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Show . . w, ' , , . , , , , , , - , i - , - B 1 LA, . ' ' , - --- ' ," . - i - , I,,,. Fro, - Negotiating - ,, , , .; Across thee nation this past week, mil-- . Ilohi of Americans were given the:oppor- tunity to view part of . our country's armed rni,,,-1On military posts parade anMain grounds, in the air and up Street,' citizens stared in d wonder- Inent at the awesome armadas of ourweapo ens and machines of war. Although they were privileged Wsee only a part of what our militarv Men End our ftirtnriPt hvas developed, ' Ltd impressive. , ',Armed Forces Day and its demonstra-- tiOn.of 'Power for Peace" achieved its oh., . t I , . open-mouthe- i , --- - ' a-s- -, ,.. ' . , j,,,, - N.',..;;;;', i ' - trengtn, f. --- -. 7. -- ' -- -- ,..1, .4 ;,, --- , -- . -. of---- - -- . ,, , ''' ' - . ' ' ' . ' -- - ' -- towldpeace.' ' --' - - -- --- - ,: - , , -- he :- col--Th- is 'soaring increase is reason, too, for end- less discussioni around the Conference ta. bles of legislators; educators, and Indus. , - - - - - - - greatly-increase- , - s state-supporte- d -- -- -- - - , greatly-increase- - - . T -- . . Proxy War Budgets s is, - 7Louis '' threat of a "real es .'' - -- . Vander what sort of ' dollars. s proxy-light-wa-- it -- -- the ry . ,, ccmpany has just gong through.----- -.'It also raises the question: Who pays the ' . . bill for these fights? Robert R. Young, victor in last. year's of directors? Can any ambitious- financial similar proxy battle over 'control of New manipulator who happens to- - come along ,York Central Railroad, recently submitted, force the management into such a fight--2- ateexpense account of $1,308,733 represent-- ' with the bill being paid by the stOckhold- ' ing campaign costs. Ile expects the corn-- 7 - ers? And one other question raised by the Are such costs deductible pany to pay it, and probably the company ,' will. After. all, he is the boss: He controls from tax returns as business expense- swhich would mean they would be paid by theliew board of directors. : '' , , , among-c-o c : - . l . , 44. e-. w- - - ...of - - , 4 ,''':- ; - - .,'-:- - ' - - ' ,t---- -- - ,,,-,,-.- - ;"!-,:- -I ,5- , ', - -- -- -' REIrIZ'WHENHooperville , --- , A . - '3, - "-- s '1,,i,--.-g- - . , ,- 0,-.4- .,-,- .0- ., -- -- - - - ,-- '.';,--- ., -' - 7 . , ,..,..,7,:,--;,- - w"11.1":';':.01041-00111111111.141"I'''''''-..."- - it . . Against '-'. :" ' , ' -- t ti,, -- ' ----- . . , Parents of Polio ' Patients Not Callous - time out busy day to answer the letter of Mt A. Borg. I am a mother of six children, rangfroM four years to 14 years. ing esterdW:rny daughter Whola tight had --her first polio shot were 'possib1e,xny and,'itit otheffiVe children would have the shots, too. these days: We have reared six healthy, can't live on $1,5,000 in Washstrong sons UncleSam), ington, D.C. were whose lives young kept out My blood pressure rises every of mischief by milking Cows time 1 think about the group I time at morning and night . through supported , the polls. and the only public their high school years, 'You drink all we can and group of servants who have the seeove we can't drink we can." what power to raise their own This should be pay enough but going ahead and placing, doesn't pay the .bills. an outlandish salary on their it . There was's time when.many families throughout Utah kept Maybe Mr. Dalton-eajustify a cow in their backyard (plus this action, but I feil every flies)i and peddled unpasteurcitizen who is being ized milk to their neighbors for taxed should .shout to high ten cents a quart. Those were heaven and demand Sens. Wat- . the horse and buggy days when hay sold for $10 a ton. not $30, kins, Bennett and others to when modern equipment and justify such a downright fool- sanitation were never thought mother should thank hardy move before we send them back to a 'nest they them- our State Board of Health whose rigid inspections insure selves feathered with ow hard her- children- against typhoid given tax money. so prevalent diseases and other Maybe, being ,a school prin- in those days. kcipal,- and- - seeing our-- children even 'at Yet,- Grade-A-mila too small school, 25c a quart would still be the crowded into with two few books, and too few best food value she can buy!' trained teachers has made me True, it does cost more like more sensitive to this matter. everything else nowadays, but But, I ask where our sense of the strange thing about it all Is values lie and- also ask justificat- - that we producert still get less ion- publicli- of this doilright than 10c a quart. -- Mrs. NJ Nielsen sguaderIng of public, money. If the congressmen are havRiverton. ' ' 7 on trouble let $23,000, living ing them come home and try living Disc Jockeys Must Why . on our salaries! , - -- Marvin M.Allen, Rut? Remain In-loElementary Principal, , , - Our radio was In the repair American Fork. shop for quite a few months, were tremendously Jean Wants to K now - and--w- e when we finally had it happy Wot Hoppen to 22nd? back in our home. During the - sal-trie-s, own-plat- es. -- n - public-m- inded of.-T- . -- surprised Act learn at a constitutional government class recently that, the 22nd Amend- ment in 1951 failed to polish off the Electoral College.' Are we letting that meaieval scarecrow haunt the political field again . next year? Next time we sing- the Star, Spangled Banner, think of the Bill of Rights:all 10 of them to protect everyone from any possible form of 1injusticeonly do not mention the . . draftees. - -- , - 0 -- - menorg , aable . - , , , ,. - e el-tast- -- yi , ' , G2 , . famil--Iperit- - - , , .,,- 1 -- 1 , ,, ' -- ' - , , - , tirnuit-w- as as - , . .. - , - me , 1 - , lf d - , - , ' -10t gone,,,s-i-hael-- touch with the music world-T- he little music one hears on TV could be put in a thimble. ' Unfortunately, our happiness was shortlived. After two weeks of listening to the various disc jockey shows, one knew all the current pines and advertisements by heart. To say the least, it was frustrating. To top it off, there was no variety, just the same old tunes, expertly and inexpertly doneno contrasts were provided. such is a classical number or operatic number or tune. In desperation, we even listened to some in :order to get a change.' ,Must all disc jockeys remain in a rut? Isn't there one brave enough to get out of step? At the rate the, shos are going now, it will soon be unneccessary tq 'have 'more than one station on the radio. Why should . ' cent-pullo- 107ears righte-treaties,th- The country, continues loin overwhelmingly against admitting Red China to the U.N. but If Red China is legally voted ineven over U.S. protest--60 per cent of the public would favor continuing to work with and through the U.N. and only number would want -to see the U.S. resign, This strong, stable support U.N. does not mean that there is no dissatisfaction with the - performance of There is, but those, who are dissatisfied tend to waikt to work for strengthening it. , . IT IS EVIDENT that hostility to the United Nations has at times appeared greater than It really is In the public mind of-th- e he-U.N. -t- . . . -- Genoteder----- e-- pact and some of the pamphlets issued byUNESCOallonthe .. against , ground of any impairment the supremacy of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution inside the U.S. It is profoundly to its credit that, between the two world wars,-whemany others were naive, ore beguiled by .wishful DAR early was pacifism,---thalert to communism and stoel for military preparedness even when it r to --do so. groups the DAR Is today dissatisfied with aspects of the U.N. But on the official record it-- is evident that it still believes that world organization, is needed to work for world peace. - - - safe-guardi- n - wla - - . - . , . - - (Coryritht, tromit IN WASHINGTON --', -- -- . 1935) soap-opera- s- - . , , be- - spent money cate? to , just " dupli- - ' I don't believe we are asking tooinuch.. IsietAtreasonable to assume that there are some who might appreciate- - listening - to something different? The fact that ,10 or so popular tunes have becrLderived from 'rschal- kavskl's music alone should- 1n- dicate that there is Some merit in that kind of 'music; if only so it can be commercialized, So how about It, let's be Johnny, and get out of step just;once - in a while. -- - t -- , - bi DORIS FLEiSON Valle - . - .---- -- Of the Air to the '.Soviets? WASHINGTOIST! The Senate - Armed - Services-Committwill begin promptly its investigation of the charges of Senator Symington of Missouri that the United States may have lost control otthe air to the Soviet Union. Senator Symington was of the Air the first Secretary Force. It is already apparent that first job twill be to discover when administra-- tionspo - - telling the ee - the-commit- - - tee's ekstnee troth. . -- - - -- - - - - Air Force Secretary 7albott this week addressed private f the aircraft indusmeetings-otry. He elaborated upon the , terse that flights of Pentagon-announcem- ent seize command of the air from - - - -- - - -- this- - country.- -- - --- - -- -- -- THE PRESIDENT admitted - that -- drogen bombers bad been seen' in the Moscow May Day parade. THIRTEEN FLIGHTS of five new types of Soviet aircraft were seen, he 'said, and they were equivalent to the best pro: dueed here. lie emphasized that Reds were producing the planes in quantity and bad the air wings which could operate them offensively. , Secretary of Defense Wilson said last year that the Soviets were building primarily& defensit e Air Force.' That concept Talbott buried deeply '' and . ' .auy.. In Detroit, Brig. den. Woodbu- -. - the Russians had often outrun the expectations of the experts here. There have been enough published reports of iSoviet progress to prove this more , than amply. The senators will ' conduct their hearings in private. They prt doing this not only for se- - 7 curity reason but also because they think they can get more -candid testimony- from Air Force officers if those officers public troversy. It is known that a school of thought in the Pentagon agrees with Senator Symington that the new revelations of Sovitt strength prove that a drastic altercation in the relative U.S.Red air might has taken, place. They think it should be recog-- , nized, and fresh rdans made to forge ahead, once more. ' . A reluctance on the part of ' -- - - ----- - on---....fi - ' - . hy- jet-power- - - -- ' - . ' thtsadministratIonto. embirk on new and expensive military ' courses is understandabla----- . We are currently in the midst of a peace offensive. A new U.S, military- prograri could be turned to propagimda advantage by the .Russians, potsibly even used as an excruse to shatter the world's hopes for a release ' of tension. , - -- - - - - - "--- '' , ., Burgess, ceputir chief THE ADMLNISTRATION Is vir-of staff for intelligence of the ' tua,Uy committed to another . ContinentaLAirDefense tax cut and an old college- tr- y-mand, really laid it on theline. for a balanced budget AS the that the Russian-A- ir next presidential election nears, - - Force is currently at least as Defense costs are already, high good as airs. , and any major increases would- - ' Yet Secretary 'Talbott and ruin both those aims. '' . General Twining are. telling re- - Senator Symington has a punt',-(7.- gent answer for those who cite I '. budgetary considerations, taxes air. power. This is apparently or any other reason for proceedthe line handed President Eisen-bow- ing -- also. At his press con- - - It is: "If I am arrong, we will;------ferenceNtlPresident said he have lost some money. If the e at had tie-sthe Soviet President is wreng, we 4 ' Union had seizedNor woeldlost Our country." ry-1kt- He-sai- . - d - - - - - ' P.Russian --. - . . ,,,, er - -- -- . -- Marguerite Pearson , Murray. ail s ty-tir- , , - - Has-the.-Lost-Control-- , .. - h - , You see, M. A. Borg, three and one-hayears ago my old- ues their his- - -- 1 and-aven- of - . . , - - . - SOME - Editor', e attest -- - . take- P. News. Lake City. Utah, ' -- ARE- tbrtOst the 0 lox um. tat nothintlyttateverabout of Grade A Milk production ago. The sto.-Address,- - - - - - A;- Borg straight -oil ,'a few tmiiJtigho many childien do they have? Yes, he can say what he did because he hasn't to lie anyone give up. says polio' usually doesn't kill. Well, in 1951 we lost a Mi. year-ol- d girl with bulbar polio and the same week we put a 7. year-olboy in the respiritor she came out of. lie spent nine long months in the hospital and while there underwent one serious operation. He was completely paralyzed. He has- since spent five months :at Warm Springs and is now in San Francisco receiving more treatments. He can now walk a little with crutches-aft- er you stand him up. He can nearly dress and undress- himself, write with - his left hand and feed himself. We pack him everywhere he goes. He has to wear a big heavy corset and two long leg braces. We have three other children and we are willing to risk them for any trial vaccine they might have -if i t will help prever)t going- through what their brothtr has gone through. We think M. A,,, Borg is narrow-minde- d and should be 'forced to go spend a week at the polio ward at the General Hospital 111 nd see the suffering,-an- d bet he'd change his mind. Mrs. E. R. Kaas ,, Granger ' , Had Incipient Feud'? work-teultivate- HERE- n -- r. '...-- -s - on. Current Issues P.M.-everf'd- - - - has,-wit- - aY ;:1:1;. , f ,..4.,,,- !Z.- .- . al - - , !... - settling-Internation- ;. - l-y : ' - findings: s The proportion of HeyMaybot, a 'Oarking-Place- 'who favor pulling' out of the THE DAR has taken this stand times 'and has taken U.N; is 5 per cent: 80 percent is for staying in, 15 per cent uti7 no contrary' position. It has decided. -vigorously condemned world 80 of This government and all movements per proportion TM Dsorot Nom, and To Iowans five beautiful children, whose Salk Vaccine? Invites to turn the U.N. in thae direccomments front tts moors on cent stay-i- and 5 per id topics of current intorost. Ltters Olcturs appeared in a milk-minor fluctuation, tion the least bit. It has conz must bo shined, should No limitod to -- a "human 20f wards Sr less,- and must knew same ever since demned the In the local remained newspaper, . . -violate accaptd canons of ad '''' ---- , , ..- . '- ',.' Letters From Reade - '''-'''''' ..7.t....:;:.:"'--- . ---!-- - ',- - --, - , - '- ".-!- - ' - 4 ''...t ,0.,.4111,110.1011.k. , societyi-,,,DAR,--,en--- - : '':..--'''';--;'--!-;-'.-'- - , --- -- ....t,..;,ii-dr--..4.-.- ', :"-- ' - ' - ' , - f- - 4 '',- 'it,:,--- . .:- - , - '- - s - - - . . Ago;. , - ;P5--- ,, - .. ,... - ... ... 75 per. , --- - -- - -t .., , . - the U.S. pull out of the' U.N. 35 per cent i 5 per cent 1 '. . . 4 .1'. :,..'zi - - - , lamps-04-4-- ' ,.-- - - 1.e- - , . ,,,,- ''' '''.. , 7, 1 Atomesert -- umill.'-4.- Glohe-DemKra- , -- -- "?;,.-1,,- -- ,- . -- - .,...4 ''...4: . f WifilidtuIPetsreweonutladgell-kf)e- ,t, - ' - ---4.- 4-7k 1- , -- - .;- p -- ..., ii 1o; . Itr...and.11r&-tTohn---Ctir-rubli- '- , . '.71's-.- . A ;"' P you your - '; c- at; - '- . - .; .7 .'- -- -- - -- . -z--- ::.:-;;;,..--' -- -' - , .:2.' 4.--t n; . -- - Globe-Democr- t . ' ,r'..&;,1- - , ' ' ' 7 i- - Itliel own answersNto some of the as these: same questioni-Lsuc- h, ''' '',., 4.......40-- - that dissatisfaction with particular aspects of the U.N. does not mean,dissatisfaction its central purpose. winth position of the DAR Is,- a good case in point Ask al- the OAR most anybody-'how us- U.N.17an4----on the spteacnt: the interviewees would usually say that the DAR is opposed to the U.N. It isn't, , and its attitude deserves to be better known. Recently L- erroneously construed one of its 1955 resolutionsand the debate which consurrounded demning any possible U.N. Interference with the internal affairs of the ,United States- as hostility to the U.N.itself. Since the DAR has centered its attention more on the dangers of world government than upon the right uses of the United Nations,' it5 is perhaps, understandable that the DAR gets, to some extent unfairly identified as a U.N. opponent, It is often overlooked that the national doried the U.N., in 1946 at itsfirst continental congress after the charter was signed, characterized it is providing "prac--- tical and peaceful methods of ,disputes't and hasnever passed any resolution criticizing its central role or urging that the U.S. withdraw. WnaAiraSeglicloiniN7reUrPS711Nead-SiluIctlieFut- mitheghtljbenitedintereNastiteciónsto FEA''''-- t-:- 4 i ! - and eg:E1 ATIC. c ' - . 4 ''''''. 41,-- --- I. , - - i. est boy 'was afflicted with the dread polio and the road back ' . from this crippling disease is a long, bard one. My boys one ' of the more:fortunate victims 1 of the disease, wilL never be able to run and play like other children, but he is alive and he will have a happy life in ""1 Blitwh0.11111eLeeitiPanY9AThe..,,StOck- c 4ill'AThrlirsTliaiidiCA 117B ut e 1 While Congress is looking at the merger holders, of course. If the company pays have seen many, many others gested,giving them the right to 4 those costs, it will come- directly out of --the .'prohlem, 'hew about a check-uwho e.noL.atfortunate. As voteBut how ,about. the right onthe, ..71! 'who lost' their lives, to grow up? Of :stockholder's clividend.-- ' ' Will who for hesome question proxy fights? t and In the meae 'oldreonarchy of wile strugg1e0.for ,others The sit - St.Louis to --the allowed be pointed precedent - byYoung t months', even years;Just to be Englandt-40Yeari it did ' other day that last year ':stand? the , , I- - otit editorially look' , . Able a a move toe. or so not at when bad; , tq finger s quite ' - . 4 ,: . galled up. the , We- parents ,are rot as . bard intervals . they ... ' " ."" ' L; -And callous ps AL A. B : ' ', .,. ' to think we are. grieve along with the parents age 0V16 to 60. N, "'' ' ' in Idaho whose children were them use all Couldn't of '' (Freak the 14mvsl Flies now; I ' of various male members of the afflicted with 75 Years polio, and we course. The converted Lusitania i , two clans. 25 Years Ago . wonder, along with them, why carried 10.000 draftees at a trip May23,1880Butçhersof t L, May 23, 1930Babe Ruth hit Salt Lake it had )be. .,100Yeors -. Ago to France in 1917. Think of ship- City signed an agreb Now are we . that going A head i a , threa homers in two games it naent to to close their shOps may 23, 183SK, S a y e'r ' ping that many - wrote concerning the increased withthe shots,leti - proceed fight- - the - Gerntan - armyl- - But Philadelphia todanbringing his promptly at 6:30 interest Apf Salt Lakers in plant-- with caution, faith in God and then, lowering the upper age total for the season to 12. except Saturday.' This was-t-o ing trees and shrubs and laying ea prayer irk our heart& .,, limit 15Or N years, it could not so Tears Ago , -L-ouise Anderson , make life a little easier for the out flower gardens.- - "The Well be amiss to raise the lower limit frce-- , Y ars.--farms,the-rura- l ,Glassman, employes, who had been, May 23, 1905--4tot'Ralie'''-CangressCwnEr of the Ogden Standard, ing from 5' a.m., to 8 and 9 tage, the Pay -J- ean Beinion.- pretty flower garden .., ofbe that had been and the streets reported p.m every day. .) ' 1Boosts Blood Pressure fered $60,000 cash for the paper. ' Hooperville was in the throes, with shade 'and fruit trees, all , Wh o Cents? .. , ' "But I simply said, 'You can't of an "incipient fuea" between!give evidence and pros. In answer t6 Don Max Dalton i farmer Doesn't - - 'hare it.LThe building alone ,is the rowers and Fielding indeed; they are the re In his letter lathe editor. If;Dairy . worth more than that. les. Several quarrels and as. suits of enterprise, intelligence, would like to ask him, if he sin- II It. is very evident Besides,1 that the ' the paper is net for saults had resulted in arrestsi and industry."., cerely helloes a congressman lovely little mother with her . - I " liL ' . , , to Check Your Answers Want ' About U.N.? i To Oyestions ,......,, - , ROSCCV DRIIMMOND by - 1 . , , - -- A 4,,,,I.,-,,,-41---- - ' , -- 'ij , rriert-inust from MY these-involve- millian-dollars,Eve- --..-.---- If - .t- '' ' -- lie tostsner teAttalta penny of it must come frornsomewhere. But where? .. Does the winner only have the privilege of submitting his bill to the company?, What about Wolfson, who lost but is on the board- - , 1 Some of ,- 2.4.17,. , exceeding three billion ' proxy bat--- ets panies-wath7ass- a Man with-liimMak- 70sTA-Co-opgrat0 -- - - t-- - - there 'were 27 41ajor Mergers . 4, -- - , proxy fight for control Ward if the coMpanys board of directors - ' , E. Wolfson's t 1 I IN WAS141NqTON ... -,,,.. .'' - - leges produce, They puzzle over how much, , and to whom they should make their fi' tancial grants, scholarships, and contribu. ' trialists. tions. Should their fóundations be set up for the private colleges, of which many are - ''- By 1960 the college load will almost haved doubled because of the virtually on the brink of financial collapse birth-rateof the 19403. The facilities re.- -- because of the surge upward of operating quired, plus the army of new teachers . ,costs? Or, should industry throw its finan. instituneeded, concerns the legislators and their . vial support to the -tions and save them from falling into the constituents, the taxpayers. Bow is the bill --- --to be paid? Who is to pay It? precarious evils ortederal aid, pressures of d . The rate of college the market-paren- ts and students, by the , no end alunini who want a better football team, by of policy problems students presents employers , whol demand, certain kinds, of - to' the educators. As more and more stu. deits arrive on the campus, can and should training, by professional associations seek-th- e same high standards for liberal arts ed'' ing to advance their fields, by givers of ' ucation be maintained? Should there be less money,, and by political pressure groups. liberal arts education and more specialized Theseand a thousand More questions and vocationally-oriente- d curricula? ' Be- just as disquietingmust be met with cour- caase only 40 per cent of freshman continue.- -- age and decision.;-- , Because the futifieTe America depends in no small 'degree upon through to be graduated, should more col- the wisdom which is eventually brouTht to lege courses be directed toward helping, as the solutions, everyone should have grave quickly as possible, the 60 per cent who t drop out? Or, should education insist on concern' in the decisions to be made. -- 44,-- :,. how, - Am& - d - -- - '...lra.,....e,., ,, , .,,.,.,,,...,.,.,z........::1114, '''s- --- ' ;- - ,.?........,-' --- -- M. not 1 ' ,1 ' ;, , ,.,t,".'44.-1''- - l 11:ifillida)uitlike tillitp put 0 - - ,14 ' Around the dinner table of many high the thigh scholarship which only the,-4per-- , school graduating seniors, discussion after ' cent are able to reach? Educators, too, won- . der and -worry how to spare young people has been centered - from the deception Involved In shoddy and lem: to go to college. Twenty. -. superficial college experience. Can a bet- fie years ago in 1930, only 12 per cent of ter job be done of meeting the problems the graduates decided to go on; by 1940 the ' of theater-size- d classes, production-lin- e number bad increased to 18 per cent. Today mass methods, student anonymity, and eh-tpercentage has shot up to 30 per,Centiscenceof Individual treatment?, and ,tor a- - number of reasons: prosperity; The industrial leaders are also deeply . business and industry's demanding better. concerned. In the last decade they have , schooled employes; the belief that college come to realize that their companies have a training is a heritage for every American.. great stake in the kind ot society that -- - - ,- SatiMir ' -' , '''''' ''' - ' - - ...,.... --- , 4 ;1 , ' t - 7,01.vt.- 4-- '2r IRead-Thoughtful- . ---- :.'" , 7,:t t'",- - - .,,, - , - ' , cent? ' - . .., - ,., the past 10 years has 7: , During erom,r77--0i , . , ,., ,,..,,, . k,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,;;-.,,number of Americans who the 4i,' . ,, ,0,1 ,, Vvo:. . , e, out gone steadily favor pulling -. l'','",, ,1.,:A'' . ,.......,,72.:3..!..',i-,E,-.!- ,,4 :..:,' stayed-abothe same or ut Loi4;--up, -.' . r--. '11.1' down? z: ' NvtiAsteadily gone Z .7.0, ,4 r t v , ; r . :What would be the dominant , ... , '11.1v'''.1'11 '..1 ' . attitude of the American people 00", laN tii,,, . Nations should United If the . e , .1 f;,, -- , ' vote Red China a member over .. ,;, 4,'' 1 ,US government opposition? 4N111"N.0.- ' ',,A, '' ' , -' . N 1 -If you have determined your , -- -., ,..x......,,Q- - , ---- , "4,..,,,,,i,,... .,, ,, ,1 - answers, Fli turn to the back '- 00- -' .,,:t17 what it of. the. book and-s- ee . . N;....0- -' ,:., : an to 7,-is It prove says. going ' ,,. , . d Informative an interesting ..4.i book and will be out in the fall. ' . .: :. :c ; ,....,.. ....,,,,,,.,,- , i, A, ' -. study of '"American at Cr , "P toward the United Nati' ons"-and will be a review and ,,',..1,.,,r4..;, ",a,....,,,,-:-- - ' .. 7, ,....'''- ,.. ' ' . all the surveys ,of of appraisal 411,11:rk , ' in this field opinion public -a,' : 6.,', is the work of 1945. c, It since . ' '' , ' 'Alf 3 IL- - Whitney- - laid ,,';,-.,., .' - .., s., Ste;then ,... ' ' :. , liam A. Scott of the Survey Ites, - ,, z' - ' ,,. ;460777-- ' ', - :.. , eargh-- Center- University-- Of , , ., . 'itt, ---,,,, ' ''''' 7! , :'' , ,.:. , ' .,,' ,, Chicago. .:,,- ,,, ,,. ,:: '""-- - ,, - - -- ,.,..,,r;,: ," e - , , ,,, -- mosa-witho- . --' .. ; " ' -- '- - ' .. ," zo Pz ,,-- - - 7 ; -- , '''''' ..;'''' , f ,, . - '', ., - - . , , ' , - -- , , S7.4 ' .A ,.t , . - news-Conference- e. NIN'a --- '7 te.,- -- , 7';' . - , :,,. ,J ,,,. ,4 - -- ,'- - ' ' ee;L, convinced world, it The facts are, however, that on April 23, is Safest to maintain a position that allows at th0 nAndung , Conference,' Red China our leaders to negotiate from strength. made a tentative offer to talk with the U.S. As we centemplate our arms, however, on the. question of Formosa. Our State ,. we mast not forget that military might is first reaction was to take no only one of the essential ingredients of a in talks without the presence, such part any position. of. strength. Other ingredients ,ofNationalist China. Later, however,' Sec. which must be integrated with the military .retary Dulles modified this stand and said , power to act, are such moral principles as that the U.S. might agree to confer-wit- h honor, integrity and consistency. The Free.. the Reds alone on the question of &cease ' 11Vorld's successes at the conterencetable ta.,..fire,only....In --' SEATO pact,- in the West the achieving President said be Eisenhower supported ' Mr. Dulles' view. European Union, at Suez, in Iran and at ' , Vienna have come not alone through the In view of the fact that we recognize threat of military,might,-,They.have-been..,; only the Nationalists as the government' ....7 because West'sthe with accomplished China and because we have- - a treaty of along ' mounting strength in arms there is, among . understanding with that ' government,' it , the FreeWorld nations,' a growing unity would seem dangerous 'and inconsistent to - of purpose and a gathering conviction that - talk in any way with the Reds about For. at last, American foreign policy Is being -- ut the Nationalists being pres- .conducted with ,courage and consistency. ent Certainly, these are the seeds from One important evidence of this unity. and which . mistrust and disunity: grow. - This conviction came at the Bandung con. this is the type of inconsistency that weakens ' ference where communism, instead of gain- - our position of strength, which, at the mo- was banded a In,: the lictoryit-expecte- d, 1 merit, givesStien hope of acrneving-re- al harsh setback. rather , progress ' . ' ' . ,,)'''' ' ':': ' rl ;',' .., ' ,It,Neee.., k: t, I , 4' '. . , al t , ..,..,,-,,, 11141'.7".7.ft. jectiv' cans are ,r. 7.- - , ,, -- . ' - t. - :, 6 7;,--- 0 t,k -- It '''''A.':', ' 4"'a 1 -- 1;as----iir-s-u- I . Having gained this position of strength, it would be a tragedy indeed if we were noW to show signs of wavering and incon- . art Yet, reportedly' sistency. suchsigns appearing in respect io our Formosan policy. A recent dispatch from India credits high Indian sources as saying that direct talks between Communist China, and the ,. United States on the :Far Eastern crisis are expected to take place within 60 days. These talks would exclude Nationalist China with whom theCoMmunists have re- fused to negotiate. 4t. 1 ,, ,i , - .' -.- - . ' - . - ' - ' i .,- - NZ,. , . witti its three , tinitcd-Stales- r. - ' -- -- '1' ' I of the . 'r '; - - '''-- : ,. 4,- 1- I ---- -- 1 i - - , on Co-n-statiti- - ,e -- "ei; . departthents of government, each fully independent in its ouin field. , ii' , the-- sta-n-i-f- ' - Solt itikti City, Utah, Monday, May 23, 1953 . ot EDI,TORIAL- PAGE - ,r , ellit callteealCDreanl' - - -- - - . , - 0 DJFL. L.,z.).,E;i2LIFf - . - --- ' , - |