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Show omrttto ' SPEAKING OF, POLITICS 'Non-Candidat- es' JFK'S Candidates This Fall By M. DeMAB TEUSCHEB Deseret News Pt41tiel Editor name Will NEITHER the 1961 ballot, but the big battle In the Salt Lake City elections this fall is very likely to be between Mayor 1. Bracken Lee and Parks Commissioner L. C Romney. - r And this battle is apt to cause emotional heat which could hurt seme of those whose names will be on the ' ballot. In every election. .since he first burst onto the public scene. Mayor Lee has been a controversial figure, and the and pro-Le- v ' e "anti Lee - forces have been duly noted and attempts made to assess their on influence elections. But in this Mr.Teuscher election, as in 1958, Mr. Lee shows every sign of bringing also the pro Romney and forces anti Romney the into the act. AND THE END result may well be attempts to attach either Lee or Romney lab- on any candidates who seek the office. There will undoubtedly be some candidates for whom such labels would be fitting. But there will also be some candidates the labels wont fit, even though applied. For example, jp it is almost a foregone conclusion that els Com mission-er- s Joe L. Chris tensenB. and Conrad Harrison will again sepk the offices they now hold. And it is very nearly certain the pro Lee forces "Romney label on both the incumbents. It also appears likely that former City Attorney Janies L-- Barker will seek a commission seat. If he does, he will very probably be tabbed as a "Lee man. If this situation develops, and it appears to most political observers in the city that it will, some well qualified candidates who might otherwise have sought office may decide such side HOWEVER, there may be a compensating side issue, also. Some reports circulating in political circles indicate there may be an interest in the commission race which transcends the 1961' results. There will I dont mind hearing folks be a mayoral-it-y quarrel about their religion battle in . . . its better than ignor- 1963 and, ing on working the theory that in Committee 21-M- an there will be no end of reBy VICTOR EIESEL-most executive suttee sentment against what the businessmen call overwhelmdays, most business ' ing interference In their afleaders believe they have befairs. come second class citizens This resentment flared, for under the Kennedy Adminin one of Arthur example, istration. And many prominent busiGoldbergs conference rooms ness leaders were talking of inside the Labor Dept at declaring war1 on the Presi3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, about dent about the time he made his speech May 16. before Congress. IN THAT BOOM were some There will be of the highest officials of now and no open war cm the White House. But corporations now building everything needed for a landing on the moon, or the orbiting of an astronaut or completion of a 17,000 square mile Mlnuteman base. Mr. Goldberg had called his foreign aid request Is them together in the windup (k) more than; (b) less than of a series of talks parley (c) the same as Mr. Eisenho had had with professors, howers? union chiefs, contractors and A. (c). Mr. Kennedy said military brass all in search his program "will not in of advice on how to handle whole or in part unbalance missile base strikes. the previous budget In any Just as the President's fashion. labor advisor was talking to the businessmen, he was Q. The fiscal 1962 budget contains a request for apcalled to the phone. After all proximately (a) $4 billion; the noise and all the public (b) $8 billion; (c) $16 biloutcry and all the anger of lion for foreign aid. President Kennedy and Senator McClellan, 16 craftsmen A. a). Mr. Kennedys had just pulled another budget revisions emphasized on a Boeing project at long-terdevelopment strike loans. Cape Canaveral. Mr. Goldberg said frankly, it was embarrassing and Imported Mexican something would have to be done. Laborers CONGRESSIONAL being the public eye may be an advantage, some are advancing the possibility that persons Mr. interested in Harrison the 1963 mayorality race might take a crack at the 1961 contest as a means of getting their foot in the door. You can scratch one widely discussed possible entry in the 1962 U.S. Senate derby In Utah. State Sen. Sherman P. Lloyd Lake) is writing to a good many persons over the state who urged him to run and is telling them that he will not be a candidate. Sen. Lloyd, who was the GOP candidate for Second District Congress in 1960, had been widely mentioned as a possible candidate. In fact, suppor(R-Sa- ters of Sen. Lloyd had done considerable surveying among Republicans over the state sounding them out on the matter. But Sen. Mr. Lloyd Lloyd appears to be firmly slamming the door in his letter in which he states that he will' not seek the GOP nomination against incumbent Sen. Wallace- F. Bennett He is not shutting any doors on rumbles that he may again seek a Congressional seat, however, even though he has not yet made up his mind on this matter. Right now. Sen. Lloyd appears to be carefully assessing the political situation before making any moves other than the one notifying friends he will not be a U.S. Senate candidate. On the Democratic side of the ledger, there is much ac QUIZ "PRESIDENT Kennedy has sent a message to Congress requesting revised a new organization and working concept of the U.S. Foreign Aid Program. This quiz tests your knpwledge of that program: Q. In his March 22 mes- sage, President Kennedy asked that our separate and often confusing aid programs be integrated in a single agency. One of those programs is administered by the DLF. What do the initials stand for? A. The Development Loan Fund. The fund is designed loans to to make long-terforeign nations for economic projects. Q. The United States provides its largest amount of economic aid to three of the following countries. four Whichr is out of place: (a) (c) Korea; (b) Turkey; Albania; (d) Taiwan? A. (c). Albania is a European satellite of the Soviet Union. Q. President Kennedy is currently making revisions in Mr. Eisenhowers fiscal 1962 budget The amount of tivity behind the scenes, but little, if any, outward change. ) Rep. David S. King still wants to run against Sen. Bennett. So do Salt Lake attorneys Calvin L. Rampton and Brigham E. Roberts. Backers of all three are engaged now in checking feeling over the state in regard to their prospective candidates By the time the 1962 political fever actually breaks out, there could be some changes that could catapult some entirely new names into the picture or remove some now being mentioned. But right now, things remain at status quo. 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And as Utahs largest dealer, we add to the value with better trades - content to take a smaller profit on bigger volume and pass the savings on to co:.TLnar relaxed 82-7- ' USE THE FREED PLAN and IT BLAIIKET-EZ- E n work- - V '4, full-si- ze - A! 9 . strike-settleme- 315,-84- IF YOURE AIMING FOR VALUE, . V -- AT THIS POINT Arch Logan, a Boeing vice president said ers face competition respectfully, but bluntly, he from Mexican laborers imThe hoped the government would ported under PL law authorizes the Departkeep out of this one. The ment of Labor to enter into company would see to it that the work continued. agreements with the MexIf the 16 craftsmen refused ican government to obtain to work, the company would the services of Mexican laborers for use on American' replace them with members of industrial unions. If this farms under certain circumwas resented by electricians stances. PL Is schedan the base and they went uled for extension in 1961 out in support of the craftsand labor and welfare groups are pressuring Congress to men, then the company make the law more specific would replace the new strikers. or refuse the extension. This But the work would conquiz will test your knowltinue, Logan said, if only the edge of the farm labor situgovernment kept its hands ation. off this latest crisis. A few Q In 1960 the number of more phone calls were made Mexican farm laborers enand the 16 went back to U S. the tering dropped by work. more than 100,000. This reThe crisis was over. The sulted from (a) new laws never got out But Mr. story Mexthe influx of curtailing reflected the sentiLogan use harof new icans; (b) ment of most business exvesting machinery in several ecutives there. states; (c) scarcity of Mexicans seeking such employTHEY BELIEVE that any ment? government intervention In A (b). New cotton harrelations, vesting machinery in use in even by the respected ArTexas, Arkansas, New Mexthur Goldberg, is intervenico and Arizona, usually tion on the side of labor. large Importers of labor, This is their point of view contributed heavily to the and they say that the opindecrease. ions of the organized business community Simply are Q True or false: Mexico .is the largest supplier of fornot being sought eign farm labor for the They say that no one in U.S.? the leadership of the NaA True. Mexico sent 6 tional Assn, of Manufacturfarm laborers to the U.S. ers or the chamber of comin 1960 while only 9,820 came merce has been consulted by from the British West Indies, anyone in the Administration 8,200 from Canada, and 863 at any time before or after from Japan. the creation of the S. itinerant . ' t President Kennedy is modeling it after a similar tri- -' partite labor management public board created in Holland right after the war. This Dutch board has crested vast economic policy, ft deliberates. It formulates what becomes broad economic patterns for the nation. It is not simply s body. It can change the direction of the government It has, in fact This is what President Kennedy and Labor Secretary Goldberg hope to make of the American board. Since that moment, no one in the White House or the comcabinet or the mittee has communicated with the national business nor do the Chamgroups ber of Commerce or National Assn, of Manufacturers expect that they will be consulted on the holding down of the unjustified price and wage increases which the President said this nation cannot "afford. SO THEBE is anger and antagonism. And wheh the threat of international war passes, there will be a do piestic war on the industrial and political fronts. Could JFK Revise Aid Plan? JL ? government self-restrai- It .. . .-( -- rf Issues constitute too lsrge e hazard. ' t Presidential labor management advisory committee. THEY BAT, this comYET, mittee now is a permanent policymaking branch of the executive division of the INSIDE LABOR Tojta' tf0 Salt late City, Wednesday, May SI, 1M1 DESEJtET NEWS AND TELEGRAM, COUNTRY SAGE o' pftooucB , ' " ' t -' -- 'wc t - s Talapha Dawntawa IMpIra Tkhat OFfica, Hetol or hoasa, IMpira all yaar Traval AgaM. Na J -- |