Show J THE OODEN (UTAH) 4A faufctuii-fetuttt- stewart Aisop er EDITORIALS STANDARD-EXAMINE- S! SUNDAY MORNING Let Us Pray There’ll Never Be Another One Drew Pearson Stevenson In Dilemma Over '56 Race Bettor Storm Warning Service Even while the elements were mobilizing for the destruction of Udall Kan the House of Representatives was debating Jin amendment to increase the staff of ' the Weather Bureau Several members of Congress declared that if there were more weather men in the stations could throughout the land more effective storm warnings for the protection of Uves and perhaps of he tor-nad- ic Negro Congressman Wins Applause of Southerners WASHINGTON — It is not often that Congressman Carl Vinson of Georgia astute capable chairman of the Armed Services Committee suffers a defeat Jle is a tough and able legislative battler and most colleagues are afraid to tangle with hinv However Vinson took a drastic drubbing on the Universal Military Service or “Reserve” Act and the man who defeated him was New York’s brainy Negro congressman Adam Clayton Powell In a David and Goliath struggle that had the House galleries on edge Powell outmaneuvered and outtalked his powerful Georgia colleague for two hectic days of debate' Powell had greatly enhanced his prestige at the Bandung con- r fA""c wh?r he electrified for a 90 baric wage 1 might not be enough to satisfy provided property to read in Congressional Record that in the past eight years the Weather Bureau has had to operate with a smaller number of employes each succeeding year until now the Weather Bureau has about 1000 fewer employes than in 1949 in a Why this reduction should have taken place services for aviation period when the demand for weather and agriculture increased is hard to understand Rep John E Fogarty (D-- I) had no trouble inducing the House to adopt his amendment to increase the Weather appropriation by $3850000 to keep more stations to open 24 hours a day for observations and warnings and provide other services likely to improve the information ' and warning services If it is true as many lawmakers said that the Weather can if expanded provide far better warning service than at present the increased appropriation is assuredly justified It was-astonishi- ng cents-an-hou- y a‘ hcaan‘ Slewart Alsop didate the underlying e a11 t advic® has he been ‘J® assump-commerc- “J ted counsel concerns the u ma which all potential presides dilem-Burea- ‘paXuiaJwvere in“to of Stevenson rule” of America n" nolU i J cS tL?1? “hue acknowledgement by Stevenson of his availablility would be interpreted by his enemies as meaning that his tongue was out On the other hand every time a reporter gets within hailing week distance of him Stevenson is MA SMc man who already is President to parry such questions with dig- nity it is extraordinarily diffi-l- o £ult foiLa ?“ who merely wants at iviisauma' The university despite recent expansion will be filled its capacity when the next school season starts in the fall President McFarland says that if more money is spent for Sthout new buildings money will be lacking to staff the new build- - cisive Hurts Jin-- com-ident- ’s City Hall Notebook His Chances 'instead of enlarging the university the president favors Adhegvencs°0fs chancTof 1 10-won- ind seeming a ’ lie-ima- MS M — attend classes” I— t ge asstareiiya: a -- ers indefinitely short of joining Man Maus And month after The university president it seems to us is on the right month of artfully dodgins Queries track Why should expensive facilities and services be pro- - about his intentions could do him vided for young men and young women who are unwilling irreparable political harm mi“°rity among his advisers or unable to prom from them’ believe that he should solve this Yet We doubt that McFarland Will be able to advance dilemma in the simplest and most w thev passed around left out They to alioftheruTes city employes ssun& f t 4 his idea He heads a state university supported by the people a great many of whom would object to having their boys or girls excluded even though it could be shown they Pthisy were not college materUl he President McFflrlsnd probably will be Wise to plen for interpreted as a sure sign of a hanging tongue Another formula enlarging his university which has been proposed to hiip is a rather ambiguous statement to the effect that it would be pre- - & SK sumptuous of him to discuss the ma7er so long before the con- y®nt10”- He would then repeat Of National executive the director this statement so automatically Prenaergast Joseph that reporters might get tired of to Recreational Association urges President Eisenhower him call a national conference in the spring of 1956 to alert the asking The danger here of course is nation to its need for parks and open spaces seeming coyness a third formu- tile lindenied To read about what is happening in some populous assertion °hv !!e source Z - -- ! Americans " Washington sources are quoted as expressing pleasure over Sir Anthony’s victory This pleasure we believe is justified because of the insurance the election provides for an era Of good feehng between the English-speakin- g coun-Of tries The leaders Eisenhower administration and the Fden government speak the same language to a large ex- - “t in the lhJ thnmedCan aUianCe Sh0Uld gr0W Str0n2er 1 classified civil service However as a matter of actual procedure no new employes added to the library staff since council-manage- r government was have taken a civil inaugurated service test The city attorney feels that the library should be made a bona fide department of the city with its head librarian given the stature of a city department di- rector These changes would not do away with the citizens’ library board which would serve in an advisory capacity the same as the city board of health City Personnel Director Julian x W0ulda0urice flatly hat he was available and Stev- enson would fail to deny it But this too has a coy and indecisive tion so far as nvnI can recall Cftmoul0o OHiewnere TO ILUncn City employes soon will have a large and convenient lunch room removed from public view The room is being ar-ranged on the basement floor of Municipal Building under police department offices It will be outfitted with chairs and tables City Manager E J Allison feels the seclusion of such facili- ties is due city employes who “Ret advise v R Another potential Farley was gtaef tTe'Sociatk’Nati’onli ® Stevenson has long been obvious- - lyn4d0“to ’- a- Inched long' politi-summe- “Can you do anything with a report card?" Beneficial Tears Tears are beneficial to the Letter postage on the old Pony ey®s' ?hey helP to clear the eye of foreign particles such as dust Joseph Sacramento Calif was $5 for ing out If the cornea 'should each hal?°-unc-f' snd ttssue the dry pute the FaVleJ’theoryTh’eyb instead that getting the h®ve The’annoccmt K Richard Russell that he not run again they believe finally copper riveted the nomi-nation for Stevenson Most of the ?94a delegate votes Russell ed tskvTnJosTncVth'eyha’n den lds Seminary where else to go The only prob-- dents were held in the Ogden SC°o1 is LDS Tabeacle Clyde Parker best caiculatedMto1Uheip lstewen Was geera chairman and Carol son into the White House even ean kambourne narrator Di-hy 3: K&Tl agaiesident Eisenhower mnS Wood supervisor of seminaries Sethis wore Stevenson him- of the church de- to “the “rtment ot educatto President- is unbeatable His About 30 ’000 "Ratoon notices friends echo this view They P°in to certain advantages which f n?losed JPProxmately 16000 on Sat- Stevenson would enjoy against iu gei tZZ tot nof ehkyeriin wslnoubf to Vo® N n beenunweii ZIZZ J—How do the best “brains” In America Eisenhower’s account for President great popularity? of the nation’ When that question was put to a cross-sectiopersons whose achievements have won outstanding citizen-leader- s wide recognition and whose names are listed in Who's Who In America the one reason that comes up more times than any other is: intellectual The President’s — and fairness The American peo honesty d executive As one corporation pie sense that he is not a in“His it up integrity or opportunist! (Penn- caj spires confidence college president 62) The second most frequently gylvania is He stnctly himself at all cited reason was the fact that Mr a natural times person without Eisenhower is a war hero with or pose pretense” (Member of a brilliantly suc55) Congress cessful military Honesty Dignity career and the “His honesty dignity and he third reason is ms sm- f i represents what the people expect a President to be along The with in above average management of domestic and foreign £yste pu‘t0 matic sample problems” (Missouri judge 62) “His honesty courage energy of America’s outsucand sense and prodigious common standing cessful people in record of public service The s c i- education USA simply loves and trusts the Dr Gallup law ence him” (New York editor 64) govbusiness medicine Because of his middle-of-the- clergy ernment the arts and other road philosophy and the fact that he is a liberaL conservative he walks of life was: “If someone from abroad were draws from both sides The mass to ask you what accounted for 0f the people dislike both ex Eisenhower’s great popularity tremes They want a less central- would what you be likciy to teU government than Roosevelt him?” wanted and a more progressive one than Taft would have given T vy Three Reasons After the top three reasons them” (Massachusetts educator mentioned above here are others 4) PRINCETON sum me Former secre tary of the interior Oscar chap- 0?31 has eenu proposed for the Ut C apman has col-tribut- eroer-“talkin- g” Leaders Say lkes Honesty Accounts for His Popularity h°oui fo"actui md potential supporters as Farley Sen Ironically the Federal Crop Insurance Corp in its latest ai nual report pointed out that ‘ drought emphasizes insurance need Yet farmers who have lost their crops to the drought now find they can t buy any more insurance At the same time Secretary of Agriculture Benson also boost-o- n ed their interest rate on gency disaster loans from 3 to 5 per cent Gallup Pol! dJiing ” ' county JOSEPHINE has been de Stevenson is also being Meeting with GOP congression- al leaders however Ike did not indicate his plans for 1956 nor was he asked about them' How evcr this was on everybody's mind Senate G0P Knowland reported that he had enough votes to defeat an over- rider of the postal pay bill “Of course I am delighted to hear that” said the President “and I am confident that Con- gress will adopt another pay-in- crease bill that I can sign But we have other legislation on the calendar including the highway bill and minimum wages I will not be satisfied unless the whole program is adopted by Congress r ! cidedponf°rmula Johnson culture Ezra Benson will charge that the Agriculture Department’s action is like drawing health insurance when the policy holder gets sick Senate critics Poiat that Benson watched out for his own home sUte UUh which was worse hit than Texas In fact the Utah wheat crop showed the greatest insurance loss of any crop in any state— --seven times greater than the Texas wheat crop Yet Benson dian t cancel crop insurance for a single UUh Labor Secretary James Mitch- either must eat their lunch at U broke in with a comment that their desks enjoying the privacy was of a gold fish or buy them at it “high time” for both the and Republicans in Democrats restaurants to start some “action" Congress minimum wages instead of about it Mitchell added that the administration program is a genuinely serious problem npmncratii trend In states as New York ur - i SeYeuSOn ofnee kontv? SS The Weber County Good Roads was organized with officers 20 tificates to teacher trainers of appointed as follows: Thomas D Mount Ogden Stake Sunday Dte president Nathaniel Mont- School at commencement exer gomery first vice president O B rises in the Ninth Ward chap-- Madsen second vice president The raduates ere from j c Nye treasurer Charles R ing the Fourteenth and Eighteenth Hollingsworth secretary ffmri0cd top ciuzens wards Presentation of the concertized versi0n of Verdi’s “II Trovatore” attracted several hundred people to tbe Hotel Ben Lomond ball- m- - The'event was spoMorcd m We- - by the Rotary Club and directed Treasurer Arts G by the Rotary-Ann-s her County and the Relnao reponea I predict we wUl have a work day because of STff alleiance t£fs?SthJ? automation Albert Whltehouse director of United steel- - sounds a trifle hollow And the Workers and Vice president National Council Of Churches furren growing wave of specu- ' lation that the President really fs determined to retire in 1956 77 TheU 5 Should take the current threats to world peace which has so appalled the Repub- to the UN General Assembly— Former Prpsidpnt iruman licans makes the Stevenson men as gay as so many larks two-ho- - lihrVwVmlw bJ Htt fdminuf? I on a basis equal to others in the Sf® sT-SSS- are- needed- and- that u b him on the p0stal pay vet0 al- - Committee But Mitchell irritated Stevenson when he attempted entirely on his own to read the Southern dissidents out of the party The two men have seen each other since Stevenson publicly repudiated Mitchell and they have made their peace But the relationship is moreover? Mitchel? In' the rat is a natlve of the arid west- which seem it was ’ - There are aspects of the British election strange to American observers There is for example the declaration that Sir Anthony Eden’s Conservative victory was due in part to his poUcy of maintaining the welfare state established by the Attlee’s Socialist regime from 1945 to 1951 There is also the interesting fact Jhat while the Labor Party generally took a beating the' more radical leader of the party Aneurin Bevan emerged from the elec- tion in good shape He won handily and so did his closest political friends Sir Anthony declares that young people in Britain con-to his victory because they are turning away from radical programs This probably is true It scorns to US that young people in the western world are adhering to more conservative political philosophies This goes for young rrvs s assssssiarsa of —someone known to be close to it “’‘ ih? ai uiauweu caught up with procedure in the library although this is something the city intends to look into soon The library is run by a group of citizens who are appointed by the City Council and known as the Ogden Carnegie Library Board The board is handed an amount of money by the city at the start of each year to pay sal- - R Stephens who returned yes- anes buy and repair books and terday from the Western Region- - The Need for Open Spaces metropolitan areas is to indorse the Prendergast proposal Some regions are running out of open spaces New York metropolitan area for example will be The°T so densely packed with people and buildings by 1970 New Yorkers will have to take an overnight trip to find open country according to Planner C McKim Norton A man from Miami Fla who heard Prendergast make his proposal for a national conference indorsed the sugges- ' tion by declaring that Dade County soon will be without a cow because all of the pasture lands are being sold for hous- ing developments Planners say that even in moderately sized communi- ties the rush to buy sites for houses is so great few areas are left to provide parks and playgrounds This is behavior the communities will soon find reason for regret : Every resident ofa region where there is abundant open space rich in natural beauty is entitled to rejoice over his good fortune as he reads about crowded metropolitan areas where the lack of natural settings makes it difficult often impossible to make an art of living hours and other ‘ha!-rdtlvinti°- usually are the city manager for all others torae 'f ' ? who work for the city though they are as much a city worker as are po reP1yins in ef- - hce health in Iect me next time he was asked spectors and wa the inevitable question that he ter crews Council - man fouJd not refuse the nomination 1 ’t Library Workers Are the 'Forgotten People' selective admissions program to exclude those who have ning the Presidency in 1956 than Ry LOU the like gladwell little chance to make the grades 11111 But it is actually the board worn "polHkaYddiSawmy‘”s "he R'ort" “Such a program will solve a goodjnany of OUT prob- - himself is well iwInTbUm who operate the func-members pub! I Library employes are the "for-of With to him as an irresolute gotten people in city govern- lions of the library determine lems” he said “We will no longer need plead i ' Southern colleagues who op- posed him joined in the applause for Powells courageous stand Remarked Congressman Forres- ter of Georgia in the Democratic cloakroom following the second- day rtbuff Jo Vinson: ‘Carl has ' beat a more masterful retreat F th!!) The Universal Military Train- ing act will not pass unless it hill” bans segregation The President seemed greatly Ike’s New Weapon pleased when Joe Martin pre-The whip which was cracked dieted that Congress would act over senators to sustain the Pres- - favorably on a “suitable” postal pay veto was sim- - promise embodying most of the of Eisenhower’s pie but effective It was: “Ike provisions billion-dollar 27 highway run' if you don’t support year program him” On the eve of the postal pay Crop Insurance Canceled veto vote GOP Sen John Butler n hasn’t been announced but of Maryland up for reelection Agriculture Department will told a group of constituents that cancei cr0p insurance in several Ike would not be a candidate for additional drought - distressed reelection if Congress overrode arcas counycs have already the postal veto off from crop insurance been cut al Conference of Civil Service House Leader Charlie Halleck on the that thrisk is too ob- - of Indiana was even more cm- at Sacramento Assembly high th!?t "outraged Senate Majority ndon Johnson whose L'ader Ike s decision on whether to run home state of Texas is in the cen- city government than Ogdens m man Wh0 seems to seek the presf-Burea- u dency with his tongue hanging Montana newspapers gave prominent displaylast h‘£e 1M6Ttat“ntioSe to Montana University President McFarland’s suggestion aS3 the is not it too of students although number university the difficult entering for trimming for jngS labor Eisenhower Mitchell and the GOP congressional leaders final-lagreed to consider a “com- promise” of $1 an hour as a minimum wage ceiling but no higher Ike also agreed to a suggestion by House Leader Joe Martin that he modify his demands for superhighway legislation in order to insure passage The President said however that he was unalterably opposed to the alternate bill by Democratic sen Albert Gore of Tennessee “The Gore would leave us with a 7 billion-dolla- r deficit for highway construction with no way to get the money from the states” contended Eisenhower -Moreover 'I am Informed that 0nly one atate — California — would actually be eligible for the highway program under the Gore I R Montana University's Problems MAY 29 1953 A Herrick had presented the LDS Weber Academy domestic arts department with 12 high grade sewing machines of the Va'“e °f °n bChaU school the gift was accepted President Charles F Middleton V director of Joseph Ballantyne Lawrence H Evans was ap- Mrs Lydia H Tanner who re- LDS Ogden Tabernacle choir tired after 30 years in the home pointed bishop of the LDS Sixth was overwhelmed with offers of economics department of Weber Ward to succeed Bishop Arthur singers to join the organization College delivered the sermon at Haivorcon mnncrinrs amjointed since it had been announced that baccalaureate services held in the choir would sing during the Keuer aI Cla session of the National the Moench auditorium Music were Irvlne Irrigation was under the direction of J ence Neuensch wander Ben J Congress At the Portland Fair in Clair Anderson Griffin was retained as clerk August t try’fierTsfsVhLd" and his party’s and he is brave enough to believe openly in the old Biblical virtues and teach- mEn lueal5 5lalulc His basic £olitical phuosophy” inw” ( Arizona investment coun egor 53) “Simplicity modesty’ “First of course because he “His approach” such a magnificent Job as dld “Common sense good judgment” non-partisa- n SStaSSTSSSi beAusuh “Candor straightforwardness” “Enlightened grasp of world “His spiritual leader-affairs” “Fairness tolerance” ship” “Political amateurism” “His dignity” “Tact” of humor” “Sense “Courage” and “Steadiness” Some typical replies: “Mr Eisenhower’ genuine in- terest in the U S has sincerity 4 so generally felt that he Is so honest” (Virginia educator 70) Flower-Bud- s are the unexpanded of the caper plant with vinegar for use as prepared a pickle according to the Ency clopedia Britannica Capers flower-bud-s |