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Show THE UTAH INDEPENDENT Truth UNICEF (Continued from page 5) September 11, 1970 Rigell - except for some additional space at a saving over five years of $150,000 to $200,000, plus a large contribution from a New York company that wanted to rent the sixth floor. The executive director, touring in Africa, telegraphed to the real estate agents that under no circumstances would he accept second-storspace but insisted on the sixth; so, since ALCOA, the building owner, had a moral agreement with the UN, that was that. U.N.I.C.E.F. claims that for one penny it can provide five glasses of milk. By such figures, its fancy quarters are depriving needy children of 100 million glasses of milk. Consider also how adept U.N.I.C.E.F. is at squandering money in its everyday operations. G. Edward Griffin includes an excellent illustration of this in his valuable book The Fearful Master, A Second Look At The United Nations (Western Islands, Belmont, Massachusetts, 1964, $1.00) where he writes: UNICEF received one dollar for two teachers manuals advertised in one of its promotional pamphlets; it sent not only the manuals, but a large box containing hundreds of expensively printed brochures glorifying the purposes and accomplishments of UNICEF. This unrequested and unwanted material was shipped first class airmail at a total postage cost of $10.40. According to UN statistics this could have purchased 5,200 glasses of milk. What must be especially galling to the untold thousands of Americans whose loved ones have been killed or wounded in the war in Vietnam is the recently announced plans of U.N.I.C.E.F. to funnel money to the government of Communist North Vietnam. As Human Events for June 28, 1969, UNICEF reported: The United Nations International Childrens Fund will shortly begin negotiations to inaugurate an aid program for children in North Vietnam, marking the world bodys first official contact with the Hanoi Communist regime. Discussions will be carried out by a UNICEF vice president, Dr. Boguslav Kozusznik of Communist Poland. Because of its simply monstrous record, U.N.I.C.E.F. hides behind a mask of alleged charity, for fear that the American public will come to realize that it is just one more front which the International Communist Conspiracy is using in its drive to enslave the world. - W.E.D. y jaundiced eye on UNICEF gifts of SSI million worth of food and drugs to Cuba, where underground sources in that unhappy island reported that the drugs are already aboard a Russian ship on their way to the Soviet Union.' In 1962 an important national Catholic weekly. The Wanderer, prepared a flyer about U.N.I.C.E.F. In it was the following: As for Catholic spokesmen who in recent years have taken a stand against participating in UNICEF trick or treating, only a few weeks ago we wrote to Msgr. Edward J. Goebel, Milwaukee archdiocesan superintendent of schools, asking him whether Milwaukee schools still do not participate in the UNICEF Halloween program, and, if not, would he please state his reasons. Msgr. Goebel's reply, dated September 8, 1962, follows. He writes: Our opposition to the UNICEF organization was based on the protest of several of our former Catholic Army chaplains who maintain that UNICEF proceeds were not contributed to youth in need, but rather that they were taken up by the Communists in the Communist-controlle- d countries. In short, U.N.I.C.E.F. supports the policy of submit or starve! Even without considering the Communists exploitation of U.N.I.C.E.F., i we would want to caution Americans against supporting it purely on grounds of its incompetence. One can do far more good with his money by supporting bonafide religious and charitable causes. The U.N.I.C.E.F. publication Children Of The Developing Countries, for example, admits that in 1961 U.N.I.C.E.F. had 575 employees and distributed about $25 million. In typical contrast, the Catholic Relief Services for that same year distributed $125 million in aid with a staff of only 130 employees. To see how financially irresponsible U.N.I.C.E.F. can get, note the following from National Review for June 14, 1966: Twenty million cents will permit UNICEF to occupy quarters on the sixth floor of the. swank United Nations Plaza, instead of the unspeakable second floor. Yes, last week UNICEF was offered the second floor identical in layout to the sixth. t - - -- This short article is reprinted from the Correction Please ! section of the weekly magazine. The Review Of The News. Additional copies of these folders are available in any quantity at fifty for one dollar, postpaid. Subscriptions to the magazine itself are ten dollars per year. Address The Review Of The News, Belmont, Massachusetts 02178. DONT Police Officer Shot At, Resigns Miss The Next Issue (Continued from P. 1) i . Storper was on a routine patrol at 4:20 A. M. in Midvale when the incident occurred. was traveling south along North Main when a vehicle with no lights on began pulling alongside of me with a gun poked out of the right front window. As the car neared I saw an arm and a hand with a pistol in it, so 1 dove for the seat just as he cut loose, Storper said. 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I dont need to be informed. Eight dollars is too much to nay for the truth. My bishop didnt tell me to subscribe. The editor didnt send me a personal letter. The paper isnt perfect, so I wont subscribe yet. The paper must he rich, so my money wouldnt help anyway. Actually, Im a liberal, and I dont want to hear the other side. What would Chairman Mao tell my comrades if he caught me reading the Utah Independent? I dont have time to read. Anyway, my basketweaving class will make me an informed citizen. The Utah Independent is too biased. I want something lukewarm. I cant stand the paper, hut I will send eight dollars just to make sure there will he opposition in all things. Enclosed find W for a oneyear subscription to the UTAH INDEPENDENT. It was all over in a second but I could feel those bullets whiz over my head. If I hadnt been hugging the bottom of the seat, Id have been a goner. There were three males in the car two in the front seat and one in the back, Storper said. The bullets were fired by a man in the right front seat. Storpers left window was down. The two shots, fired in rapid order, came through the open left window but shattered-th-e window of the right front door. Officer Storper lost control of his car and ran through a small ditch into a pile of dirt. There was no damage, however, to the rest of the car other than the window. Subscriber's Name Address After the shooting, the car, des- THE UTAH INDEPENDENT Box No. 6274 Salt Lake City, Utah 84105 U cribed as a white over red 1955 or 1956 Ford sedan, sped away with its lights still off. Officer Storper felt the pistol was a .38 caliber. ictcir |