OCR Text |
Show . ' - : 4 I 1 ' - I A - ' 4 . - ' ' - ' 9,1953 , - ' .' - ' . . ' '1 - - - , - ' ''. i , 6 I . ' I 'r:;'8:4--il:)j..TORIAL'-..PAE- : 1 ---- '''..' -- - 7 4 t - . - DESERET NEWS . AND-fELEGRA- M . - - ' .SALT---LAKE.caLyi?.uTA.1- - , , , We stand for theVonstitution of the UnitedStatee with its three departments ..;,,,government as therein set forth, each one fully independent in its owli field. - , ! - i - -- , ': ' -- TheCitizenship. James appointthent , I - . There is going to be a real pc) . . Utica' scrap over labor policies come. next , x 1 ' ! - ' : - 1 - 'i ef , , Taft-Hartle- : , 1 -- I. , States-has-one-- t doorstep in this Trieste dispute. The conse4tuences could be very, very grave.l. V2, It seemed like a smart move, the prom- ise we made back in 1948 to work toward giving the entire 'Trieste Territory to Italy. It was just, at election time. De Gasperi, upon whom we counted for strong support in N A T faced a - tough- Communist opposition. He needed stong help of 'a promise like we gave and, ' after all, Yugoslavia, the other claimant to Trieste, was part of the Soviet bloc at that Treading on the toe of an Iron Curtain satellitd has been considered fair sport. Who could have guessed that within a. year Yugoslavia would revolt and become - - . , - , A,- fight-again- st - - , --ha- I - 1 . I 11 , .-- , iI 1 (ICI , , t' i , 1 i i' . - .0 ! III . i . Jr i PO alp, . , f V, ! , t 1V i , ..) 14 . , 1.4 1...1 1764- ' ' 1 ' s 1 , ., till I ill .,) tlpf J.., I pi ''''' 41 ., . t ' 1 - 4 r - - i , '43 .. a, midi ';', 4 , '1410 - Isram..aaatia., . - i - , -- ' , tt, - ' - hard-togoo- easy-to-spen- BLAME IT all to woman's curi- osity. When Christopher Co. lumbus said, "What do you sup' pose is out there beyond all that water?" Isabelle Just had to find out. So we have Columbus Day, for which we are all most grateful even though we do not know whether we observe it on his birthday or not. ' The history books are not quite certain when Columbus was born. October 12, 1446 is generally accepted as the natal day of the great Genoan, assuming that he was born in Genoa, which Is no certainty,. either. Some historians record that Columbus was born in 1451 and that it was June or January. AU of which does not matter, since the day we celebrate is the date on which he set foot on Watling Island, although it is likely he landed some ether place. Confusing lase , is the fact that 'Columbus was looking for something else when hi bumped smack into the Bahama Islands. 'N , - GNI THING is reasonably certain: The calendars are all to the falsetto when they print bens reported on this, outlining the date OCTOBER 12 in red a rectangle 2,731 rods in perime- ink and note below "Birthday ter exclusive of the Jordan Riv- of Columbus." Nor is Columbus er, which would orm one side. the only great man who has no birthday to call his own. School They recommended that the children are taught thatShakewall be made of cpud, dug from speares birthday h April 23, moat a ditch, or which was to run parallel to the outer side which is only a wild guess-- at -of the wall The mud villa to best, REIVIEMBER.WFjENPrison Was Utah's Big Headache? ewe Mont the nest killed. Peter Mortensen,- - also under the death sentence, begged to be included in. the escape but his fellow prisoners would not take him with them. 25 Years Ago gugar House businessmen were demanding that the state prison be moved from its location on 21st South Street, and thltt some place be found that would provide more space for ,' , the 75 Years Ago , Oct. 10, - The famous trial of Sylvanus Collett for the 1878 -- inmates.- - be mixed with - weeds, sage. Shakespeare was christened brush, bullrushes, etc. It- was In Stratford Church, April 26,-- to be 12 feet highL six feet thick 1564. It is a reasonable as- at the bottom, sloping equally ,sumption that he was born on both sides to it thickness of some time before that. 212 feet at a height atilt feet parted this life April 23, 1616, ' which has nothing to do,ivith from the Vase., The remaining feet would go up straight. .114 birthday. - 7 coners-the-li- . - - ne , ,d1P . IV,Iiii. ,r,10.,,,,,,s ... : ,,,,,,,p,,T.,,,...swis24,19,g, - . , . - , : . Nobody bothered to record the date of Shakespeare's birth, although his mother must have known it. Nevertheless trustful school children are told that April 23 is the birthday of the Bard of Avon and thousands of his equally trustful devotees pay sixpence te visit the house lia which he was born, which probably was torn down 200 years LIKELY AS NOT the question anent the birthdays of Columbus and Shakespeare will never be settled. It has been suggested that maybe the United Nations could help out, since 'both of the illustrious gentlemen concerned,---belonio all "nations, except : Russia and her Soviet satellites. Just give them, a little time and they will claim both were born in Moscow on May I. - ' Aside from the birthday angle, the salient fact about Columbus Day is that he was the first to set out with firm purpose acrou'a chartless sea to .1' through' sail on, and on the thick of fogs of discouragement and the sullen storms of mutiny, to give the Old World a New World! On October 12, or any other day we may choose, let us be grateful for Columbus. If be hadn't given the Old World a New World, how else could we of the New World, ever have become so completely involved in the affairs of the -Old 'World? ,, - TEXT FOR, 'TODAY: "For know , that my Redeemer liveth and that he' shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: And though, after my skin, worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shill 1 see God.---Job - 1 ,. - , . - ,,, . . I - - McKay Points With Pride doe-clos- nor Wok's This , Highlights - utrima.ry of Good and Bad lows From Around World - The week's balance sheet b.-- 1 tween the good and bad news in the hot and cold wars, as seen by Phil Newsom, United Press foreign editor: THE GOOD In I, Italy, Premier Guiseppe Pella won a vote of confidence on his foreign policy which has Italian participation in NATO and friendship toward the U. S. as Its keystone.-- - The French moved closer to positive action on the U. European army plan, and at Margate, England, Prime Minister Winston - Churchill's Conservative Party reaffirmed its close ties With American foreign policy. Tbe United States and Brit- am took a positive step to settle the question of Trieste. They suggested that Italy occupy zone A, now occupied by United States- and British Jorces,and that zone B continue to be administered by tbe Yugoslays. & Egyptian Vice Premier Game', Abdel Nasser said that Egypt and Britain were .at a .decisive stage in their negotiations .for British surrender of Suez and tad reached basié The British ex. I agreement.-, , the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security, Welker has Impressed his constituents with his astute questioning of witnesse& His busy schedule calls for many subcommittee hearings and speeches within the next few months. As soon as his friends can spot a break in his schedule, the dinner will be held.- - "Operation Candor," the administration's plan to enlighten the public on Soviet 'atomic threats, has turned into "operation confusion." Within one week the of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy said Russia could blitz us any minute; the Director of Civilian Defense stated his doubts that Russia even bad the the Secretary of De- fense sant Russia couldn't launch an atom attack for three years; the ,Secretary of State talked about a nonaggression pact with the Soviets and the President of the tk a speech full of - caution Ind little hope. THE FORT MONMOUTH, N. Army Signal Corps probe of disloyalty suspects, including U. S. radar experts, was sidetracked in 1951 by Pentagon and Central Intelligence Agency orders. A Signal Corps major, later transferred from Washington, produced w)re recordings of telephone conversations linking Signal Corps Reds with C I A employes. The C I A dispatched a persuasive official to two Washington newsmen when word leaked out that storiez would be printed regarding the suspected Reds. He promised to give the newsmen- the story when the in- vestigation was concluded. C I A failed to keep its word . never got in touch-Wi- th the newsmen, presumably ' never made an investigation.. SerretarY of Interior Douglas McKay, under fire from public power enthusiasts, points with pride to Franklin County, ho, when he Is told private in- tefests cannot match federal power and irrigation construe pressed cautious hope but warned there still could be a -slip twixt cup and lip. THE BAD I. The United States sent a fourth note to Communist China and north Korea warnitig that action must come soon if the political conference on the fu. titre of Korea is to start on the Oct. 28 target date. 2.. Whether or not the Russians have a deliverable hydro. gen bomb reached the ultimate in confusion. Gordon Dean, forrn mer chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, believed they did. Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson said they 'were three years away. Those were the outer limits of a mass of conflicting opinion. Added was Civil Defense Administra. tor Val Peterson's gloomy pre. In 1951 the federal governdecided that .Franklin dictionlhat atomic warfare ) ment Inevitable. . County farmland erosion could 3. Britain rushed warships be helped with a check dant. A and troop reinforcements to preliminary survey, costing 930,. crush Communist "intrigue" 000 was undertaken, Govern. and to prevent any possibility 9f ment "experts" estimated1.the "Communist.dominated" goy. cost of ' the dam at $500,000. ernmentin ber only foothold on Frankliri..County's 10,000 rest.South America, the colony of - dents said no thank you, built British Guiana. Oam themselves for ;39,743. the , ' "IF' '4'4 - -'. ,,,'' , , ''""re.ko- ,,..,...,,z.....,,-cAra,,,,op-, . - . , ..... .. . , , ) - , - . - - Adams" Learns How to Relax; . - -- Muhl . . - impor- tance its founders planned for It. The U. N. was set up to funelion in a peaceful world which simply does not , exist. What American foreign policy is doing is actively to keep the peace and, at the same time, to keep the United Nations alive so at, to give it, the time (and the chances) to consolidate whatever peace there is. - '- ' -- , -- murder of John Aiken in 1857 ' 50 Years Ago opened In the First District t. 10, 1903 City and state Court at Provo. over the big prison , were agog 100 Years Ago break in which the condemned Oct. 10, 185 -- prisbners,, Vahan Haworth and James Lynch, made good their had been chosen to determine for the .contemplated escape. Several other were wounded and ions wail wallierotmd the city. The mem-Isl-a -- -- :L ss eye-witne- October 12 Columbus Day, But It Is Not His Birthday - , ne Communists fight-1,- m definitely , against Christ and Christians. In all their plans and actions they mail down religion as Enemy No. I. It Is terrifying to know all this and at the same time to see that the citilized world seems unable to do anything for the oppressed ones, I saw tears in the eyes of many of these watching the movie, but as an of, and a sufferer under the Soviet regime, I wish to help draw the attention of the unwary to the very real and terrible danger existing in our own time, a danger as stated above, far greater than any of a bygone age:- - chiefly because of a Godless philosophy making LES' GO - ; - . ual , - ! impressive harsh and merciless except for the favored few. with its persecutions of Christians,. slavery,etc. How nice it is to live in this century. But unfortunately, if we really had such a thought, we were in great error. The truth is that our generation has yet to realize that untold millions of people in this world, in Soviet Russia, are in the grip of a system of slavery without parallel in history. The slavery, which existed in Ancient Rome, is differed drastically from that practiced by the Soviets. Also it is necessary to emphasize again and again the most post-wa- - - show "The Robe," many found that life- under Roman rule was products of other countries, produdng them at remarkably point in world affairs, economic and po-- low cost and selling them profitably on Utica!, when he reported on his return from growing world markets. r Their weakness, however, lies in that a world tour that recovery is .surprisingly good,- - but that the economies very trait of imitation. They are unable, on their past record, to develop outstandof too many nations are far too dependent on U. S. aid to be really healthy ing products of their own. This fact, in , If it is not direct Americad aid these the end, could prove their economic down. fall. nations rely on, it Is the indirect sort rep- What is needed both in the Orient and resented by the dollars of the American in Europe is organized and skillfully di tourist and the American G. L stationed rected research, to find new .ways of abroad. Take away this source of income, Ind too many countries would be Ina bad 'eloping and exploiting national resources and skills. The old saying about the "better Way indeed. ;..; Dr. Olpin, who traveled as a special mousetrap" is as true, in the atomic age as it was in the horse and buggy days. The emissary of the U. S. State Department man, or the nation, who offers a better ' in its information exchange program,-spen- t somn weeks in Japan and was particularly product wifl find ready buyers who will bring him sound prosperity. The man, the Impressed. by the recovery of our , World business or the nation who is content to War II enemy --- and at the same time take fringe benefits, to copy others and to by its basic weakness The Japanese, Dr: Olpin noted, are mak, work only on the slim margin of competi-trig substantial economic 'strides by .11; , five salesmanship is bound to lead I pre.' ploiting their national genius for imita . carious economic existence. i saw the Many Important fact In the Communistic movement, namely the violent or rather fanatical antagonism to all things spirit- The lives and liberties of hundreds of millions of people depend on how we handle these usq of "scientific methods per. for, whether we like it tthings, verted to malevolent ends. Or not, we have been forced into M. the leadership of what is left Grietens. of the free world in its desReader Protests perste attempt to escape the domination of communism, -- News Medical Series It is true that we have the U. N. through which the world's The undersigned bas been a subscriber to your paper for about fifty years and I non. The Igton Angle out of many that I know that think that your paper should 1 not publish such propaganda as "It Is Your Life.' The profession that is exonerated has failed in so many cases themselves that you cannot blame ByDWARD K. NELLOK the public to seek help outside. I shall speak of only my WASHINGTQN (NANA) personal experience, although Presidential Assistant SherI know of many other cases. man Adams, with a reputation Two cases of cancer in our mediate family, operated on as a stern New Englander, seems e actually to have mellowed unand treated by a medical both died of cancer-- A der White House pressure. friend of mine has been operA recent White House visitor, ated on twice and treated with later appointed to a top federal upto-dat- e methods this last job, spent almost all of three year and is now dying with can- days with Adams waiting to see I ce , helves the PresidentHe-says- . A fourthcase where another amazed at the change in Adams, practitioner, a doctor of chiro- found him busy all day long, practice was called in after their but relaxed. doctor, an M.D. bad informed the family that their bother FROM MS, VANTAGE point the visitor concluded that would last only le hours. She Was in a state of coma, having about all the President has time had nothing to eat for a week for is to sign papers and talk and bad been on a fluid diet to callers. Adams agreed, indifor three months. She re- cated that the entire White sponded to this treatment and House staff had learned a few In a month was eating r any- tricks from the President on thing; She lived for ten more how to endure the pace and years and was past 70 when she stay happy and healthy. If he will stay put long died., I don't expect you will pub- enough Idaho friends of Sen. lish this but I felt like protesthim with a testimonial, dinner. ' : Mrs. A. K. A somewhat unsung member of - , attain the Letters From Readers on Current Issues Slavery Worse Under Soviets Than Romans- - h . So D44 1 As.mit .9., 14? (.4 - 1 1 f .., , i :,' I- i Don't Look Now, John, but . , that-Amer.-- fl,, 1 :.' - - Sen. Refauver has certainly "foreign affairs" should be adeworld crystallized publie uncertainty 'quately bandied and maintained. be by demanding from the adminis peace should tr atien some authoritative But it hasn't worked out that the N. theory and practice 'common fa esreHgr posi- way. II, coincide. extent of Meanwhile seldom tion. Recently several military lf in world is very real and government leaders have free is threatCivilization been differing widely on this -- - and only America can ened who presumably problem. Some, Remember. have groundsforiheir state save the situation. re- mentsevendoubL that Russia ing President 'Eisenhower's warnings, we must or the means to tent has a become realistic about that-- , deliver it. There la no, excuse for not deadly realistic. We can be thankful that the up the inabeen Never clearing before- has there greater government has taken the lead need for accurately informing In realism and has long decided nitch the American people of the dan- that something more gers they face.We must have moremust ,be done. the truthand no wishful think- -- BECAUSE OF THIS the kn. pression ls growing ON THE OTHER HAND, it is Ica has Adopted a dual policy in our duty to help the govern- foreign affairs. On the one ment by'tngam-mmuictmgreater hand she is giving the- greatest United to the be. possible support Interest commit- Nations, despite the poor prosyond our borders ments which include plans for pects of improving its sad reeagainst -- potential ord since- its ireation, while on cluefense the other hand, America is aggression. There would be much less going in for direct action as if we were to help our if no United Nations organizeleaders AT, aPpreciating wbat ticat exists. I refer to the setting they are up against. The old up ,of such defense plans as concepts of foreign affairs have - N A T 0, The treaty with Korea, changed. Today theyare almost the Point-programs and Impossibly complei. They in- others. Some people, especially U. N. volve not only eonventional diplomacy, but global military enthusiasts, don't like this, but planning, economic aid, propa- If they gave the matter serious ganda and world financing in thought, they should be quick to a dozen different currencies, realize that only in this Amerimost of which are blocked, policy can there be hope frozen or raiseral4 dem:eel thaLthe-rilitedliatio- ns , ' :; ..) .... I. , is ,115 ' 1 11 1 t ,,, t e,...,N 440.4, , 1 0 - i ' 1 p,,,,,,. ; 1 ' 1' btee'l' t.',1 - r 'VI( 4 , Utah does not want to be penny wise and pound foolish in the matter of official travel and it is certain that many trips of state officials pay for themselves many times over in educational and other values. d On the other hand, in these days of d get and dollars, we have no money to waste. leloorent Ambit - Att I tif , I Alt t 11,4? 10 .111 f t, II I 't . 1,' ; 1 "- - : ' ' I 11 11(1 liMtV:11.1 : 1, 1-, :-- t ,, , . 1 ,.., ilr IA 0 pease, Now ' VA I I,., ! ; :1 70' 0 I II semi-vacatio- I ByVIVIAM MEIK IS fee, . 4 Keturns ulpin of the tion. They are copying ...- , . . . let) t! " ,; ! Uni- Dr. A. hay Olpin, president on a fundamental touched versitrof Utah, : '4 - i. . 1 ) m Dr - , , i1 11 I . n, out-of-sta-te , 1 I 11 i 0 ti . But questionable one avoided entirely. when the written request is followed up by the true nature direct of any proposed trip is sure to come out. Trips which have a definite value to the state will continue to be authorized, but the new procedure should cut out "junkets" which, sometimes in the past, have given at state exstate employes -- 4 I tI (1 . -- a NEWS don-Itse- , Junketing Taboo t' Mt . I I , But if 41d. Since then we- - have been the uncomfortable position of a man trying to divide an indivisible plete of candy between two children, each of whom insists on the whole thing. 'The decision we announced this week, to tunt Zone Athe part we and Britain d' been' policing-4v- ir at least, the virtue of bringing a dering dispute to a head. Although 'Tito has summarily rejected this proposal, It may be hoped that he is well as the tans will have the common sense to realize that armed conflict over this' bit of land Is unthinkable when so much graver clangera confront the free world. out-of-sta- 7 , I I , ' , . . long-smoult- , - LIS..INcliks to Keep Peace And Save Unifed Nations 4 : 11 I lo , 1: In the past, it has been the custom for ' any employe of the State of Utah who wished to make an trip at the state's expense to fftl out a form in which he described the nature of the proposed trip and told why it should be made. If the- request got the approval of his department head the written request was passed on to Examiners for approval. s:the Board of , The system had, Jnanyobvious and the board's new ruling which requires the personal appearance of department beads to support travel requests Ieems to be a sound step in the right di- tection Almost any trip can be made to look "on paper," when the most favorable aspects can be heavily emphasized and the j t ' 't ,,,,,:i;--. ' II , , z I ft SN) t.,,, ttssovietiommunieffrr on , INTERPRETING if ever an expedient promise came home - - one of the Weevil key hopes in ooraeininc,- tetoostr the, Vatted L. , - t.!c-,.- ,) L ,s, 1 y That Trieste Promise ". - .,- -, 1.1 - 1 t.. ,,,1 ' - ,,. I -- Taft-Hartle- .91 '' - - 1 ip-t-x) 11 y basis f. . - ' ''.;) in Q 'kaf-- - - ; . , !, t kt 'N(q". - o -- Af........00.6 , ipte"........"' oZ, Taft-Butl- er - - ' fr.:J1.:'' wage-earne- rs - ''' morot -- k -- -- , ,, L - lthe , . .,, - (2) President Eisenhower has decided after what looked like a false start of two .what his positionlls going to be in that ' iciaP ' ' There had been cause for concern on this latter point.- Events seemed to indi- iate the administration WAS flirting with Ei:erniorfu'irif tipectal Interest" category. There has been tenon to wonder whether political ex- was taking the place of principle ' In' labor matters. To be specific, there Was at this time last month real concern - whether the 'administration wu frying to today are working at their buy the political support ot union leaders jobs with a happiness and contentment with emateulation, of - the with such men Au James Mitchell.- - We - taw tbPrice to be that these mons-may-nionger Secretary -- Durkin's resignation nd1 j, of ffifs,persuasion that the only "good" cited that this was not to be. Secretary management Is management beaten Into the Mitchell's appointment clinches it. This ground by Big Labor. Many of them may makes the matter of a certain feel that their interests in the White House political battleground in the 1954 elections. can be very adequately looked after by a If the President has thus lost the pc). Man of Mr. Mitchell's stamp. tied support of union bosses, he has These will be the same millions who gained much more. He has now the oppor- have come to appreciate the freedom and tunity to tackle labor policy strictly on a the progress the working man has made of principle---- -not expediency the law, and who wantand to go 'straight to the working man for to see its ninciples retained in any apeapproval. This is the better- wait- .- It be made. These what Senator Taft did in Ohio are those who are citizens first, union with such effect in 1950. It is what Gen- members second, and special interest plead.. oral Eisenhower did last fall. If there is era not at all. - I , - ' Lasr:' , I:Tactically. Mr. Mitchell may be just the man to spearhead an tisenhower labor campaign carried out in this straight-forwarway. In labor relations has been -entirely on the management ,iride of the table. This may in one ,sense make his appointment "incredible," as one labor boss was quick to say. But fronranother point of view, that of. the working man, it may not be so incredible it that., He has, as C I"O President- said,' "a good reputation among the labor people who have dealt with him across the bargaining table." The vast majority of - , t neis-,, , - (1) - é is ' . ,40'.41 one lesson the country and its politiciani ought to have learned in the past quarter. it is that government based on special consideration to ,special groups is not good government, either morally - or ' clear: , '4 I , . , of P. Mitchell of Labor seems to make two ' --Y-. irstiff - ' --- -- ,, , . , IP . ' ' 4' ' , , ) of . , , . - - ss. I : 4. I ..0951 |