Show - - - - wamt&v444 v voildv -- - - - ' - ----- p4kr -- ' - P -4 WWCowa-q-M- t -- - -- - ' ' - - 4- - "? I i ' - A I It - - i e Established 4 Sinn 15 1871 1041104 no every morning by 1952 :7 Eaturday MSrningJtin-'- : li Salt Late Tribune Publishing 0 ' Co gait Lilts city Mat ( ''' years ago a commencement speaker captured the headlines with his facetious but practical counsel to graduates to marry the boss' daughter if they really wanted to get ahead Dr The other day at Trinidad Colo George Nuckolls of Western State College told the graduates of Trinidad Junior College 'If we could learn to keep our mouths shut at the proper time we would spare the world much grief and misunderstanding "A course in silence would make a good addition to any college curriculum I strongly recommend the course for official Washing-ion- "' ' t : t 1 i -- 8 --1- m - t'At ' down i 'fi- e--- - I 4 ' 1 I I I 1 0 ' i s t - -- io' i 1 111:0A q:t 0 t E HZ P M 1 L r A" Thatik—et 1 t 1 -- 1"" rft rA!IP2f411:ifloliAl Pro) 47F100 I I D' I dr 'I'" 'V (1 At—t A rys a: -7 1 r AL I ei oe'N 41 - fftrfPvil4r:11 AnoA01141 I SI L 1 LONDON—Britain has eontrols but they are of a somewhat different 'character from o o V G I 1 I I kM711(4frJ1777) 11- I 1 sg111 Jo JAenr: Aide-- s I 7Apn -- u412 e"rouzizird ar244±0 I ''':: doctrine e I ' ‘ -- 42'N N ' I many graduates eepecially in the engineer-triteaching and profesisonal fields and pay is generally good Wromen especially a retoe OPPOP int offered almost 'unprecedented ' tunities For all the solemnity of the graduation exercises and the lofty inspirational words uttered from the various platforms the grad- 'e ' The thousands I t I t e 1 jt----- P 'i ' '' - ' '''' - ' ' ' c 4 - 1 ' :' ' ' - Sf '''' ''' ' e) 0: ' '4: i i ' ) - t - ekl '''''14X: ze'f' - '"'"-e ' ' e le-- ipc 1 :- - 1 ) ' - Vlo kr4 f - e: 'i'$'- 7 '' is:4 - 0 es-t- e '"' - - te-'-e- 4 '04” l'c'e ' "I 't it' 20' 't 'X ' ' ''''''' 7' ' - ''''W e: : - -- l''e ' --? "0"- - IA tlIP '' '''''1' ' ""''' ''''''''' ::) ::""': :m's0111- ! ekl ''''''''''':::'':-C!-::''''''''-:''''- : ' Rtc-MAN- mft4 ' htsid''?e141:4i'-'‘'-7F4e'40- ' 4 --- I L STOKES THOMAS Tidelands Kefativer - that WASIIINGTON—In winding up his truly amazing Atlanticto-Pac- of ific the presi-- nomi- - r"""1 with nation overwhelming twin in veto for Demo- - cratntial 1 t victories ' Iwo' California i r and South Da- kota Senator ' ' EstesKelauver of Tennessee :''' I 1 aos e 1 ii i I LA Alr Stokes also exploded a myth which of itself shows how powerful economic interests operate in politics The myth is one introduced by California's representatives in congress to the effect that the people of that state man WOMAII and child were ablaze for stale control ' of the so- called "tidelands" oil in marginal coatlands and were dead set against federal control of such lands in this and other states as advocated by President Truman on behalf of all These are as essential for useful grades happy living as A grades and high I stls We would like to think of John F Keiser of Salt Lake City and Mr and Mrs Young Drew Leonard Haight as more representative of the 1952 graduating class than the nocturnal raiders The latter couple are highest honor students at Utah State Agricultural College and the branch college and Keiser honor graduate at Judge Memorial lligh School received his diploma in spite of a r illness five months heartbreaking of which he was bedridden his senior year of the It boldly announced working in the Argonne Theatre Berlin airlift The hooks in the memorial library are not simply for the use of scholars and students as library books have been throughout Germany School toritim read Audi- - view 7 I just Lowell Durhanfsre- - r- of the - - performance and I agree with all be the the said about Alexander rector Ilam Park east Carlos workshop is an accomplished di- pro- fessional and as was to be expected stole the show But if Harry R Brough Lauren Bodges Kaye Abplanalp Lnis Hobson Warren Kirk Ray Halverson and Ronald Folkerson are amateurs then a lot of the professionals I've seen and heard had better look to their laurels lit "Julius Caesar" says: "The fault dear Cassius Brutus in our- not in our stars but selves that we are underlings"— Therefore no doubt the fault is mine but any ay I don't like Is Alozartt I've read that he was musical prodigy That he composed pieces when he was practically an infant Maybe "Don Giovanni" was one of them' It sure sounded to me like it nee Wednes- was The a day was English and the east's enunelatinn was excellent ”I've always s0rt 01re sented grand operas being sung Ag ve look bark now to 1918 Stassen Tray bake he'll getting a long running start fur 1356 but not1252 hither''' They are for the people—Provtdence Journal t the East d 0000 I and Workshopin The United States we hope has atomic leadership although there is cold comfort in that because the Communist enemy through espionage and its own ingenuity cannot be far behind The terror of one laboratory accident involving four persons might be multiplied a million-folif atomic war were to break out Therefore such war should be prevented How that is to be done cannot be easily said However there is no reason why because we are aware of the terror that we should let that knowledge keep tis from preparing to use it Rather the peoples behind the Iron Curtain should be made aware of the nightmare that can become a reality It might be better to try to convince them notihat democ racy is the better way of life hut: that the kind of warfare we and they are capable of waging could easily be the end of life Not ideologies but frightening facts should be the better argument in this year just before the 12th hour of modern history cost of a modern bomber the United States government is providing one of the most effective weapons in the cold war In Berlin The wespon is a library with 150000 volumes the first American type open-stac- k library to be built in Germany Books are dangerous objects Worse than bombs They keep exploding in people's minds and encoursging them to think—frequently to And the wisest thing think for themselves any dictator can do is to burn all of them he on knowing how quickly unremislay-handcorded knowledge evaporates Then he can rewrite history to suit himself and dictate his All this sounds like something out own truth of the dark ages but less than a decade ago It was going on The spot where the new Berlin library is to stand isn't very far from where llider's followers burned books in their time and not too far from where theRussiarts are volumes so far burning them it Is estimated This new library is to stand as a memorial to the allied airmen who lost their lives in the Tor less than th doubts also about' rark A good ear for music and a tast for music are two very different things which are often confounded—Greville The Opinions of a Drip Wedne sd a y evening the Nlissus and I went to see and bear "Don Giovanni" presented by the Utah Opera i - New Berlin Library raises 1 pletely understood as yet But if such accidents happen what about the deadly rays which can be set off on purpose in far greater extent than in a laboratory? Other Viewpoints test in whether the people in Texas and Louisiana the other two states involved in the oil grab are as excited as they are rented to be By were placed in a hospital while a watch was kept to see if they would be stricken by deadly radiation 'sickness which doctors said it would take some time to determine SUch accidents are to be expected The mysteries of atomic radiation are not com- that the lesson is not lost tipon the Communists that their old game needling is not a solo act but that any number can play The The Senator From Sandpit Ham National Laboratory in Chicago an establishment of the Atomic Energy Commission were exposed to a heavy dose of atomic rays They We hope here oil lobby I Frightening r acts sector" state control would seem indicate that the people were not aflameat all for whatever reason The oil companies which hope to profit handsomely from state control had merely taken the name of the people in vain and constructed the myth Should Reveal Hoax This has been plain a long California by ballot which is usually a good index shouldreveal the hoax to everybody- two-yea- Four scientists bill control for to the people who state a of which Congress passed for a second time this session A vote will come in Congress shortly on whether to sustain or override the president's veto Senator Kefauver's lopsided victory over an uninstructed delegation that was hell-be- time to any close observer watching the machinations of This was made a major issue against the outsider from Tennetsee supported President he Truman's position and would vote to uphold the president's primary door-to-do- campaign a greater extent their emotional onstrate stability and maturity as well as passing being acted out in Berlin which isn't according to the Russian script This tirne the West is doing the shoving For some time the Russians have been operating a radio station in British sector of West Berlin much to the annoyance of Ger-- rnan residents Nothing was done however until the Communists started their present wave of unpleasantness cutting phone kervice stopping traffic on the autobahn and seizing British governed hamlets Then suddenly the British blockaded the station "Any- one can come out but no one can go in" was the order The Russians don't need the station they have plenty of facilities in their own sector But there is the matter of prestige And it rust have been some sort of a shock for the Russians to hear the British announce with a straight face that the action was necessary "in the interests of the population of the 71 f United States With respect to regulation of wages and ir r""41 - how- - prices - t ever there are some similarifk ties Thus in ' ' Britain today f L the chancellor of the excheq- - Mr Lawrence uer who corresponds to the Secretary of the Treasury in Washington has the responsibility for dealing with the leaders of trade unions and industrial companies on the subject of wages Conferences have been held to urge the trade anions to be moderate in their demands though there la no way to reetraki them exeept by public Sentiment Speaks Out Bluntly The chancellor R A Butier has not asked for a complete wage freeze and has conceded that there might be some very moderate adjustments but he does speak out bluntly against the possibility of a wage-pric- e Inflationary spiral that could cause great damage and suffering before it could be brought under control Many of the trade-unioleaders are themselves convinced that restraint is needed but are afraid they will be repudiated by the rank and file are unless wage increases granted Probably the most important restraint that exists is the knowledge that if the cost of production goes up very high Britain will be unable to compete in the export markets of the world Can Bar Price Rises The government of course can prevent prices from rising and has already warned that profits will have to be someMr Butler what restricted says: If wages are pushed up in this way to offset price increases for which compensation has already been received they will- - themselves give the most powerful impetus to rises in prices at the very time when we have a chance of getting n d IS i - ' Any Number Can Play - 'A yk'1 'Itt'? Vtlos : ' e ' A ' l'1-'(- IA " -' '1 )s f '4 'tee -- -- "d- 44 ' 'Y ': - ' -- -- 1 1 4 ' - rze '"!-k"- ' - - t e i - - it - 1 -- 14' - ' iLt-- - - ' - 11 - ''A----'-- - - " el ' '1-f- -e 2 - 'et s b 4 — ' e'' 'd es - a - uation classes of 1952 will never be able to dissociate themselves entirely from' the'symWe are proud and bol of the nylon panty happy that the demonstrations of instability or lawlssness which took place on a number of campuses did not occur in Utah Idaho or Wyoming We are aware that there are many other colleges throughout the country where nothing occurred to lower publierespeet for the whole of higher education Unhappily however the irresponsibility and picadellos of the few reflect on the many So thousands of earnest intellectual and emotionally stable young people will suffer because some "boys will be boys" This year will not only go down as the year of the panty but it is also the year when college athletic scandals reached a new high We have had the spectacle of coaches backed alumni and worse in effect by single-mindethumbing their noses at college presidents and others who would change the emphasis to intellectual and cultural pursuits The college moral course be divorced from that of the community and the nation But we still look to the colleges for leadersitip for training and demonstration of democracy and good living In many minds college students are democracy's most privileged class and hazing drinking commercialized athletics and destruction of property and rules by' dormitory raids destroy confidence in some of our finest institutions They rake the old sore caused by deferring scholars from the draft student and faculty Strong leadership could change the tone on campuses as they can in communities and the country Doubtless college authorities are reexamaling their curriculums and general philosophy with an aim of eliminating unnaturalenvironment fac-tors and other conditions contributing to tension Perhaps the time will come when candi-date for college diplomas will have to den who crowded the lower canyons In a ' 1 those which tr exist in the 14 La 1 in foreign languages But now I feel different Maybe its better that way However my inability to appreciate Derr Mozart'a music didn't affect my admiration for Carl Fuerstner's playing and conducting it He's a wizard at in the ' keys! Heresy Breathe it not in here or home Or in theater or club Shssh! lest sleeping "longhairs" foam And divas slay me with a snub Put as one debased A lowlife in the realm of art Every man to his distaste— Mine remains that guy Mozart! me down Notes on the Cuff Department A woman was mailing the old family Bible to her brother Art a distant city "Does this package contain anything breakable?" asked the postal clerk "Only the TP11 Command- ments" she replied Mettome says That a pessimist is often a man who financed an optimist Nels Some minds are like concrete—all mixed up and permanently set I'm wailing for a chance to pull a pun on some of my dentist friends- If and when 'I meet Drs Sanford Ballinger Dee Stockman Ern Browning Cliff Springfr or Hyrum Bergstrom on the street I'm going tn say: "fliya did you have a hard day at Abe orifice?:" -- Maybe money talks but mine twit seems to sneak off ts hen I'm not looking Mythl Senator Kefauver proposed calling for a commission representing the states federal government and the public to seek an equitable solution that would recognize the interest of the states and the public at large rauley Was Opposed Included in the slate was Edwin H Pauley Cal-ifornia oilman former treasurer of the Democratic National Committee and bitherto a recognized power in California polities who it may be recalled previously was identified with the Tidelands issue The late Secretary of the In- tutor Harold L Ickes charged in sworn testimony before a Senate committee which was considering Mr Pau ley's nomination SS 'Secretary' that the latter in a conversation in the secretary's office had said that California oilsubmen would contribute stantially to the Democratic campaign fund if the Justice Department would withhold a projected suit subsequently instituted to recover marginal also Mr Pauley oil lands under oath denied the allege tions President Truman withdrew the Pauley nomination in the face of indications that it would be rejected Beats ‘'Machine' Again The government's suit to establish federal control was up: held by the Supreme Court incases involving California Texas and Louisiana In his defeat of the slate of uninstructed delegates which was headed by Attorney General Edmund G (Pat) Brown and included outstanding party leaders Senator Kefauver dealt a heavy blow to the regular party organization and again claimed a defeat over the "machine" This seems to open the way for a realignment of party control in California to the advantage of what John Anson Ford head of the winning Kefauver slate called "a growing and dominant body of liberal Democrats" Demonstrate! Strength The tidelands oil issue and Its part in the California Democratic primary is stressed for it goes to the fundamentals of the impact of formidable economic interests on politics It could easily be overlooked in the dramatic climax of the Kefauver campaign which demonstrated the southerner's popular strength in the west He claimed almost a clean sweep on the Pacific coast Previously he had won Oregon's delegation and he said he would have half of that from the state of Washington In his lone wolf campaign which he repeatedly represents as a crusade against bossism and machines the Tennessee senator has polled just tinder 3000000votes in 14 states and netted almost 300 delegates While in some cases it was in the nature of a sham battle herause of lark of opposition his Penes of triumphs nevertheless poes quite a dilemma for party bor4a si hp would prefer somebody else a compromise bt-Na- ' - British Fear of Competition Ilelped Nationalization 0 k ei :i) ):011' these now-900- i:t '4 :44-- - - - 4 itimomOmommig DAVID lAWRENCE : atomic-aguncertainties There has never been a time when uncertainties and troubles did not beset the world This spring's' graduates at least have the advantage over those the false conformity Is disloyal Silence Is golden if It avoids defaming a person with whom we happeo todisagre ButlhaArnericao tradi- 7 tion la to speak up for the things we hold vital Our hearty congratulations and best wishes A drama ' 4 spill--in- of picnickers and hikers the Salt Lake vicinity over the Memorial pay week end gave a preview of what is to come i ' 0" Thawing snow in the upper canyons and ' basins will permit a greater spread out of summer recreationists but as the temperature soars in July and August their numbers also will increase Wasatch National Forest officials expect an average of 200000 campers and picnickers each month during June July and August The figure does not Include casual motorists or visiting tourists who will merely pass through the scenic mountain country The influx of visitors poses tremendous problems consequential not only to the forest service personnel trying hard to keep maintenance programs going under economy budgeta but to the communities as well The delightful sparkling streams which make the I canyons so attractive to the relaxing picnick- ers also supply culinary water for homes and business houses Lack of sufficient sanitary facilities to accommodate large crowds poses a serious danger It makes it all the more necessary for caution and responsibility to be It calls practiced by all using the canyons Some for keeping vandalism to a minimum damage was done by vandals over tbil 11411PM0 rial Day week end Our lovely mountain canyons are among We cannot allow our most valued assets them to be spoiled by thoughtless or deliberately destructive persons City Creek Canyon Is being closed to the public because of In This necessary pre-creased contamination caution should serve as a warning respecting - c - ‘ ' I Crowded Canyons Armin n ' - 0 't I I The advice is good if properly applied It should not be practiced however when demagogues take over Too many people are keeping their mouths shut and their ' - Ir A 1-- 4 '''' - q e ! ' !! ' go to the 1952 graduates who have reached an important milestone in their lives It is interesting to note that 2700 seniors II Aly and graduate students are being honored at Utah's four-yea- r collegiate institutibns and in Salt Lake City alone more than 1600 youths I and girls received high school diplomas Thurs- I day night With exercises atlhe University of Utah today and at Utah State Agricultural College Monday commencement week will I come to an end in this part of the countr)yl There is a tendency to become grim and pessimistic regarding today's graduates tears of sympathy for men and women going out into a world of war inflation and I e'tiq'' ' V'A''Y0010-- o - 'wow Alb 11: klITTHe -- : ''s i' ' - Y 1 '52 Grads Must Live Down Sins of iMinority Twenty-od- d ---- ' No So Sinipto Arithmetic Ubts5alt faktiZtibunt 4 f I I stability" All this has a familiar ring to the American who has been observing the fight against Inflation in the United States But while the average Ameri- leader and incan trade-unio- n dustrialist sees inflation as an abstract proposition the Briton sees a possible fall in exports as a realistic threat to his survival Best Inflation Cheek The best check therefore against inflation is the knowledge that the cost of production must be held down or exported articles will not be able to compete against other countries The Conservative government has reduced somewhat the deftcit in dollars resulting from the fact that Great Britain buys more from the rest of the world than she sells The drain on Britain's gold reserves has been constant and it was nib of the main reasons why the Conservatire governmenteame d Into powerHad the defieit at the rate it was piling up in 1951 the collapse of Britain would have come in only a ' kw months Two Systems Differ The British and American economic systems are by no means alike In their operation Here competition is looked upon as a ruinous affair and this is one of the reasons why nationalization wam such an easy step for the British public to take Incidentally the Conservative government which is attempting to "denationalize" some of the industries taken over by the Labor government is finding it hard to sell the Idea to the fornrr owners who are being told by radicals that if a Labor government is returned to power the properties would again be acquired by the government Those who believe in private must necessarily enterprise look with a tolerant sympathy upon the efforts of the Conservative government here to find a way out of the morass Into which Britain has been led This has been brought about not just by "left wing" elements but by the lack of foresight and initiative of industrial leaders in Britain In the past who have failed to mechanize and who have mistakenly regarded monopoly and cartels as a convenient substitute for Competition - I I1 3 1 1 ! ' i ' eon-tinne- i q ROBERT C RUARK A Tool Bluilted Fine-Edoc- d vy NEW YORK—The old man I guess you svcruld call him the grandest old man quit trying and died the : other day at 92 This was 1 (' John It : s Dewey e ' :: one of the few : tc ' 1' Ogreat thinkers - t of the —long ) Al ' time we call past and pres- - ti! 471:-'"- ' ent and you Vit1‘''''!'' might say he 's sowed more 't--- 4 - l1 - r :: :' whirlwinds MrRuark than anybody else Dr Dewey made one mistake Ile presumed in innocent arrogance that the majority of his fellow citizens were partially as intelligent as he and there he made his mistake And aren't They weren't And doubtless won't be Unfettered Thous-h- t John Dewey was the father of what is loosely termed "progressive education" This is to say that he slew the little red schoolhouse assassinated Santa Claus and placed an added burden of maladjustment on a civilization that had been reasonably happy with the three Rs and lkicCluffey's Reader lie introduced unfettered thought into the public domain and ye gods how it got mishandled! The old 'man was a fine old man and a brilliant thinker he was too and a fine philosopher and a good practical psychologist and a great educator and withal he made more trouble for us than Karl Marx Becaus e principally John Dewey made a vogue of early and the lip readers seized on his doctrines with glad incoherent cries Propounded Idea His idea was basically if an Idea is ever basic that the young in mind should be freed to develop the richness of the moment rather than to equip the fledgling with the standard spare parts ofeducation for a problematical future He propounded the idea that modern education should be fitted to individual needs and capacities Instead of of a long the simple precepts his fathers Hia teachings being' fairly Intricate and dependent on responsibilities naturally got abused and soiled from handling by the inept The story is ancient about his abrupt meeting with a nursery school brawl involving his young son and another moppet Professor Dewey was shocked at the infantile mayhem and was informed that this was "progre- ssive education" ' Unbridled freeing of the coarser impulses was not what hehad in mind Not What Re Thought It Is ironic that the day after Dr Dewey's death notices were printed that a tabloid carried a finely furbished story about two little girls who had scornfully disobeyed Mama flatly disobeyed Papa and finally had flagrantly flouted the direct orders of a state supreme court justice sending the court into a state of semishock This might be called fulfilled progressivism and also was not what the old professor had in mind It is my purely private idea that the dean regarded mankind as essentially noble and simultaneously susceptible to nobility of handling at a Very early age I do not think that In his academic purity he considered a high incidence of lazy parents spoiled brats and incompetent candidates for There are some horses that cannot be led to water there are some dolts who must be scourged into submission to the common laws of behavior Show Small Progress Be all that as it may we have shown small progress in of popularity the for John Dewey's credo of eduHis advanced (then) cation theories of literally making the child his own master do not seem to have tamed the dreary of statistics of delinquency adult aberration of social maladjustment of rape murder dope addiction irresponsibility and general tinhappines s Maybe it was no better in the day of the little red schoolhouse and the little red hen But I doubt it was worse d tool of John The Dewey's- thought fell I fear Into clumsy hands and was turned and blunted against his original purpose half-centur- - — fine-edge- ‘" ' if :i - r ' - ( "' - - '7' ( - - - - - a I I ' I aa : j - e!'411 " I - ft t |