| Show S 2"lUrZs -l- fcs -V? Vang! IP iMw Wt -r l v£ IX-- DREW v P EDITORIALS OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY MORNING JULY 28 1957 6A '-"- ? ' -i'r fuv Work for Civil Rights? How Hard Will Ike on the relation of the president is whoThe for- being ington Even as President Eisenhower to legislation criticized by friends of federal aid to educa- ever he might be mer secretary of state wrote that in the tion because he did not fight hard enough early years of the nation Congress initiated in their opinion for the federal aid bill and formulated legislation and the presithe President is represented as wishing dent approved or vetoed it Today in the Congress to stand fast for a strong civil field of major administration measures the rights bill-- A question being asked is how president initiates and formulates legislavigorously will the President espouse the tion and the Congress modifies approves civil rights cause by appealing individually or vetoes "This change has come about as well as collectively to senators Demothrough the sheer necessity in today's crats as well as Republicans world for an interrelated and coherent legObservers in Washington believe that islative program and the recognition of had President Eisenhower called a few Re- this necessity by strong presidents" Mr publicans in the House urging them to vote Acheson declared Some of us remember the vigor with in favor of federal aid the school would have been approved by a small vote in- which Theodore Roosevelt Woodrow Wilstead of being defeated by a small vote son F D Roosevelt and Harry Truman Eisenhower may now regret he did not initiated and followed through on the bills do that they wanted We remember also the eloNo one can say for certain that an appeal quent manner in which President Eisenhower appeals in his messages for the from the President would have succeeded but there is no doubt that a popular presi- measures he favors The civil rights bill dent has much influence on lawmakers if seems dear to his heart His friends will watch to see how hard he works to get the he makes use of his strength Dean Acheson is being quoted in Wash strong bill he wants of car repossession to a grand jury in L A so perhaps the crooks may be running for cover whose president Carlos Castillo Armas was slain yesterday by an assassin is a Central American republic Guatemala Its population how exceeds three million and its principal exports are coffee bananas chicle for chewing gum essential oils and lumber The news from Guatemala in recent months has pertained to social and economic problems and political unrest The jyeRT 1956 was marked by a plot to overthrow Armas and by demonstrations by students who criticized 4000 leftist-ReArmas for deporting plotters against his regime For months on end the Armas regime charged Communists were plotting inside the government and in the army The charges probably were valid In the face of unrest Armas could point to some land reforms completion of a link highway progress pf the oil resources and the signing in developing of contracts for the sale of cedar and mahogany timber to U S interests under conditions insuring that new forests will grow while old ones are cut The real story of the palace murder may be delayed until American observers can report but it seems quite possible a Communist plot is involved This is a matter of considerable significance to the United States which wants no Communist plotters at work in neighboring republics inter-America- Los other fact and that is that at a time when his medical needs are normally the greatest the earning power of the oldster is lowest Doctors have some responsibility for working out methods whereby the oldsters requiring medical care reself-evide- n in a productivity race The lawmaker said that unless ways are found to maintain oldsters in productive life over more years capitalism may lose the race to communism The problem however is more grave than the lawmaker presented it There are great numbers of Americans living so long they can't look after themselves They are no longer productive and they need the care of those who otherwise would be contributing to the productivity race Science doubtless will discover that one way to provide the elderly with vigor over the years is to provide useful work for them over the longer spans of their lives I Los Angeles Times reports that some of the city's private detectives are operating a racket in which visiting motorists are the victims The scheme is like this: The unscrupulous detective will look car parked in a shabby for an neighborhood He picks the lock to disout-of-sta- te Eisenhower Seeks Truth cover if the car is paid for If not he obtains the name of the legal owner If it is an eastern finance company he will telephone to the company and say that the car is uncler suspicion for transportation of narcotics making it subject to seizure by the state Usually the finance firm the crooked sleuth to repossess the automobile immediately The detective does so at a substantial charge Well a word to the wise is sufficient A lot of Utahns drive their unpaid-fo- r cars to Los Angeles and park them in the streets The Los Angeles police bunco squad leader has told all about crooked methods in-truc- nt ceive it A member of Congress last week called his colleague attention to the Soviet Union's challengeto capitalism to compete Angeles Racket President Eisenhower wishing to know exactly what is the outlook for progress in the disarmament meetings in London has asked Secretary of State Dulles to fly to London to get the facts Just as the President wants what the man in the street calls the so do the American people wish to learn whether hopes for a disarmament treaty still retains some life or whether they have long since expired If and when Mr Dulles does get at the roots of the situation we hope he puts his findings in blunt words so clear everybody can place the blame for the failure ts low-dow- BOOK REVIEW ON THE BEACH n JOSEPHINE By Nevil and Towers' sub may be half of all that's left of the whole United Shute Morrow In a quiet village near Melbourne Australia lives the Holmes family: Peter navy officer wife Mary infant Jennifer Idle for some time Peter is about to get an assignment on an American submarine as liaison officer under D wight Towers once of States Navy There has 'been you at least realize an atomic war even them Bombs became so cheap t nations could afford two-bi- after the irresponsibles sparked it China and Russia went at each other's throats Fallout He Conn brings Mystic Dwight has slaughtered half the earth's home for a visit before the population or so it seems and cruise and to brighten up the the invisible fatal pall spreads inexorably Melbourne will party invites Aloira Davidson ' south "i t u in aeptemoer iney predict too Bit by bit as this story de- The year is 1963 and the world doomed to end with T S Elivelops Shute hints at calamity — is ot's there is no gas no radio link "whimper" Co TMwctte kts toina ra&oe There has been no such terriwith the northern hemisphere fying picture as this showing enHaw many day will you be tire continents peopled only by the dead Shute makes it shockSons en this picnic?" Milk Variations ingly plausible he persuades you Milks vary as strikingly as the this is how it might happen and sources: Camel's milk is sweet what it might be like The year whale milk tastes oily porpoise 1963 is more dreadful than "1934" Two Offices milk has 12 times as much and a lot nearer Don't be so James Abram Garfield was as cow milk goat milk scared of all turning into fact president-elec- t and senator-elec-t comes homogenized with the that you miss the thrills of the at the same time Nombutterfat already broken up and gripping fiction but still be inated for president in 18S0 he dispersed evenly throughout the scared be awfully scared — WG previously had been elected senfluid ator from Ohio Rogers ! L I I but-terf- t at ! - 1 A T A -- r? ' v? — 1 "i- - " "r Shk jr tr- "vl " i -- Arab countries home-towpreacher priest or to come to the USA for train rabbi visiting Washington on a ing it has failed to invite any summer's vacation has confided military men from Israel to his' senator how dearly he This has led to wisecracks! in would love to deliver the daily military circles that lack of US invocation in the United S t a t e s training is the reason for the efSenate of the Israeli Army ut The senator then speaks to the ficiency be recalled that Israeli will chaplain of the Senate and oblig- knocked Egypt completely out of ing Rev Frederick Brown Harris the Sinai Peninsula in four dayi always agrees In fact the fact that Egypt was T even prepared a handsome certifi- T4t u0 ir?rpSf tmn v cate which he gives to visiting l Jiuv70iui aPmfwincl in otfe r uinw j clergymen as a souvenir of their place since Warld War II outside experience United States and Kussia Rev Harris is a most inspira- theHowever when Sen Hubert tional chaplain It is a great treat Humphrey of Minnesota Demoto bear him open the Senate crat touring the Near East disRecently Rev Harris confided covered that Israeli officers had to Senate majority leader Lyndon not been invited to the United Johnson that he was getting con- States he intervened witn tne cerned about the increasing num- State Department He demanded ber of guest ministers He point- that Israel at least the same ed out that in recent weeks he artvantflffps have as Arab officers They had been done out of his job in will now be invited to the USA the Senate chamber no fewer HARRY CAIN COMES RACK than 17 times "Now look here Reverend" President Eisenhower hasn't consoled Sen Johnson "If you heard the last of Harry ever want me to call a halt to Cain who was dropped from the this sort of thing you let me subversive activities control board know and we'll just restrict the for criticizing Ike's loyalty pro- number of visiting preachers" XJgram The Rev Harris nodded appreTht outsnoken Republican is ciatively He did not remind preparing a new blast at the Ei-Johnson that at that very moment senhower Administration in book he had two requests from Sen form He has already completed a Johnson's office asking special confidential outline of his pro permission for two Texas minis posed book intended for the pub ters to preach lisher's eyes only m wmcn ne that "the only thing recommends HOUSE GOP STIFFENS with the loyalty-securitdo to Congressional Wi' leaaers toia them com -is tft sm WASHINGTON — n ' - £s a sions from various Many widespite — : -- ''- ' ?' f ' r ' - 'Sw v - "' ' XN -i v- or - - ' i ex-Se- L-'oV- Vv''- -' "' ' - - I $ ifA v n 1 UcKaufbt v j Snd:cte I SAILING OUT OF SIGHT AGAIN Mr claimants Since medical science is largely responsible for men and women living longer physicians everywhere must prolong man's span of vigor an editorial declares in the Journal of the American Medical Association So we have an answer to the question often asked: Now that the doctors have made it possible for more persons to live to riper ages what are the doctors going to do about the problems raised by longevity especially if the years are accompanied by senility The same editorial calls attention to an- d :" C V: Problem for Doctors adjoining Mexico and Honduras :- - ARSON Priests Push Out Senate Chaplain House GOP May Balk at Rights Bill '"'--'--vv- -i --V r- ? ' I Murder in Guatemala yf -- -- - E ?m''i°"lCLSa has a JO SEP H uhns a ranital ed — There is an obscure tribal uprising in the remote British protected Arabian Sultanate of Muscat and Oman The Foreign Office sends into action its unique private army the trucial scouts while the War Office alerts the regular British troops in the area And the whole ambitious structure of the new American policy in the Middle East begins to quake and tremble like a boy camper's puptent in a high wind This surely is a fairly alarming sequence of Until very recently all official fingers both British and American were rather desperately crossed The hope was everywhere voiced that "this disorder in Oman can be locally handled"' — for which read "handled by the obscure and irregular and mainly Arab trucial scouts without the importation of regular British cause-and-effe- ct Oman As a result the little trouble In Oman can mean big trouble both in the Middle East and in the And alliance while saying a prayer for a good outcome it is well to understand the reasons why such small trouble may produce such big trouble OLD STYLE OUTPOSTS In brief the last old style British outposts in the Middle East are the Persian Gulf coast Sheikhdoms and the Aden protectorate which together compromise the whole Southern and Eastern shores of the Arabian Anglo-America- n peninsula The two most valuable pieces of totally arid real estate in the world are the Sheikhdoms of Kuweit and Qatar with their truly fabulous oil riches and Sheikhdom of Bahrein while less wealthy is also a respectable oil producer The Sultanate of troops" But that hope is all but dead Muscat and Oman in contrast since British Foreign Minister has not in recent memory proSelwyn Lloyd's statement to the duced anything but camels and House of Commons foreshadow- headaches The Sultan is one of the local ing active British intervention in VIEWS and NE WS By RAY WIGHT so broke by Saturday and Sun- day that they'd have to stay home the garden over the weeding other: "I haven't told you about weekend my new grandchild have I?" They'd be so bored they'd be anxious to get back on the job Second fond grandmother: — "No and I do want to thank you Monday might even come an hour early so much for it" 3 Make Monday the last workAccording to a news item I ing day in the week In just a noticed the other day there are few years it might then be reabout 25 million harmonicas in ferred to as "Gay Monday" or the United States — as many as "Happy Monday" all other musical instruments 4 Expand the coffee break combined And what can you do idea only a little more on Monabout it? and make it a day on which day Another news item was full of everyone would be entertained ideas on things women can do to by the management on picnics at brighten a blue Monday There the movies or at the races all were ways mentioned to do this day long job a little more quickly this one 5 Cut out Saturday and Sunwith a little less strain and the Then workers day vacations other one with more efficient use wouldn't of the mood out all get of modern machinery available in work for and they'd greet Monalmost every home as morning day just one more That's an excellent thing to look into this business of mak- day of the week ing Monday a little less blue for 6 Have men stay home and housewives (reminds me of the selp their wives on Monday Then little round bluing balls that wouldn't be called Blue Monwomen used to use for washday it day It would be known by more maybe still do) but what about descriptive names and more vivid the rest of us? colors bordering on purple mayHere are some rather tentative be mentioned only suggestions In case you should be intertimidly which I hope will ease ested the original charter for the blue Monday problem for some of the rest of us: the present city of Tucson Ariz was granted in 1552 by the King 1 We could do away with Monof Spain day entirely just as some" superstitious hotel managers do away They're having a water shortage 13 in Washington DC All the or even with rooms numbered are going down You 13th floor reservoirs That with the whole would make the whole week move can never tell what those confaster and we could all come gressmen will start drinking next back to work refreshed on Tueswas a bank vice president day Who ever heard of blue andHe she just a wisp of a girl Tuesday? blue eyes were filled mostWorkers could decide by popu- whose innocence with lar vote whether or not they ly But asguileless he stopped to pay anwanted to work a full day Saturother staggering check at the day to make up the difference in department store he began to time wonder if maybe 2 Have payday on Monday so "Say" he barked sternly "I've that everyone would show up already given you a fur coat and now you want a foreign car By fresh and eager to work inmean the I that any chance did you ever hear of No don't terest in picking up the weekly the goose that laid the golden check would make the difference egg?" "Oh no" she cooed eagerly as entirely although it would help But if payday were set on Mon- her eyelashes flickered "Who is day almost everyone would be he?" One fond grandmother to an- j is at Muscat also i j LOCAL FRICTION This local friction had little more than local significance until the Suez crisis forcibly propelled the reluctant American nolicv makers into the midst of the mess in the Middle East A vital part of the new and thus far successful American policy was to encourage King Saud of Saudi Arabia to separate himself from Egypt and to give his support as he did in Jordan to the West's friends among the Arabs While King Saud was the chief ally of Egypt's venomously Gamal Abdel Nasser it did not matter greatly that he was rowing with the British over Buraimi But as soon as King Saud abandoned Nasser and became the key figure in the new American Middle Eastern policy Buraimi began to matter very n greatly SECOND EFFORT Efforts were made at Bermuda to by President Eisenhower secA out the tangle straighten ond effort was made here in London after the grave Jordanian crisis had demonstrated King Saud's vital importance On this second occasion the State for prolonged negotia-partmesent Loy Henderson to tions with a special British representative the former Ambassador to Cairo Sir Humphrey De-Lond- bSethe y are based d er Buraimi anti-Wester- last week Senate passes too weak a bill "Afinu TTrMieo m cmhorc aro nnt at all satisfied with proposed sen- ate compromises to weaken the bill passed by the House Joe Martin of Massachusetts told the President "The House joint conferees will be headed by Reps Celler (New York Democrat) and Keating (New York Republican) both of whom will strongly oppose any vital changes that will emasculate the bill "Then of course the House it self will have to vote again on the question when the report from the joint conference comes back to us If the conference re port reflects too much of the Senate compromising it will face some pretty stiff opposition on the House floor" Senate GOP leader Bill Know-lan- d of California seemed uncertain about which way the cat was jumping in his own chamber Knowland said he was "hopeful" of wearing down the Southern filibuster by September but he added that it would take another week before he had a clear picture of how the battle would shape up in the Senate IKE FROWNS ON SCHOOL BILL cAHo-e-- if the person of the Iman for ArchpriestV of Oman In both these quarrels the Sultan has been stoutly supported by the British who have publicly broken with Saudi Arabia over Middle East Trouble Still Brewing Area Has Revolt LONDON j has a rival in A LS O P British-Protect- to the tin: oasis Eisenhower r mat j ca J WO? (maintainln a competent counter intelligence oc- - service which will detect the ncinnal nrtual $rv in our midst Cain is a conservative but Republ lean with a belligerent eye and grating voice Though an Eisenhower appointee he caustically attacked Ike for permitting abuses in the Loyalty Program e Cain finally had a showdown with Ike the day before the President's ileitis attack Insiders claim Ike got so wrought nn over the interview that he de veloped stomach cramps which u in nnv moniously dropped at the end of his term Far from silenced however he has teamed up with Benresearch jamin Ginzburg former ConstituSenate of the director tional Rights Committee to write book under the a title "Rededication to Freedom" CONFIDENTIAL OUTLINE Civil-Rights-mind- face-to-fac- rJVunl hard-hittin- g In their confidential outline" the authors charge: "The loyalty-securit- y are now programs revealed to have been brought about principally through the agency of the unchecked Elizabeth Bentley tale of Communist It has been demonespionage President Eisenhower had little strated William Henry Tayby the to say during the Civil Rights disdocuments the and case by cussion He was more vocal — and lor Brown-el- l Gen declassified by Atty negative — about the proposed at the 1953 (Harry Dexter) r school $1500000000 White hearings that the Bentley construction bill His main oba fictional narrative which is jection was to a compromise com- story g Communist mittee formula basing distribu- converts her acinnocent even and tion of federal school funds on into so many Soviet quaintances both per capita income and school FBI agents hundred spies Five age population in the various were to unable produce any corstates her for story roboration "I don't like that formula at that not revealed is it "Thus all" he told the leaders "It is only do the loyalty-securitpronot based on actual need Under dismiss to peoundertake the formula I proposed to Con grams ple on the basis of uncorroborated gress the poorer states — tnose tales of informers but that the with the greatest school needs — whole activized program was startwould get a larger share of fed- ed largely on the basis of an uneral help If the compromise bill corroborated informer's story" is passed by Congress I would continues Cain the manuscript have to sign it not because I like been has no basis "Certainly it but because it apparently is established to instithe justify all I can get" measures to totalitarian of tution Martin and Knowland replied meet the spy danger" that he probably wouldn't face "If and when conclusion: Cain's sesthis a decision during such of little faitH men to me cease we sion as the odds were against en- in freedom we shall find our actment of any kind of school-aipsychotic fears of communism legislation disappearing and we shall find ISRAEL OFFICERS TO US the Communists themselves sucWhile the Eisenhower Admin- cumbing to the contagion of istration has invited military mis- five-yea- fellow-travelin- on nt Trevelyan Both efforts came to nothing for three reasons First the British said they "could not let down a friend" and as the sole Arab leader who publicly endorsed the Suez venture the Sultan of Muscat and Oman certainly comes under that heading Second the British said that if they showed weakness anywhere on the Gulf Coast their good faith would be questioned everywhere — meaning in the really important Sheikhdoms of Kuweit Qatar and Bahrein COULDN'T TRUST THEM Third some of the British did not sav but certainly felt that thej' could not trust either the United States or Saudi Arabia Thus they also felt they must d stand firm now lest out Saud his reach later King hand for their oil interests on the Arabian Coast The British intransigence over Buraimi gave a golden chance to the Egyptians and the many powerful advisers of King Saud who bitterly opposed his break with Gamal Abdel Nasser The tribes of Oman have therefore been paid to rise against the Sultan in favor of the exiled Oman The real aims are to inflame the row between King Saud and the British to force the British into overt "imperialist" action which will inflame the whole Arab world and so to cause a break between King Saud and United y d US-linke- States Fortunately the British seem to be handling the ugly little crisis with great sobriety But the danger is still grave that the new American Middle Eastern policy will be defeated by the outbreak of trouble between King Saud and a third party in this case the British And this will in turn help to suggest the explosive possibilities of the Gulf of Aqaba where the Egyptians are encouraging another Saud-thirparty fight in this case with the Israelis which will again embroil ' ' the United States d Worst Flood Worst flood in recorded history is considered to be the flood of 1228 in Holland when 100000 persons reputedly were drowned in the Fries land section 10 YEARS AGO The Rev Charles E Bennison rector of Christ Episcopal Church to turn them down are amused by their persistency says Miss Inez Cortez stamp clerk at the Joliet 111 was guest speaker at postoffice the Ogden Church of the Good 50 YEARS AGO Shepherd He was also celebrant A committee representing the at the 8 am Holy Communion service i Ogden Trades and Labor Assemis preparing plan3 for ar big Paul Tanner and Heber Ja- bly on Sept 2 cobs who recently completed the Labor Day celebration trek from Nauvoo to Salt Lake Jack Wood of London England trail Mormon old over the City will speak tonight at 8 pm at were speakers at the LDS Thirty-fourt-h Washington Blvd and 25th St Ward on "Socialism and Atheism ReEarl S Paul president of the ligion and Temperance" LDS Mount Ogden Stake at the "Is Sunday Worth Saving?" Twelfth Ward Chapel reported was the subject" of a sermon by details and dramatic incidents-o- f the Rev Noble Strong Elderkin the recent Sons of Utah Pioneers at the Ogden First Congregationtrek to Nauvoo 111 al Church 20 YEARS AGO Wilson North Ogden and Pleasant View are the three winners of the Weber Farm Bureau clean- up and Deautmcauon contest By W JL GORDON which closed July l casn prizes third and for first second place were awarded OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED dollar million high Ogden's Parquet Pronounce Pahr-kaschool will be ready for use when accent on second syllable the city system resumes operaOFTEN MISSPELLED tion Sept 13 Supt W Karl Hopkins announced Eligible (fit to be chosen) Illegible (that cannot be read) x There is one place where OgSYNONYMS den residents just can't get rid of Restore replace rebuild resales tax tokens but they keep trying and the persons who have establish reconstruct LESSON ENGLISH y |