Show it i 141 t 1 J ( P BARS ON OGDEN UTAH SATURDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 16 1961 WHAT OTHERS SAY question of tinue the flow of defense contracts On top of all this here is th whether General Electric and West inghouse should have their valuable record of General Electric when o licenses renewed despite it comes to lobbying and influence:' their conviction for antitrust vio-- 1 1 When Dorothy Thompson tried lation has been completely over- - to broadcast criticism: of Dictator General Electric looked by the Kennedy administra- - Franco imbecause a of most censored broadcast her one is the tion Yet it Catholic boycott had been threat-Eve- n portant issues in the nation if GE and Westinghouse cned against GE products: A' big had not been guilty xf antitrust vio- - 'corporation which does extensive lation ifs a debatable question retail business and therefore is sub- "whether companies having import- - ject to consumer pressure should stations ant impact on the economic and not be operating radio-Tasked 1949 GE 2 Congress In political structure of the United °i? States should have the right to gov-damage suits ernment-grante- d TV and radio °l s m ighl censes with the power to mould ' m s torm it m l? "ig public opinion andolitics - produa wtather Take for instance the case of Geninfluence --- rfli Fleotric company which GE gets defense contracts fton-hlcthe Pentagon averaging close to a' billion dollars a year It ranks third S or fourth among the largest 16 Jitrost suits fense contractors in the nation This mvdved in in itself should bar a company from SSSS" license Defense fa having a that for Department figures show should not be given at the GE the five years between 1950-5of forming toe Amer-tracts means condefense in got $3024000000 n e law over radl0' In 19G0 it received the huge total of 903000000 in government fey WASIIINGTON—The -- Toward Peaceful Integration Dallas and Atlanta notably illustrate the philosophy that must underlie-sounprogress toward settlement of racial problems and the means to implement that were philosophy In both cities" citizens that thoroughly schooled in the basic idea take must obedience to the law of the land views Respect precedence over personal fundafor due process a concept which is mental to bur form of government was the theme during the months preceding the start1 of token school integration This is no time for to" gloat over fancied triumphs It is a time for them to freshen their own faith in the idea of equal opportunity for all Amerr inspired by icans It is a time evidence of enlightened leadership in the South to root out intolerance in their own communities There is still much to be done in both North and South From New Orleans and Dallas from Atlanta 'and Little Rock and Galveston and Raleigh the word has gone out this fall that progress in the 'settlement of racial disputes can be made without violence In these and mother communities where at least token moves toward desegration have been1 made the counsel of moderation appears to be gaining ascendancy "This is good news to all in both North ' ' and Souths who believe that the Supreme Court's 1954 decision calling for desegration of the schools was in a sense nothing more than the recognition of an historic imperative: Communities which have acknowledged Jhis' imperative by moving peaceably toward integration merit honor The path they tread is not an easy onev They need understanding and when they make such strides s were made at this year's school openings they deserve full - Iv Next Sunday is election day in West Qermany The campaign battle between Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and West Berlin's Mayor Willy' Brandt has achieved prominence chiefly because' of what is really an extraneous issue in 'the election the clash between the Soviet Union and the West 'over Berlin j Whichever way the voting goes' Western diplomats expect no change in the existing relationship between free Germany and the West Basically the issue betweerr the two candidates involves the question whether Adenauer's domestic policies should be continued or altered "Der Alte" chancellor's admirers call him has spoken out against any 'experiments" in government This' is merely his way of opposing the social reforms 'urged by v ' l for-them- i '! Who Wants 'Ain't'? "Ain't'f has gained dictionary accept ance andfrnanglers of the language will cheer The news comes as a blow to the purists however We suspect — might as 've'H'admii it we hope — that "ain't" will -- not soon jvin the approval oL most English teachfcrsuvriters and scholars It seems unlikely that the editors of the forthcoming dictionary heralded for its acceptance of 'ain't" took this step HOLMES! ALEXANDER K'i iffe : ill j T" i :V' 'I " f " ' ' "1 I n ill : -- fhrmond sought to impose the muzzle of ceif it f f J You will remember that t s position was strongly crit- Though the persuasive power of the bright cai matservices presidency has- been used before in fiEhtmg men wim tne true nature ters of this kind the steel industry may of communism As these efforts of n by the current Sen Fulbright continue it will be justifiably feel -' to remember that a pressure Government mediation in labor- interestine same man was aso this vear management disputes has been accepted praising Gauin: and Taylor for and- - occasionally even welcomed by indusspeaking out critically against the try But this is a far cry from advice given ffiSrSOnheElSeDh°Ve in an overt attempt to influence' company Advocates of central control have to be case the this in charged price policy always been carefuKto cloak theirin noble objective The pofor steel liticS radical and the editorial radi- hanH and mount a slash- ai It is more than likely that the wage inany one who crease promised during contract negotia- ing attackiviagainst Tovmh i nmuAfc tions in January 1960 was granted only be- aufecaia men cause of the consoling belief that if neces- TRUE NATURE OF REDS L advance an it could be supported by sary in prices This if free enterprise means lftt?militarv teaches the true anything is an assumption the industry nism it mist Jied- make could safely fir Unfortunately the" Council by its action fundamentally socialism When so: haV prepared a moral stigma should the cialism in turrt is understood one UMi dui neip companies exercise their freedom to raise cannoi liicy ad vo- domestic of programs the the price of steeL Most Americans we cated think will riot approve of this attempt It many oi ujum duupicu hovers too close to government dictation within the category of socialism in tms case are MilitaryJ leaders 41 a At! in the price and wage field ' num fluiNib nsuuy icacimis w uucu id uic wwsi does hurt" : j i -- ij 11 The Baltimore Evening Sun carried bis "History of a Bomb EveSquadron" and The Saturday ' ning Post ran his "Fishers of Men" He came horns with a major's commission with the Air Medal four battle stars and the Distinguished Unit award (ErfiUr'i Notf tUlmts AUxtndtr hti I will always remember one of vacatian left aa a britf Ivrpttm Purinf kit aaia a tiumatr af arantinant ana" Holmes letters to his children intartstinf fueitt will centributt cal overseas from Itwas published in vmai) The Saturday Evening Post under the title "Dispatch From Dad"— chination in which one of our most it might have been called "My distinguished columnist's colleagues Children This Is Why We Are lied to him Holmes swore he would try to kill himv and set about Fighting'" This son of a distinguished sucto do it The story I heard from cessful family forsook a Annapolis was that Holmes quickly seat in the Alexander busitook the startled professional poll-tici- ness firm ior a reporter's penciL by the throat and undoubted- His pencil has been golden in ' a ly would have proceeded with the different sense WTe can see in his work at hand had he not been books stories and columns the repulled off by his friends ofv the-- physical violence and These men later commented that sult smashing falls of racing days the they would not have missed the tension of the bomber crew the man who broke his word but t understanding and sentimentality would have been a shame for of a son and father ancKthe schoHolmes to go to jail— he would of a historian All this comes larship have been missed Holmes has nevthrough in our favorite reporter's er been afraid to fight At the end of his tour of duty writings : "BE INDEPENDENT" in office Holmes reported to Mary-landereturn from duty in the On my in an article entitled "I with the Marine Pacific South Hold Office" which was published went see Holmes Alexto I Corps in Harper's Magazine in 1933 and neighbor friend Sacred cows were butchered wind- ander my on ' politics I will advice Mission— bags deflated and spades called remember the wise counsel spades The big county boss was always me It summed up to this he gave dubbed "Old Rolling Thunder" adhe —"Be independent" Ihisgood When the boss read this me taken has vice eight through thundered even louder Holmes did years iff the General Assembly not run for reelection and into my second term ' WAS IN AIR FORCE in the Congress of the United In World War II Holmes'" went States in as an Air Force ground officer Long ago at the Gilman School but he flew as an aerial photog- Holmes wrote something for the rerapher on the very first mission of school magazine which I stillmothis as the 392nd Bomber Group (H) and member It has served decided to be a flyer Although to down the years' over for such things he went to "It's true in life and race and ' ' hunt gunnery school and earned his Air The place to die is cit in front" Crew Member's vinc-He flew Well Holmes here's to the old over Germany and France as a and over the days but also here's to tomorrow! North Sea as Air-Se- a Rescue offi- We all hope there will be better cer of the 2nd Air Division Ht days— but if we die let's do so wrote about it all "out in front!" For Columnist Politician — — inerei is one common anu nece 'WASHINGTON Foreign Ministers - By Rp Danitl 3rtwitr WASHINGTON DC— A disUn- - guished cohimnist runs a great risk when he turns this space over to an bid: friend Let me tell you about this learned man of letters I kno-v Holmes Alexander is a - ' mn with "Who's interests and diverse many Who in America" lists his books-th- ree biographies four novels and work on Amer- the highly-praise- d lean air power 'Tomorrow's Air Age"— but this is only part of the man His quest for excitement has known few limits Among other hazardous under- takings Holmes was once an amateur steeplechase rider I remember one dark night in Msy 1900 when Holmes 'won the moonlight steeplechase j on a horse f named "Red Dragon Just imagine racing ' in the 'middle of the night hoping would see the white-paintjour horse fences in time to jump Holmes won other races— I know as I rode against him—but there were many times when he ended up in a crashing splintering fall ed 'with horse in a heap fence and Holmes all j IN POLITICS AT 24 Holmes also turned his hand to politics At the age Of 24 he was elected to the General Assembly of Maryland In days of bossisra and recognized political machines independence was his motto In country man fact one back-rosaid the last time he saw such an independent operation was when his boar ho? got loose on the frozen mill pond Holmes was not a w "go along" man i later succeeded to the legislative seat then held by Holmes and heard many legends about him r one particular political ma- - gold-plat- an - : -- '""' rs k gunner-photograph- er - - ed — - state-interventio- rxwe BeS tith S&ithS "f £Tsni hETSSfS fSPwSJ mb5 LS? SnSSf1 Theiri primary problem is tnewi- - wi Snd -v- — strateSyKta!n?n5y l"r MMi u- :x?t sin?ularlv udv reaching GA SSJS Advisory GounqL JChQ House t or oustetlt 5 would bt interesting tosee whether GE's ra-dio and TV stations carried any criticism of the Business Advisory Council scandal and Cordiner' mister 6 In 1957 a GE spokesman E S Waller admitted in a sworn state- mpnt that fTE had Mwlfpted $6 in dividends from the work-500 ers welfare fund Half the money war " thA'raHi'A m'edia ft fe govern ment of the! United States-wh- ich ttu whether ' r rmation was hStfifSSSWS Gstet "? before Congress GE pulled ert p°werful wires and deluged Conj£hn sj Another interesting factor: GE gress with telegrams in favor of alsq- employs 35 retired generals the bill This was its right HowCross- E-an- d - - inT - add up to enough striking power fnr 5 - tte TOfi m thA laws Af thfl TTnifpd to vinlsHncr ZTTm £T £ not head "VvSS1? Judiciary ammittee penetrating probe of this operation Secretary of Commerce Jh£ year Hodges discreetly' arranged- orders from the government of the United States GE was engaged in undercutting! and violating the laws of the United States It was also guilty of failure to inform Amer- - mum- - yie1 " m back to GE to negotiate about other way at Heart for the present Nikita Si Khrushchev "mi rherk what GE said ODDOnentS mand v These are questions which Com- States and while in a position to to " wish who for those Except had Vhchev —— ?:- mSne rrlv xo V S : i"-J- ' vhrnnh : r - ff vo Khfflcihrhpv nrise v what he il?r o a me ross aoni wani io give prooe iney :"' "TIT be drawn government-granreli:: gone out ot : : ii-- want the lessons T""nis wayin Moscow " Sir wants: to hand the valuable GE also used the taxDaycenses British ambassador TrtWf-Qn iimcM back to GE and Westing- Qm flhlf rp from these facts are Ivery clear rtaAn tQV 1tinnijA house nubeTTf on a silver plattejr to 0 tne 'viet — - r" to vr rv-raai- TV-rad- io - ?4nb needed to ffefffid bmsts aUatethe £fnr? has aes without dScuss Yet no effort ' suffer ng from SAC must be spared to minimize the future change m the "me deliehtful tome of num3° strategic j balance wh eh may be him onstage sans fee at "And now ladies and gentleman": joining " S--":"!wt caused bv the continuing output of- Joe F Tpwis ?aid after takinff a every performance Soviet ICBMs in the dangerous peThe Chemistry between the pair n TinH European ames end Ir ZTZS nf Amfir dozen bows at hpfni-i — — - larPp nnrnhPrsi j :K — " r:r-: ° js a wmg ueauiy w ueuwu iijb jn addition Jvnrusncney nimsen icaBMhutemen misSUe3 bow at areeady Cooacabana' Last of the Red Hot Mamas jn her miVht bomb the AcroDolis at Athens early 70s gushes like a swooning as he's said for teen-age- r olcrt nnhlirlv riprlarpd that Brit-whenever her" darling-Jothe past 2- - SepE graces the scene Now that tembers vTd like can he talk again she seldom interto introduce the when hedoes him and crisis This word "hostages' which rupts Judy Garland of to caress him with phrases of en Khrushchev seems 10 nave u&eu By W L Gordon the Stone Age" dearment such as a mother roos Everyone in the WORDS OFTEN! MISUSED into to suggesting what he has really the ears of her first born in' hip audience m- fant The use of "shekf in the sense stinctively craned At one time after recuperating of "slippery" is' a 'provincialism his neck to 'turn wUi uac owmoa nrw I -- voided: and catch the reaction of the Vvhat Khrushchev has really been and sKouid libeled lady balancing a Uny red on7 to Hve If he teUing his interlocutors in Moscow M1BDftNnllMri!'n -cTCkI - LJtb turoan atop ner Dionue nairao ine aDOve all what ne nas reaiiy it wa was Trachea (the' windpipe) ' was the same as' en telling the British French coined the Joe V- rf?n°n nl Joe- tray-kee-- a accent first (sylopenings n0unce anj Western German itrepresentaprevious old more know drunks 1 j E Joe E you mustn t say mac tives there is not just mat ne nas loh1- Hearin- - of her Miss jjiqi Domos 10 arumuiaie mem xic phie WcKer scoioea as snc otto imolored decision YijftNYMt hai been tellinff them rather J that SffSS HY GARDNER CALLING the to rT 7nL 7 A ---- -- m "vr Z £ " tOS-OPeil- titji' r-- r ENGLISH LESSON i's ' - i JSSSXJS' l v- 1 ?t: the two! SSL If -- u& -- -- : i -- eT"romjncebetween — uuacciae uui vu- - v caDuiarv1' dv masterms one wora uiaucugc iuu" imc cm iwuiiivn w- - current act 'is one ' of his each day Today's word- - RACISM for dead m his hotel ropn lus to ear ear slashed from raees throat th and briffhtpot ffi pixS others Soph helped to nurse the mashed docfanePor based hulk of humanity back to the land' als ' v' accimti program i "Vi: nn mmnmmrp of the living taught him to speak ucl is vuuis ' n- LS "jJSL0 r — — — - SSsiSSorto ffi rrrf :t: i- - VIOLATING US LAWS While getting this bonanza of fa" WJ'Z °j3 the soviet today ?JHrS£ Sine "you-whT-get-i- 1 - OP The! Western heads And these are ostensibly 1— — " iui: y v oaj ux& as Fabianism wenare state ras- - Americans will not move a linger cism "Nazism There are two things to note irst'1 line ism egalitarianism the planned about this Deal Fau New the the such ugly meaning to whch gives economy word "hostages" publicly-use- d Deal or the New Frontier-cen- tral the 3 1 i j control is pracuceuj not I would sugge ment that suooprters '- H Threatening American Allies To Force US Hand on Berlin - 1 il ' K ! P°licy- - - 1' -- US Setting huge subsidies government through unwarranted nd unnecessary tax witwfls John G Ball 5vy°r lobbyist for GE was pa d - : Sn ality however: the prhnary ?n?ta5iSst3 problem they face is quite differeilt j"" 1! A LS - SSSf incident llnSSSEn JaH?n-aS53SJSw- - r BvMbkwiai the late Sen investigation by Hebert of LouisianaRep showed that corporations getting de- fense orders are loath to criticize the Defense Department They don't bite the hand that feeds them! And this writer has personal knowledge sta- of the fact that UE's radio-Ttions have vetoed programs critical of the defense setup Yet during recent years the na- tional defense has lagged disas- trously and this is one reason fot with our weak bargaining position ' V JOSEPH By Barry GoldwaUr Th? secret- memorandum written by Sen W J Fulbright for delivery to "the Defense Department might have escaped notice had it not been for the persistent courageous of conservative ben Jatrom Cor£ ' - Senator Bates TrueNature Of Socialism A congressional UNITED NATIONS i r Independence Best Motto i itS S JZr' f fse 6 put-upo- ' gWJ°w2WKFY io £f " tober first - 0S?V VJJSTftri i de-A- TV-rad- J J1 i lf " The administration his decided to bring its full weight to bear against any increase in steel prices Marshalling statistics the Presidents Council of Economic advisors is trying to argue the steel incompanies out of matching jwith a price crease the wage raise scheduled for Oc- re-electi- on fh- - Near Price Control 0 German political experts give Brandt little chance to unseat Adenauer The lat- would be favorably reter's ceived in Washington because of the way he has made West Germany a firm but not obstreperous bulwarK of the Western alliance: Still whichever one wins no important change in Bonn's attitude toward the West is anticipated The West's chief concern about the campaign fs ihat it be completed without any untoward incident which might embarrass the Allies in the Berlin dispute Asit neafs its end the hope grows that nothing will occure to rock the international boat j i ' ! ?TWm'ax' without "some reluctance The move was doubtless forced by the seeming weight of evidence that the contraction is gaining so ground and Will continue to do Still it is' somewhat distressing that the ' dictionary people made this bow to vulgar usage Here could be a turning point the beginning of the engulf merit of the English language by slang and shoddy' speech We are aware that such complaints have been uttered before when violence was more or less officially done to ideas about the purity of the language But "ain't''? That's hard to swallow: as-th- e Brandt V anti-segregationi- - Germany's Election of-Spa- i ' credit TV-radi- aSlJrS w i TTrnntisr nro r'ntnmnnists- - they are not They are for the most the: jail where the most hardened STRICTLY RICHTER muivmuais wna criminals try 10 use uw pan a strong desire to help their fellow as human shields to protect them man Unfortunately they are blind from tranishment for their latest weii-meanin- g dangerously blind iSSfS: to the evil of murder IVl? JCS: the-righ- t f DISPUTE ' MAIN the opoprtunity to recognize that jvtumiukjv s umm uavvc contained in these "isms" is an with the other Western allies 'after this absolute requirement for central alLf His main: dispute is towith secure His is object country where over control over production United we work over how much we get surrender at Berlin by the to he But is States eeng secure over labor management paid surrender American by threaten ng health conditions and education and the Frenih the the: British 1 All the types of governments ore what and is have outlined above accept the West Germans a in them jay-fobasic premise that responsibility by threatening hat the welfare prosperity and se-- which implies threaten the US in the same man- curity of the people rests with the central government No American ne£- P1 Th likes to be called a Socialist or to l It m a Srw think something he supports ' is point that is notable ttawne:might ahnost say an ad-Slikened unto communism the Thurmond in his stirring s spoech defending the rights of each K be cou id Lmrt hi 3 ed vie- individual American to hear the to the British Fiench wd truth has pulled the camouflage tuns he est Germans sheet from the corpse of freedom overwhelming strategic about to be interred in the coffin eW of central authority The strategic striking power of How do you stand sir? the Western European allies consists of the few American medium- range ballistic missiles they have accepted plus Britain's obsolescent bomber force plus maws tignter-- ! By United Press Internationa equipped to carry nuclear In 12C8 the Scots passed alav boms wcap0nSi 1 i -- - : full-fledg- J fffSSff to the man s means - usuc missues wkh uravmu V : borrow") Joe E Lewis( though still showing the scarsi of his- close ' sha e wuii deatn ha$ no bitterness' in his heart' - ' 6r revenge in his soul : At on he had time wlien he told "Machine-Gun" Jack dinner with McGurn the gangster who ordered the comedian taken for a ride I ' wondered how he could even look at the man without revulsion':f "Well" he said slowly shrugging his shoulders' and unconsciously : rubbing- his scarred chin with his r forefinger "I found out years later that they tried to kill him loo so' i : i Joe E Lewis is no' student of the me'-tha- NOV YOU KNOW fining any man who refused a4 POWERFUL PANOPLY woman's proposal of marriage made during a leap year The surl The Soviets now possess a pow- bal- was one pound or less according erful panoply of medium-rang- e ed -- en ygowI "Adlai Stevenson" Joe says "althings at the ways says' the to time— but wrong peo- right Mort as pie" He describes in a Sahl sweater- -' "the'jgreatest thing since Laha Turner" In refemng to a feud between two Miami Beach ' innkeepers he notes that the only way you lean get them together is to arrange a meeting at a neutral pool Joe also discusses juvenile delinquency "When we were kids"' he says rather sentimentally "we ' weren't juvenile delinquents we criminals" He were also has a word of advice to spend- thrifts "Live within your means" I he rnimteU 'vin if VOU havft tft1 t - it:-'- : r iwi a ttSjmmmm' t X iiUwywiiV! Inc unii rifM-- taatka'- !" Ki'-- III ±iJi i I- - ' i ' veM-ve- f VWvuivu " - — — — money ana mere is woss lao&ey 14 yJ UU — — — -- — V he Bible-- ' but- more important believes in its teachings and lives by the Good Book chapter and ?erst This is a good man |