguard (although not to the Truman in the Harry Dexter extent of trying to maintain un- White Case situations) practical colonial More important still we have got to make it clear that the Western m m Alliance really is an alliance a in wnm w true partnership And for this such measures are needed as an amendment of the MacMahon TO YEARS AGO Act to permit a sensible distribution of the tasks of common deDue to reduction in personnel fense collecIf we do not do these things of the Ogden office of the then "Save yourselves and the tor of internal revenue from will eight to our employes it will be devil take the hindmost soon be the watchword inside the Western Alliance And the United States will then suffer quite as much as all the other allies safeguard which it is humanly possible to as they both threw the book at "m The "dog days' are supposed to be so languid that not even a yellow dog will budge out of the road In Washington however the dog days are the lobbyists heyday This is the season when congressmen are so hell-- e nal- t to get out of town they pass most any legislation As a result the smart lobbyists wait until the last days of Congress and then pull the right wires to stampede their bills through Congress Here are some special interest bonanzas about to become law Bonanza No 1—A bill introJohn duced by Congressman which Democrat Georgia Flynt originally would have meant mil lions to Pan American Airways was passed by the House just 12 days after being reported out of committee Pan American has been trying to get this bill through Congress for several years It would permit subsidized airlines to reinvest their capital gains from selling airplanes without having such capital gains counted as income which would reduce their government subsidy This year Rep Oren Harris of Arkansas great friend of Pan American Airways quietly brought the bill out of his committee in the last hectic days of Congress and it was rushed through the House of representatives Opponents of Harris managed to take out most of the b profits for Pan American before it passed AIRLINE PUSHES BILL Bonanza No 2 — The airlines are pushing a bill giving them privileged status under the bankruptcy laws This would permit them to place their airplanes in "equipment trusts" so creditors could not touch them in bankruptcy proceedings Bonanza No 3— Certain airlines are pushing a bill by which the Civil Aeronautics Board would gurantee loans made to feeder airlines and to lines servicing Hawaii Alaska and the territories This bill has passed the senate Contrast — Sen Williams of Delaware has introduced a bill authorizing the admission of a Korean woman Ching Wol Nyo Ko to the USA She is the mother of the famed North Korean pilot who flew a Russian MIG into South Korea and was paid $100000 by the USA as a reward The pilot Kum Sok No now known as Kenneth Rowe is living quietly as an American citizen He is a senior at the University of Delaware He would like his mother to enter the United States But no lobbyist ii pushing bis bill WASHINGTON PIPELINE When Cy Anderson of the railroad brotherhoods worked backstage for the Jury Trial amendment he found that of the 51 senators who voted for jury trials 32 were friendly to labor 19 unfriendly On the other side and voting against the jury trial amendment and for a tough Civil Rights Bill were various Republican reactionaries and Dixie Democrats who traditionally voted against labor—a total of 29 As & labor man he considered himself oh the right side m nw m m m m ta m m m v By W L GORDON WORD STUDY "Use a word three times and our yours" Let us increase one vocabulary by mastering Is word each day Today's word: CALLOW immature "The young man displayed a callow disregard of the law" LETTER S Dear Editor: I'd like to extend my congrat ulations to the very small group of individuals in Ogden who are so gleeful because a new dog ordinance has been passed In short this law should read No Dogs Allowed in Ogden City" My condolences to the taxpay ers who will have to bear the extra burden of additional dog catchers buildings etc espec ially when they will be of no value after this law has been in effect for long It is impossible to raise a dog to love its owners and then not allow him to be with them Do we lock up all the human beings in Ogden because one man is a criminal? Mayoe you can imagine the terrific fears and is subjected to panic a every day Will the children open the gate and let the dog escape? Will someone cut his leash? Maybe you've never heard the screams and cries ol a young child whose dog has been taken away I have and never want to again — it's terrible Mr Herbert mentioned that dog-own- er registration of the September class of the Thomas-Dee Memorial Hospital's School of Nursing is falling short of corresponding figures for previous years"Weber College evening school has scheduled an extensive list of business and secretarial classes covering the most needed areas o u S — t h to the close How Q in this field Pole did the explorer Sir Er20 YEARS AGO nest Shackleton get in 1909? Due to slow construction of a A—Within 97 miles Storms and a food shortage forced the party new $15000 building opening of to turn back school year at the the 1937-3- 8 Weber LDS County Seminary somechemical Q — What times found in drinking water will be delayed The new buildseems to prevent tootb decay? ing will replace an old frame A—Fluorine structure Five hundred Ogden children TO THE tonight will bring to life a fairy EDITOR tale "The Pot of Gold' musical- dance at the Ogden Municipal (Editor's Note: The Ogden Stadium at 8 pm Standard-Examine- r welcomes letters to the editor provided It's the honor system that's they are in good taste and In keeping Ogden motorists within the public interest They must fun not exceed 300 words and the the law' Or- else it just isn't when the writer must be fully identi- for the mice to play Traffic Since Sgt cat isn't there fied) D E Shaw has left on his vacadrivers upon whom he the number of poisonings and tion the have stayed within watch keeps dogs hit by cars has been re- the law duced He neglected to mention — law of this v 50 YEARS AGO the real casualties the 300 dogs who have been The LDS Ogden Tabernacla gassed and the owners who Choir has dicontinued its rehearsgrieve for them the summer and will confor al! He forgot to mention the many the season's work with an people who despite the sobs of clude evening at the their children have had to give outing tomorrow in Ogden Canyon up their dogs because they could Hermitage not afford an expensive fence Supt Frank M Driggsof the and who know that if they leash Utah School for the Deaf and a dog constantly he will become Blind and family have returned vicious- 'v from 'Silver Lake where they I have one question to ask the spent 10 days of fishing and genCity Council Members and others eral out-dolife who passed this law Are you Weber county commissioners proud of the heartbreak you are instructed the county clerk have causing? ' to advertise for bids fcr the conSincerely struction of an annex to the counMrs Grant C Wood 2443 Tyler Ave ty infirmary at Roy Advance QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ENGLISH LESSON it necessary to close the office each day from 12:3a pm to 1:30 pm - or D ( |