Show taturday Morning November 22 S 'Let's Get Away From It MI' - fakt gtibunt !jt e9a1t ' tt'k 1058 ' ' 4:'"' ' - Spealdng before the National Reclamation Association at Houston Texas Utah's Governor Clyde has 'called for a clear and effective national water' policy : Such a policy the governor believes should be flexible enough to deal with "the great variety of conditions" found tliroughout the country : GOVERNOR CLYDE an outstanding etnitier and water expert said that state's rights must be considered para! Mount He added however that the natron "must fully control our river systems placing adequate storage dams not only on the major rivers but also on the small tilbUtary streams" He warned that the easy and inexpensive projects have already been built and that those of the future will be big complex and costly Governor Clyde's appeal is a reminder that many recommendations for a nafinal water policy are gathering dust in official bookcases and file cases We have In mind the monumental report of the President's Water Resources Policy Come volume is mission of 1950 One entitled "A Water Policy for the Amer- lean People" The commission called for a "multiple purpose basin approach" in water development Each major river basin it said should be treated as a tmit and each of the purposes to which water can be applied should be weighed in considering each project We should save our soil maintain our forests avoid pollution develop - GOVERNOR CLYDE Pointed out Dr Paul kpace Senator Gore also a Democrat repre- Sented this country at the Geneva conferce on nuclear 'control and he has pre- pented to President Eisenhower a dramatic proposal that this country cease abovekrbund testing of nuclear weapons for Ihree years This plan perhaps a last hope pf saving the Geneva conference from complete failure was referred to Secretary Dulles And he and the President rent on separate vacations without anteuncing a decision- ' k : i z1)1 S r -- I: ' II ':(I - i:: i 4 0 dP0 P csb d3 A 1'f'i - - : :::: s In alphabetical order? 41‘ non-prof- ' - 41'4494o0449o41k 440A 401 lb '''k 4:4 4'' ' N-1:- ' pcti 'i' ''s' 't 'At ix'' 4:04':i4: 1 :44' ' stikv- J- 4i 1 14 I -- '::NA'0 z 44 - —h - rv3N9 J!c:34iv - - 10016414A--gspo- V' 1" rs ' :''1t:'f-p- ' 1 4t i ' tot ' -- 1 "i' 743 f:?1:'' 0 t ' '' i ''- 't - ' '0'1 :''i 1 " P- ' " I 454 - ( t:e-e- - P I dpr Ai Alb - 45i':":" :t4'::t' ' :447 ' WI' - -- - - I ' 0A'' A"-- - v'''''''' ):1 ymyI taspti- o5':K-l''7'- 4 - a4 1 1r 1 4J - !'" t ''' :'-'-" ' 411LW - ' l '' "' s !:ck43:41:i 49g:i t ' ' g:1:-4m '!--2- A-i7rii'" "i444? 1rjort'Z' - ' - tr-3- p '4 grSrer(1 4 TZ"4:4--:'- '''1'"'t: 4'4 4 II 4 - ' :k '''': "" ''41''cY' 'is ‘1' ::::::'''''' 4: " '4- ' 4f-- pots )I i 4N - it 4 i '') t! ':t'')- ' ' I i- - ' ' -': - "i '4 1 - I ositV16b1S'SN -- 0 c CCP ' ?' ''14"41':4 '' 4'''' : t 14 y:'4- 1472k' Ct:4 t - : ' Si 44 NO 47 ' '" i'S ' 4' '''" I e i:':ti 't "'r rots i tdet sAL'r: b ' -- 1' mt" A ::rrA------77-TcirC91 r4 TESA : t"r" I ArmEkb Joseph Alsop Hussein Holds Job by Guile Courage AMMAN JORI5AN - the — The never being seltrevealing So what he says rarely casts any light on the question Is far too big for fine head slender body The short dark deep - 1:::1'! (0 sein's best friend and chosen chief of army staff All Abu Nuwar many of the arm3r's other senior officers and all the members of his government joined to destroy the King and were defeated only by Hussein's naked courage Or consider his cool firmness when the bloody coup in Baghdad shook Jordan to its foundations and another coup in Amman was expected every hour The violence the drama the almost absurdly picturesque character of such scenes from Hussein's life must not be allowed to obscure the other realities which Is none above-note- d theless the really Interesting question about Hussein The question Is posed by the extraordinary scenes from Hussein's story for the boyish I for example the : " - i lastConsider face Even the it incredible scene ' musical voice When the Syrian MIGs at- NI Is far t o o Itempttheto shut the deep and res-young King quietly onant for so Mr Alsop hands over the controls of small a man his little plane to his former By these contrasts at Just flying instructor Wing Com23 years of age Hussein mander John Daigleish FlyKing of Jordan achieves ing just 10 feet above the what few men twice or Round Dalgleish sets a zigthrice his age ever achieve zag course The King coolly —a genuinely commanding takes over the observer's' role warning Dalgleish of presence Even in a very oreach new pass that the dinary business suit sitting at a very ordinary desk in MIGs make ("as though he a quiet ordinary office he had been talking about the does not look like a boy weather" Dalgleish says He later) One pass all but playing at being king looks like a ruler drives the hunted Utile plane into a hillside When the young Xing re ceived me the other day for BUT THE end is disapa long private talk I could for the layer of pointment hardly resist the temptation Nasser's Syrian the trap to put the question bluntly: viceroy Col Abdel Hamid "How do you do It and what Serraj Serraj has been waitmakes you tick?" But the ing at Damascus airport answer Would surely have for his intended victim since been polite and meaningless early morning with an eager for this seeming-boalways litUe compgany of the Jorspeaks with the circumspec danian exiles who plotted to tion of an old master politikill the King in 1957 But cian they wait in vain "I'd have died before landPARTLY for this reason at Damascus" the King ing I shall not record the Inter remarks about this frusview in detail Hussein told roe what he wanted to tell trated reception committee me—that his stormtossed And so of course he little country had never the real reason why gives been nearer to tranquillity he got away which is true He has the knack which roost older Or consider those other scenes in 1957 when Hus politicians should envy of fringed Arab ! eyes are far too penetrat- ing the set of the mouth far tr1:::4°'':::i‘:::1 tr too resolute 1 ‘ 411P k L i? - - it well-lai- d Other Viewpoints A - Welsh Flag at the UN? Review: National President Gwynfor R Evans of the Plaid Cymru (independence) Party of Wales has arrived in the States to enlist American and United Nations support for his people He says he is ready to settle for nothing less than total Independence with possible Commonwealth status later on and he is understood to have received assurances that the bloc will support his case It may not be UN too long before the flamboyant red flag of his people will fly proudly in front of the As a slogan for Mr Evans we United Nations building suggest: "If Ghana's come can Wales be far behind?" Afro-Asia- n Upsurge Begidat Home THOUGH even enemies to admire him King rules by have come this young force and watchfulness ' If the voice of Nasser and the hand of the Kremlin have lost their power in Jordan it is because very great numbers of Egyptian and Communist agents and sym'pathizers are in jail or in concentration camps If the country is more stable than It has ever been in the recent past it is because the army's loyalty has been tested for all to see These facts carry their own penalties moreover ice -- Route to Meadows Editor Tribune: In an swer to A J Harvey's letter about Mountain Meadows can supply this information: - Meadows Is Mountain 28 miles north of the proposed Dixie State Park It is difficult to find as there is no marker on the road that mentions Mountain Meadows and the few road maps that do mark it place It on the wrong side Going south from Enterprise if you keep a sharp lookout you will see an Old Spanish Trail marker about 10 miles south of Enterprise Take the dirt road at that point to the right and follow it about one mile or as far as it goes and you will be able to see on the other side of a little ravine the little quadrangle of stones that marks the spot where John D Lee was exe- ' about which our library staff gives is proof of theirabillty to work under adverse situations but the physical plant in which they operate does not allow them to render the service modern cities expect from their libraries It is surely time we had a library worthy of other The community services time is now the drive has cuted I have been there often and the tranquility of the surroundings makes it difficult for me to realize that there more than one hundred persons were savagely attacked and killed HOWARD FIRM Springdale Utah Senator From Sandpit Ham Park By he was the oldest living member of El Kalah Tern pie I met him In Chicago in 1944 when I was attending the Republican and Demo cratic National Conventions He gave a dinner in honor of group of El Kalah "brass" who had stopped over in Chicago after attending the national ceremonial in Milwaukee Among them was Julius Daniels El Kalah recorder Upon his suggestion I crashed the party When we arrived at the swanky If there's another world he lives in bliss If there is none he made the best of this —Robert Burns In Remembrance James McDonald Milne is dead He died as he had lived quietly and unostenta:' tiously Jim and I ) had been friends for :4‘41-it- s about 35 years We first met when he was ‘ iks 'tr--rt4- assistant to the late Guy Pembertonwho was : e 4p ' 1 I: Chicago Club it was found that I was the 13th guest! Our host said that while he kirlf p 1 ' man- ' I LJ '' Among Jordan's t 6 w n of the ham Park dwellers too many families - ager Pantages Theater now the contained at least one active Utah instruor suspected Nasserite or mentalInin1928 he was me booked having Communist Too many famifor personal appearances on lies today have missing here and members- In the great plot - - Pantages stages n-- -- in and Ogden Logaof 1957 too much depended Jim was far from being on the loyalty of the simple a dour Scot He invariably soldiers who refused their was courteous considerate officers' orders to move and friendly as customers the Today against King of the Walker Bank & Trust therefore the soldiers are Co where he was too much trusted for more than aemployed perhaps quarter and the officers perhaps too century will testify little His favorite poet was RobThe government of Jordan ert Burns I imagine that the by force and watchfulness Scottish bard had in mind a is no easy business But by man like Jim when he some curious instinctive wrote: throwback to his ancestors "The social friendly honest Hussein carries on this govman ernment with the quiet guile he be Whate'er and everpready courage of 1Tis he fulfills great Nature's the old rulers of the desert plan tribes And none but he" - The State Department says we should like Tito but for Most of us it will be like dancing with the daughter of She old family friends at the junior prom for Editor Tribune: Hurrah for the letter (Forum Nov 19) concerning the cost of charity! am not against charity but it should begin at home Last week my husband was asked to give a day's pay Here are a few of the other expenses incurred by this one small family last week: First $31 for glasses for one child $15 for medicine two smaller children sick with only the first sore throats and complaints of winter finally $96 to patch up the old bucket of bolts we drive so we can baby it through another winter (We can't afford a new car) BUDGET CONSCIOUS Notes On Cuff Department Joseph Hardie Young a' nephew of Brigham Young died recently in Chicago at the age of 94 At the time of his death ' wasn't particularly superstitious he was too old to take any chances so he and I sat at a small table near by My grandfather after whom I am named was the foreman of Brigham Young's warehouses etc back of Eagle Gate for some 20 years and Mr Young re- membered him well Who knows but that they are together again? "Farmer age 38 wishes to wed woman around 30 who owns a tractor Please enclose picture of tractor" —Classified ad Romance still lives Ed Eshleman says there'll always be western shows on rs TV until someone-discovea cure for the common Colt Johnny Douglas wants to know if I am the kind of husband who insists that he makes the decisions at home and if so are they decisions such as "Which do I wash first—the flooT or the dishes?" Well if Teamster Union hoodlums can use the Fifth Amendment so can ley Says: Comptroller General Goes to Root of Fiscal Mess Raymond ISlo ley Comptroller General seph Campbell head of the General Accounting Office By Ia' ' has reported on the unbe-- mess lievabie made by the International Cooperation Administra- - tion the kingdom of Laos Thereader in will ask 'WM something be done about that the Hope diamond is the property of the United States does h this mean that each of us has of its dire curse hanging over us? ' E Mr Moley it?" The answer is yes Something will be done about Laos This is too terrible to ignore To clear the way for another big appropriation for foreign aid concentrated efforts will be made to clean up this one ud piece of bungling nes& IT WILL alao be said by 4 I 41 Editor Tribune: Follow lug the good old American of breaking into print to call attention to per sonal enthusiasms may I join other friends of the brary to urge that considera lion and action relative to a new library for our city be continued? The Library Board has called attention to the urgency of the situa bop the the City Commission has given it active at tendon the press has helped with effective articles To each of these groups I express my appreciation and urge that other groups and individuals demonstrate their interest and willing- ness to help this important cause When schools are overcrowded and when their programs can not give sufficient attention to extracurricular work for Alpe- nor students there is no inr stitution which can so well meet the needs as an adequate library When investi gators for expansion of industry ask what library fa dillies are offered by any city it Is surely imperative we supply a library - that with space and facilities to meet these new needs We Salt Lakers are proud of our city of its many beauties and advantages But there can be only shame that our library is still in the building (with very little mere space) in which it was in 1905 It then served well the city's 90000 people but is woefully inadequate for our present 210000 people and every sign indicates a much greater population in the near future The friendly helpful serv11- II r ( c: illy: I 14::5 d With the population surging past 175- 000000 there doesn't seem to be much we can do about getting rid of together it ' Ef The sudden upsurge in United Fund contributions past the $700000 mark is encouraging even though the campaign is still some $147450 short of the goal Only 10 days ago contributions totaled Just a little over $400000 This proves what real campaign effort can accomplish It should not take too much more to put the campaign within This is reach of the $855000 objective why Chairman Harold J Steele announced extension of the drive beyond the sched tiled completion date of November 20 There is plenty of giving potential left In the community What was done in the last 10 days is a challenge for the next 10 We can wind the campaign up by December—if we will Now ('417 t---- I al pt 1' vi °I-:- Ilit' ' - f 1175-milliont- in Loa Angeles Time' t Dr Paul S Richards who died this' at the age of 65 was a dedicated physician He was also an outstanding citizen whose good works will be long remeMbeiled and whose death will be mourned by the thousands he had served in his profession For 27 years Dr Richards practiced in Bingham Canyon where he established his own clinic and hospital and while there became interested in industrial medicine achieving a national reputation In that field Later he helped found the Memorial Medical Center in Salt Lake City and the Richards Memorial Medical Foundation a organization for medical research Dr Richards was keenly interested in humanity and its problems He spent his adult life helping relieve human suffering He also devoted much time to civic affairs serving for many years on the Jordan Board of Education and as a member of the Medical Labor and Industrial Council helped bring about enactment of Utah's first occupational disease law If there was a job which Dr Richards believed worth doing then he did it well Many honors came to Dr Richards among them a presidential citation—along with Dr L E Viko—for contributions in aid of the physically handicapped But the true measure of his worth was the great affection and high respect in which he was held by the community he served It could truly be said that he practiced the art as well as the science of medicine Encouracttn ing ' ' I ' ' N o: week 35-be- 4: t'' Richards S o - fi tecting the watersheds WE DO need a clear and effective national water policy We need to control our river systems by building storage dams But we also need to stop pollution where ever possible to clean up poisoned streams and most important to adjust all kinds of watershed uses to the carrying capacity of the land Senate Majority Leader L3tdon John-Po- n was chosen by Mr Dulles to give a Major address before the United Nations 'on: this country's proposal for international cooperation in control of outer (k ik- 3 Scientific experiments and exhaustive ! a 1 1 f 1 ecological studies have verified the longterth necessity of maintaining healthy plant cover particularly where mountain slopes are high and steep Abuses persist however not only of the land but of the administrators who are charged with pro- The State Department has already : t ' lIdes Made some overtures to the leaders of the major party of Congress and likely will make more ' 4 ':- 4'4 : that Even more Important reforestation and reseeding of denuded watersheds Jagging dangerously and powerful forces are at work seeking to weaken or break down sound management po- ed Visiting Cartoonist ' ‘1 d of "brinkmanship" particularly what several consider an unrealistic stand with regard to the Chinese offshore islands - I e' SOME observers read into the Dulles remarks a refusal to budge in the face of a strongly Democratic Congress many 'members of which are extremely critical it : as per capita and per factory water con- sumption increases "Iris plain that we must plan carefully and husband every available drop of water in the dry areas of the nation if we are not to run into a dead end in our national development" It was only natural that water devel- opment and storage should receive prime consideration at the reclamation associa-::'tion's convention Yet husbanding and maximum use of water may prove equally or more important in the future Water Is being wasted at an alarming rate even In this semi-ariWest where it is the most precious resource: The National Water Pollution Control Program which was launched two years ago with great promise and under which a large number of sewage treatment plants were begun with federal and local funds is currently under strong attack III a speech at Cleveland Secretary of State Dulles has declared that the United States will not change its basic foreign policies to appease its enemies or to curry favor with its friends ' a was The address reply to clearly critics who think the Dulles policy is too rigid that it falls to take changing world conditions into consideration IN A THOUGHTFUL article entitled trongress Abdicates on Foreign Policy" )ti the Nation magazine Neal A Maxwell forinerly legislative assistant to Senator Pennett of Utah concludes: "All else side we are in no position to ignore postible injections of intelligence and wisdom our foreign policy The Senate Foreign Relatiolgs Committee affords a source largely untapped If there is to be a renaissance in our foreign policy the com- mittee under a strong chairman could serve as a catalyst" Senator Mansfield one of the ablest and most articulate members of the Foreign Relations Committee says the Demo crats have no intention of making a whipping boy of Mr pulles We hope this is true We hope also the committee will be able to work closer in the future with the State Department injecting more wisdom and flexibility into foreign policy In 1 p7tO?)-41- No Limit on Wisdom I ' 1 445-pag- i ' been started and every citizen should make known Ms interest and support MRS THERON S PARMELEE Inadequate Library 411111 A(A '1 4 t t 4lb 40'' - by-rec- The only 'way a serious crisis can be avoided in the coming years is to have a national water policy carried out on the various levels of government including strong measures of reforestation and con- servation The 1950 proposal for a national policy was not without flaws but it was debated only briefly and probably went unread by many officials and legislators who should have studied it Other surveys have been made many books have been written and endless speeches given on the water problem but the action programs lag far be- hind And lack of coordination and over- all planning point to a critical emergency In the future -- t river transportation fully utilize draulic power maintain and develop reational facilities and NO forth By Our Besders 2 N Water Policy Calls for More Than Dams - 1 Tli P0b11c'EOtiojf:' to ra Ak44W4k40—&404AMo0PofrNL440& apologists in the government who will be appearing before congressional committees to ask for another whacking vote of money that the case of Laos is exceptional It is a small mote kingdom in what was French It is ex- tremely primitive hard to reach and inhabited by people who are to say the least unaccustomed to the independent administration of their affairs But the comptroller general has made other reports over a considerable period of time on other situations into which foreign aid money is being poured He has been standing against a tide Of dobureaucratic bungling ing his duty as no other man who has held that office has ever done it Indo-Chin- a la of Importance to look at the background and powers of this office It For it is about the only protection that the taxpayer is going to have in the stempede for spending that lies ahead Joseph Campbell is the best of all who have held the office since it was created 38 years ago As originally created It was to be much more than a mere auditing affair checking On the millions of ex- penditures made under congressional appropriations It had the authority to dig deeply Into the executive departments and make reports to Congress—critical reports —and to make recommendations for improvement To remove the comptroller general from political control and tà protect him from control by the president — any president—his term was for 15 yearL Essentially agency to he is an help Congress per form Its constitutional duty achecking on the executive Comptrollers before Camp bell have been swamped by the job of auditing millions and millions of government checks with an occasional disallowance CAMPBELL has gone to the root of trouble and through some of his reports has tried to get the barn door locked before the horse has been stolen His independence of the exeeutive is acknowledged in what is revealed in this report because his employes were denied access to cen tam n information on the ground that it was limited only to the executive branch of government In this report on Laos there is the account of (plan-title- s of motor vehicles dumped into the country before the highways to accommodate them had been built much expensive planning for a new airport before it was decided that the old one with improvements would be more useful much military equipment delivered before the Laotians could use it even store it a comical and expensive effort to create a police force on western lines confusion among con tractors and other doings A great amount of other Information about other Inexcusable waste and in competence has alrendy been placed before Con tress by the comptroller general Still the administration' asks for more and Congress goes ahead with appropria tions Perhaps if you are an op- timist the Laos mess will bring to light some general corrections to be made Perhaps not 4 AO‘ØsOs Ak0104M "4 :411404 - |