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'' j'-- ' DREW : v--- PEARSON SEPTEMBER 28 1959 Problems Continue But Hopes Rising Ik: Although problems dividing the free and the Communist worlds were not solved by the meetings between President Eisenhower and Premier Khrushchev hope can be held that the Khrushchev visit to the United States established more favorable auspices for crucial 'conferences to be held ing to listen to reason and act accordingly but sometimes the rough edges of Soviet policy stood revealed One instance occurred in Khrushchev statements about Russian policy on Germany There are two German states he said Just as West Germany wishes to be later independent so does East Germany wish While there was much controversy to continue as at present The Khrushchev about the President's invitation to the Rus- claim that East Germany desires to remain sian leader to visit our country many in- in its present condition doesn't stand up sisting that the end results would be more in the face of the East German revolt of bad than good it now seems plain that a few years ago and of the continued efWhile the visit did not bring about notable forts of East Germans to escape into fri good results the bad results which some territory Mr Khrushchev should be dared forecast did not materialize to permit a free election in East Germany Mr Khrushchev took advantage of evEurope especially Britain is encourinterview with the American ery press and aged by the era of better feeling Europeans of every appearance before the American see emerging as a result of the Khrushchev television to impress upon those who heard visit They are impatient for the summit and saw or read about him that he is wholly talks which are expected to follow It is sincere in his desires for disarmament safe to predict that summit talks will be held and soon but who will predict the peace and international harmony He tried to present himself as a reasonoutcome of the conferences even after able man and his government as one will vast outpouring of friendly words °&- - my t-7- Steel Maneuvering Going On While Nikita Grabs Spotlight WASHINGTON — Because of the industries through October HowKhrushchev visit nobody noticed it ever big steel wants the ere boats V but some significant backstage jock- to begin running by October 6 so as to pile up plenty of ore before the eying has been taking place' at the freeze And this is what the White White House affecting the economy House plans to do of the nation Note: The strike will begin all Taft-HartlThe Jockeying was between Jim over again after the y Mitchell Ike's g moratorium But steel exbut sometimes frustrated Secretary of ecutives figure there will be great Labor on one side and some of resistance to union Ike's closest advisers on the other President Dave McDonald against each pulling in opposite directions renewing the strike on Christmas eve They hope by that time union regarding the steel strike Mitchell had persuaded the Presi- morale will be broken Then they dent to propose that both labor will have plenty of ore on hand to and big steel agree to a fact-findoperate through the winter of the ing board Treasury George Humphrey now HAL BOYLE head of National Steel advised Ike not to propose it But the President sided with his secretary of labor and wrote letters to both the United Steel Workers and the industry proposing it The steel industry doesn't want a g board because have the power to make specific recommendations on wages for the strike's settlement So steel indusNEW YORK (AP) — Things a try spokesmen promptly voiced ob- columnist never know if he jection "f j didn't openmight his mail: Secretary Mitchell was 'outcf Civilization often can borrow an town at the time and in no position idea from the primitive uast For to persuade the President So the President immediately announced example some aboriginal Australin press conference that he was ian tribes had a rule requiring men to stay at least 50 yards away from g idea- dropping the The man who killed it in this case their mother-in-laWe'r getting more literate all the was not Humphrey but the" No 2 man on the White time America now has three milHouse staff Gerald Morgan Mor- lion college students and in 10 gan sold the President on dropping years the number will double New York City boasts it has tbe the idea and even drafted the letter withdrawing his proposal for a finest fire department in the world g It needs the best because there "are board But what most people don't know 1000 fires a week here Did you is that Morgan used to work for know careless smoking habits lead U S SteeL Furthermore be to more fire deaths than any other worked directly under Roger Blough cause? when Blough was solicitor for the The average woman has 75 per giant steel company Today Blough cent more body fat than the avis head of U S Steel and some erage many despite the fact most claim that Morgan is still indirect- fatheads you meet are male ly working for him At any rate George Bernard Shaw once said there would be a terrific outcry "The only service a friend can from business if a former labor-unio- n really render is to keep up your representative while serv- courage by holding up to yon ing on the White House staff wrote mirror in which you can see ft a letter for the President of the noble image of yourself" United States vitally affecting- an The United States now has 600-0accidents a year labor dispute and in half cf them the drivers go AUTHOR OF T-ACT There's another interesting bit of unpunished USO SURVEY history in Jerry Morgan's background He was the real author of Incidentally a survey by tht y the Act Though the USO showed that the Christmas late Sen Bob Taft and gifts most wanted by U S serviceFred Hartley of New Jersey men overseas'' were more family put the act through Congress Mor- photographs more mail from borne gan admitted under oath before the and : subscriptions to their home' House Labor Education Committee town newspapers on March 18 1949 that he was paid Around 1907 the average ' man $7500 by the Republican National spent $33 a year on clothing" and Committee to draft the act a oil annually twuyjt a new He made the further amazing ad- Now the average man wears mor mission that he was rthe only out- sports attire buys a new suit only sider who sat ' in on all executive about every three years sessions of the House carnmittee Apt definition: 'Alimony says during the drafting of the" act : He Al Cooper 'is just the high cost cf got assistance he said from Jerry leaving" h consultant for America now has 'enough Riley General Electric and from Theowheat to bake about 60 bildore Iserman of Chrysler lion loaves of bread or nearly 25 It is highly unusual for any con- for every person in the world ' gressional committee to permit an ' What state leads - the nation in interested party to attend an execu- lady politicians? It's New Hamptive session and the late Sen Hi- shire which has 55 women in its ram Bingham of Connecticut was legislature once officially censored by the The good old days: "Remember Senate for permitting this recalls comic - George De Witt However Morgan had worked for "when hotel rooms used to havi 10 years under the "Democrats as courtesy signs asking - 'Have you legislative counsel of the House of left anything? Now they might as Representatives and ' knew f how to well say 'Have you anything draft laws He was also considered left'?" a Democrat But in 1945 he left The motorist is getting more tht Democrats to set up a highly pampered every day Some Midlucrative law practice and in 1947 west gas stations now offer free was paid by the Republican Na- - shoe shines while your car is being tional Committee to write the serviced Act Feeling older? By 1970 America will have 20 million people over 65 BIO CHRISTMAS FREEZE of age years Eisenhower is now taking prelimin a Greenwich Village beatSign y inary steps to invoke the nik bar: "Behave yourself Once Act which his assistant drafted go off your trolley it's the end This requires that the President ap- you of the line for you" point a board 'of inquiry to see It was Oscar Wilde who obwhether continuation of the strike served spoils a romance is hurting the nation's economy Un- so much"nothing as sense a cf humor in g like a board the board the woman" of inquiry cannot make recommendations for settling the strike There is no objections to this from the steel industry In fact it very much y wants the Act invoked Reason why it wants the Act invoked is quite simple Gordon By W If the steel workers are forced to go back to work for 80 days the WORDS OFTEN MISUSED industry can get its ore boats "runDo not say "Please file away ning on the Great Lakes until the these papers" Omit "away winter freeze sets in The boat OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED crews also members of the United 1 1 1r trr oaounce pross-ea- - rs u&eiyie Steelworkers are on strike too But if the boats can operate for 80 lite accent on first syllable WORD STUDY days this brings the industry right "Use a word three times find ft up to Christmas eve and enough ore can be piled up to last the mills the is yours" Let' us increase our rest of the winter After Christmas vocabulary by mastering one word the lakes freeze over each day Today's word: REVELAIt was expected that there would TION act of disclosing or that be enough steel on hand to last the which is disclosed "His revelation auto industry and most other "key came as a surprise to his friends" 80-da- ey hard-workin- rank-and-fi- le - -" Ex-Secreta- ry fact-findin- this-recen- t Rare Items Come in Daily Mail d - Why Accidents Happen Women for Antarctic "I SAID - Dr Karl Menninger in an article on New York Times reports that masculine acmental attitudes and safety relates that resistance is breaking down to a point it cidents rank third as a cause of death in seems certain that American women will the United States He suggests that any- - be permitted to visit and take part in rething ranking third as ja cause of death should be the subject of a great amount search at U S bases in Antarctica with of scientific research But he says that ac- the first group to arrive about 13 months cidents receive far less attention from sci- from now at the start of the 1960-6Antentists than they deserve which surprises arctic summer Red Boss to Be Royalty The interesting aspect of this news is some of us who had thought accidents were not that women are eager to- take part in the subject of widespread study of Despi Antarctic research activity but that there Dr Menninger is among those who have The king of course could do no ture' magnate is a literate man fn has been resistance to authorizing the entry wrong but in due course most the way of the Greeks with whnm devoted research to accidents One of his conclusions is that "there is a little murder of women in the far south project kings were toppled and their places I have" discussed abstruse ques- Women are fully able to withstand the were taken by presidents premiers tions of philosophy and religion and a little suicide dwelling in everybody's heart Give them a powerful weapon like rigors of cold climates Indeed nature chairmen dictators and all sorts over goat cheese on Matzos gave Khrushchev a hard time a car inflame their inhibitions or irrita- seems to have given them more protection of persons who rule neither by di- - Nikita Khrlshchev he was vine primogeniture a mmer who can tions or frustrations and diminish their against the cold than nature gave to men nor right heredity under Soviet socialism anything but by an election or worked his way up to a great suppressive control by means of alcohol Furthermore some of the rigors of the a seizure of power Whereas kings country But Skouras can or fatigue and the murder or suicide mav Antarctic have been tamed by the use- - of were supposed to be anointed the that from an immigrant who boast sold bananas for and he and new and his rules committed" peanuts come from airplanes transportation get through anywhere and worked untheir 5rothetrs way up the construction of facilities that provide nowhere to go after mey are der This is a eruesome theory but the noted American capitalism to be WnvJ r out heads of large corporations He did psychiatrist vouches for its validity and comfort no matter how severe the weather so For instance was Batista a argue and Khrushchev thought The United States is undertaking a long grimly it offers the only reasonable extnat was impolite for Skouras to shot huin Cuba until a mighty big planation why some of our more horrible range program of Arctic research at the manismo revolution sent him into &rm Wlth seven bases built for the International Geoaccidents take place BIT OF AADVERTISING exile in the Dominican Year The base at McMurdo I physical Sound I forgotten? where In I 1 4MT l he was fact Khrushchev got even with U all but M A It is Skouras said now he that will is be in The latter used the visit one the chosen to receive probably Portugal Peron was one of e verv the b Utah Foundation tells us in a research the women some of whom will be research tators whose name appeared in the workers and others news be cent corresof Utah's that 222 newspapers may populaevery day Peron is per report still alive is said a forgotten it We u i ii in i ia rue pondents mil ri puu in suspect the Navy will receive man Malenkov succeeded Stalin compares to a national rate of 165 ter far more applications from women than as few remember Now he is somewhere in exile and is never mencent bo again we learn that Utah continues the project can accommodate tioned Stalin the greatest of all lo maintain us wonaenui record oi voutns dictators left a son when he died in v "j r i rn onat? in v but the son succeeded neither to Young Thugs the father's power nor his wealth ine Jjounaation iurtner reports that it was better to be a king in the J Edgar Hoover director of the Fed- 19th most Utahns remain at home for their colcentury than a dictator in the °?T Becalise Jff -L J per- lege work Their confidence in their own eral Bureau of Investigation gives the ap- zum ine jod lasiea longer tne fTnh candidates'r"1' body but the campaign institutions is shared by persons in other pearance of a most angry man as he calls uc has noticed the latest ef- onagers fofts of counter-attaca for Dr Gallup ft states and nations as reflected by the fact vigorous upon the NNERS 0F PEASANT is also to conventional pretend that that in the fall term of 1958 there were vicious type of teen-agcriminal who conKhrushchev who has the manners the doings of the pollsters are be- 9393 students from other states and for tinues to make headlines especially in the of an East European peasant fceath serious notice In reality however this new dressed up for Sunday objects to eign countries enrolled in Utah colleges larger cities of those who series of Gallup polls has had the the bad manners Mr Hoover's outburst springs from his heckle him I watched and listened effect of a and universities On the other hand only major political bomb- shell Since to of of the the Khrushchev results began to be the statistics which reveal that arreception by study of men around Vice Los the the Norris published mayor Angeles rests of persons under the age of 18 intions Poulson I thought that the mayor- President Richard M Nixon Gov There were nearly 27000 students en- - creased 8 per cent in 1958 while the ar- behaved genteely He said to Khru- - Nelson Rockefeller and Sen Jo-II 111 TT11 J !in ruian 'if lastl rests of adults increased shchev: You will not bury us and seph F Kennedy of Massachusetts - roueu coneges ana universiues only 18 per cent we will not bury you What could have all been huddling with their year a figure that far exceeds the esti- and by the reports revealing young offen- be nicer? Khrushchev lost him tern- - respective heroes mates of even 10 years ago The end of the ders engaging in "torturesadism murder per said that even mayors can campaign strategy Convention newspapers and that if they must therefore be defied to ex- increased enrollment is not in sight Build- and gang warfare" Mr Hoover urges that read did not (that is in his country amine the political results of Dr ing programs are under way on all cam- these vicious types of youthful criminals be where there are noi mayors) they Gallup's polling results ml ii II xne De not in Drier snow reeieciea wouia takresults pumng is is treated much as adult criminals are treated doubted expansion puses but it in San Francisco Khru- Vice President Nixon getting 51 Then There will be outcry from some sources sncnev tore up his program and per cent of the national vote ing place fast enough One of our big domestic problems in the U S is to provide against this Hoover attitude but the public went to see Harry Bridges That against 49 per cent for Sen Ken-was bringing coals to New-- 'nedy They show Sen Kennedy get- is swinging to it believing more humane room for the increasing numbers demandcastle Khrushchev probably felt ting 57 per cent of the national vote methods do not seem to work more at home with Harry Bridges against 43 per cent for Gov Rocke- ing college educations GEORGE SOKOLSKY lis W: 1 Pretends Mannerisms - Peasant boast-tha- - A die--- 1 i : f r I f i Assailed t r-:- WhSfSly k e j - 1 l- - it' j 1 -- - 11 1 YEARS AGO The town of South Weber Davis County was all set for installation ct a $40678 culinary-wate- r system 'and work was to start as soon as the WPAi assigned workers to the project said Joseph Staples chairman of the town board Darrell J Green-we- ll state WPA administrator said presidential approval of the project had been received The WTA was to supply $22845 and South Weber $17833 : Khrushchev it looks is cam- ui6iuua iu juanc iiiviiaiu I11AUI1 There were five assistant teachers the Remihliran rnndMnte fnr nroci in the school dent and Henry Cabot Lodge the : — - ijji ior vice presiaent lie Dr Epperson's dental office was caiiumaie so two much about these complains on the floor third of the First opened that they must be working overtime National Bank Building for the U S A Apparently Khru-- : said President Bruce Jenkins shchev does not like those who an- Attendance at Weber College was iwtr uautt riavmg attamea a posi- uuu equivalent 10 mai 01 ine CZar expected to pass the 1000 mark he expects to be treated royally said Mrs Clarisse H Hall registrar who had signed up 775 as compared recognition of his prerogatives to 752 last year and registration Spyros Skouras the motion pic- was incomplete Expanded facilities were credited with the increase 50 YEARS AGO F E Schlageter of Ogden had all the interests of purchased Robert Wadlow of Alton III said sheep business for $60-0to he the : largest human in the She was known as "sheep world was an Ogden visitor Rob- queen of Utah" ert who was 21 was 8 feet and a It was reported from the office quarter tall and weighed 491 pounds of the Utah Light and Railway Co Eight or perhaps 12 feminine mat me aemana tor wiring buildings bowling teams were to compete for for lighting purposes had never been the Ogden City championship dur- so extensive as at resent time season said Eva Practically all of thep ing the 1339-4- 0 the new homes Smart president of the Ladies' were being wired for electric lights League1 Mary Evans was vice Manager Decker said: "This city president and Aliene Pantone sec- - is the best lighted at this time withretary-treasurin the limits of any city that I can 00 er recall" e Fred Chez lineman at Ogden High School had reWeber County was sinking a numsigned as athletic director at Sheri- ber of artesian wells on Washington one-tim- all-sta- te dan Wyo High School effective between Ogden and North Ogden to next June 1 and planned to locate secure water for snrinklin the on the West Coast thoroughfares Annual meeting of the Ogden di- - The North Ogden schools had vision M Tuen was to be held in the opened under favorable conditions Fourta Void 2i£t ard Jefferson said John E Blayiock principal s ? v m ! 20 fact-findin- w Ex-Secreta- ry to do a bit of advertising for a forthcoming picture On television Khrushchev was shown mingling with the prettiest' movie stars and a dance in watching the can-ca-n the tradition of France The next day Khrushchev pronounced the can-ca- n immoral Khrushchev is undoubtedly a puritan as most successful Russians are Their morality is definitely Calvinistic They have no side roads no deviations to the right or to the left Second generation Communists like Khrushchev or Kozlov are bound to be rigid in their attitude inward 7e? have no wish to be mistaken rt n i in J S £!vi tbl a usua°start3" eratio tha t Then the demand for consumers' goods becomes pressing Only war or a rising standard of living can save a government under such cir- cumstances This Khrushchev un- derstands Stalin had another al- ternative apparently unavailable at the present time: Stalin could and did murder his opposition Khrushchev is discovering what a high standard of living really means No matter what front of dissatisfaction with his visit he still sees what a high efecis ffio £5J' SsSonSnSSSirS in time becomeThfs 5?t TwunS feller And they show Adlai Steven- evil 111c next strongest Democratic randiHte running very much worse than Kennedy against both t ana Kociceieiier iixon VCDV DRAMATC Tbe improvements m the positions ?f Vice President Nixon in particu- k"v' " anjr iu wAi0wk mamauv m July according to Gallup Kennedy fau nomination really has to enter the active phase by next January The Nlx°n P°sitl0ns of strength are really tco numert)US and solid to be broken up by a last minute at- tack Thus some way of setting the stage for a Rockefeller campaign really must be found in the months just ahead r"" Meanwhile - attempt H 5 Taft-Hartle- -- su-plu- Taft-Hartl- Nixon's rise in the P0113 certainly blocks an attemPt to giie that "Nixon can't W1n so helps mightily to con- soudate the formidable positions of e vice Presicient already ? nsr sum n°I(?s' although it is very ?bvl0US m3eed that Gov Rockefel- a candidate his Krw?nts to difficulties have been much in-- aost Jt It- nirisn ucus Iiu ue uuudi- Reiner ne will take the plunge rrpSSOrt r — 1 l? at all Jy L e same token Sen nedy has also suffered although in mofre subtl? wav than Gov Rockefeller His experience has bJfen rather like the experience of m the last lines JS rufrocl$!: "e nave hngered in the cham- bers of the sea s wreathed with "By seaweed red and brown "Til human voices' wake us and we drown" The determined senator is very " "wh uiuwmiig iu ue sure out in a period when the country was Ken-inde- ed t tne °Tf sea-girl- ey - Taft-Hartle- fact-findin- ENGLISH LESSON Taft-Hartle- s t Taft-Hartl- ey L - " HY GARDNER CALLING bar-Pohticia- ns be-mo- re Presi-pro-Repubhc- an - ?ons near-assassin- a- smaller In 1914 the last died in captivity in hit-and-r- un ! politics being wreathed with en-- a couraging polling results by his own great" personal popularity Now however Russian voices have waked the country from its inward-badl- y looking dream "Who can best face Nikita Khrushchev across a gaining table" has suddenlv come the current test for dential candidates Sen Kennedy's appearance of youth although it makes him more Domilar inevit- ably hurts him when the new test is applied by the voters The senator himself reportedly agrees in general with the fore-going analysis of his somewhat tered situation His solution cf the problem was audible in Ohio where he warned of dangers ahead and called in almost Cburchillian tones for efforts and sacrifice to meet these coming dangers He believes this to be good politics and it also happens to coincide with his convic-o- f tions Furthermore Kennedy has the consolation that he is important US name' "FYir fhp r u in foof thc ctlll mnninrr Pnvprnnr —ine name Jimson is a popular autumn is the truly decisive mo- - Democrat in the race Yet the of the name of the early ment look for Kennedy is at least less A Rockefeller campaign for tha glowing than it was Virginia settlement of Jamestown v- 00 - -- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS OF FACT fact-findin- $3000-a-mont- ai yote against both Nixon and the world the senator lingered in i Hnrkpfpiior At that fima CtsninfAM ftUu- - r also beat the two Republicans by more narrow but still command- mg margin Now Nixon barely leads Kennedy and beats Stevenson badly And Rockefeller though still beaten by Kennedy also leads Stevenson by a hair being politicians the acute pain caused by these results is to be Q— Who was the oldest U S presobserved among the Republicans in ident nominee? ' Rockefeller A— Peter CooDer at R5 hp was the camp of Gov m is Rockefel- truth iYlATTtR gam nominated by the Greenback Party s And this in respect at in 1876 s Nixon least gain may be de- Passenger pigeons once Who en-was the Q— first woman C1ive common in North America Regarded more broadly the are now extinct In colonial voy to be accredited to a foreign Nlx°n must be judged with the United States? by days they were so plentiful A—Mrs Rohde (Ruth Bryan prudence He rose like a rocket that the trees bent beneath Owen) appointed minister to Den- - in tne po'ls after his 10n m Venezuela and like a rocket their weight As many as 100 mark in 1933 ' ' he soon began to fall again Maybe nests were found in a single How old is the Giant Sequoia this new rise unquestionably trace- tree The birds were about in Q— Yosemite National Park? able to the vice president's Rus- 16 inches long and of slate-blu- e A— The tree to a height sian journey will also be followed towering color During three cen209 feet is 3800 years old by a drop But from Gov Rocke- turies of hunting the number r tt —- feller's standpoint a drop for Nixon jmuwe dwiion weea get next winter will come too late uiu of passenger pigeons grew v s -- JOSEPH ALSO? i 1 1 " 'ARISE! YE WORKERS -iiuw nt4 ng NEW YORK— Mrs Kathleen Behan (in "Quote" magazine) speaking about her hard-livinplaywright son Eren-do- n Behan: "He's such a beautiful boy He's got a heart as big as g his thirst!" hard-drinkin- i g - t V'"' " ' Bandleader Buddy Morrow's old but favorite adage: 'The low who watches the clock always remains one of the hands' " : - fel-- Jayne Mansfield on why she no longtr wears a black chiffon negliges when her son is awake: "It Isn't nice for babies to be conscious of their mothers as being sexy Babies always like to see their mothers In simple fresh attire" Bachelor actor Tab Hunter's advice to the lovelorn in "Movie World": "I learned in my late teens that you don't marry a girl for looks or appearance You marry her because cf what she is and how she makes you feel plus the fact that you can't face life without her" i Singer Bill Hayes on the same subject: "The real reason a fellow marries today is simply because he can't afford to keep taking his girl out on dates" Franchot Tone on his reported romance with Susan Strasberg: "I've known her since she was a baby and she calls me 'Uncle HrU7 rtopc thnf rrnva a Mwnrna nf f vp)' s |