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Show Qh, and Also No Inspection" The only daily newspaper-devote- and advancement to the progress d of Central Utah - and THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24; 1959 its- - ' people I y$f4j Il Sl-- jP . Two Embarrassing Failures 'tP- jy" . American Space Program Is Doing Very Well, Too ' - Fellow In the Picture ' a civic 1850-5-2 .l.,v--4H:. i:1, Congress Faces Life may After the record of 1959, it. fore-- 1 h a lonff time before anyone, casts airily that, big congressional majorities gained at the polls mean easy achievement Vol party pro; in Congress. grams TVio rriconsna amnncr Washing ton" observers seems to be that the results this year represent victory for President Eisenhower, a : relatively conservative Republican, ample libagainst the. reportedly on Capitol eral Demorca tic forces ' Hill. probably explain Many factors, ' these results. For one thing the President's a considerably more . veto proved powerful deterrent to Democratic plans than was foreseen. It operand ated this way both in actuality " as a threat. For another, Democratic leaders, moderate to the point of almost matching Mr. Eisenhower's t views in some fields, chose a com- -, promise course they felt was not only wise but practical, in the sense that it wouldenerally avoid collisions with the veto power. On their "side was the mood of the country. The nation seemed to take to heart the fresh warnings of inflation: Business was sharply improved. The citizenry questioned the need for .heavy spending urged by rrnliberal Democrats. i xxiese tj.x laiter were. nanaicappea,i too, by their failure to show, at any time,: where the additional money was to come from. They never called for higher taxes or more borrowing, but simply advocated' costly programs. It could not be overlooked, ith -- f ' . this : was a. truly new Congress. uotn m tne Senate and House, many of those Democrats who won election on liberal platforms found thev. 'had not. .VpPYnoripnofrt nv ganize with the .aim of pushing their proposals to passage." They were no match for veterans like Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson, Speaker Sara Rayburn, and their established followers in Congress. " Moreover, a sizable proportion of the new men did not vote as they campaigned. Confronted with the hard facts of national life, sensing the mood; listening to the cautions of their leaders, they cast : conservative votes on many occa- sions. The net of all this was to cut the core out of the" smashing liberal election triumph of 1958. The events which produced this come may long serve, as an object lesson to easy prophets. : X-1- Assignment: Washington v For one thing, he anticipates attacks by 'bringing weaknesses himself, our progress in comHe even offers this Marie McDonald Crashes Washington Press Row as candid proof of our, freedom by saying: "We rentlessly advertise .ft and her husband of four months, TV executive Lou Bass, haVej been adding a big new section to their lanch house. It'll have a. master bathroom with a' tub of Chinese mosiac seven feet long.f fqur fet" . I wide and 28' inches deep. For three hours, Miss McDonald cooed about a lot of things. Her anecdotes, have body, .too'. Like the story about Alben Barkley. Her dad introduced her to him back In Kentucky when, she was seven "When I grow up," sW told Barkley." I want to be your . and secretary.". And Marie- - grew " grew. During World War II, Miss Mc- - . Donald stopped by Washington, plugging her picture, "GuesJ; hv the By ED KOTERBA WASHINGTON With our Conout of town, I gressional body decided to check on the shape of things at the swanky Shorehan Hotel. i . Across a small dining table in an our imperfections." Lodge is in fact giving Khrushchev a short cram course of the soft a student might get from an extremely knowledgeable tutor. And as he explains, he sinks some telling shafts into Mr. K's hide. Russian propagandists; for instance, like to prate about America's alleged "ruling classes." Lodge to Khrushchev : "There 'is only one ruling class iq this country, and that is the American voter." The ambassador also declined to . 7 . suite .. . hungry. Originally this meeting was to have been a big press reception downstairs in the Blue Room, but that was canceled and by virtue of bungling I was the only one who ,, shewed up. So we lunched alone, Marie McDonald and I She's here headlining her own singing show for two ... weeks. , "Don't refer to me as The Body,' " she said. "But if you must, then please don't write it Marie (The Body) McDonald, like everybody else does." Well, I don't intend to. Miss McDonald said she Wants to the body and emphasise her voice. And she warbl a bit for me. I found the voice had body, too. This gal isn't the ogre I envision- - ., ed when reading all those hoax kidnap accounts about her years ago. Now, she seems as lonely as the kid 'next door, if anybody was that lucky to have had a kid. like. her next door.; , She still insists those two hoodlums really did kidnap her and beat her" And after it happened the headlines dropped away she to went back to the beginning that old kick the jazz singing, started her to fame, at 17, in 1941 with Tommy Dorsey's band. " McDonald,' who has 28 . Marie she was a mpvies behind her is back up star in 15 of them there again. She's 35, the mother two adopted of three children a brand-neand one her own husband, and contracts a couple yaVds long. Her latest movie, made a year ago, was "Geisha Boy" . . with Jerry Lewis. Back at Encino, Calif., Marie the Soviet label "monopoly capitalism" stay pinned to our economic system. Mindful of the fact that we provide our citizens with the world's best living standards, he suggested "economic,' human- ism" 'as more fitting. Lodge is giving Khrushchev quotations from Lincoln, from the Declaration of Independence, from many another historic source. And he is heavily armed with the facts needed to document almost any aspect of American, life. Khrushchev regards himself as a pretty sharp man with the thrust and the. barbs, and of course he's got a trunkfui of misconceptions 'about America. But he's not likely to score any debating points on teacher Lodge, nor is the ambassador going to buy much of the stuff in that, trunk. On this trip he's hot only a guide but an excellent keeper of America's interest. or .. -- Washington Lowrjown Tough Man to Deal With In Talk By PETER EDSON NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NEA) Nikita Khru-schev- 's endless utterances on the early tour are revealphase of his American ' ing to Washington an amazing record of evasions,' distortions, and misstatements of fact in answers to direct questions.' This record is being viewed with some concern nere. .For it indicates the Russian political boss will be a touch man to deal with in his private talks with President Eisenhower at the end-othe .' . tour. KHRUSHCHEV DISTOTIONS H A V E TAKEN lines like these: At the New York Economic Club lun cheon, he declared .that Soviet Union wants more cultural exchanges but that mc. otate jjeparuneni is ninuenng them. The facts are just the opposite. The State Department has long been, trying to expand exchanges. But It is blocked by longer Russian delays in making and by Soviet negotiators who demand minutely exact equality In mission numbers and treatment before they agree to my thing. Before the. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Khrushchev declined to discuss aitalra in China and Laos. The reason be gave was that he and President Eisenhower had an agreement not to discuss affairs' in "third countries." President Elsenhower himself nailed that one with his press conference statement that, , . if we don't discuss Ber-li. , I would have difficulty in toeing why we got together" . Chairman Khrushchev's speech before the U.N. General Assembly was replete with distortions. The-- record he recited of Soviet disarmament was completely at vtriann with (antm tt thm loaf yean In history. in RKFEATRDLY CALLING FOR AH END of the, cold war and the of triendiy relation between nations the Slumlan leader ignored the : f . ; . Ue-cisio- ns n, 9' etab-Utkmc- nt fact that the cold war was started by the Russians in such acts as blockade, and the wiping out of democratic government in Poland and Czechoslovakia. His offer to in United Nations aid for underdeveloped countries was a complete misrepresentation. Last year the United State gav,e 12 million dollars' to U.N. technical assistance pro- grams, Russia gave $10,000. In President Eisenhower's report on American participation in U.N. pro- 'The chief grams last year he said: I . since, the ' .. founding of the danger Lnited Nations (has been) the failure of the Soviet Union to in achiev-inthe objectives of the organization.'' Khrushchev has revealed himself to be I a master evader of questions he doesn't ' want .to answer. When 'Khrushchev was asked how he Justified Russian armed intervention in Hungary, his reply in substance was: "We have a 'long time ago done away with, any questions that might have caused difficulties between the Hun garian pepple and ourselves." PRESIDENT EISENHOWER SUMMED THIS . UP NEATLY in observing that; "The American people are strong enough to hear this man and capable of making their own opinion, . , , 1 do not believe that master debater are-- going, to fool the American people long." In this connection, there is one fambu quotation from Abraham ..Lincoln that might have been called to the Jiusalan 'visitor's atentlon when he visited the Lincoln Memorial in Washington; , "You can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time. But you can't fool all of the people all of the time." The moral being drawn from ihi lit that the American people may get awfully sick of this act before it's over, And the visitor may be doing nf own cuuna rnoro harm than good. Vur thl in no way to relieve tensions. . " y r. Who are the only father and Q son to have their portraits on U.S. , postage stamps? A John Adams and John Quincy ' . jnr-mediate- ly . ; - D. By EDWIN P. JORDAN, Written for NEA Service Acne or adolescent pimples lis definitely a physical disorder, but it carries with it profound, psy- 5, Communiststirred " Are there any pure races of man today? .. ANo, The Pygmies "of the Ituri Forest of Equatorial Africa ' J, are close. Q j v A Wahinflton married? At St. Peter's Episcopal Church In Tuiifttall, New Kent 0, 1759, County, Va., on Jan. ' , . , Q river? y Which is Europe's longest The Volga, It flows entirely within the Soviet Union, inaife3' ing on a . four-yea- r I plan that totals ;ptA mCt Intended to make- a moVm'ias and also to put a foro-mjtfe laboratory into orbit.4 Ceoir cost 93.$ million tor the saw fi lod It is an advanced in? satellite and Is erpeet! - aa 3 raefW. establish the first tommuaNaHcae I system in space. Offc There is less 'dangef wfltttt&ejt Russians will best We will hs.. beat ourseivf by Jence and scatter4aiM. ,tW S-- . has pCas senhower AdminisrU kip much lost ground from 'stand-Sti- ll years that prweeded (k We had hetUr hope . that successor can keep 'the prorrrst srolling. . ' . - The phychologieal aspects of ' 2t U ; 15-voln-me andi friends to comment every 'morning, on. the ' state of a younxater's skin since this can only increase the selfconsciousness. However, it youngstar with this condtion should" take a fin grip on himself, get the best treatment and .advice possible, and make a real effort to .Jead a normal life without,, paying,' to much, attention to the disfigure- ment' of 'the- pimples which la ordinarily only temporary. : - biologist-detee-tiveSia- re p. cM enough fsr as much She goes on to say, ."Julie was always such a sweet child.. But for the past few months shs has . . "You wouldn't believe tot amount of disdain she ean get into two words, 'Oh, Mother I And those are the two words I 'hear no matter how helpful I am try' to i , ing be, a "I can't even buy dress to suit, her any more. She hat) also become very critical of the way I look, the y way J" treat( her. ; as they want, tout ar tired of always having Ao heecr the assumptloa that mother . knows .best., ,j If you ean kid her akctg a little, it might help to make her see her behavior for vhat-f- t is. When she" is being high a&4 mighty with you, try aaytag, "Yes, Duchess," .or "Whatever you say, Princess'.' and set If the doesn't suddenly rtsllie how - certainly been hard to live 'with. ' lode-penden- ce j eutof character she la fcehaviag. But if you cta't kid, tt Wkst don't squabble cr shew, Kurt ImU j lags. Just take friendsand so on, Do you' hive any idea of what has brought on . ) ' . ' Utitxga calmly . i and quietly. One mora tMsg? Dw't tZsr la locking for dues that will and answer re mlndrrf more adrift their questions, biologists any than absolutely. necessary, In, kef get i helping hand from nature. frame of mind, sht'U'fetl. that They dredge the 'Icy depths of you art treating, her llkt child, , the oceans and scale the peaks cf the tallest mountains looking, Ctand by important lines, ?Jt lid for for small dues They, hack their way the to let eies try while. And don't fctek rey'rt through steaming jungles, and alone. Many, mcheri e lya-old- s, pett ier hours into microscopes. the are going through eimt .Sometimes they perform strange iTpeTtmentM, such as mskJsg daflatlsg erptrienes ttat you art. . ( '.' - - . . ' TXkB;"f&l t ; FUN 1. What animals do yen in banks Mf&'CM' 2. What did the ' waU?. J. Why is 'A" like U Velsflf" . Sr - . ' ? -- Ajurwer 1. Doe and buek. f at the corner. 1. Because, it ... in the middle of day. create " j - WHY WE fAT T7 mm he -- "Are all girls of 15 -- almost impossible to live with?'' asks an ..l U exasperated mother. desf ' aeh ef tbese CtV ioteiM separated mte ' aubdivisions!. . - which zoology,- animals. And Do you like to read detective stories or watch them on' TV. What makes them exciting for you and me is the suspense . . we want - to find out ' who did It, or 'how, or" why. But life itself, the ''world around us is full of mysteries too. Why do animals behave as they 'do? What makes plants grow in special ways? How, does our body do this or :' " that Man has always wanted to solve these, mysteries of life. And just the way a detective pro-- . ceeds on a. case, the first thing that had to be" done was to gather-all the facts. The gathering and; the study of these facts was called "natural history." Today we call this. science, word comes from two words Greek f "bios," meaning life, and "logos," meaning a study. So biology is the study of all organisms, both plants and, animals.; What is studied about them Is their form, their activities, their' functions, and their environment. But today our not satisfied just to col- -' of facts, helter skelter. lot lect a to establish some links They; try between the facts, some relation-shiFor exa mple, they are interested in discovering the relations that exist between man and the millions of living things that surround him. They want to know what effect these living things have had on man's own development. And biologiita are interested in the greatest mystery of all: how life first started on earth and why it took the forms it did. So they also study all the conditions that, are necessary to life. And bureau keeps, juifss a detective fae, they try to classify every organism which exists en our planet, with all the facts about ft. ''bio-logyT- . ' , slons is ' a mistake for family or' certainly : ' t , ,1 acne. cannot be neglected Junior .( limbs and heads grwr U wrong place on organisms,., m tier to get at the mystefy,PT Biology is a very compIeaf5,V ence. It has twe main tititiesfi botany, whkh- deals with tf&K Today's winner Is: Cheryl Hugh, Kingston,. Jamaica. .' . 1,.' : this sudden antagonism?" ' ( Adolescence, I suspect, Julie Is tired of being a nice, obedient adV oi Which the new world Q part miring child and la striking cut at you In an effort to auirt her 'Wi fJrct called America? A own individuality, The coantu of what are now ; and It .u and tor 'bear it can' Rrizll, Uruguay Argentina, , gria TJw a little while, the phase will pats, name gradually came Into for all of South America and Many girls go through 'a Hat was Jatcr given to both continents like thii;.whefl they aren'tiyet A e : encyclopedia for school and home. Send your questions, name, are, address to "Tell Me Why!'' care of this! paper. Sure Sign of GroVing Up , Lake vary? ' It varies greatly from one , A season to the next, and from one year to the next. The area of the Jake is affected by the amount of water withdrawn from' tributary rivers for irrlgational purposes. Mnrtha 19G0,'-'w- . Win the Britannic Ruth Millett ' .' Where, were George .and . j By A. LEOKUM v Does the size of Great Salt Q - microminiaturization, ve'sty the h&5r )etter equipped - for r : v pull. Tor the new decade whtct' W have p4V "4? gins in f vhide-lbr"snew generation ' to the! moon and beyoad. feb which taxpayers are e4rey What Is Bio logy scarring : . Q gri programs of minlaturisaUa cj4 Tail Me Why g chological effects. If acne were not a blot on the appearance at a time when personal sensitivity is at its peak it could perhaps be considered only a minor affliction. It appears, however, 'at the same time that most youngsters begin to be interested in' the opposite sex and in their personal ' appearance so that it not infrequently results in unfortunate effects on the personality, i What causes acne is uncertain. ; lnecJion plays a part, but so does diet and it has been noted frequently that the condition . is likely to become worse when the adolescent victim of acne takes too: many sweets, or miscellaneous foods or drinks, out1 side of regular mealslf '; Treatment of the physical condition is of great importance. This should be taken under the direction of a skilled and sym- pathetic ' physician. .(.''! Patients are usually advised) to refrain, ' from certain common foods, especially chocolate,: nuts, j - ., part guQt, old-fashion- ed. de-tectlo- n,; - Adams." ' from Kha complacency, we did ot denrt the propulsion ',thst fre!4 necessary to hurl. atMilc', heads at indefensible 'speeds heighU. Husila took tbe prooulsion and 1 the' star B t by projectiles. smaller instruments, by ttre ' . Jft - cotf-ge-Glen- seafoods, iodized salt and sharp cheeses, Also, it. is generally wise to avoid sweets and fata to excess. It may be particularly-encouraginto some who have very bad acne and scarring, that the new methods, particularly th use of a wire brush as a plaainf method, can often be used if necessary to reduce the scars If they should occur. Such treatments are;not often needed but do offer Aope ti future improvement in the skin to one "who has been unfortunate enough to develop 1 O's and A's g ' ' i . co-oper- atq - , Acne, Pimples Are Still Big Worry tojTeeh-Ager- s . co-opera- te President. He, reminded, her about that old pledge. She replied, "H I knw you'd 'get this .far I would have been more serious- - about it." An4 Barkley:eye twinkltd. "If this way, I I .knew; you'd ,iurn-'otrtwould 'have insisted a It." Anyway, sh kised ithe Veep hi front of the news cameras. The next day she came down wijh Hie measles. And Barkley had never had them I The actress's press agent ' wanted , to quarantina the whole. Congress. But Marie said, no, there was a wnt en. This gal has a; mind of her own. And a body, too. ; . Your Family Doctor w the-Berli- . . 2' . Vice . , ; -- . v celebrity airy that looks down on the tree tops ot Rock Creek Park sat the object of my, search. She dined daintily from a vast platter of fried scallops. I had just a green salad. I wasn't fourth-flo- House," and visited with th . . V ai 't lrr. . , -- let- ' - " Khrushchev's up America's and detailing bating them. Dr.'-ClO- k. . but-on- , tetinnawsn-tatio- n, they have been JWtf;cJ quite expensive, per peirn4J stead: of cutting looee sj errdi of' these petty earritrr,. nan proposes to - hoM e?'..tCS we have ; the .optinnafr t&f?JLlz tion of engine thrust p4ytes performance1 It IS' slrtedy tain that our, satellites- -' given world sienee, were tefs? ' ma tion than the Jtu tns It is probable thai our left J'sr-it tion al vehicles, have bedlam productive of Rmg4erm beweftt.'''.Looking back, it appeare ,tSt: American wrogth!nklnf the atomic bobbing of jwas the- beginning of mxr t;f( scientific leaderthip. Part frtssi k: rough-and-read- tJ , payloads of scientific news-catchin- -- I stress to alter a prefrnl t5t t scheduled ten year? the.. our vehicles have earrltd s- fuller responsibility than pointing out the sights He is undertaking to explain and portray America to Khrushchev in all its dimensions. At first blush, he might seeni an odd choice for this task. The urbane, patrician with the Lodge contrasts sharply ' onetime shepherd boy and miner who bosses, the.; Soviet Union. But Lodge has been dealing; with the y Russians in the U. N for half a dozen years. Seldom has he lost his icy composure as he has again and again marshaled facts to cut through legalistic smokescreens or to knock down flamboyant propaganda put out from the Kremlin. Reports indicate this experience and these qualities are standing him in good stead on his Khrushchev assignment. He seems to be getting in some solid licks for our n . " . . at;J . Wash-ingto- Lodge. Our ambassador to. the United Nations probably 'classifies as the most distingu ished and most 'highly priced tourist guide in American history. Yet, quietly and efficiently; he is performing a much side. InfS of Lunik II and K-- l, somebody ought to say that the American astronauUc and space pro-- , gram is doing very well, too, .V.-"thank you. v While Khrushchev was In n and justifiably making the most of his country's successful moon-sho-t, we had two embarra sing failures; The Jupiter IRBM," g with its cargo of ' Vpregnant mice," fizzled out. The bad-lucNavy Satellite - called Vanguard didn!t take off. Instead of hanging our heads and cring- ing at newa stories about our own ineptitude, we' might have considered the scoreboard," Of the nine vehicles orbiting the earth, is American. all two the ;.Of, planetoids In solar erbit, one Is, ours and one is Jlussian; The U.S. has launched 12- earth satellites, with eight still up there. Meanwhile, you have to keep a hot wire open to stay abreast of American progress The world's only known ' airplane to take 'a man into space, 'North American's made Its . first powered flight While Big K was eriroute to New York.; Before; he had addressed the United Nations there, Vanguard' III had joined its two r predecessors up there. Is this good? It's very good. Better yet is the Impression of internal fortitude' among our space" scientists and administra- tors which a reporter brings away from bis interviews. It would be understandable If the inmates of NASA (National Aeronautics and ; Space Administration) began to gnaw the carpets. It Is reassuring, to find .that the . pace and purpose of an orderly scientific probe of the upper atmosphere have not been jarred by foreign. ' successes or by domestic pressure for cheap, quick spectaculars. T. Keith Glennan the NASA Administrator should get credit for .holding things together. Dr. Glennan himself has pretty well- -' orbited the firmament of American economy. When our middle-age- d generation was in was in Hollywood, first as a top engineer in the early talkies, next as a studio boss. He served in wartime, by bringing sophistication to underwater moved to the academle field In 1M7 as President iof the Case Institute , of Technology :';n Cleveland, where, he also.became ,. . -- . junket. His name is Henry Cabot 'el affairs leeder, was on leave ht WeM-ton as a member' ef the Assta Energy Commission V3t4t .,tT. Truman. Not long ago D.' nan made a depth , turtf , Ituisla and Its etfoeatyeoel e' " ' tern. . Dr. Glennan has refure c5rf By nOLEMS ALEXANDER Amid WASHINGTON, D.C. the Soviet's triumphant launch-, He's in most Of the group pic- -' tures you'll see of Nikita Khrushchev. He's' well known, but he's not attention getting any foregroundsight-seeing ; on this celebrated 4 which there Is a terrtUe t'vCtar Cit and a beautiful hertis, :villian gets puniihed"l Cs .C-we call it a "m&odrmMa,'. ZZM fe :kiMyvr that, this woH isar wvi t4 -- dtsertbe. fltyi'. aC4i5 ly used j i had songs and .jBUsk?-T"melo". la . . Greek , mm These plays used i .. 'saUonal. Gradually, part was dropped, tir cto i3-C- a "melodrama I" Wfa she s& ssrjd'fss i fltf we have audi K : -- ; , Eritaaaict TTtrU .Yearbeek 'ss E?ei,"f-riddles, jkef, trietf se A (7 fCy f Ta Why. Today' vttaer Is t Share Evase, li, terscrC Ind. ' ; r Darbs : By IUL COCTSUir U life restiy ' fettfi f t fcrtf, what were fclks drfagdiri.ng f thirty-n- f n years? . Jlett to idea . , eltff tt kids sttrtlpg' what tfcty trant eept graduated 7 ' ;; " t, ""i Every poHtleicn'ahev!4'afvv(ttt e t spedal hsls the ring, sd' tHt thw' ! ' through, e a ' '" i t;Ct etrihatpt T.e ssdcj ire lust e Dasirttrr it |