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Show ,,, . .. . - - - - '' '' ': ,; s,sEr2sr. ;' ': .' -- - ' ''' ' fution , '''' ') W, - ' - , , - , aPPlauding-----thePresident- - , - ..., ' - -- ' , 's an-atta- - --- - ' while ' -. ,,. - two-hou- - has 4lie . . .. -- tailidg--t- ' ' a,a - - -' still,- - , - , was-the-pro- , ' r ammunition, which they surelrwill trot litgagree President and t withthe his di s- nt agrees-mecannot be ,challenged,nitourse but flamboyant talk about "the threat of preventive war being im- --e hes- - ' , ' -- - '. , - ... . I , .. .. -- ''- e l'Editorss,note? - 1, .. . . and sit. .1. The enemy would laVe an- other "sanctuary" to which he couldI retreat ,' and, unmolested, build up his reserves until he was- - ready to attack us at a time and our .place of IiIS' own Choosing.. This Korea be our in and itwould undoing .undoing around Formosaand it is fright- ening to find that members of Congress art? not able. to see that fact clearly. . ,... avorable, and ., a.,. ',., , li-t- u'st a Itii-b- it the cold' war "hitt-ir-e . . a . ,, , ' ' -7' , ' . - ' . -- ' -- ....,,, 142 - - -, , 3- , ,..:-- , I IP - ' ..,.;4'1-4,--- 41,,,1 - .... ,,a. ' :- . --'- --- -'' ---:- ' , - ' .- , ' - - -- - "' -..--- : ,.... 4, I KIANGSHAN - i --- - - iii, . - - - , I . ,,7,"- - , . , .!t i . '.- -1 Sha sien - .',.. ',. ,,, i9';'--- . Pis, I 1 I Z1, 1 :- -, 4110 N 7 ,,,,-7,' - ,.--.l" t. 4. - ' ., - ' , ;-.---- - - - k ' - - s. ' , ,- ArNAC:c - -- - , , 16 -- the-senato- r's . , . - -- , - . ' '. : ..: - - - . - ' - 1 - - kr,-,2-,,-7, ,,-- .- Poor Pay for .a Herd) , - - : -- , , - , , - ' . -- h -- --:- - - . - --- - ', , ,: , , , ----Bou 7 1 i j , - , -- . i '---- --- 4- - , --- - ' ': 7-:- ---- - v,..:',..,;-..!:;.. y-r- - . n - - - rtrIrriraft , - , the-steami- ng ::m."f-4...:- 1' - - ; ..., T took-the-fa- med 2? . -- i- , :,-- - ..' ,- -- . .: . 4 , ,....,;,-- , t were-killedincludi- - ,.. '- - ng - - C . . : ...:A3,1, -- -- - - ''' ' kL9 -'1- - 1 ' el::,,1 ..: ' - . , 4 4- 0- - cA at ' - FeCh ,, , " - 4. --?- ; A - ,Y:,,-"- - - .. k ..,), .,,,, . , ., :;;-- -- '''' ,,,,,,,... kienyang Chanting 1 cra--,.....- Wenth9W N - - IL 7,JTICIetrell ' , -- - , ' , . --'- ;-:- 4,,, A. - ililikiangshan . V. i - -' - . ., - -- - ' , . , .. iitz,:,-,..,- . , - - ;,' - - 't't 0.,,,,., i - .,,,,,,..----- ..,,,... n : . , ' , - . ,, - ) kilii CHEN -- - - I. ---- .01. , 0 , 71' , .1 , . .. .. U - . ".. - . - - 1 i e Z . ,:- J1--"r- 9 ':'.7' - - -- , . .,,,L,-,----z------ 41111 - , ' - - ." 1' 0 LI MEN Lf,:,? , ------- times howevetAmewonders whether -- -1. - - 'IF - - . Same Backgrouird ' ,,a' 7 k) : can continue indefinitely to make our way 1' arttnery---finelb 3 . S an' egan Amoy Lastseptembtl.31., he (a' through the perils and difficultles-ort:, luN, .between fled ChInese forces based at the old China . ' 4,, , ,y situation. , while oeing -- , international . (91 ,...,, ii e. mime c)v Haulm. hich, rosktd,portmu3,amt.:t,h !'" -, pat-IT-th: Formosa" r6oItitithi'r is $ a steady succession of dissensions in fields the islands of Quemoy only .a few miles .FA '..... v ....,.,. et4 ,(4,--to ' the of and blunders from Ile is discretions open charge ,,,,.-''downright irresponsibility. , , ..',),,,I.,!..:-..:P was initiated in this which ,:' b), tbe , 0-i4away s shelling,' ..t. ,. , , to Red even within, tonvinee the likely. Chinese, ,:,, - ii, some soldiers . Communists. , swab - two ' ' ' ' .4 i; ,..4 , ,e, '.. e ; , US. Army officers. The Nationalists; based on 4 N? ' : ' 7: ' ' ' ..', ..'. , - r 1 4,44. r,,,,r,;,-Formosa, retaliated with air raids:and night coin- - ,,, ,...., ' ..,0 ,.ps. a :, 4,4to.,.. -' " on the China coast. mando attacks , ,:, ,.. ,,..1,',11,,.. -As a nation stands saddened by the news ., Ile had frequently referred to himself ' ..; .. , t 1.::;;:shtn".1 s, i ,,,.,, , After this military flurry, things remained , :,- , r-i- ii,,a 1. 104-- 4.4.41.- -1 ----of the tragic death of Ira Hayes, it must ,,. ; I3ut ' who V ': , as "no ', ' r, the goOd." , . e. r, photographer . con week ' after , relatively quiet. Then, again last - J4, ' - , 1 tslAvA1 E,A...ES , a CI:itIn 111S0 feel that somehow it failed in. 'ita re' ' Cornsoftening-up-througJoe,senthal, sIderable bombing,- the pitture, , J to - this hero of World War ' ,'., - - - - sponsibility '''"1"'-' 1'1 saidmunistt struck-with-aAlrl tA!,S ' ,. f: "There was no secret about his drink- ., - ,,,.,. .. , amphibious force and ctp-,. z ''' - As A Marine sharpshooter , he fought ,:' ' ''' ' ' t i'' ' ' 77 -14: 7 -: Yiklangshan31111nall-hland-,in-theTache4 7 lured. :. , ing-b1.thintlt. was a psychological quirk -jungles through authorPresident Eisenhower's for , group request ' , vile and other Pacific islands VS the terror It had something to do with his position as its, to use U.S armed forces lollowed immediately. that was the jutting rock The administration then -- contacted the Chinese Main divisions consisting of a national assembly basic purpose of this .action was "To prevent any What Ira Hayes needed in his fight be gained immortality as a nero of the Nationalist , authorities and suggested that the wnich , 6 directly elected by the people, and the attack on Formosa" but not in any way to assist flag raising on Mount Suribachi. Home from .against alcoholism was not adulation, here,United States would be willing to help evacuate was central government composed of the presidency his service, the young Pima Indian was de- worship, and banquets; whatte--tieedethe Nationalists in their ef fOrts to invade th e main- the Nationalist garrisons located on the Tachen the best clinical, medical, and psychiatric servedly feted with great pomp and cere- five the i Yuans or "councils" whose principal of land. In fact, Mr. Truman asked the Nationalist Islands. As of today the Nationalist government t , treatment-thathe nation could offer. But rnony, shook hands with the President, officers are in to has withdraw the Its troops appointed by agreed principle president. By law, government "to cease all air and sea operations somehow, and for some unexPlained reaposed for photos, and spoke in war bond from these islands and our 7th Fleet is standing must be nat,onal meet assembly : everyaik years, agamst the mainland." driveb Ti sons, the nation failed to give it to him. , to assist. ' by ' After the war he wandered from his can but be it called into session. In January 1953, the Eisenhower administraThis is the same kind of help that some extraordinary Important Questions Its' powers are to elect and recall the president the disease of alcoholism Arizona reservation home to try and find a , Utahnsfighting tin reaffirmed the policy established by Mr . to mount in As the threat of eplaee in the white man's world:He turned need, too. They need the helpful and con and vice to amend the and constitution, Truman. However, President Eisenhower went - president, .this Eastern area ' Americans here at home scientlous care of public and private agen0 to drink again and again, and finally slipped to amendments the as constitution ratify one step farther. He lifted the restriction against proposed face many perplexing questions. to Chicago s Skid Road. Friends and stran- cies adequately staffed with professionallyrubber-stam- p In eouncil. is a actual it by fact, the Nationalist government which had specified tile How serious are the Implications of the tense trained and sympathetic workers. And gers, touched by a chance to repay the debt . controlled in the situation body Formosa? by Party a who Kuomintang few thousand to all fighting -dollars, him that they were to cease all air and sea operations those jobs, aided, place - Can the 7milla real Off and needs of The above the desperate-plig- ht Islands Shore him. present btilfel-uconstltutq against the mainland . bis craving was a losing one The stocky, 32- these alcoholics might indeed ponder long tary threat, or is it merely initiating a 'program to ' The hot war at present is cOncentrating on the Then ' on December 2nd, the administration and thoughtfully the sad and lamentable FormoS'a and '1 give substance to Red psychological propaganda? hero died in loneliness earlier this year-ol- d islands which lie between Should-- we implemented this policy in a mutual defense treaty case of Ira Ilayesthe quiet Indian boy who week...He was found on a reservation road help the Nationalists in protecting the mainland (see map). All of the islands along these off shore islands? won nation-widacclaim but died in loneli,, by the side of his car where too much alco- the Chinese coast in the TaChen area appear to with the Nationalist government Under this e Is a in invasion of Formosa the off, treaty we pledged the Nationalists that any attack hot and too much exposure in freezing b e vu I nerableAnd the big question is: Will the ness, a victim of a, disease he could not on Formosa or the Pescadores would be resisted ' ing? handle without helP, weather caused his death. Red Chinese attempt to invade, .and-- if by United States forces. This treaty, however did are ChiangstateTritnts successfully resist? not of his determination to invade the mainland? apply to the islands along the Chinese main is lying between these numerous as- Iznd from Quemoy northward, to Shanghai. The How serious are Chou repeated lands 'and Formosa, me the Pescadores (see map) 'willrecent action in asking for Congressertions'President's The his invade is that forces not in once arafildoigeneral pane Vtah, really interested which are some 80 miles from the mainland. and sional and islands attack.Formosa7 and cite the comparaapproval to use American forces in the de- eventually primary elections, 20 miles from Formosa. These islands, of course, of electiokprocedures, the . , of fense Formosa, and the expected approval by recent turnout to at twely light primaries Sara Facts About Formosa , ate too far rernOved to be threatened byartillery is being asked to grab the brass ring to -draws a firm line beyond which the is There definite Congress their point weight Formosa is a beautifulWA , tropical island shelling, but the threat of air bombardment or air- start a second trip. 1LB. 133 would return prove Communists ' cannot go and indicates clearly that to their argument that the light primary about the size of the State of Utah It borne invasion is 'always present. The qdrainistra- which same us more or the less to action system turnout the trouble and any against Formosa itself-- or the Pesca- ; hardly justifies tion has now definitely indicated that the United to be settled some 300 years ago by Chinese began t dores will undoubtedly be metwith the full power we discarded 16 years ago expense involved, but hardly enouglf-NveighStates' fleet will protect-no- t who ,c aits..mainly from what is now the. Fukien only Formosa but of the United ' States 7th Fleet. to justify ignoring the big army of "indePrior to 1939, candidates fotoffice were Province some 100 miles away. Currently there' also the Pescadores. Whether or not Quemoy and The of our commitments, however, voters. selected in the nominating conventions ot question pendent" other islands directly west and close to the Chi- - are mine 7.500000'. native inhabitants on the to iin idea the is still not clear. The of These resent respect the public general independents major political parties. Wand whose population has been augmented by nese shore will also be protected, has not beerAs we have no voice no indication the candidates or their to in little yet, that we will had them it given being N. presented cotriptained spproximately 2,500,000 refugees who fled from clarified. ' the Nationalists in defense of their directly candidates for whom it voted, and a "direct help t by what they call "professional politicians" is It the mainland aturing the Chinese Civil War. ' generally conceded, also, that these hese -i' ndicated eliminated has a was law This and machines." want -not---tThey oice,' passed. easternsideof-the-Asla-nd "party close primary" to The are the is China of ;shores , we would that and . This may not only assistance give their officials, but atm - largely populated by aborightes,--bu- t "logistic" nominating conventions-entire- ly theweAern particularly strategic in the defense of Formosa, - mean that the PIthFteet will in selecting the candidates for office And it made for a costly and confusing series of protect 01 side, fading the mainland, is rieh agricul,Itralland. yet they are Nationalist-me-n lines of the is highly probable that a big factor in Ptah's and materials Jo the over a period of 'months. The island produces cane sutiar, rice and has valustvvationpoints and are particularly important inthe-casas of the Tachen Islands, , , - This was definitely not satisfactei7, and pblls m s from forest areas- It provideOhree-fourthof the point of to be used evacuate Nationalist November Pieqtions has been the may another change was made. The ,present troops and to able Chinese are take any of these Nationalist camphor supply. Recently some oil has ents'- - feeling that they were voting eonds subjects ewooal law, passed by the 1947 Legislature, pro- discovered, and there tre rood supplies of bases, their: acquisition might prove valuate . intentions ' in their in- candidates whom they had a voice In Having tested the vides nominating conventions In addition, the island 'boasts a propaganda which could possibly influence the vasion of the is Tachen now which choose two candidates preach ppm group. it quite likely ing and not for hand picked representatives attitude of some 10 million overseas Chi, university and a considerable manufacturing in 7 that the Communists will continue . of "political party machines.'!-ton- - on the November 411ot, and for a their SoutheastrAiia---1141es- e aggres- littSe the latter started by Japanese and dustrythe cloSe-isive islands It is not other Utah's present election proeid4 lite gives movesagainst single primary to decide betwOn them.: fisrmer mainlanders can be persuaded to accept pushed forward with our help during the past few this however, -that will be Now it is proposed to scrap the present political parties fullresponsibility-andsetup.a- nd aggession the Communist cause,, the problems of halting the expected Power. make up years carried Formosa 9 to Pescadores to room orthe exercise their talents. Let against the China, go back sy4em, ample , the ingredientt for a potentially rich. varied econ- - growth of communism in Indonesia, New Guinea, ld at this time does nut want a in-- - these-e war with not miner niodifications. -i snd even-i- n Burma important :be tmy,---griatly - the United States nor aspects of our election laws --- but let - The 'stand which had been occupied by Japan. popular with the majority of citizens, - ter in us not the on back be the in. would it go Thalituation Is Precarious the immediattr objective sought by the Red Chi- - . public interestwas restored to China 101,1945-i1Japan 's defeat ' voters, either. nese , In any event, the situation in Formosa is preProponents of 11.)3. 133 argue that the to 1949 it was badly At World War II From-19It is generally conceded also , that these off - . carious. Because of our commitments In this Chinese carpetbaggers against much governed by c : coulo oe urawn into anotner-trpresentment uevelopeaTamonvule native popula- - billire islanos nitwit ue USea as stePPIng.stones in. area. we ensive , an attack on Formosa. tion ; The island is cureently the seat of the Free and possibily embarrassing conflict in the Far East A large automobile company doing its News that Ford Motor Company officials Yet. Americans generally concede that we must Chinese Nationalist government under Can These Islands Be Defended? , the rule . ., are smashing cars up right and left in head- - own experimenting is .something else again. of Chiang cease retreating in front of Red aggressions The who, because of his govern- The 'exact strengthof . Chiang on. collisions is some of the best we have line must be drawn somewhere and present indi- ment's is virtual the if Ford known-system, the dictator. tests, Presumably, Nationalist forces is not making ---had It is thought to be. 'catiOns -time;. For- ' are that we will not budge from our firm will Labout 600,000 men. It would be unable, without r someth ngvith the re- ., not producing any deaths or injuriesthey commitments. ' 1.1 S is in his second- term as, Presi- help. to hold these island bases along the worthsults. e Chiang .dis- e SoPe features to safety are experiments staged deliberately Nev ertheless : th e Formosan situation demands . Chinese coast if the. CodA unists make a serious dent of the Republic of China. His Kuomintang should be appearing ,in, the future Fords cover the efiectiveness of safety belts and straight effort y to China:and the party recently demonstrated its superi- which you will bowing At your dealers. other safety features in modern cars . r4 Eisenhower is certainlyiright . inpti3, distince,s-- d om Formosa are-th- e over Chinese oyity ,thinoritygroupsbv:isivReping It has beenpred In these tatirtIlliiTile idea of experimental 14rpsh tests in tease'fitt'irrthe-ureq;7; ktoilei in local elections As a result.the Gen!. ,,Inadditio.A.Althoughlt--is4eneral- l that some enterTrisino cazmanufacturcs, --e falissitno'S-govertithRew,Yringro,n tte ,Hilat.)tteteaLaugigty to should entire 4. This, the pro Nationalist , world that the is becoming more and ithe navy is ' superior to the Commu- has conducted extensive' testy would- someday take the emphasis off United States is notcthe aggressor. it should more the Comnuinitt, now The adminNationalists air , navy betause .i authovitarian. of force, pist I University piit' , programs, and so have several other insti, ' chrome, paint and horsepower and put it the Mainefor the) current situation sqbarely the'Nitionalist-an- ,Ithe acquisition of ifier both incial the govProf planes on automobile tafety--anthat whoelier 'tuitions including at least one organization It belongs-t- on the Clgriese Conminnists. : from at TuiRet. is probahly much str9nger than Chisno A greatinasny did would a find it 1 ready,..responseATAitb-tho-for purposethat,sole Lsetzp az:tea-few-7The This There qUeStOns:WhiCh e- eftifillY- need invrnment is operatk - on an emergency i4 despite the tact that Chiang rect4tly-' of public. Perhaps Ford's current experitnints suggestions have been made as a result i'84 Inswering. added American ' b,asis inciMing general application of martial law. jet fighters to his groups. are the beginaing of Such a program. If so, and the experiments a1re4dy conducted Hai the Nationalist govvrmient on Formosa ' some filiwever, news, to ue It that the US. 18tb emergency Today's respects, conditions, I. better the 'other manufacturers had the majority of them have so far been get , changed Bomber sufficiently to b Wing,- filtin F86 Sabre jets, has Fighter by the 10 mil. go ertunent is not too unlike Cniang mann-busy fastor elsg ,be prepared to fall belargely- ignored by the 'automobile lion,' from oi.erseas4 thiTommunist'S n rule llove.c1 the Mainland in, addition Chmese?. ()bum and the 'Philippines to , hind in sales a' few years hehce. ' - , Is it good enot!Igh . to ggvern the 600 million 2, to the one tompbrary duty on Formosa might have i'signithe a Kuomintang. , -1y : -'-government is composed of political commtsars 'fitant bearing on this air strength. The presence PEllEtIBERWHEtsi Pu Shouldludrastitoverhzul. be made of the one His'tciry v, ho exert'ise ir,high degree of undethocratic cen-T- T of this U.S. Air force might do much to constrain f rule of the Kuoraintang, as suggested by . party the .4rent is That th. Nwt' Flies) ' Commun.4ts tralism,h of ithe paper, fought a duel yestergovermnental e,dicts come from , . s t volume of t i history , Dr Iiu Shih. former Chinese ambassador to the . ' down the .' flow was dis; 25 Years Ago Utah by Orson IF. Whitney top,', through the organization and What Are J.J.S. Commitments? , day afternoon ,td settle a United ' .. States? If Chiang deon contracts th&, to below. over to, to and.! c The ready pute people soverninent is sup- , The big ntivle in the Formosa enigma has been gorzninePtis mprded - ' Jan. 28, of published, , b'Y e he sl6uld demonstrate thtsfacit, truly a, demoeratic, secret . paper. and 1e .1 ry. portedhigh police ith ... . . government ,, Basin how were the of United far the ... , thrIntah Stales Would , by making needed asking qu'etion . ' lobs- are reserved for chinges. ' ' - - - - - 0 Yetill-Ae- o partyofficials the support of the entire state ti7.-.7- 5 I Frar- mosa 4s; a- - ot. sigtinothe, 9 . Should , the possibility be)expr(iretr,-',0flputtnly- , , . itt4 getting, a .railroad into th e . -- 28 The National Conititution ' ' -- i . Iv - thR , backuround-orrthis E. J. 1 to n ., ., , iques ancl., the Pesc;dorti under' United-'v fo11owS-1The natio. eolistittiVori;:-h .11me, 1950 Prestdent had - ;Mike, editor of the New taliir11 tiorist This wouht at least put titd i trusteeship? ' ;; leans Dmocrat ,,andL,Malet11., bee-i- de ct.411tAlliSzspriugliker--!-- . ttniailtiiijjedi,tis.oider$A-ithttnLthiLbaie , Ago' ip 1 a , dptd , its in problem one 14a,28,1-905,-Zhfourth-end-4. :Fleet mtotha Fonncsa Straits.--Th- e ind "11)a11ny, 111.14 whichcon) Hearsay,- former -- editor of i gpvernmat has . two ,tatek cams 'the whole wori ct , : :: - . L - - tar. East' Ate'..--All Americans : .. tp, , , ' -- . i ;,7 7 Bo .... , ' En-lai,- u' e 1 : 4...s.,A ,,;,,,....Ji;:,;.;;:,a, - - - it;'01-rriosa).- 4 ;1:- ' ' d 1 4,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .,,..: ,...,17,s,' ke,..,' ,i,.';,ii.,,x4s; o :,,...,.,,;.,,. " -- - - ,-- - , e . . , i,- - - esti N--,In Extteme-Importanc- , -- 1 Of - . 1 J didil ' . uPveiPPrn.,ent$9P Ihe Cuirent-Curren- . the-Tat- uly, .... ...,.,,,.6,,,9..,..,, , L,,.,:,,,. 1 ..,:,: , - , in-I- 4,,,,e ,. '' dAAINN,010..00,A,,de," , .1 up-date- , .. , ,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,,, -' , .,1, , . ' , - ' ,,, ; d;;'4,04,,,,;VeAeatt101,;44,ii.0O34444,;;;01:,,,,400Wir4-V;44;ia,,,40;,- nificance of Fornsoia4lin the events of thos tveek's news, the following "Riport to f.eaders", to fitrinled trim last ,5 eptem,e,-- , ' tiftle of the Deseret News. In flOn le illa ,sesrvice to readers in the Formo'la problem in- world affairs JO original article has been edited and to include develoomcnts.) f f I - .';' ,, ....-4,.,,- ,.,,, ' .f4c .... . . - ,: Because of ...- ';' ,,,,,.,-,.,,- - ' ,. ER -'- -- ,. . Another keg of powder is orninously awaiting ''' , that could set off the blast of World , War III, S Chinese Communist ineefarly .1., lords ba4ed by the Soviet press, have been , tpanttrng the "liberition" of Formotia " Red Chinese preSeptember, Chou ' mier in announcing his program of ''peace," said ' that Formosa would not be forgotten. Again. this past Monday, In response to President Eisen-wa- s hower's request that tCongress give him .specific to defend For authority 'to use US. armet-forc'e-i mosa and the Peseadorei,--th- e Red leader said, . "The of the Peoples Republic of China - 'has governmentand in solemnAerms declared to repeatedly the world that the. Chihes;éliei . ---- -t, t am.; ,,, -- , ' I( -- , .., . i - I '.14', '. '' l' REA rpoRt.To - V.;'Ifi".;,4;d: - IN, ' which led to the debacle ' in Korea ha; hot been cleared up If hostilifies ettould break out in the vicinity of Formosaand the proposed amendment would tr., of inr.ortance would create an cx;irt wily if thev lit the to thi. Yalu liver situation parallel - ' ,C.,4' ' I ' -- amendment to the Formosa resolution would specifically prevent American attacking any, point of the Chinese land. This amendment, appeared' from the start, but the fact that it was - t- A' D ILE MM 14' VI I IEnDlillfIC , ' ' convince 1iis;i01ow sena- , .. .. ., o '''' .' sr'rl ; ,11, - 4 P,,4,, - ' ' :. 1,1 fitidt,' sir '. a Own- , - , ''' ''' '. L - More disturbing - a.; . . tors. , de------- i'-- Dates, thith' its three . breaking movein inviting Congress to share the responsibility forforeign policy. the latest move Strengthening U.S. de; fenses kfl the critical Sdptheast 'Asia area adding a f ull wingnf Salbrejets to the power of the U . 7th Fleetadds to the solidarity of, the U .S position, while it Is clear That American intention is to defend Formosa and not tO launch on, Red China. ,, , Against these highly encouraging lac- tors, however, we must balance some others which are distinctly- - disquieting.. ' Wednesdars r speech of Sen Wayne' Morse, the Oregon Independent, , , ' - - dared intention to defend IVrmosa. From coast to coast, the maprity reaction is that the Formosa resolution will strengthen the cause of peace 'rather than increase' the danger of warand the nation is further . , .i'. - to President Eisenhower's request for spe-- , ' T.; O.''':B0.47 clic - Congressional - approval --tit. sour - . ' ... .::,.:gpi..T,O.,.,-p..1A..1p,A,GLE- 'Soft takot City, lJtoh, Friday, Jan. 284 1915 ''''-I .4, ,,Ttr ,. i. ., V of the United Most Americans have reactedAavorably , . , ' $,...10.;:P6-0..:d,.ó.ti, . - ' 1 -:- '.''1 ". -- , 1 , ehft7tly indepeniept in'itsi ' q , --- - - departments ofgovernrrten t, ' - ' - ' ' : ; , We'stan d, ' - - , . il, ' ' .. ,Ratt..,g4114.-ed- ' - 77, 1.44 .I, .. - . - , ' .. '1 ' ., ''''t : 14 A ' , .... ,.. , ' .. .... , ' ; ... - .. - ..... . -- '''..:"-- 1 - , ut. , . -- - , k ' d z - -- I -''' -' . - wark-continue- s Fr """: . - , - p ' off-sho- ' -- re ' . e - full-scal- -- -- so,---ca- T -Ho- - w-realistic Kai-shek'- Let's Not Go Back off-sho- En-lai- off-slwr- merry-go-roun- , -- -- T . one-sixt- re 's e - -- . h -- . , islands-Itut-Secretarylatull- I es --island- s and as - valuable-to-the-Ntuoulalists- rentT -- able - - for-par- ty- the-supp- - e - 11-.- , full-fledg- ly S , w1io4ive-threugho- ut n , , These-php-hydro-elect- pre-193- ----wi- tfr be------us-br This-wou- ainfa - ,. full-scal- ht - - non-affiliat- 45 - 1 . On-the-Right-Tra- ck- . - s - . Kai-she- k Kai-shek- 's one-part- y I 1 1 . ie' "--61-r- Kol-Sh'e- - k Pt -- toinla4-4hM4-Prortlit- one-part- , elit late-mod- d d 4;00' - trmnl-Ilitersia- el , - ,kample: 1' Kai-shek- I 's - 0 ?1 i : fi - . , - g , , kal-shek-'s , - l - , 4 A - ah --- - -- ,l , Whifne , Was 1s-Lit- bleihecr , 1 -- -- - . F- TI ;-- , ,-- Kai-shek- - - 1930-Resi- dents ,. . -- . - 1. . k , - , , - 11. 1880,-Alajor- - . 100-Yearl- y-A :- - 's - - ' . -- ...-- -tam: N- . 50-Yea- rs e . 1 I -- - L P..' - - ' 14 , - - ' , . 4 , . - - V i , - . , 4 , . - , , -- , t 1 |