Show i r I THE OGDEN (UTAH) 6A (Bgitett ijCan Take a Hint " J6sePb A £?!mtte&-£xmnt- er Things Worse In IndochinQ I I t i WASHINGTON— Two revealing events haye taken place behind the scenes at the White House which throw some light on r ' the President’s present and future 1 litUe Adams Yankee who sits the Sherman at Ike’s right hand aSi assistant President has emerged as second most powerful man in America This is because Ike is ayay a lot and delegates authority a lot Adams is such a quiet operator the public has heard little of him yet he has replaced New York’s Tom Dewey as the power behind the President 2 Foreign Aid boss Harold Stassen was almost fired instead of appointed Secretary of Peace— has run up a dead-enstreet for speaking out of turn about DUring thj Republican-cintroller r his own presiaen- Congresp a GOP senator from tial ambit ions North Dakota named Langer President ISisen-hpws was so proOut really stirred up voked he acted of his owk pocket he pfdd a smart like a man who L young lawyer from New York intended to r u n Sidney Davis who single handed n d wanted no showed up the way in which the rival nudging his power trust had been able to get elbow concessions from the amazing Here are In contrast f since government backstage details the Democrats have taken over When Mr Eisj has Drew nothing moved Pearson happened enhower en Joe CX’Mahoney of into the White House Tom Dew- s ghost moved in with him oming a veteran For the first two years Dewey’s been PM back on the judiciary men dominated tne White House committee vyhich is supposed to Most influential was Tom Steph- - investigate monopoly Here Also ens the appointment secretary nothing has happened Sen- - Estes Kefauverof Tennes-elbowho worked at the President’s see another seasoned and decided who got past1 on the subcommittee inner portal Another influ- - er to Posed probe monopoly Again Dewey man was Press Sec- has nothing happened who Jim retary guides Hagerty Sen iRarley Kilgore’ of West the President’s public relations Tip-of- f that the Dewey influ- - Virginia-- a fine public servant ence was declining was Stephens’ when he s on the job is chairman the subcommittee on monopoly unexpected resignation It was °f Bu be just doesn’t seem to be generally assumed Stephens around If he has appointed any-firwanted to go back to his law subcommittees 'to function while and share in function-ris- e prosperity Ever since Stephens’ bes absept they aren’t ‘ to the White House his for- - tng- Sen Olm Johnston of South mer law firm has been unusually Carolina had some potent things prosperous about saV Probing the Repub-Adams Arranged Exit llcan numbers racket on security Inside story however is that risks But since Congress opened Stephens didn’t want to quit at he appointed his ‘colleague ex- sewn the Suspicion and the ill they must be published and ex-- all He was squeezed out Sher- - sen Guy Gillette of Iowa as wnif and have shaken confidence cept possibly in the crisis of a man Adams complained about all counsel of an investigating cora- Stephens was mittee An honest public servant war international agreements fhe “pohticians” inside the Atlantic alliance to in see the I?1111?8 ?resident with a farm which makes no moii- New Law should not even be considered as fmany Need maneuvered him com- - ey and with no law practice to If open diplomacy required the valid until they have been pub- - pietely out of the White House bund up a nest-egwhile in the l ice-blood- the American policy makers kept dependent Upon irrigation a is states for program saying it was getting better and The need in the reclamation has instead got worse to assist in the construction of irrigation projects that are better It The proof is the crisis of the too big for the "Department of Agriculture water facility sects program and too small for the Bureau of ' massive machinery The projects for which the small projects bill is designed are the' kind that have been constructed in Utah under the Utah Water & Power Board’s construction profinanced from a revolving gram Utah’s programs-werfund The small' projects' bill in Congress calls for the Interior Department to lend funds for the construction of the small projects to the local associations that would build and own the projects and repay the funds advanced Many states outside of the reclamation region are watching the progress of the bill because there is a growing interest even in states of extensive rainfall in the use of irrigation devices to promote agricultural security The west welcomes broader interest in irrigation When more people know of the rich economic and social returns that flow from irrigation projects he progress of irrigation projects in the Congress will be f ster and easier ed' into ‘ ( d which armed d mmmmm Even er Dixon-Yajte- e lY joseph Alsop impotent in the mined pressurd from the local political-religioij- s war lords who tb® of the southern gjleaders ar® Indochinese sects As these words are written it is still barely possible that some sort 0f comprpmise settlement might be patched up If so the life of the Diem government may But meanwhile be prolonged a government which has far too little authority already will have lost a good deal of the authority U S it possesses' President Diem who has never yet been able to gov- News from Washington indicates th administration Vrn in' the truesense of "the word will be still less able to policy is to refrain from announcing whether the United w trust-bust-th- I also-guessin- g unhappy circum-jus- t stances curiously enough it is phyorYheSlsectYeaders who are substantially increasing the already abeiet?bltc3 y Walter Lippmann Open Diplomacy Misapplied at Yalta? Though it is rather late to islands' tory here in Southern Indochina write about the publication of at One great service however has been performed as a Uhpardonabie Folly ihhayalhLJapers1 a m sunning myself What they are doing in an result of the discussion in recent days about the Formosa absolute sense is of course unThe nation has pardonable folly strait situation and the prospects of war Im Equally of tlme moves slowlyJ' ’ been fully alerted tojhe gravity of the Rr eastern crisis President Eisenhower and Congressional leaders are sitting down together to talk labout wiat should or should not be done The President h js calmed the nation io a considerable extent by declaring that he does not share Admiral Carney’s belief that the Chinese1 Reds might start an1 aggressive move in two weeks If the President disagrees with Carpeyf about an immi- nent explosion he does not disagree With government lead- ers who take a grave view of our relations with Red China His concern is indicated by the conferences with Congres- sional leaders These conferences nave ftrengthened the bipartisan support accorded the adminis ration The de- velopmcnt js something for which the nation can give I I thanks “ae£s p"?v!?eC"mie fonnerS Across he been Jbere will provided by the French has thtmsdvethlyfavf toiscuss have not no which g Pfacti-lappm- i - I April and Its Showers £ SA? dpersonay Z rains perced I generaUy disagreeable discouraging to y ? ’ tjhe rustle Of spring the (mall Catholic minority tor Which there IS nrovided bv We observe garden imple- - en0je thevveather that another spring has arrived rose bushes Of grass seed Of ments and fertilizers The nursery men are preparing foi :the season’s rush Universities and colleges are announcing their summer school programs Shopping for Easterfj nery is picking up And of course-thbest signs of all are he announcements pertaining to the general conference of tie Church of Jesus Saints Christ of Latter-da9U9V' much spring cant rUmain away - With April arrived longer and it will be more enthusiastic T:ally welcomed be- - the purchase Of 11 e y “ “ertleadSs the other hand are strongly rooted in their native earth For good or ill— and alas mostly for ill — they are able to do what Diem has so far sadly failed to do They are able to compete with the Viet- minh in controlling the peasants of the villages Feel stronger Hence th® sec“ Ieaders feel themselves far stronger than Dlem There is not a one of them who is not bewildered by the American view that the way I !?!? rather than to talir the fSf' Al®yf ‘!at ‘h' i! y TfT 5ei4ir?wiL : Diem and feat the Vietmiph whereas the Diem government has shown no Pulitzer and McCormick i i °in S° S17Vk° me same reason mat mey Wherever newspaper people are me sting today we may are strong because they are still be certain they are discussing the contrasting personalities c!Lf ieaders S!?F not see tneir and methods of two famous and successful publishers who own folly They do not under- i " ! chit-cha- e I -f For thisi particular publication It’ treats Heve radically new the informal conversation of pub- lie men and an abbreviated and unverified version of it at thatj as if it were part of the official diplomatic record This is as if the official rec- ords of the Chicago conventions of 1952 were made to include ex- cerpts of telephone conversations among the political managers and’ bits and pieCeson what polite cians saia to one anotner m the Iobbies It J like publishing ex which Mr cerpts o£ DUues ba(j wjtb §en jafj and with Gen Eisenhower before the Dulles plank on foreign affairs was adopted for the Republican platform Tbe publication of the official agreements entered into at Yal- and o£ be American memo- randa bearjng on American pol- icy and action is one thing The dialogue the t the table talk before and after the liquor are a quite different af- which rajr Yet 0'fh verified record — and not-thagreements and the official documents themselves have done the damage have travel around with a tar£ re- - which have not already been pub- corder attached to him This ushed chnniH aniv alert trt con a ecnd 5P! of documen tors when they talk to the rep-be descnbed aa concerned resentativfes of foreign powers mi£ht tbe bargains lb6u 1 uras Nothing should be unpublished rest agreements the dreams that statesmen to know need (Jemocracies cannot remember when they what was given for what and wake up the next morning — conces- Mr Dulles has been quoted as why: for example' the saying at a press conference in adfd Ottawa that the Yalta papers were M g0 to war against JaPan Dut out in the normal ronr of tbem the contemporary mili- procedure in accord with the tai7 and P°btical estimates on Department’s Dolicv of mb wbich the negotiators acted ohis! lishing toric interest l ywgn3er whethV Third Type of Material er in his busy life Mr Dulles has But there is a third type of had the time to check the ac- - material which unless there' has an agreement to make a curacy of that statement " been Worked! in These Volumes stenographic record is not a haL legitimate T part of the official of rft!1PQ Ji1 “ hd thomanv ?mined res on Ki’CMWhS 55Tm 14 Taid'bdL'fng'They rJrl a a witlii th uum mu course were given jods Dj Ike However Gillette is a Demo-la- w ity for public relations has been Crat transferred Quietly to Arizona’s Howard Pyle an astute radio and TV station owner All White House operations are now firmly under Adams’ thumb Those close to hup swear he has not accumulated all this Power for his own sake but is ex-Go- v So kindly Olin Johnston Demo- cratf gave hm a job probing se-- curity risks Gillette would be excellent at probing farm ji Jems but security risks are a new fjed forhim A slow worker maybe he’ll get there in the end! Pipeline PS“ Washington ' 1°yai1 The Sam Rayburn dinner April rb®d such proportions Another straw in the wind is s hemg switched from the the untold story of Harold Stas- - Jb?L sen’s close political shave jle BUl GoengefDifnu spoke too freely of his own prej cratic national committeeman dwitial prospects in case Ike challenging fided not to run again Stassen Te t I contest to see wheth- be known that he wouJd er tjjey CanT get more guests to the make a good candidate to dinner from Sam’s home state jjjg Oklahoma Biggest mis- When word of this got back to Jban Italian ambassador the' ‘'Presidlntr he” became ''so ‘hehey ( prob-calcj- S'TwSSS?' -- Stasseon the furiousjhafire aiaes f reThis material is normally often wt?rked in these volumes community to the emDassy however finally talked Ike out Dersonal for diaries and my Jmpressl0n is that it- is a se5vea for Premier Scelba The amnr anf ef-t before the firing became which do not have of- - of new departure to publish uuyeri- - ieTaT r ambassador like his Active When he cooled down he autnomy behind Them appojnted SUsscn Q be a spe Pfacesorsis takmtheadvk the cial Secretary of Peac instead and Democratic Vacuum l“e State has ever made such a pub- have should not been put into lication it would be interesting Jt shortly before the 84th Con- to know who he was and vhen inear ta°k D'emcra contemporary 'offkial 'pub2-- he'ard There 'is no simple anj auto-- noto”' m?ke baPpenAwhen fw4 hatf matic solution for the problem ?hi It otherpaX of open diplomacy things the Dixon-Yate- s The prob- caerl° Jaf d lem is how to keep 'diplomacy Power contract was going to be open enough so that the Legis- thoroughly investigated — and ica lature can know enough to hold bTheJe as t0 b® a P®ne morpilrtivi the executive responsible and tratingLproJ?? of m?noPoIy and ° VnH frt c accountable — and at the same ha"dhng of ocalled se- G0? r time not to destroy the indis- crb i? cu”ty nlks' nnt 3h?nl Jn 1 Since then exactly three months pensable function of diplomacy Xiserf:° a i?° Pnnt tJew y®ars iater- But have passed and the net result is The solution lies somewhere be- we be if every ut-- one arge and silent zero where tween two poles Pbbc men were jbe Dixon-Yate- s At the one pole diplomats! investigation Back the caves brunt would be permitted to make se- - Publlf one another g cret agreements unknown to their people but binding upon Could Have Been Averted them At the other pole diplo- It is only fair to say that th macy would be so open that noth- - trouble could have been averted ing could be said except in the if the three great men at Yalta presence of a television camera had provided a precise and sys- Three Types of Material tematic record of their own if Now there are — as I think after their personal talks they grammar and the art of speak- This expression probably came °ne could show in the miscel- - had exchanged memoranda of ng correctly “Science” is sys- Into use from Freemasonry but tematized knowledge “art” is laneous collection of the Yalta what was said it Is usually used to denote I® skm — Performance three main types of papers But they- were in a hurry and treatment by t(he police In rough OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED documentary material which are they were casual in the manner the thicd degree Is Freemasonry left over from international ne- - of men who had come to Exuberance Pronounce eggMaster Mason and it Is said to be gotiations The first consists of they were master nf the Hp5 rtJ? zlberans u as in use and no conferred after a rigid Initiation To which nf ihe nancr goveX”ts or the extutne which l'” deal of OFTEN MISSPELLED second degree cpnfme- branch of the governments to do a mess and a muddlegcd and ment t the Faint (to swoon) certain things Feint questioning third degra violent (Copyright 1955 (trick) There can be no question that New York Herald Tribune) Mng - pre-wa- rl - Ttlf rtZ3 - : “ to--d- ay - - teyWtl 1S died this week — Joseph Pulitzer Of the St Louis Post-Dis- jai u i?5ueru ert0 the Vietminhultimately patch and Robert R McCormick of the Chicago Tribune h°Pel®ss the Both were controversial figures Pulitzer for his crusad- secI leadersButdojustnotbecause ' have this ing zeal and McCormick f6r his ultraconservatism and the kind of understanding the Amer- OUT OUR WAY i use he made even of news columns this gospel ican Pcy makers are not ex- Each produced newspapers that were eagerly purchased by toMdSSSnd" th!£?ect featos”® thousands of readers Each was a financial success Yet if the working men and women of the newspaper business and the sincere young men and young women of the 10 Years college and university journalism schools were to be polled Merrill Shupe son of Mr and Notice was received at the lo- Mayor William Glasiqann was the crown for superior journalism wquld be awarded to Mrs Parley G Shupe of North cal office of the U S Bureau of a?P0riGd tchr RllSSlOll xOllCC Pulitzer and his paper by of sweep opinion Ogden stationed at San Diego Recitation of invitation for Chief Thomas E Browning was Calif with the Navy was the holding that the St Louis publisher year in and year out received for labor and named vice chairman and Supt a Weber County Future Farmer William Allison of the Ogden City performed greater journalistic service to the greater r 1- g i yet en- therefore united to save their ' “I11?8' money and their skins before tne the diffcrfincc ronsidpr tWgee these men and President ages overtake us Diem has one important Jher® are things Diem ouffyoaFrenh puppetTah isada oneUof them though he is now dangerously whichquestion matters cose to being regarded as an n a in much also He has American puppet) conthe two positive virtues rare in Viet- - cal negotiation and in namese public life He is whol- - duct of foreign policy In pub- ly honest and an undoubted pa- - lishing this miscellaneous eollec- tion of papers has Mr Dulles ap- On the other hand this de- pne(j correctly and wisely thescendant of a great Mandarin sound principle of Open diplofamily is narrow ’ Ld macy? Or has he misapplied es Ta hls started Cliaucer uSe0iStOthUWdochina’S t“ee Principle and done injury to by describing Canterbury how April showers had checked a Marcl drought bathing death agony he princi- with issuance of passport visas sweet of been rainfall le has 0 in diplomacy every plant Above all he is completely out has done this that ourlmisaPPlieQ As April arrives today we hardly n ed to remind 0f contact the noliTical considerable damage to our inter- the and selves 1 ?' i to-sprea- d ’ j Ago I'- - J 'number j man winner of the 1945 $100 Carl Ray- - materials for the construction uof tunnel and tmond Gray scholarship to the the of the the tunnel Utah State Agricultural College Ogden Canyon ’ Pine View dam project Work John M Scowcroft son of Mr i:ke Keein on May 1 and Mrs John W Scowcroft 2885 ' Swaner Place had been promot- north and south addltional ed to sergeant He had graduated was a major from Ogden High School and was arterial highway attending the University of Utah project of the new Chamber of when he enlisted in the Signal Commerce roads committee Mem- Corps in April 1943 bers were: Lawrence Farr chair- The LDS First Ward honored man George M' Thorstensen retiring ' Bishop Raymond S city Commissioner George O’Con- Wright Counselor Ephraim Van p Vmnv w a Rishnn Dyke and clerks John Tingen anHT Ogden-Bingha- Mr Pulitzer was the newspaper people’s newspaper m ( - - The President has recently condemned fiscal irresponsibility but there has ben no recent example of fiscal irresponsibility more shocking than that of his own Secretary of the Treasury in viewing with alarm the Senate study of the stock exchanges— Prof Arthur Schlesingerj Harvard ’ College " I" There is still a point Of contact between East and West That point is in the realm of the spirit-B- iUy Graham I - A k "Oh it’i you sinqlnql was March - in I" out like ! r thouaht ' al f to Leave Them Guessing 6 e Sup-enti- g g°inrn these ’s jWy-ey- tmst-busterfha- - V States will or will not defend the Nationalist Chinese islands off the Red Chinese coast The policy will be to let the Red Chinese guess where we shall begin toj fight in the Far East Of course that leaves a lot of us in the United States what will happen if the Reds move upon the C ex-Go- v have now erupt- rebellion t Ike Got Sore at Stassen For Becoming a Candidate o the National William E Welsh secretary-manage- r Reclamation Association told a Senate comm ttee this week that the small projects bill has more widespread interest SAIGON Indochina — The and support among western reclamation people than any policy is cm- His doubtless irt recent other legislation testimony years rentiy being proven here in in- dochina Everything has not “got reflects public opinion in the region where agriculture is better and better” just because f i Drew Pearson Crisis Proves Small Projects Bill Favored y 1935 APRIL" 1 ' editorials 1 FRIDAY EVENING STANDARD-EXAMINE- E 2 at a program HaroW G°“- - nS 7 Schools secretary A judge to be appointed would receive a sal- mon y' ary 0 Lake Shore Duck Club entirely of Ogdenites elected officers and limited the membership to 100 Officers were j0hn Browning Jr president Sid- vThe composed vice president' ney Badcon Thomas O’Connell secretary and Dr G W Baker treasurer Just when spring was expected to arrive in all its beauty winter mad® a return visit snow blanket- ed the city and paralyzed traffic in all directions The strong wind “ ve- - By J R Williams - |