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Show m Grain Range The Weather Bterald oima Favor Fndav Qj VOL 45. NO. 266 v i'1' 'Vyt2 t - v;- NOVEMBER LOGAN, UTAH. THURSDAY. Sable let ti.h-i V over Not tilt the of I XV .1 Ml soviet down lnv.nlm- i ' Mills .loan tiu'o.utr'u lliesu'i !k! - lo'ee .it ji Is to -- hoot have bet n :h t- - now fotct-- s aa.iwuiprinpi'T ppawi wah, fis shoot outai . ov t r o! iu .it tlie tn I, anal) a ea i. !i Voi i n ail of-- t r v.nd it, at l et oniiaissain e llivhts ot U on. pi.iin s and ntappm' S ,i H .K.K in ,ti the expltts !!u! ts of 4, '7 tr opeiatuig on a basis in the event e a ' a 1 a ' iw5uPw,4if Kan A F1 1, 1' I i l's exiilon! ) fo! i shooting down Rus- the bv 11 In tiie futuie, it is militated, time will lie no such (ailute to meet a lied challenge shoot back High Education Subcommittee over I Miiveved the situation Northern Hokkaido Island on a lecent visit, befoie Sunday's at- ta k. subcommittee on higher education, Utah Legislative Coun-- j cil, will report Its findings and recommendations to a joint ivv oo ing Friday of Utah State Agricul tural college board of trustees and University of Utah board of regents. The meeting will be held at 9 m. in the state capitol building. Highlights of the report were discussed today in Logan by Adrian W. Hatch, committee chairman, and former member of the Utah legislature. Assisting him on the committee are Rep. Clair R. Hopkins, Rep Lee W. Dalebout, Rep. John W. The Cache County's sugar beet harvest will have been completed by Friday of this week, and that cheeks for beets delivered in October will be mailed Monday, was the lepoit Amal- today of D. E. Smith, manager of the Lewiston district, amated Sugar Co. Its been a wonderful fall for harvest operations, and one of the best beet crops in local history, Mr. Smith said. Our 4000 acres will average neatly 15 tons to the acre, is normal. The- sugar content measuring just a little above 16' Truck-Aut- o per cent. ' 4 Row-ber- are making up checks now for the initial payment of $10. 50 We per ton, ,- Determining the re of existing institutions other, to private institv to the elementary and s. school system. 3. flying over Hokkaido. In . addition to the constant watch for invading MIGs, the Sabre jets are now escorting reconnaissance planes instead of waiting to go up when it might be too late. er i I We see this ptojeet, he continued, as and futuie generaicmmder to the tions that tiie most distinctive featuu within tiie fri-- system other than its spiritual hase and its pioteitioii of inalienable rights is individual oppoitumty; not security, not an economic guaiantee, but opportunity. Shortly liefore the dedication reremonies, tiie Pi osident viewed a Veterans Hay parade from a caipetiHl marque of the Sunflower a pit-sen- Sombre Message Health Meetings On Veterans Day missed at noon; school lunch will not be served, and the afternoon (jeVOted to parent-teachwijj conferences ..We are confident all parents cooeprte j this undertaking and be prepared, if possible, to mPe appointed hour which )een agreed upon with the teacher. Miss Daniels said. One other half day will be used in the spring, with the date to be announced at that time." It was in October 1953 that the board approved using the parent-teachconference method of reporting the progress of element- ary school children. This policy vas adopted on an experiment basls an(j was use(j during the 1953.54 school year together with a more (onnaj type of report wj,en deemed necessary, jt wag agrepd that two individual parent-teachconferences, each approximately 20 minutes in length, should be held during the year. This involved a great many people and many hours of teacher-parent time outside of regular school hours. Near the close of the sear, teachers and parents were asked to appraise this type of reporting and to express their candid opinions. The results of this evalu-- I ation were that 94.7rc of the parents responded and 93 of the teachers aproved this method as against the more traditional method of report cards only. er nd .ry At Utah State Select Two Casts r . r fP 6 rr is - i.'" j ? tv r . i-- ! y V1 1 'A, tf V er ! t A , mV V :t - I u I - .! ... LEARNING .TO MARK a ballot Is part of the citizenship training afforded students in today's schools. .Miles Feleren of Elhs school discusses to.r election results with Jackie Freeman, daughfer of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Freeman, and Bonni Shoup, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Shoup. low-pric- re- s t ' government and other officials. Armistice Day was changed to Veterans Day under a law Mr. Fiscnhower signed last June 1. The new name was deemed more fitting for a day of fubute to the 571,598 Americans who died in two world wars and Korea and to the 21 million American veterans. As part of the nationwide observance, some 48,000 aliens were to tke oaths of citizenship in mass naturalization ceremonies in 109 towns and cities. Attorney General Heibert Brownell Jr., said in a speech at New York reremomes that the Immigration Service is going to adopt new regulations to seed up the admission of aliens at ports of entrance. we have not Talbott said achieved the goal for which the men buried in Arlington fought but are living in a sort of armed truce. Discussing weaons which make those past wars puny, he j asseited- truee. Discussing weapons which men. women, chilcontinent dren, even tiie beasts and the vegetation. They can abolish, in a single night not only an army, not only a nation, but a whole Dec. 23. Theatrical Atmosphere I have found no evidence of any desire to filibuster this or delay it until Dee. 23, Knowland said. I don't believe any filibuster Is seriously contemplated or that it would succeed. There is no indication that it would be desirable or advantageous." Dirksen said he was distressed at the theatrical atmosphere in which spectators were standing in line in the Capitol corridors for admission to the gallery. By 11:30 a.m. half an hour before today's Senate session somr 450 seats in the galleries were filled up and several hundred mere proipective spectators were lined In a main Capitol corridor and stretched back to the main rotunda. Sen. Francis Case a member of the Censure Committee, was slated as the first speaker on the second day of general debate. Case was holding the floor late Wednesday at the windup of a turbulent initial session in which McCarthy and Chairman Arthur V. Watkins waged a argument over tho merits of the Censure Committee and its report. Meanwhile, the sporadic nature of Wednesdays debate prompted several predictions that the historic special session might be shorter than first expected. Watkins said we could finish in a week if everybody would cooper(R-S- D civilization Without naming Russia. Talbott declared that two powerful systems of government now-- have "powers of absolute destruction. He said the spirit of a free people ate. will be more potent than war The Democrats were so conmachines that move only at spicuously silent that the debate man's command. nearly collapsed at one point. Some Democrats are expected to U.S. Denies For speak eventually, but if they leave most of the oratory to the Republicans, the debate might be bobtailed considerably. Plans H-Bo- Tests In Antarctic The WASHINGTON, Wt States today flatly denied report that it plans to test bombs in the Antarctic. The Atomic Energy Commission said there was no truth in the reports. Later the State department also issued a denial and communicated it to the U. S. Embassy in New Zeland for delivery to the New Zealand government. Walter Nash, New Zealand LaDETROIT (IF Chrysler Cor- bor party leader, has been quoted new introduced today poration as expressing concern over relower, longer, wider and more ports that the United States might powerful 1955 Plymouth which be thinking of shifting its will be competitive in it hones the fight between Ford and proving ground to the south Polar auto- continent from the Marshall IsChevrolet in the lands in the Western Pacific. mobile fit Id. A U. S. icebreaker will leave The new Plvmouths. redesigned from bumper to bumper to Boston for the Antarctic Dec. 1 meet complaints the old Ply- in advance of an expedition planmouth lacked style, were given ned for later on. Fortune magV-- 8 engines for the first time in azine has suggested that one purpose of the expedition is to find Plymouth history. The Plymouth four-doo- r sedans out whether the Russians have were 10 3 inches longer, 1.7 inches been using Antarctica as a nulower and had more seating clear testing ground. room. Front seats were 3.2 inchAsked whether this country es wider and rear scats 5.3 in- plans any the AEG Issued ches wider. a one word reply No. New Cars T by by MSCt 18-2- questioned ditional silent numite was oheiv-Sec- t posed of in tiie 83rd Congress d aeioss the land at 11 a. m. which will end when the special session adjourns. By previous agreement, the session must eu.l a Y' er ct t Knowland, porters about Capchart's proposal, said, The Senate called for this purpose. It should be dis- to a pos- With definite plans initiated as committee project those on session hand for the planning were Reed Roberts, district sanitarian for the State of Utah; Dr. Wellsville G. S. Francis, city Mrs. MEMPHIS. Tenn., TP Mrs. Bessie physician; Matty Brescia lost her knitting '' " ' y ! ' 111 A H 11 U 9 1 DStC bag containing some half finished 1 on A gem U F rEc h I) r so1 ks She received a telephone knecht, director of Utah State ExSniithfield will again play host cad from Mrs Bill Keenan of tension Service; G. Alvin Carpento Gi eenv die. Miss, who said she the annual dinner meeting of ter, of Extension Service. Eail Cache had found it Valley Council, Boy Scouts City Sanitarian, Ixgan Fillmore, "By the way I finished those and Mrs. Luella Barlow, of the of America. More than 500 scout-er- s It is exerted, gather in socks for ou, Mrs. Keenan add- district public f nursing the will, Southfield stake house on ed. staff. 19 for the event. January Dr Frbchknecht reported that Chan man of the occasion is Dr. the extension set v lie hopes to, Cailton Culmsee. dean of aits hold such programs in Ixigan, and sciences, Utah Mate Agricul- Ogden, Provo and Richfield, fori tural college, it is announced by the citizens in those immediate Byron Snow, council president, The purpose of these Working with Dean Culmsee on area. ing the necessary records of the health education programs is to, the program will be J. A. Watts, J. R Johnson is chairman of conferences. The Board of Edu-le- get people the facts, he explain-- j Ijoiu-ed. physical anangements. cation approved this recommend-leMoser head and Albert Danielson ation ano granted two one-haVarious members of the com- the general comittee. with Mr. mittee were assigned specific Danielson in charge of the dinner phrases of the planning activities arrangements Tickets will lie to be handled prior to the next handled by ean Iostma, Joe of the group, set for Dec. Goff and James McBride. M. T. meeting additional time outside of regular 1 at'l p.m. Van Oiden heads the committee school hours would be necessa;. which will manage the awarding of the coveted Silver Beavers. William Seholes will supervise ushering. Field Scout Executive Ramon Scaly is seci etary. Several council officers lunched Q Wednesday with Victor Sharp, deputy regional executive, who was making his farewell visit to the council. He is being given a new responsibility In the San Francisco area, under a regrouping of districts. The council's allotment of three explorers has been raised to four, for the 8th World Jamboree, to 1955. at be held August Ontario, Canada, it was announced. af- McCarthys supporters drove hard behind the scenes to whip up a compromise formula to blunt or at least soften the apparently unbeatable censure move. But Sen. Everett M. Dirksen a flc .leader of the McCarthy forces, denied any intent by his side to filibuster. Dirksen agreed with Knowland that the Senate is almost compelled to take action before adjourning is special session, which was called specifically to debate the censure issue. Hotel. Discussions elating sible senes of public health eduAir force WASHING ION V cation programs in lxigan, simE. Talbot old Hat etary ilar to those held earlier this told a nation obxeiving gtavely year in Salt Lake City, look place its 111 st Veterans Day today that here Wednesday afternoon. nuclear weapons nowean abolish Meeting at Cache County Court- a whole civilization in a single night. house, with County Agent Lamont Representing President Eisenof Tueller in charge, a group hower in rites at Arlington Nat- Cache Valley medical, health and jonai Cemetery. Talbott under-civi- c officials talked over the Sl0ied a plea for world peace such with the staik declaration that possibility of conducting be would which oten gatherings today's arms can lay waste an free of charge to the general entire continent His remaiks were prepared for public. General topics of inteiestj would be featured. delivery shot fly after the fia- - land's remarks came posi-electi- - lf j t e I one-ba- lf Know Possible Series -- the censure ter Sen. Homer E. Capehart R Ind ) proposed that the Senate oil off the temper rattling censure debate until January to re move the issue from the present faatmoxphre of tigue. Filibuster Unlikely ' Officials Discuss 1 of al ll. , i diMHive move Ol ies-So- ar 1 xhuulil position hut only in teims of the good and tiie non-g- Hut m the foima! tieduatory speech, Hr. Milton S. Eisenhowei, said tie and Ins hioth-et- s associate the spot with memory of their patents who heltti Hit hoys learn the of honesty, frugality, lnitriHiidenee, love of God the freedom, lesponsibility simple lessons of free Ameitea. Mr. Before the dedication cm Milton of his hrothets, Eisenhower and two and Earl, visited the gtavex of their patents in Abilene Cemeteiy. They were accompanied by the Piesidents son, John, and lus thiee children. Of Re-itd'- lii g cat-tim- PARENT - TEACHER CONFERENCES TAKE PLACE OF REPORT CARDS Parent-teachconferences for However, the time required reporting the progress of element- - proved to be somewhat of a prob-ary school children in Logan City AfteF considering this prob- district are being continued this the Committee on carefully, year, according to Virginia Danto Parents recommendReporting iels, elementary grades supervis- ed to the Board of Education that or. in order to conduct worthwhile The first day to be conferences some released time devoted to conferences will be be allowed teachers for this pur- the afternoon of November 17. On and for the purpose of niak-- 1 pose disw ill be that day, children SHINGTON (IF Senate an Leader William F. Know buid said today the Senate W h lot peat e. God-fearin- vvats Anu-ma- t Good Neighbor - Opera Auditions h c a n i 9 Mr. Smith said that the LewisJohn COLUMBUS. Ohio TP factory will be processing the beets until about Nov. 27; the Cowles, president of the Minneastaff totals 300 persons. polis Star and Tribune, today predicted that the next 10 years will In the valley, perfect autumn be the brightest of any past deas favored alf harvest-ente- d cade in the history of American operations. The potato crop newspapers 'lr,ua11-Cowles made the prediction In ' ls aJ', n- lea(brs re ported. Many flplds a'ready bave a keynoet address before some bepn faUPloed- - and fertilizer 400 members of Sigma Delta distributed Chi, national journalistic frater- Weather ahead, within the next nity. at the first general session few davs, is expected to be of the four-da- y 45th anniversary stormy, according to forecasters. convention. aeh They will be presented winter who is quarter, states Dr. Welti, head of the division o- - vocal music. Pietro Macagni's grand opera and the Cavelleria Rustuana comic opera Giahni Schichi by Puccini have been selected for They provide lead production. re'es for all parts. Interest in- opera seems to a new- high each year. rea'-said Dr. 1'eiti oi the large turnout to auditions. Applicants ranged from freshmen through graduates and promise a cast o fine singers, said Director Welti. r Japanese territory. fighter pilots sei amble with orders to shot down the MIGs or chase them out. The Russians have their bases on the Kurile Islands and Sakhalin Island, 20 to 40 miles from the Hokkaido Island coast. American airmen believe the MJGs which shot down, the Sunday came from an airdrove on Kunashiri, southernmost of the Kuriles, whose volcanic mountains can be seen even on cloudy days from Hokkaido's shoies. On clear days the Russian air base, where scores of MIGs are stationed, is visible from a plane Coal Collision Sends ton 4. Evaluating enteric for ad- ditional institutions or the euro- (Continued on Page 5) as. Ante Bright Years onsbip Opera auditions at Utah State Agricultural college attracted the largest number of singers in the colleges history, as Dr. w al- -j ter Welti prepared this week o oper- select casts for two one-a- Fighters Alerted If the MIGs get too close, U. S. fighter bases 200 miles to the west and southwest are alerted. If the Soviet jets nose over al i - day. Three To Hospital 45,000 go through their accs every fljing covering approximatetons delivered to the factory in October. Those checks Two women, immediately unishould go into the mail next suffered multiple indentified, Monday. car-cotruck collision a in juries 1953 Total $14.41 on South Main in Logan at 1:15 4 p.m. today. Additional payments on the The women were taken to Locrop will be made at later dates. gan LDS Hospital by ambulance For the 1953 crop, farmers re- where they were undergoing ceived a total of $14 41 per ton, emergency treatment. Driver of including government allocations. the truck was taken to the hospiBest sugar beets in the county tal for observation. Investigating this year were grown in the Nib-le- y thb accident is Deputy Sheriff and Hyrum areas, he said, Arthur Roskelley. with some fields yielding as high Coal was scattered all about as 25 tons to the acre. About 75 the street from the accident. per cent of the 1954 crop has been mechanically harvested. ly pre-jeadi- - iadar men watch the MIGs - ry and Carl C. GaskilL Survey Needed There never hs been an agency to coordinate and survey higher education in Utah, Mr. Hatch the years, sfld. Throughout there has been competition among our state institutions, instead of efforts toward offerings that are complementary to each other. Our subcommittee is not a joint necessarily advocating governing board, as such, for the institutions. But we do recommend a coordinating board, to take a two- - ear look at our state institutions of higher learning, and make specific recommendations after such a study. cr He noted that the evidence in the report for coordm- ation of higher education in the state points toward a single re sponsible agency. This proposal, if implemented, would require some amendment to the state constitution, to harmonize existing authorities. Would Set Up Board Mr. Hatch then emphasized: In the absence of such an enabling clause, it is recommended board be that a coordinating created by law with certain defined duties. Functions of such a board would be as follows: To encour--i and effectuate cooperation ag of higher among institutions learing by 1. Formulating a statement of aims, purposes and objectives of higher education for the state. 2. Appraising the programs and policies of individual institutions as integral parts af a statewide s'ste- There alwavs has been a stant wat(.h for tie Mills, handful of lonely Amenean con-Th- at To Make Report veterans of I against Sen. Joseph R. Mi before going home. Carthy ' Jn our tint king, he said, we natm ally As the Senate roiled into its second day of full dress debate assoc ute tins spot with our Know land told newsmen, I doubt patents who believed so deeply' m the whether senators on jun'miich pitnuplrx Mf our i elisions t r adit ion either Mde of the aisle or either that they measuted sun esc or failute of side of the question. want to delay final action. then sons, not in temis of fame or 1 29 mapping sians Kumlav of a over Noithein Japan. plane In that instance, the taptain of the 1129 did not give eiders to Milton it. os! m a seal , tlie Against Delay Of Action Vei M white house o h"!!ie of an Ametnan who led lus nation to viitoiy iiu.ii .aid now leads the free nations and lax Vna'igt-xluctliei, MJ t n paid solemn tiihuie P then Hod teat mg pa.ti lx tod.iV as the j rt impaled in de.h ea eg a museum .it t tu tuivhood home The modem museum liotisu g tanulv meollei- mentoes and the llesideiit s pi an ef fiom illustnous mildaiv tiou tioplues stands neai the modest and polithal tait-cihome m uhuh tilt1 Eisenhower family was iMird. The museum officially is dedicated to the ptomotioii of I'lnetislnp and to honoi the hi 'War 1 t young couple Weather forecasters see a storm front moving in, with indications of snow local!. Is TO BOYHOOD TOWN ' t Senate Leader PRESIDENT PAYS VISIT both the United Slates and the Kussi.ui air rk r . j'l.iin1-- foi ( t'f'.hlv l esi i' d It is imiu ated that i Anti-Free- iihi jm- vjlll'slk OMIts g I pi.eii ... ".iiu efi'.. give b.i'tle to I Prestone In East Theatre TOKIO r - fN.'k . r.-- ; Sure with CENTS U.S. Planes y f FIVE cloudi- Sabres Escort lifffSy a 11. 1954 Considerable ness, Rule change in temperature: low tonight 42, high 58. Youre Set. Youre Safe. Youre Predicts Senate Will Censure H$en. McCarthy DURHAM, N. C., Sen (IP Wayne Morse predicted today the Senate will vote to censure Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy by a three to one margin. Censure of McCarthy will be on the basis of his conduct as an agent of the Senate, the Ore- gon Independent said in a speech at Duke Womans College auditorium last night. Morse, said he and the Democratic oarty are willing to be very bipartisan as far as the administration is concerned. Morse saiS prior to the election thz--t he would vole with the Democrats to help them orginize the Senate. The President has net been Mmself. Mre said. He has not asked for minor party consultation in advance of policy. Morse said that when the full facts are known, the Dixon-Yakcontract will make Teapot Dome look like an honest transaction. -s |