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Show , --- t-- r Irt 'Ar , c-- - dm, . . 4 Soldier 1Pgagi7 "":. eltit '- - - - ' '0' 41( ":77-- :rL 10 I ILI 411111 '...-- ' ' ' - ;- - - I - We Stand For The Constitution Of The United States- As 'Having" ' A-- 1 .. 6 EDITORIAL ... . , ', ',- .' ' The stirrhig deeds lean DivinIY TUESDAY. APRi 7s 1964' , , , ' PAGE 1: 0.'40-0017:,,i;':F:00,f:01- - ghts irtsPited----7-Deu- , of the isle Gen. MacArthur will long live Itt-the annahl Ilt AI:pelican bistr7. too, wM some of his sthling words ':,7., 8' ' - ''- -- ' - ell ' .'. - "e'- . triV:tit, ' y; lb' I," , ,,,,rediretPatA ...Age.. ,,,. 'M.,!"---- - ' ' ' Words " o, lye - . z ', ,1 - -- - .. , , .. , - -- '4.. ,: - , . , of ' quiet-spoke- '' , ; of Ms servIceé... these .the wt s s'4.!-'- , , ,aonvietions s e r e d without prepired text or notes- when - - -1, a nation grateful for ,........ Among the best '' ' ,, - .. .. ,. . : , - - ,', , , ... , -- ,J.--'' addressed- Went Pobst cadets MAY Ha,. uPen Ille eccePtence et the Silvana' ThaYer .1 Award for service to Ids country. The Deseret News printed these i. words at the time, but does.; so again' .!;, as a final tribute to the great "old . ,. SO idig 1 , , -- - Z.:7,1.r .; ile, IT HAD BEEN A great ,General Confer-who had distinguished himself as an ;;"2 ''' ence-"- The , greatest ever, 1- as men and I cator in the institutes and seminaries of , ;:'4"-? :".", lq,,' women - assured one another as they who had been a highly Skilled . the Church, ' 6; ' q. walked out of ,.Temple Square and pre- -' athlete, whd speaks the language of youth 14:14t:4:57 l.:!,,.!) ' '; , and is much loved by them, and who is ., i three, days - , pared to return home after , . , of joyous inspiration. known as a valiant and highly effective ' , ,,ft '4,,,,', --, There had been those, great messages .4,;,,E. : z.,..,. .spiritul servant. His appointment was : r . ' , -P-resident McKay's appeal for living the , warmly welcomed. ' ' Iliit morn,.. ,.. standards of the Chmch, for keeping the , There had been the great t wave of A s 1 wits leaving the hotel this , 4 . ti,., ; ' ,' : Word of Wisdom, for building virtuous, human warmth and compassion that had 1'1 . ing, a doorman asked me, "Where .. ; ki,;. i't N., . gone out to President David 0.- McKay as, 'are you bound for, General?" and strong homes; President Brown's stirring ' .. affirmation of the meaning of the Gospel ill.; recent of a off effects the .011,, lighting when I replied, "West Point," be reovemoviee of Jesus Christ in a world In which so ness, be had insisted on conducting "Beautiful place, have you ' - - many men are frustrated' in their search ference sessions and, With his unfail- - seer hPen there before?" - for truth; President Tanner's scholarly' - ing humor and sense of. rightness, had to be fall could human No being' . ' succeeded-- , descriPtion of God's dealings with men -- moved by such a- - tribute as . , deeply '. an his His.d prophets, c4e-',through , ringing Yes, it had been a great conterence- .- thi, (Thayer Award) coming from a did ' declaration that . the heavens are still And then came its closing,' climactic profession I have served so long and a ,ns.) , open and that God still teaches through 'moments . - -. - people I have loved's well, it finis Me VPIA -' His megthese the and other all prophet; --with an emotion I cannot express. But -- - - Is J , ,had read for the-- - -. : - - sages pertaining to life and salvation' leftT., &Tea'sidea his words of thanks ;to all cn--:this award is not intend& primarily -- .- 0 ie ',mom ' " soul' the the heart uplifted, , strengthened. corned, words that have become a hall- - for a personslity, but 10 symbolize a - , ,.. - and ' There had been the "glozioula music of graciousness-great moral code-- the 'code of Inarlot,several during the 13 yeara the,2- Tabernacle Clioir-,and who thin. of those and guard chivalry , President McKay - - choruses of young people, whose spirits - led the Church. beloved land of culture and ancient . ) - : - Atilt shown out through their lovely faces Then - President McKay stood.,-,--- He descent , three ; - DutY, hnr, country: Thse ex-' He - - - .. - as welt as. through their music.' to to and fathers," mothers, ' ntlY ' There had been the sense of universal!---a------ ---, spoke the pride- hallawed ,'ete-cante- -f eel.Linrehildreit--;1rile, -they ' pressed ' towhat what , be announce, you ought you ty" d strength the formalhad y , who ere living the Gospel. saan a greates; 'be,"what"you will"be.-"Theare your - - . ment, that Church membership passed e of be the to is father he ,said, work, rallYing, point to 'build courage when the ,. ,, , trtork, the reality that the 1-faith to q '7't ''''''''''- -'I proceedings of the Conference were being one who witnessed i'''' can i there seems- - to be little cause heard virtually worldwide through the hush the that reverent, loving lay for faith,. to create hope when hope beforget -- -' Gen. John J. Pershing-pinthe Distinguished,Service Medal on ' the Tabernacle as he said: We are comes forlorn. . ' MacArthur Gen. for this purPuse at Rernagen sons fort shall but our Germany 'during World War 1. speakUnhappily, I, possess neither that '.- born to die; . There had been the great satisfaction ' of us of that diction, poetry eloquence ' - with ' which the naming of Paul Harold , , , --- imagiftatienr.nor- - that - brilliance of had CONFERENCE? The A of GREAT Dunn to the FirstCotmcil greatest, Seventy to all tell that they you metaphor J 4, most memorable of all. been received. Here was IL young man, 39, mean. I ; The imbellevers will say they are Country,-T- he Duty, but words, but a slogan, but a Amencan-Patrlo- t. LiUT.A-Distinguisboyant phrase. Every pedant, every nc . - , - ; It ' . . , ' - -- s -- - -- ;. - ' ,,,-- 4,- ' ' -'- ,,,,i-- .:.. , .. - - .., - . - r (i . - - , ,& V 1,1 - . . , ,.. - 1. - . ! . -- , - , A - évf--- N: 1. -- - - - - con-mark- ':. - e - . - . ' , , . - - - !- . - - conduct----2,--- t -- ., -- -- -- - , --- -- , -- ,,. -- - -- -',. , two-mini- - - -- - - --- - on ,., , s ' - , - , --- , 1 t S est "'17'-great- Ittel , , - -- - - -- -' '''''''.isr------------- , , - - - v., ' --- - -- '-- - - -- ---- - ,..'. ;t , - --- ; -- -- S . -- - - - , . s, , , - - - - . - - , - - - - - - - , - -- The Plide - li hed demagogue, every cynic, every hypo- crite, every troublemaker, and,-- am sorry to say,sorneothers of an en- tirely different character, ' will try to downgrade them even to the extent of mockery and ridicule. - But these are some --of the things - equaled. He was the youngest brigadier youngest-majo- r life general of his thne,-th- e division the in commander, ' youngest controversy that general, stmlately caught up the key1 to his complex personality may - the - youngest - supetintendent"-- - of West - Point, and, at 50,the youngest officer , never be found. ever appointed Army Chief of Staff. But if a 'single word can be used to sum up this man:Thy o can 1) described Possibly the most decorated officer inU.S. history, he held the Congressional roles as thecustodians of the nation's only in Superlatives, that word is pride. have defense. They make you stung enough , of Honor, three Distinguished ServMedal Pride, unfortunately, seems to -.days- It- his -keCrosses, and seven Silver Stars, in 7 to know when you are weak, and brave come to be associated with selfishness, -- - addition to many other decorations, doenough to -face yourself when you are afraid. the of that idnd and mestic and egotism, .. ownot - - . 1 FOB MOST OF IIIS constructive, colorful -- Douglas-MacArthur-was- Credo Honor, any other man.. Hellas written Ids history and written it in red on, his . ' . enemy's breast .' . . . - ., , the satellite, spheres andmissilesoo mighty, by power groups grownto marks k beginning of another epoch arrogant, by politics grown too cor. -.in the long story of mankind. In the -rupt, by crime grown too rampant, by five or more billions of years the so17. morals grown too low, by taxes grown -- tell us it has taken to form the extremists grown loft via, - liceteYrb, - Witness To -- The, Fortitude sts en-ti- our personal liberties are years of development of the htiman as thorough and complete as they race, there has never been a greater, shod be ' a more abrupt or staggering evolution. 'These great national pmblems are tion, and that invincible determtnation We deal now, not with things of not for your professional participation which have carved,his stature in the wirld itioni, but with the iMrrdtable foreign. Your guidepost or military solution. inflates thevalue otthe individual in--- a outward What-ThThese, of course, ere only-th- e -- Words-Teach distances and its yet unfathomed mrJ- -I- leartlPtilis People- - f beicon in th e his-trlike ue worth. volved beyond -- - From one end -- -manifestations of ottheworldtothe - teries of the ImiverseWeerereaching - tm-to teach an4 rilHtY But Douglas MacArthur had a higher, you night: Duty, honor, country. out for a neW and botmdless frontier. deeds themselves are a glorious part of Chalice has drained the he other, deep to- but You in honest which are the binds leaven failure, bending nobler kind of pride We i'Plill in strange terms of harnessfrom his keeping our nation's history As I listened to those soigs humble gentle in success; not to of courage. His was the ldnd of pride that comes gether the entire fabric of our national b3g the cosmic energy,of maldng of the famousTShall Return" In ornise substituteadwordsfort I of the glee club,- in memon's eye I to nor of defense. From your ranks actiom. a cause in system from winds find tides work for us ... . of bigger being wrapped up , at the Philippines, to the wise and Just seek the of comfort, but to face , could ;ee those stazzetins COItunns of the . come the great captains who hold the 1 path in this case, the than any in no war, longer primary target administratión, of occupied Japan which ii- i- their hands the the stress and spur of difficulty and the first World : , War, bending under ' limited to the armed forces of an nation's destiny glory and honor of his country. It is the led it to den?ocracy, to, his service as su to in the moment war the tocsin Sounds. learn ttstand upon those - soggy packs on many a weary march, enemy, but instead to include his civil kind of pride, moreover, that both' springs - - preme commander in,1Corea at an age , - challenge; - The lonu gray line has never lailed .-to have but : storm, from dripping dusk to, drizzling dawn, populations; of ultimate conflict- be- from outstanding accomplishment and when generals usually are retired. who fall; to master" yourself before tween a united human race and the ' . us. Were you to do so, a million ghosts even more mire of ankle that acts as a spur to produce through deep slogging to Master Dthers;; to have a in olive drab, in brown khaki, in blue you seek A PROUD MAN? Of course he was roads; to form grimly for sinister forces of some other planetary constructive achievements- .and gray, would rise from their white heart that is clean, a goal that is high; of such dreams and fantasies Because was covered with wouldn't galaxy; he be? the who that - to learn to attack, The achievements of Douglas' how t h o se magic laugh, yet neverforget to most life as the make exciting of crosses, thundering kind of man, he helped his country hold to weep; to reach into the future, yet - sludge and mud, chilled by the wind on bolos. speak volumes on why this man of words: Duty, honor, country. . to their and home objecrain, driving its head up during some of its most diffinever neglect the past; to be serious, stern, patrician bearing could justifiably And through all this ' welter of .g.nr. Dame judgment a West cult hours. For this reason we're proud t never to take yourself tooserious- - live, and for many, to the -- -D,,,,,, . - hold hhnsellram-roderectA- s , 7"' change and God. your mission development of . ,seat tile to salute of General -rees Douglas will MacArthur so to 1 memory be modest that ; compiled Point cadet, young you ly; not Y1.111E-domean that Inviolable. remains . you ltre,--. fixed, determined, I do not know the dignity fof their . MacArthur. - record never member the simplicity of true treat-an academic and leadership On the contrail, the 1017-o. their It is to win our wars. Everything else -of true wisdonvhirth, i)ut Id lalowthe mess; all other people prays for died unquestioning, lin-- In rut: professionarcareer death. They the rneekntss of true strength. with faith in their hearts,--- - corollary to this vital dedication. All peace, for he must suffer and bear the . , , ' They give you a temperate will, a complaining, and on their lips the hope that we other Public Purposes, all other public - deepest wounds and scars of war. But - . ,- quality of imagination, 1 vigor of the would go on to victory. projects, all other public needs, great always in our ears -- the ominous emotions, a freshness of the deep or small, will find others for their ac-- words of Plato, that wisest of all . Allusive for them: fi Inhonor, Duty, demands More imediate are an satisfacsome TAKE CAN AliffIRICANS springs of life, a temperamental pre- complishment; but you are the ones philosophers, "Only the dead have seen crease In the annualU,.S. payment of $1.9 dominance of courage over timidity, country:Always their blood, and eat, who tion ht the way affairs in Panama are , to trained are , fight. the end of war." as we .sought the way and -have-r- e an appetite for adventure over love of and tears, And going- - riow The mirdmum 20 on the minion; raisingof thepresent the light. after, : The shadows are lengthening for . years ease. as a . A The P prereqon sumed diplomatic relations Of rms rof centsworkrate an essi of 70 hour for wage other side of the globe, again the filth me. The twilight is here . My days of They create in your heart the sense uisite to reviewing the Canal Z9ne treaty ers in the zone; more of the better paying of murky foxholes, the stench of ghost- is the profession of arms, old have vanishedtone and tint. They VOURS of wonder the ' should be done. -A- ust-as .i. the will to win, the sure knowledge jobs for panananians; removal., of the next, and' the y andginpmiration of 1Y trenches, the slime of dripping dug- have gone glimmering throug- h- lhe - relentMoreover, this review won't commit the of bonus now paid to Americans work- - . life . the 25 stms those boiling that in war there is no substitute for dreams of things that were. Their outs, They teach you in this way to be . advanceto revising the treaty--less heat, those torrential rains of de-- - victor that tf you lose-,- the nation memory Ls one of wonderous beauty- ,-ing in the zone - and indeased purchasing - an officer and a -- gentleman :- - -- another victory for the U.S. viewpoint. of supplies for the zone from Panamanian And what sort of soldiers are those - vastatbig stormS, the loneliness and , will be destroyed, that the very obses- - watered by tears and coaxed and mist he caressed bys. the smiles of yesterday. merchttnts. Since the treaty hag been re- - you are to lead? Are they reliable? Are utter desolation of jungle trails, the - - !don of your public service .These victories, h o weve r, may be of long separation from 1 listen vainly, but with thirsty ear, duty, honor, count7. vised before hi 1934-anrather hollow. That we made these two 1955, a third re-- they brave? Are they capable of vic - bitterness those they loved and cherished, the Others will debate the controversial for the witching melody of faint bugles 4, , , vital points on their merit and without vision to handle these points shouldn't be tory! of tropical --disease, issues, n a t i o n a I and international, pestilence deadly still blowing reveille, of far drums beating of to all Their is known to you. . Out of order story "gunboat diplomacy" resorting' areas of war. the horror Of stricken wMch divide men's minds. But serene, the long roll . man of , the . won't erase, the ugly memory of anti'Th- e US, , aloof, you stand as the nation ' s In my dreams -- 1 hear againthe - at arms.- My estimate ofilimwas--------Swilt- American rioting last January that took And Sure AttackT: wax'. guardian crisis originally ltslifeguards 21 guns, the rattle r' musketry, and soldiers 'U.S. three of Tatty the lives American of ambassador the who the conT reported years ago, and has never chin' ied. raging tides of international the strange, 'mournful of ill; THEM resolute 'arid determined de- . Panamanian citizens , the Panamanians were becoming restive.filet, as its gladiators in the arena of battlefield. swift and sure attack, him But the him in the iti of roy -I fense, then, evening regarded regard Now that tempers have cooled, much - He resigned when his advice went un- battle. and. For half a a century you their to Indomitable back of come world's West one noblest as their figthe , I memory always m47 purpose:L rlow, ed, of what Panama has-bee- n demanding does and protected Point. Always there echoes and re- heeded. Let's hope that obvious weakness ; not only as one of the finest and decisive victoryalways vie. ,, have defended,-guarduses plete not seem unreasonable. The most difficult ' -- - -- --'has been patched up. always through the bloody haze its hallowed traditions of liberty and echoes:. Duty, honor, country . ' military characters, but also as .,Mry, -' , of demands are for a clear recognition of-- the and freedom, ,,:'right justice. of their last reverberating shot, the of the most stainless: , Today marks my final roll call with 1...,, - Let zone' THE II.S. IS PAYING an awfully ...high civilian voices argue the merits His name and fame are the bli411:' vision of gaunt, ghaStly men, rever- republic's titular sovereignty in the you. But I want you to know that when , price for failing to anticipate a prob. , right of every American citizen'. In his ently following your password of duty, or demerits of our processes of govern- I cross the river, my last conscious and for definite future date for relinquish . ment : Whether our lem and deal with It promptly. Isn't it youth and strength, his love and loyal- - honor, country. . . . Since canal. the over control U.S. strength is being 'thoughts Will be of the corps, and the Ing deficit 1)Y to we time learned saPPed International even these with financing You now face a new world, a world , indulged in L corps, and the corps. cope the canal is becoming obsolete, ty, he gave all that mortality can give. too long, by federal paternalista grown farewell.---bid meet. before The reach crisis of to no He I outer needs Into from from thrust or be próblems you demands they me, possible space eulogy change. drastic stage' may -- self-estee- m - tlefields, around a thousand camp fare,. s, I have witnessed that enduring!'.. ,: -- e -- -- ---- -- 1 ,T, " - - lci ' . '' . shell-pock- Mac--Arth- ur blge-lippe- , In p rogress -- ... --ye- 1 ' Panama - . two-cowit- ries the-y.Ss- aid - --- -- ;- d story many, - h-of troln-7---cras- I - - -- , , , - mu-tte- , 4 ,. 4 . - MMaB1 MEMiEt1 A ;...BAL-- ' NcED-;TICKET- 2 - '- ..'4M4, , ) ioidliidteldföt GUEST CARTOONIS'T )o FROM THE SPOKANE , The trouble ivith the "balanced ticket" type most of ills power because he is a symbol. ton, he 'likes to think be can carry his .foi-loof thinking, they sayT is is not an - The moment he ceases to identify himself with wers with him. There ii in Odd-support would find to At. r- Certainly the Goldwater sup- - ,2'ill This In the under--- J, Ordinely switch r;- - however,- - the Republicarrpms , yea. , Nik,,,,,, at the edges. The question is whether IhT11( cannot ofi be counted to act as a group politickporters ,,, still remain a symbol as a "veep.". can count on nothing. In my home state of ! ''..", , ,. , big of the Republi-- , 414, An an ordinary way. In practically ...every state Connecticut the Republican Party stalwarts . --:- -'4, iN ' ' cans: s'Moderates"-am Iwo major' PIT MOST PRESIDENTIAL years political Goldvtaterites into are the Alvided are currently caught up in a squabble for con- ', !I -- , - who were pummel-- , Y - 2- parties tan-affo- rd to make their appeals Vol between the Searle Pinney men and the P . factions that.bave reacfiedi-Purel' ing Barry Goldwater temporarr1catch-ili1,..041,'. 'with a ofthis for -- the Eddie May men.-B- ut the Goldwater clubs in truce. Some of them arnRepublicans who shap-;-- -- as- I .,, just- yesterday- are - the state have to interest in the fightlmless little of for a the that liberals, conservatives, for now touting liim--to be pen Bany- - Others are conservatives 1.A It can be shown that it has soma bearing on for vice president. who couldn't care less about the Republican and sornething elsi again In various propor- - , their own interest,-whic- h rs is to spread dold- -' 'theni-say, regions.In-suchyeaof should the or ' go for 4 liberal ,candidate.2 Party if it personalT: water's philosophy. ' the' ticket will be v will be decisive. Nobody knew ivhatpopularity New conservative York the 1964 In Chamberlain to one of takes back party long ,Mr THEo.v1P1 Nixon Goldwater' . Served notice that it would not support Eisenhower thought about a lot of things in ' when large numbers of Republicans others that it will be Scranton-ColdwateWere for Teddy Roosevelt first and for the liberal; in Ohio, Pennsylii;nia, 1952but he was popular, se no matter: The , re the face offt,fhlesert. peediting - party only on aindition that it dump William Colorado,-whefavorite sons bave vary-and was same , makes sense, for it is obvious that Goldwater Howard Taft in favor of Bull Moose-ising claims to delegate control, there are ter-from The drive 1961 in the as vent bells' vers in the Goldwater philosophy who will go to San Francisco with a hefty ntmlber grassroots ,.11111 jS not to 'say that Barry Goldwater , of delegates who, in case they can't put their who. It affects Goldwater, however, Is for a PoPu- - -- would run a mile before voting to putt Gov- himself a Republican first and last, is -. man over, will have to be pacified in order would f0.11(PN This is something or Governor Scranton or Sn- T.R.'s example and take off into , 1atizaiten.tion -- tbatiLitetorrAnott to hold By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN - - --- 1- the-surfa- ' , t ,-- 11,.., - ----Ro-the r. 1 ',. . BUT . -- j , -- - l- Y.. . ' '' , otths4huasigoneit water supporters raises some questions conceivably be prevailed upon to run for the vice presidency provided he were satisfied about thee soundness of the plan. Many of them with the platform and with the Republican would Consider settling' for second place an ,1dloice for president But Goldwater, though , Dian, wields he is enormously ppular as unbearable defeat 1 -- ' -- , ' , ; t, ou (IllsF"- - ' , pro. The pro prerers the type of voter that can PROS MAY' HAVE iheir wiyq this be counted on to be hi his pocket no matter' at the conventions But in November the what randidate be may have to settle for in -- ' ate win settle the issue. They will do the end. He may be for Goldwater, or he may voting or by notvotingi as the choice seems by be for Rockefeller or for Lodge, but if he has indicated. ' to .mak a trade or accommoda tat it414 last-minu- , - - g year. , 0. ,, iv 0,4A., 'r ,y'''' ,' Y A' ' k A 4 41 i - ,, 1 , 1 !J , ..4,,.. . it, t 4; li 4F ,.."' tr, 7:i7,6460"c-LA:- .. . 6 , .,,e S i i; ,i, Xto o I', ' I A, ,,--- . t 4.'. 40,; i Mr; 4 ,:, , . : a . 1 , SPc-;.-- , i, . m "hir(Lpartyivudezness Indeed, ,, as a- - good party, Man, he might Gold. T: ' -I- - J ,...1G0 A: LITTLE, investigation: among REVIEW.:.: - ..,- g, - SPOKESMAN , f , , Tql- -- ,,e0t..4,v - 7 '",,t, . -- . ---- $044.1)ci IJ , 1. - Mari LamontlitgAri 'old Folend:.'.' - i fl |