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Show , , - ' - '. ' - . V j . ---- .,-- ' , - - .. , ', -- : - , ,..--- - -- ,, We stand for the Constitution of the United States with.its three departments of set forth, each one fully independent-i- n its'own field.----' , government -w lk--... , , 1- , . , ,ç U.N. -- - , yearago this peoples: , Today I -- , ' I 1 , . ' accomplished a great deal of good. Aside from Korea, the I.J..N.'s great ad- venture, which can either be claimed as a vidory overaggression or condemned as an utter failure, the U. N. has accomplishicra great deal of good. If there hive been setbicks there have also been good major beginnings and some achievement in the fields of collective security, peaceful settle- milt and economic, social, cultural,and !pi-limanitarian work. The first steps, however faltering, have been taken toward goals never before reached. It is quite fitting that America and all the world observe United Nations Day as it comes around each yearobserve it not in a spirit of celebration, but in an attitude of sober and examination, ing its shortcomings along with its accornplishments.. President Eisenhower has termed the man's best orU. N. a "sheer, necessity to substitute ganized hope ,the conference table for the heti field." Whether it Is the best, or whether it will be the last, d mains to be seen. In any event, the Ti . N. has taken the indispensable first step and helped prepare the Way for eny future world order which mankind May wish to build. open-minde- , , I I I, I I I ; n The incredible ride a of pair of teen-ag- e desptradoes through the most heavily populatOd part of Utah, exchanging gunfire with police as they roared down the highway, was quite as 'fantastic as anythIng In the sensational pulp Yet fiction found on today's newsstands. it would not be quite accurate to say the was geatly shocked at reading the story in Thttrsday's Deseret News; the pubLc' p poor bewildered mind has been somewhat numbed to shock by the frequency of youthful excursions into serious in recent months. Just as unbelievable as the tale of the youngsters' wild dash, running a succession of roadblocks and continuing at upwards of 70 miles an hour even after one, and then two, tires were blown out, was the fact that other motorists along the road escaped without a multiple-deat-h smashup. First contact with the young desperadoes was made and, before the wild , , ----- -- '' THI - . - . " ' . 14611fS AMA , - - , . , - ,, . C . - Analvw Delon 1", f ...---- , .., t . --- , - I ".-- 7 S Nan I - - - 1 - I I - - v . 1 If q '' 1 ' :. - A ''' : 11 4)11o,c' . ., ei,-11- 4 ' ' JIM .. . . IfettlESPIC . 4 4: 12.; ,.,-.- 44 .- - . sly ' -- -- ' 40 : .4 ,,' i It ' ' - - - grAtt1 . ' hall-hearte- d .4 0.1 ... ) 4 - :: :- ... --- ' '"; . A 4 i:':11: f ' 1,,' ,Il Oki - ' it.,1 'A J , ' I ' ". . .1 ' If ff ,', sle ' r , 44116. ' - rag ,ffildle: ' , s THERE IS LITTLE need ice he invitation to Russia to discuss Germany. I reported on this a few days a But to these things has now been addedI the renewal of trouble. The the Arab-Jewis- h U. N. is again going to debate it yet again. Lon Is that h." My bind the stene activity is con-Th-e centrating on the idea Of "in- ternationalizingu Jerusalem in the hope of bringing a Pales- tine peace. Knowing how Arabs and Jews both regard that city and its significance, any one with common sense and realism can dispose of that question in one word. "How?" I personally stand amazed at the likeness of this kind of diplomacy tethat of a genera- tion agothe patchwork stuff that resulted in Danzig and the polish corridor, and the "peace in our time measures so popular in Europe in the last 45 years led to two world wars. There was every sign recently that American foreign policy would not in future be unduly influenced by European ax grinding. The last few weeks have not upheld these signs., It is to be hoped that this will be only a temporary divergence. o. . .1011110. . 140.41",0671CD . A I are proving daily, quite Impossible of practical application. Itis- distressing that states- men of such experience. and first hand knowledge could have acted thus. First theyand the the Trieste dynamite stick foi years. The'n Brit.;; am n and America both draw. close to Tito and neglect Italy. Now, Seeing the difficult position into which Italy has been thrust, they suddenly change their minds. Talk about apatchwork solution. 2 ,.' Itifr:441,Zik.,,14-!'":- . Is31' , ,- If one adds up the 'various communiques issued by the ' British, French and American foreign ministers after the Lon-don conference, one specific fact emerges. Whatever the rea- son, they ha only been able meas- to agree on urea to tackle their major out-standing problems. Study Korea first. The U. N. representative, Am- bassador Arthur Dean, is now arriving in Korea 'to talk about arrangements for a conference on Korean peace. Note that he Is only going to talk about it when the U. N. resolution was supposed to have finally decided on the membership of the con-gference. It was to be limited to The Communists belligerents. had ' insisted on the inclusion of certain "neutrals" such as Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia and India. Reds still insist on bring- Ing in the neutrals. As I see it front, here, all that Mr- - Dean can do (if his U. N. briefing is what it is reported to be) is to tell the Reds "No" or find some sort of a compromise which will make the "final" U. N. resolu- tions on Korea look foolish. - tit ' - irr-&-N, I , , Foreign Poiicy'Blunders ,. Give Rise to Grave Concern -- '- ', - ,Esiapade - 1 1 - 0 f , ' - , i , IN ANY EVENT what will be the- - practical outcome? The HIfthhIki armistice agreement stressed that. Oct. 28 was the deadline for such a conference to come into active service. d The same type of decisions have been arrived at Tho Dogtrot Howe and Teloaram when we Non-Unio- n to scared, get pretend Resents invitos commonts from its readers sal Letters and their cute thank-yointerost. when in regard to Trieste and Gertopics of current must be signed, should bis limited to In the former the case, many. Workers' Attitude 2041 words or less, and must not violate you drop a few candies, cookies n bilateral deci- ted COMMIS of geed tasto Address or an apple in their bag and sion, arrived Editor, Letters to the News, P. O. at, according to I agree with the vice presi- Tho Mut 1257, Salt Saito City, Utah. so leave they happy! Christmas is 'first in a child's British Foreign Secretary Eden,dent when he 'told the A without notifying Italy.or Yugothat all the fine working condi- 'avoid doing so. They take the ,life, but Halloween is certainly slavia. was most unrealistic to second and for the little that the least. And, as events tions and high wages the work- paper until the boy comes to It costs to give such great joy say men are in this ing the leave country !collect and then boy both to ourselvea and the kidt enjoying are the result of the to pay for the paper. dies we should certainly not of the unions..I think effort edi- abolish Halloween. an in Deseret News The most people think the same, for IN WASHINGTON Mrs. Lily Stewart By ROSCOE DRUMMOND all honorable men are Willing torial was all for the to to work us force law d !right to join with the unions to keep hard-earne- d z-wage Decries Poor Support what we have achieved and try to sbare our and working conditions with to make conditions better. Softball Series' I think it just as There are a few men who these men. Big-- 3 to do to to force.us try During the recent Worlds , Few people not directly connected with the college people taking part in the prod want something for nothing. !wrong to as force the would this it Softball was Series I never so They would like to enjoy the News to ductions. Tryouts for cast assignmeuts are the theater realize the tremendous ad- give them' a paper embarrassed in my life as .1 wages and working conditirons vances being made in the cultivation and open to all comers, and are awarded strictly each evening free, we have worked to obtain hard was a basis of on in and Utah arts of dramatic ; the turnout of -i the E. performance ability development C. Wall and pay nothing for them. Moscow's iti-eWiripingr-a-bor.udel deserved the maximum guaranare and the willingness to work long, tedious during recent years. For instance, the We don't want to interfere a German renewal of tee with the to against West' negotiate Miss Kiddies' not having anything of Impor- sire hours in preparation and rehearsal. University Theater productions engage with their right to work. There is being tested. It is being' aggression. , The University of Utah, through its some 750 participants during a season, and tance in Lake and are plenty of "scab" jobs to ,Salt when "Russia's Insistent purpose tested u n d e r circumstancesi - play to a total audience running well in three divisions of dramatic activity, the keep them busy. Of course they Joy on Halloween they do get it they do not sup- which could produce useful re- - never again to be at the mercy excess of' 100,000 people. In addition, the-will get about $20 per week major theater, the young people's theater awport it. You had to go through Oh, no Halloweenr-Hodisclose or that the Krem- - of another German tyranny is suits x explay-bowill ater programs of only slightly smaller and the ,txperimental le than we do. They don't do fult and not see the streets full the paper with a project, to tal kcontinue to wants lin ' understandable," the , tent are year-roun- d activities of Brigham present snore than 100 performances of as much work as we do. They of blinking lights and the chit- comb to find anything about negotiation and steer clear of perfectly late Sen. Arthur II. Vandenberg are still looking for something dren in their mysterious masks the series. - some 20 different productions during the Young University and the Utah State Agri- table. declared in Jantliry, 1945. What kind- of sports are there the conference current season. Brigham Young U. and the for nothing and will be where-eve- r and chubby hands clutching cultural College. in Salt Shortly thereafter Secy. of Lake? Teams from are the go. :their and they their eager They type goody bags The scope of the theater movement in USAC each have several performances and France sent States, Britain, James F. Byrnes Grand who San never Junction, Colo., pay a bill if they can eyes'and their squeals of delight scheduled each month, and all three will to the Soviet Union as the re- - 1State the West, and Utah's leadership in it, is was that Pedro, Canada, 'I' Arizona, tour extensively throughout. the state. The Big Three foreign! ready to join with its war-tim- e being underlined - this week end as and C. C. Andersoni ministers meeting. in London! allies in a25- - to the first annual Rocky Mountain Theater plays themselves rulithe full dramatic scale treaty Logan, Wheeler General Tire circumstances to guarantee mutual defense from Shakespeare to current Broadway hits, Conference meets at the University of Utah. from Salt Lake, Flagstone Tav-- ! brouht those. into being. and an effort is made also to produce outFive states are represented at the con- -. lagainst another German aggret. By US GOATES ern from Salt Lake, Fisher. . work Hess from authorUtah and which of theatrical the the CENTERED IT playwrights. original Ogden Toy hy ,at,snding ference, during proposal !sim- These offers were never Month from Salt Lake. Fine An encouraging aspéct of the statewide for negotiation at the focal Ries and panels will discuss such subjects as Utah teams with all the push point of tensiona peace treaty taken up. The question ig: ' theater movement is the public response, directing,- - costuming, cosmetics, scenery, and go they could possibly start for all Germany and withdrawal Should they be renewed now theater-in-theindicating a growing intetest and apprecialighting, dance, vied shows, out with. And with the right of occupation forcesand it that Russia has surrounded it. Long-Winde- d of in face drama lion for the "live" , and children's theater Shakespeare round, support on the part of the fans; sought a conference on the verylselt by all the satellite buffer stantly improving shows by competing it could lay its hands oh. they could have probably come issue on which Moscow has said While the drama departments of the - media. And though the theater activity is The Judgment of Prime Min-an- d out on top, who knows?. a conference. it wanted universities are the moving forces and cen- - , still overshadowed publicity-wis- e by the Pres. EisenBut the people of Utah would The most significant decision ister Churchill ONE OF OUR MOST loquacious , cpreer of Frederick the Great; certainly be ready to take all of the Big Three meeting was hower, Mr. ters for this widespread activity, the partici- illes, Mr. Eden, campus athletic programs, its mentors feel Bidaultt is that the proit is gaining headway, and successfully pation is by no means limited to campus congressmen says he will beat the drum for the Louisis- the credit had one of these its unanimous support for - champions. East-Weposal should e renewedand teams been the Pact. Professional and amateur actors taming Utah's tradition of leadership in this Security peak:-19 football If team and hours,necessary, ana State Please concentrate on this: If Ever since the end of OW it Js being renewed. Adlat from the general public actually outnumber important cultural field. against any measure that will told how to toss up a salad you can't play a sport, be one." war American returned from his , thinking has re eStevenson send further financial subsidies dressing with Roquefort Union! world trip with the same an- Marrelli Soviet that the Dorothy ognized swer and he was among the first to European nations. He sets cheese. , to recommend it ,19 hours as his goal 'because the tial precipitationboth rain and snow. THE RECORD reveals that the Sadness at the passing of our ,balmy Assignment i America IN ALL CANDOR something record forlong-winde- d arguIn many areas, of course, the storm is autumn weather is largely mitigated by the ' filibuster was a psychological new has been added to t mentation within the confines too late, if not too little. Shrinking water weapon for politicians as far knowledge that the great dry spell which . coves anxieties. Germany of 18 be the the is livestock but will as back nation the the a over Congress hours, helped, has spread supplies early Revolutionary great part of Is has earned her political indetimes. An orator by the name situation still faces disaster and will require 43 minutes. and caused heavy losses of crops and live- pendence and with that inde-' of John once arose stock has finally been broken. emergency assistance because of the short Sen. Huey tong is to his feetRandolph pendence has become a staunch The late to discuss the feed crop. Winter ranges will be mate- ally of the West while East Heavy rains swept over the parched as reviacclaimed ruptcy. Bill and while he had . rially improved even at this late date. Germany, held in the vise of plains areas of the Middle West and down valist of the filibuster. In the floor he touched lightly on has asked and received rePatria-- Soviet occupation, remains irn- By INEZ ROBB! .Government weather experts had pre-reliinto Texas, and weather patterns indicated , I of use the the banking system, June, 1935, lie spoke for 15 dieted an end soon to the current drought, NEW XORK (INS1---Ithe ' hon. Others given the chance placably hostile to communism in the form of cooler weather, with hours in an heroic effort to family Bible as a hiding place hands of a relentless and re- - maY want to come home, too. and to Russia. we hinted with had that it but Atlantic headed for the be would they along sC , for money, donations to the moisture, We can hope so, not from the West . .1 hope I would Germany rally opposition to an extenmay be entering a destructive drought states by the week's end. c,hurch, Oxford, and Cambridge morseless foe, point of view of national pride lowed to R A. Hueywith of endure and the forth 4 tion continue N courage some which will for went weather years. cycle universitiek, Sliakespf are, rampaging T, Locally, the ,Ismhwai uE.svn,Dthe uge tude. But I don't know; I just but from that of Christian con- - troops and shoes three times perance, royal land This being the prospéCcit would seem that cern for the future fate and integrated grants, the don't knciw. with heavy winds which caused some dam- . of 17 glasses of water, drink and Boston Tea Party, Paul Revere's right now, even as the present drought, is eoss: age, accompanied by snow where it will I can only hope that I would happiness of 22 young men wh o er n Europe. . but fell short of setting the Ride and the unconquered long-rang- e should be some ' have suffered trials of the spirit inches broken, II count. planning recorded I' The spirit Brighton , have the strength to cling to the really record. p of the men of Kent. started against the lean years which may lie -- and many of the drouth areas of Southern faith of my fathers when the and the flesh which most of us, has beento"block E D C and the Gone to his eternal reward Sen. Caine, who spoke six 'chips were down and the pres--1 have been spared and which we European Army, to immobilize ahead. Utah were hit with welcome and substan- , also is the late Sen. Robert M. cannot really imagine. hours, some four years ago, sures applied. every Movement toward a EuroLaFollette Sr. of Wiscopsin, the 'opposed 'vigorously the nomThere are already, a number peen Union and to keep Ger. But never what has man,'who foremost - marathon orator of 'nation of Mon C. REMEMBER stood naked and alone before of quite vocal Americans who many weak and neutral. Her ihi time who held the floor for as a member of the Wallgren 1,1 W) "Nowt" all the tile and National an alien foe, can really gauge! are willing to sit in jtidgment announced reason is fear of fteCo. that had introduced the ning, O'Brien (Pron outrages 118s hours and 43 minutes. It custom of putting the prices on perpetrated by the red men Security Counciland won the the level of his own courage? on Cpl. Edward S. Dickenson ture German ggression. 25 Years Ago !took him' that long tà express laurel articles shop ,sprig as-- -top talker of What individual, innocent of and the '22 U. S. soldiers whod 'Does the Soviet Union really. displayed in,their have been attributable in the !his opposon to the'Currency Oct. 23, 1928An editorial din. such experience, can be certain to date, are said to prefer corn-- , want security against further the sission. windows. They claimed that "a first ' cusses the plans of Soviet leadplace :to the villainy of IBM of 1M. Then there was how much pain, how much coldlmunism to Americanism. German aggression or does she at proprices prospective peek The good !senator also 'won and era to better the condition of 'Sen. Allen of Nebraska, who men." . white But I do not think thael am !Want to use a pretense of fear hunger, how much devourduces prospective purchasers." the 14 for thousands of homeless children alarm viewed with for hours rungless step 'ladder ing fatigue he can bear? qualified to say that the cor-- 1 as a means of trying to block 100 Yeari Ago who have been wandering the the .repeal of the Silver Fur- - sticking to the subject. He Ogden citizens met in a mass The miracle it seems to Me is poral and the other dissenters German unification and Get-- . -streets and highways of the meeting to organize a league Act of 1893, according to .cited no poetry, gave no reel-th- e not that a handful of American should be whipped out of so- man freedom to Oct. 23, 1853A large cave, join ,in the !pea, no advice to the lovelorn soldiers country during recent years. Congressional Record. for protection against the foot- some miles in length, with by till enemy ciety, or brought to trial or common defense of the Mien- captured 'the of -and made no reference to the In Korea have chosenso far as branded with a scarlet "T." Chief tong Love pads and murderers that infest- branches off in several diree- THE SENATE makes Community? up Its own i New York Yankees' traditional we Indians, spoke at the ed the city. had been discovered near tions, knowto stick with the simply do not know my own Theproposed EastWest Mk. and as it 'rules along goes Bonneville 4Club in Salt Lake in -' the world series. Communist side, but that so breaking point in the brutal, eurity I is - Greenville, Ky. AIn petrified designed tohave almost ,always been superiority 75.Years Ago It was explained that Bro. Cain many endured the terrible physz circumstances under which find outproposal City. He asserted that the U. S. ' shape as they monkey, as perfect own is his liberal. Each speaker Constitution was given to this t wis only a junior member and !kali Oct. 23, I878An editorial if it were alive, was toad in hardships, the gnawing these men made their decisions.' The West is offering Moscow to whether or not he might do a little better anxieties, - actual torture and live news'O'apers of One of the chambOrs and sent to ljudge as I hope I would have held out efair, a faithful and a significountry by the Indians, citing is sticking to the subject. . next time! the republic formed by the constant brainwashing without! as long as there was breath In cant ooportunity to negotiate the country are waking up, to, the World's Fair. An underIndians as the model for truth of the facts always main- ground lake, huge vaulted Huey Long, in his epoch my body. But who, never tried where it will do the most good. breaking. - the United States. TEXT FOR TODAY: !!A doutained by The Deseret ,Newsi rooms decorated with stalactites monologue, informed his us- As this is written, one Ameri- in the fire, canl be certain that Soviet Intentions shobld "be ' man is unstable in can soldier of the 23 who cast! he would have held steadfast for visible befrqr--e long. That the Indians have --been and stalagmites, were other dis- tenet's as to how to take care 'I 50 1Years Age , of their health; ,,reviewed the Jail his ways."James 199110 their lot with- the Communists' a days week-o- r a year? 1.t.111 More sinned against than sin coveries. 23, ,,A903 - ,7114 off-dut- ' 23, 1953 By ,VIVIAN. M E,IK Tor:. , , 44 IMEn , chase ended some 50 miles farther south in Salt Lake County, the following law enforcement agencies were involved: The Ogden city police., The State Highway Patrol. y State An and Highway Patrol trooper. The Bountiful town marshal. The Salt Lake City police. The South Salt Lake marshal. The wildly fleeing car was finally stopped by a rookie Salt Lake police patrolman, driving. city police ambulance, and outside city limits. He and another police. man were injured, fortunately neither of them seriously. Utahns may breathe a sigh of relief that , no lives were lost in the wild dash over the highways, and they should unite in giving a heartfelt word of thanks and appreciation to the law enforcement officers who .acted and with such so promptly, so disregard for their own saNty to end the public peril as quickly as possible. ', , 41.1510111"1111?" Hair-Raisi- , :a 1 re-ol- . , ' INTERPRETING - , d . ' .. - I ' ' . . 4, , I , . :1 k FRIDAY, OCTOBER - --- , - -- -- s,,' . UTA1-1- - . , . I , - ' - - --,' '' ' . ,,, , - -- ' , ve ever-prese- SALT LAKE CITY, , ', , it is only 10o clear that we are ,s401 ciroiacpieying these' goals- ,- We amid bitter ideological differences, mai. sive conflicts of power, localized fighting and the danger of a world con-- 1 flagration Which conceivably could wipe out our civilization. Many people consider the United Nations a total failure. .A disap- poiptment would be a fairer appraisal. ' America's ambassador to the U. N., Lodge Jr., sees America's dis-satisfaction- with the world organization as a result of overselling. Exaggerated claims and pretensions, be says, have led to exag-In 945 the gerated disappointments: United Nations was hailed as a panacea for , all illsthe answer and the end to the age- evils of war, poverty and inequality The U. N.'s most ardent champions will admit it has fallen short of the goal. At the same time the U. N.'s severest critics, if they are fair, will recognize that it has , ": - , - - -- . -- - ', - , Inventory - - , . - , together for lasting peace and for the eco- nolnic and social advancement of all - ' - Day---Time-f- qr October 24 in San most of the world's-people- s, through their governments, launched the greatest political effort in history to work Eight Francisco - . x AM ,., . 9. . N ' , , ---, , w , ' ''. ' RE1G' - - N, PAGE ., , - -- ' pi Letter's From Readers on current:Issuei half-hearte- - 1 u Anglo-America- 'The Play's The Thing , of t 1 I .i i 1 1 1, T 1 f t , k t, ' Offer Puts Krebilin New Peace Talk to Genuine Test i r II multi-proteste- d , 1,1 i - fine-toot- , si h ? - - frot-M- 40-ye- GO LES , , Congressman Would Speak for 19 Hours con-theat- i at0Mr. main-personn- - st -- One's Loss' Another's Gain I , Moe-Wes- Who Qualified to Pass Judgment on Dickenson? Bank-general- ' ' , ef , n . rsnoo idbu i WHENMammoth Cave Was Discovered? - , . , - ' - ' , , . , , , . i . , ; ., he4--tha- e - says:-.,."Th- . , is , 4 4 d , - 1 1 . |