"His and That

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

sort in the world, is tangible evidence of solid Pen-names may be used if letters carry The Political Mill growth in the past and of high confidence in to writers’, correct names and addresses. Sftye ftoeniitg tf the future. As one of its neighbors, The Star Letters The Star.. All letters are subject to condensation. ssh Perpetual on the splendid 'No Politics' Tradition With Sunday Morning Edition. congratulates Delinquency Due recognition should be given to the Placing for Zoning Laxity achievement symbolized by its new building Juvenile fact that this parental right is properly Blame WASHINGTON 4, D. C. In the controversy the Canadian Os Court Is Held Fast The Sunday Star recently set forth exercised only when no gentler punish- over Published by items of property damage in the amount ment can The to Office Building now going up on Massa- be found. trend is avenue, Bench's Dignity Maintained The Evening Star Newspaper Company of $274,500 resulting from the activities supersede it for the very good reasons chusetts the Canadians and our Highest Commission SAMUEL H. KAUFFMANN, President. 'At the Level'? of youthful vandals. that: (1) more respectful treatment is own Fine Arts have taken As Warren Takes the Oath Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill is The aim of the city-wide effort to more likely to get co-operation: (2) it great pains to inform us that diplo- stated thus — matic immunity foreign govern- B. M. McKELWAY, Editor being more wishful than realistic if it is true, correct this situation is is easy to pass from striking in cor- enables By Gould Lincoln “to how much be done without ments to break our zoning laws. They from London, he plans to take see can rection to striking in anger. The Supreme MAIN OFFICE: 11th St. and P*nn»ylvania Avo. as reported that spending lot money.” It ap- have also strongly implied that we were Court sticks to tradi- Lexington Ave. a more Therefore, please let there be no NEW YORK OFFICE: 420 the initiative again for a Big Four conference pears the statistics stated that the doing no more for foreign governments tion. Chief Justice Earl Warren, four- CHICAGO OFFICE: 435 North Michigan Avo. from more presentations of corporal punish- in of “at the highest level”—a conference in which city and its residents are going to spend than they do for us. teenth the line Chief Justices of ment as synonymous with child dis- States, Delivered by Carrier. head of the $275,000 whether they want Mr. Brian the United took the oath of office he, President Eisenhower and the some yearly, cipline. Eleanor J. Daly. O’Leary’s letter from in Evening and Sunday Evening Sunday is it a historic ceremony—minus televi- government would meet with Soviet to or not. The question whether * * Canada appearing in The Star Septem- Monthly .... Weekly Monthly French sion, moving pictures, 1.75* 30c 63c spent constructively, or to re- bring radio and photog- Weekly 40c Monthly 1.30* Weekly 15c Premier Georgi Malenkov in an effort to pro- is to be There is one sure way to reduce ber 29 should us down to earth *loc additional For Night Final Edition. pair destruction. If these juveniles are capital, per- raphers. There was silence in the Su- world peace. juvenile delinquency: Give offenders a Canada’s Ottawa, does not preme by Mail—Payable mote going to be dismissed from social zoning on Court chamber—even when Rates in Advance such sound thrashing and turn them loose mit its laws to be broken President Eisenhower entered to Anywhere in When Sir Winston first advocated a thought and supervision from the time - “diplomatic immunity.” witness the United Statei to tell their friends about it. Modern the excuse of ceremony placed formally Sunday Sunday meeting last May, President Eisenhower, while until' the which his Evening and Evening they leave school in the afternoon methods have failed disastrously. We Mr. O’Leary states that a village coun- .... ... most important appointee 1 year 25.00 I year 17.00 I year 10.00 not flatly rejecting the idea, made clear that the school bell rings in the morning, cil, despite tremendous “behind-the- in office. No 6 months 13.00 6 months ... 9.00 6 months 5.50 had better go back to the old ones that applause greeted the Chief 1 1 and during the vacation months, then scenes guns and new Justice 1 month 2.25 month 2.00 month 1.25 he considered it to be premature. He made really worked. Human nature has not pressure,” stuck to its —in fact, there was no any society must expect to have to pay the * government, applause at Telephone: STerling 3-5000 clear, too, that our Government would be dis- changed. c. D. S. the Turkish wishing to time. at Post Office, Washington, Boys “raise hell” if they have Entered the D. C. inclined to give it attention unless and bill. will put up an office building, “was forced as second-class malt matter. serious nothing else to do. They must have to find a place elsewhere in the city The Supreme Court chamber was spectators. until Russia’s leaders demonstrated by deeds- constructive work and interesting rec- Balchen's Background where zoning by-laws were not so oacked with Leaders of the Member of the Associated Press bar, high like signing an Austrian treaty and agreeing to reation if they are to be kept out of mis- I am impelled to call an strict.” In Rockcliffe Park (Ottawa’s officials of the Government, The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use tor attention to including Vice republication ot all the local news printed in this newspaper as negotiate a just German settlement—that they chief. Society must somehow fill the apparent oversight in a brief article Massachusetts avenue) he says, “Em- President Nixon and well os all A. P. news dispatches. members of the cabinet helped to were really sincere in their talk about wanting gap left by inefficient parents. appearing in the September 28 issue ol bassy offices are strictly taboo. ... If fill every available seat in the massive, peacefully with the free world. There are exceptions to every general- The Star, announcing the appearance diplomats don’t like that they can go A-12 ** TUESDAY, October 6, 1953 to coexist high-vaulted chamber, when parents . the nine Nothing has since happened that would appear ity, but generally speaking the of Col. Bernt Balchen, the noted polar elsewhere in Ottawa.” delinquents are rather uncon- flyer authority, Let not scold the Canadians for black-robed members of the court en- to change in American view. On of these and weather before the us ured. The solemnity justify a this cerned and indifferent to their children National Airport Club. our own Government’s irresponsibility of the occasion nature vas immediately apparent. the contrary, considering the of Soviet and their children’s activities. If these It is noted that while full credit is in preserving the dignity and beauty States The Retrenchment's 'Complexities' conduct in recent weeks, the United parents were made financially responsi- given to the association of Col. of our Nation’s Capital. The residents new Chief Justice, always an seems to have more reason than ever to be cool ble for the property damage done by Balchen with the relatively of the District of Columbia are no less mpressive figure, in his black robe President Eisenhower’s un- heightened impression. announced concern to the Churchill proposal. their children, to the extent of some- known Amundsen-Ellsworth-Noble Arc- •spirited than the people of Ottawa still further that over the “complexities” of civil service problems thing like 25 per cent of the parents’ tic Expedition 1926, story simply Those who care for the city must makt In a full, resonant voice, he took the This is because the men of the Kremlin of the and his pledge to work for “the best possible so earning capacity (or enough so that states “and in 1929 (Balchen) became their voices heard in our State Depart- oath of office and immediately began been acting as if they were de- standards and practices in personnel adminis- have lately they would definitely feel the pinch) ment, in Congress and in the Distric the task of presiding over the court liberately upon avoiding any kind of might undergo an which pending cases major tration” come at an appropriate time. The com- intent their indifference 3uilding. We are not helpless. has of im- negotiation with the West at this time. “Thus, amazing transformation. Doris Fielding Reid. portance to the country. He is the plexities of the Federal merit system are espe- graduate second Republican appointed to the through Andrei Vishinsky in the United Nations When these juveniles into * * cially troublesome right now, in the wake of a they going to Supreme years. Assembly, they have been staging a adult criminals, are Court in more than 20 change of political administration. Federal General society great might As a Washington property owner The first was all the earmarks of a pre-planned cost a deal more. It Associate Justice Har- retrenchment has led to large-scale dismissals show that has be cheaper to furnish a few bicycles have been interested in the letters con old C. Burton, appointed by former designed put indefinitely, if not Pentagon” oi in various departments and agencies. There filibuster to off at a playground than to have boys cerning Canada’s “Little President Truman, who as Senator forever, political conference that is Organized super- problem .rom Missouri, and have been indications that in the rush to com- the Korean stealing bicycles, etc.
Recommended publications
  • The London School of Economics and Political Science the Crafting Of
    The London School of Economics and Political Science The Crafting of the Treaty of Peace with Japan, 1945-1951 Seung Mo Kang A thesis submitted to the Department of International History of the London School of Economics and Political Science for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, London, September 2020 1 Declaration I certify that the thesis I have presented for examination for the MPhil/PhD degree of the London School of Economics and Political Science is solely my own work other than where I have clearly indicated that it is the work of others (in which case the extent of any work carried out jointly by me and any other person is clearly identified in it). The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. Quotation from it is permitted, provided that full acknowledgement is made. This thesis may not be reproduced without my prior written consent. I warrant that this authorization does not, to the best of my belief, infringe the rights of any third party. I declare that my thesis consists of 99,908 words. 2 Acknowledgements I really could not have done this project alone and I owe thanks to so many people. I would first like to thank my supervisor Dr. Antony Best for always being willing to talk to me and for his meticulous review of my work. Throughout the course of my studies, he has taught me how to prioritize, summarize, clarify and most importantly to engage and write like an historian and not simply copy-and-paste interesting facts that previous books and articles did not mention.
    [Show full text]
  • Azu Etd Mr20100203 Sip1 M.Pdf
    The Use of Familial Terms Within Presidential Rhetoric from Truman to Obama Item Type text; Electronic Thesis Authors Guest, Joanna Ruth Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 01/10/2021 15:20:05 Item License http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/146932 Guest, 2010 2 Familial Terms in Presidential Rhetoric Abstract: This thesis seeks to examine the rhetorical traditions of American presidents from Truman to Obama in order to track the usage of familial terms. Within this study, the words “family” and “children” were focused on throughout the forums of Inaugural, State of the Union, Primetime, and Farewell addresses to the nation. Through tracking the prevalence of these terms and the reasons for their usage throughout the collected addresses, it has become clear that incorporating familial terms into presidential rhetoric is a dominant strategy used to engage the nation and connect with American families. 3 The word “family” is both comprehensive and far-reaching. Families today are diverse in nature while significant in purpose. It is because of these qualities that many U.S. presidents highlight the efforts, importance and strengths of the American family in their rhetoric. Throughout presidential discourse, specifically in the ritually formalized State of the Union, Inaugural, and Farewell addresses, along with the more informal and time- specific Primetime addresses, families are highlighted as a strategic means in order to instil a connection between the seemingly isolated president and the ordinary people.
    [Show full text]
  • EISENHOWER, DWIGHT D.: Papers As President PRESS CONFERENCES SERIES
    EISENHOWER, DWIGHT D.: Papers as President PRESS CONFERENCES SERIES CONTAINER LIST Box No. Contents 1 Press Conference 2/17/53 [includes proposed press conf. statement on agricultural policy] Press Conference 2/25/53 [contains notes on Governor’s meeting; surpluses for Korea; drafting of doctors] Press Conference 3/5/53 [includes Commerce Dept. statement on prices before and after decontrol; brief communique re British talks on freer trade and currencies] Press Conference 3/19/53 [list of possible questions; statement by Robert Cutler re strengthening NSC; statement by Dulles re published account of Joseph Stalin’s views] Press Conference 3/26/53 [includes notes; statement on commission to study federal- state relations] Press Conference 4/2/53 [notes; statement on exchange of sick and wounded POWS; statement on McCarthy and Greek ships; statement on Red peace moves] Press Conference 4/23/53 [miscellaneous brief notes] Press Conference 4/30/53 [includes statement re U.S. defense policy] Press Conference 5/14 Press Conference 5/28/53 Press Conference 6/17/53 [miscellaneous notes on possible questions] Press Conference 7/1/53 [miscellaneous brief notes] Press Conference 7/8/53 [includes message from George Meany and Walter Reuther calling for US. aid to workers in East Germany] Press Conference 7/22/53 [includes notes and statements on East Germany and food; legislation; forced labor; proposed statement by DDE re Indochina and Langson operation; raising of debt limit] Press Conference 9/30/53 [miscellaneous notes] Press Conference 10/8/53 [miscellaneous notes; White House press releases] Press Conference 10/21/53 [miscellaneous notes] Press Conference 10/28/53 [miscellaneous notes; suggested Presidential statement on NATO] Press Conference 11/4/53 [miscellaneous notes; proposed statement re Soviet note re conference on Germany and Austria] Press Conference 11/11/53 Press Conference 11/18/53 [miscellaneous notes and W.H.
    [Show full text]
  • Geneva: Road to Peace
    University of Central Florida STARS PRISM: Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements 1-1-1955 Geneva: Road to peace Joseph Clark Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Book is brought to you for free and open access by STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in PRISM: Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Clark, Joseph, "Geneva: Road to peace" (1955). PRISM: Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements. 825. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/825 GENEVA ROAD TO PEACE by Joseph Clark Geneva: Road to Peace By JOSEPH CLARK On many monuments and churches in Geneva you read the words: From the Darkness the Light. Who can deny that the Geneva conferu1cc, wbich brought to- gether President Eisenhower, Prerniws Bulganin and Fame and Prime Minister Eden, cast a light which pierced the darkness of "the &Id War"? Estimates vary about how much was actually achieved by the Big Four wn£erence. Some might dispute a headlint in tht Daily S&ch, of London, after the conference: REJOICEI THE DAYS OF WAR ARE PASTI But even the cautious statement of President Eisenhower on his return from Geneva, said: "There is evidence of a new frien&incss in the world." He added something that is quite new for the Ad- ministration-that any negotiations must involve mutual concessions. British Foreign Minister Harold Maurnillan said jovially when he was back in London: "There sin? gmna be any war." French Premier Faure said the codrenee "will have a happy influence" on future events.
    [Show full text]
  • June 14 Moneys to the Credit of the Tribe 1N the and for Other Purposes; to the Committee on by Mr
    8208 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE June 14 moneys to the credit of the tribe 1n the and for other purposes; to the Committee on By Mr. MACK of Illinois: United States Treasury; to the Committee Agriculture. H. Con. Res. 160. Concurrent resolution re­ on Interior and Insular Affairs. By Mr. RHODES of Pennsylvania: lating 'to the transfer of members of the By Mr. CELLER: H. R. 6816. A bill to amend the act of July Armed Forces from one military department H. R. 6805. A bill to prohibit 1n any law­ 31, 1946, in order retroactively to advance in to another; to the Committee on Armed suit or action for damages the use and ad­ grade, time in grade, and compensation cer­ Services. mission as evidence of investigations by the tain employees in the postal field service By Mr. RABAUT: military departments of aircraft accidents who are veterans of World War II; to the H. Con. Res. 161. Concurrent resolution conducted in· the interest of air safety; to committee on Post Office .and Civil Service. providing for the printing of the song Pledge the Committee on the Judiciary. By Mrs. ROGERS of Massachusetts: of Allegiance to the Flag as a House doc­ By Mr. CRUMPACKER: H. R. 6817. A bill to provide for the pro­ ument; to the Committee ,on House Admin­ H. R. 6806. A bill to provide an exemption motion of certain persons who participated istration. from participation in the Federal old-age in the defense of the Philippines and who did By Mr. BARRETT: and survivors insurance program for indi­ not receive promotions after having been H.
    [Show full text]
  • Senator Thurmond Calls for Open Big Four Conference
    ( 0 .IV-jLv-c-k 1i SK'JATOR THDRMO'.'JD CALLS FOR OPEN ~IG FOUR CO,?EffT ,JCE I N CINCINNATI SPEECH ;,( . CINCINNATI , Ohio ... Se<1ator Stro:n Thurmond ( D- SC ) declared in a speech her·e that the 11 Uni ted Statei.: should insist that the meetings at the conference of the Big ;]'our should be open to all newo media. " "The peoples of the world whose fate is at stake have the right to know all the Ric; Four does , n he asserted in a virtual re - statement of Woodrow v.Jil son t s nlea in World War I for 11 open covenants, openly arrived at . ii • Senator Thurmond addressed the annual banouet meeting of the Arllerican Bar Association ' s Big Seven Regional :heeting held Friday night in Cincinnati . 11 0ur experience in the realm of international affairs has, or should have., tau611t us that preparedness is a prime requisite for dealing with nations that are apparently less concerned with peace than we are , 11 he said. As a 1,rnrning he a.dded , nwe sho'..lld 11 temper our optimism w1 t':1 t~1.e salt of pG.st exp s rience when deal­ ing with tr:i_e Russians . Exrressinf. confidence in the efforts of President.Eisenhower to do everything possible to 11 lead us on the road to enduring peace , 11 the South Carolina Democrat declared that we must be real­ istic regardi"lg the possible results of the Big Four conference . "The United States and a world that desires lasting peac e would gain nothing if we go into the Big Four ~eeting expecting too much; and consequently, concede too much, in an effort to arrive at an agreement which in the end might be worse than no asreement at all, 11 he stated.
    [Show full text]
  • The Packer Collection Contains 64,000 Items from the Files of This American Diplomat. It Is Complete in Its Representation of Every Aspect of His Life
    The Packer collection contains 64,000 items from the files of this American diplomat. It is complete in its representation of every aspect of his life. The papers include personal and professional correspondence, manuscripts, documents, printed materials, and Russian cartoons and illustrations, as well as original World War I posters. It is also contains a wonderful array of photographs taken by Mr. Packer between 1917 and 1923, which depict scenes from the Russian Revolution and from Russian city life. Mr. Packer's correspondence includes letters from Upton Sinclair and cataloged photographs trace his career. Packer has held the consular and diplomatic titles of Vice Consul. Consul, Consul General, Third Secretary of Legation, First Secretary of Embassy, Counselor of Embassy, and Charge d'Affaires. The manuscripts in this collection includes most of his published works as well as many unpublished items, such as articles, essays, stories, and small diaries and journal notebooks. The largest part of the collection is taken up by Packer's extensively detailed subject files dealing with Soviet Russia. These subject files encompass over half of the collection and cover all aspects of the U.S.S.R., from politics and propaganda, culture and trade, to history and international relations. There are also numerous clippings about the Soviet Union from American and international newspapers, some of them pre- Revolutionary, as well as two volumes of a pre-Revolutionary Russian dictionary. Other subject files include various European and Asian countries and International organizations. Spanning over eight decades, the Packer collection is an interesting, in- depth look at a country through the eyes of an American.
    [Show full text]
  • The Truman Doctrine — March 1947 36
    CHOICES FOR THE 21 ST Coming to Terms with CENTURY Power: U.S. Choices afterafter WorldWorld WarWar IIII PUBLIC POLICY DEBATE IN THE CLASSROOM Choices for the 21st Century Education Project A program of the Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International Studies Brown University ACKNOWLEDGMENTS CHOICES for the 21st Century Coming To Terms With Power: U.S. Choices After World War II was developed Education Project by the Choices for the 21st Century staff with the assistance of the research October 1998 staff of the Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International Studies and Director scholars at Brown University. We wish to thank the following researchers Susan Graseck for their invaluable input: Curriculum Developer Mark Garrison, Former Director Mark Malkasian Center for Foreign Policy Development, Watson Institute Coordinator of Abbott Gleason, Professor of History Public Programs Brown University Megan Secatore Program Associates Sergei Khrushchev, Senior Visiting Scholar in Residence Lucy Mueller Center for Foreign Policy Development, Watson Institute Staff Associate Mark Kramer, Research Associate Anne Campau Prout Center for Foreign Policy Development, Watson Institute Office Assistant Cynthia Manzotti Charles Neu, Professor of History Brown University Unit Author Don Bakker Stephen Shenfield, Research Associate Research Associates Center for Foreign Policy Development, Watson Institute Don Bakker Richard Smoke, Research Director Patricia Keenan-Byrne Center for Foreign Policy Development, Watson Institute The Choices for the 21st Century Education Project We extend our thanks to Priscilla Carr, whose research paper for Don develops curricula on Bakker’s Advanced Placement U.S. History class in the spring of 1991 current and historical explored the possibility of using this approach to examine the Cold War.
    [Show full text]
  • Propaganda, Information and Psychological Warfare: Cold War and Hot
    PROPAGANDA, INFORMATION AND PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE: COLD WAR AND HOT A List of Holdings Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library Page 1 of 69 Page 2 of 69 Compiled by: David J. Haight April 2008 INTRODUCTION Such terms as “information,” “political warfare,” “propaganda,” “psychological strategy,” and “psychological warfare” are frequently used, often interchangeably, but are difficult to define. In preparing this guide, the Library staff recognizing this difficulty, have, therefore, interpreted the meanings of these related words broadly to cover actions, activities, symbols, thoughts, beliefs and media aimed at influencing public opinion at home and abroad. Efforts to “win the hearts and minds” of people have been attempted through many means including such conventional methods as radio and television broadcasts, public speeches, leaflets, newspapers, and the like. In addition, these efforts have covered such things as trade fairs, cultural diplomacy (a term which may itself mean different things to different people), the People-to-People program as well as actions of governments themselves and developments within countries. For example, efforts to restore and protect civil rights for minority groups within the United States certainly had and continue to have an impact on opinion at home and abroad. Wide use of labels such as “Free World,” is, itself, a form of propaganda intended to influence particular audiences. One of the best known “psychological warriors,” C.D. Jackson, pointed out that psychological warfare (or any of its related terms) cannot be separated from the actions of the sponsoring entity (in Jackson’s case and in most instances listed herein, the United States Government). Instead, each policy implemented or action taken by the government has an impact on national and/or international opinion.
    [Show full text]
  • Major Conflicts After WWII and Attempts to Make Peace – Origin, Features and Development of the Cold War
    History (S4-5) Theme B: Conflicts and Cooperation in the Twentieth-Century World Sub-theme d: Major conflicts and the quest for peace Content focus 2: Major conflicts after WWII and attempts to make peace – origin, features and development of the Cold War Q.1 Study Sources A and B carefully. Source A The following extract is cited from the minutes of a meeting of the British War Cabinet in March 1919. Mr. Churchill, continuing, said that the War Cabinet must face the fact that the North of Russia would be over-run by the Bolsheviks, and many people would be murdered. He was increasingly distressed with the way the situation had developed since the Armistice. Everything was going wrong. The continued disheartening of the Russian forces friendly to us had led to a great falling off in their morale. When firing stopped (at the end of the First World War), the Ukraine was occupied by the Germans. We requested them to withdraw, but we put in no Allied force there, and now that area, rich in food, was in the hands of the Bolsheviks. The Bolsheviks were taking Nicholiev and Kherson, and were advancing on the Black Sea. Odessa might soon be invested [captured]. Four months had passed in a policy of drift, and great potential resources which might have helped us were being dissipated. It was idle to think we should escape by sitting still and doing nothing. Bolshevism was not sitting still. It was advancing, and unless the tide were resisted it would roll over Siberia until it reached the Japanese, and perhaps drive Denikin into the mountains, while the border Baltic states would be attacked and submerged.
    [Show full text]
  • Billy Graham, Anticommunism, and Vietnam
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep Masters Theses Student Theses & Publications 2017 "A Babe in the Woods?": Billy Graham, Anticommunism, and Vietnam Daniel Alexander Hays Eastern Illinois University This research is a product of the graduate program in History at Eastern Illinois University. Find out more about the program. Recommended Citation Hays, Daniel Alexander, ""A Babe in the Woods?": Billy Graham, Anticommunism, and Vietnam" (2017). Masters Theses. 2521. https://thekeep.eiu.edu/theses/2521 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Theses & Publications at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - " _...,,,,,;.._;'[£"' -�,,� �·�----�-·--·- - The Graduate School� EAs'rER,NILLINOIS UNIVERSITY" Thesis Maintenance and Reproduction Certificate FOR: Graduate Candidates Completing Theses in Partial Fulfillment of the Degree Graduate Faculty Advisors Directing the Theses RE: Preservation, Reproduction, and Distribution of Thesis Research Preserving, reproducing, and distributing thesis research is an important part of Booth Library's responsibility to provide access to scholarship. In order to further this goal, Booth Library makes all graduate theses completed as part of a degree program at Eastern Illinois University available for personal study, research, and other not-for-profit educational purposes. Under 17 U.S.C. § 108, the library may reproduce and distribute a copy without infringing on copyright; however, professional courtesy dictates that permission be requested from the author before doing so. Your signatures affirm the following: • The graduate candidate is the author of this thesis. • The graduate candidate retains the copyright and intellectual property rights associated with the original research, creative activity, and intellectual or artistic content of the thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Geneva: Road to Peace
    GENEVA ROAD TO PEACE by Joseph Clark Geneva: Road to Peace By JOSEPH CLARK On many monuments and churches in Geneva you read the words: From the Darkness the Light. Who can deny that the Geneva conferu1cc, wbich brought to- gether President Eisenhower, Prerniws Bulganin and Fame and Prime Minister Eden, cast a light which pierced the darkness of "the &Id War"? Estimates vary about how much was actually achieved by the Big Four wn£erence. Some might dispute a headlint in tht Daily S&ch, of London, after the conference: REJOICEI THE DAYS OF WAR ARE PASTI But even the cautious statement of President Eisenhower on his return from Geneva, said: "There is evidence of a new frien&incss in the world." He added something that is quite new for the Ad- ministration-that any negotiations must involve mutual concessions. British Foreign Minister Harold Maurnillan said jovially when he was back in London: "There sin? gmna be any war." French Premier Faure said the codrenee "will have a happy influence" on future events. Soviet Premier Bulganin deckred the conferen= contributed "to the relaxation of tensions between He also said Geneva "opeus a new era in the relations among the four powers, and not only among them." Best of d we like the comment of an Iowa fa- who was having his own *rconference" with some visiting Soviet farm experts, while the Big Four met in Geneva. PsrMi~hedby NEWCENTURY PUBLISHERS, 83a Broadway, N. Y. 3 N.Y. September, 1955 -srub PRINTED IN THB UAA. "People out here," the Iowan said, "and probably in the rest of .
    [Show full text]