On every October 24 since he's been President, George W. Bush has issued a proclamation recognizing "United Nations Day." Typically, Bush calls upon the people of the United States "to observe this day with appropriate programs and activities." The appropriate thing to do would be to acknowledge the basic truth that communist spy and State Department official Alger Hiss laid the groundwork for the U.N. and became its first acting secretary-general, causing it to be dubbed "the house that Hiss built." Hiss also advised President Franklin Roosevelt at the Yalta conference, which defined post-World War II Europe and betrayed Eastern European nations to Soviet control.