Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 23, 1954, Page 4, Image 4

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    Pagr 4
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon
Tuesday, February 23, 1954
Capital Journal I
An Independent NewspoperEstoblished 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 280 North
Church St. Phone 2-2406.
Fall Uoiod Mir, r,ln al Ih, Alaarlalat frail Tha Ucllil piw.
Tha Auoclatrd prew U exelutlvrlr entuled to the uia for publication of
all nwa cIlapatehM redlt,d to It or ctlrit'aua credited In thai paoor and
also oewa published therein.
' SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Br Carrier: Monthli. Il.llt six Uonihi. n.tOi One year, lis 00. Mr UiU
Oreton: Monthlr, 10c; ail Month!. KM: One Year, 11.00. Br Uall OuUlda Oraaaaj
Monthlr. 91 15; ail Uontlu, 11.10: one Tear, lls.oti. ,
.THE 'ORDINARY' AMERICANS
DAVE BECK 'FEELS HIS OATS'
Dave Beck, president of the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, at the Miami meetinir of the union s execu
tive board has refused to assent to the no-raiding; pact
drawn-up by the American Federation of Labor and the
Congress of Industrial Organization and the machinery
proposed by the AFL with which his union is affiliated, to
nettle intra-jurisdictional disputes peacefully. Keck de
manded that other unions "surrender" 50,000 drivers and
warehousemen now in their ranks which they refused to
do. and stands pat against the no-raiding pact. v
There is nothing surprising for in this Beck is running
true to form, for he has resorted to raiding other unions,
including those of the AFL, by both raiding and goon
tactics of sabotage, violence and arson during his regime
as Teamsters' boss in the northwest. Oregon will not soon
forget the reign of terror he inaugurated in the middle
30's in Orgon, broken up by Governor Charles II. Martin
and the conviction and imprisonment of some H8 of his
voons bv Martin s special prosecutor. Ralph L. Moody.
Beck evidently intends to continue the violent methods
by which so many of the union leaders built up their self-
perpetuating power-mad heirurchy in years past, includ
ing John L. Lewis. He ignores both Wagner Act (iv.it)
and its successor, the Taft-Hartley Act (1947) which plac
ed the choice of which union, if any, an employe wishes to
join, m the hands of the employe himself and not the
union leaders, the intent being to end the dictatorship
Beck seeks to revive.
Since 1035 the labor relations acts have provided elec
tion machinery, utilized when a question of representation
arises. Thousands of such elections have been and still
are being held to eliminate disputes.
The anti-raiding proposal sponsored by both the AFL
and CIO doesn't interfere with but supplement's the pres
ent labor relations law and permits union members to
change allegiance from one union to another by majority
vote. Unless the labor board certifies as to the choice of
an agent in collective bargaining, that organization cannot
avail itself of NLRB's service.
That Beck, like Lewis, regards the Teamsters union, as
Lewis does the United Mineworkers, as personal property
and members as pawns, is further shown by the actions of
both in handling their union funds. Lewis made a $500,
000 loan to the Roosevelt campaign, and also heavy dona
tions to the outlawed dockmen's union in New York har
bor, and has recently, it is reported, to have ordered a
heavy cut in the union's welfare funds.
At Miami a protest has been filed against a loan of
Teamsters' funds amounting to $1,500,000 to the Freuhof
Trailer Corporation. The protest was made by Martin
Grouse, former Teamsters' business agent at Yakima, who
charges the loan violated a constitutional clause prohibit
ing investment of more than $50,000 of union funds to any
one firm. Beck claims he is authorized to make any in
vestment for the union so long "as the investment is
sound." Evidently he considers himself, like Lewis does,
the iol judge of ecurity as well as of choice of unions.
Gf. P.
-i MA06lAOArYMfY7 PEOPIF- ;i''e3 i
;JfJ PEOPLE LIKE
'-f.V' THE wwjjjaj
f Mm
BIO-TRUCK DRIVER- W; pPlotImc one of ffl'VJ
kr Xrn, 0iM A VII TRV BACKING IT 1 I;
TJr JT r - iJDRIVER-HE DIM, f$
&y .K Ll6MTi -KEEPS TO If
mr y f,hl4lvANE-4lCNAl.SE
. . BCAR BEHIND WHEN f,
j$ T SAFE TO PASS. Jjj
Salem 15 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
February 23, 1939
William Escb, 67, who had
served aa deputy Marion county
sheriff under three sheriffs and
two terms as sheriff had died at
the family residence, 761 Mill
street. He had been a resident of
Salem since 1892.
IF y5U HAVE AM
ACCIDENT, PRAY
FOR A TRUCK TO
COME ALONG -THE
DRIVER WAY AVE
VOUR LIFE, AS
HE' SAVEPOTHEI
A
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
Wilson 'Burned Up' Because
Twice Bypassed by Radford
BILLY AND THE BRITONS
Billy Graham, the famous American evangelist, is never
at a loss for words, but he used one too many in an ad
vance publicity release on his forthcoming evangelistic,
campaign in England and has nearly half the people over
there hopping mad at him before he even starts soliciting
their souls' salvation.
Hefore the Rev. Graham's arrival in Britain an advance
statement bearing his name was put out. One section of
it read as follows:
"When the war ended, a sense of fruslralinn and disillusionment
gripped England, and what Killer's bnmhs couldn't do, socialism wilh
its accompanying evils shortly accomplished.
"F.ngland's historic faith faltered. The churches slill standing grad
ually emptied."
One can imagine the reaction of England's Socialists io
have all the moral iitul spiritual ills that always follow in
the wake of war laid at their doorstep like another
"Hoover depression." Nor was it long in coming. Graham
was blasted fore and aft.
From his ship at sea Graham lamely explained that he
meant secularism, not socialism, and apologized prolusely.
The apology is not being accepted at face value however,
for suspicious Britons think thev probablv heard him
right the first time and that, he really meant to link their
philosophy of government with the evils against which
he is soon to declaim from English pulpits.
It will be interesting to see if he can wage a successful
campaign after such a bad beginning. Such is his wiz
ardry that it will occasion no surprise on this side of the
Atlantic if he does.
McCarthy and the general
Senator McCarthy has some justification for complaint
against the Army's handling of the Major Irving Pcress
case, but as tisral he indulges in inexcusable abuse which
is revolting to fairminded people.
It seems that Pcress was called into active service as a
dentist notwithstanding unsatisfactory answers to ques
tions on membership in subversive organizations, because
the Army needed dentists badly at the time and did not
fear that a dentist would betray military secrets '.ie didn't
luive.
The Army's judgment might be criticized, but when it
called and used the man's services, which were evidently
satisfactory it seems to have been obligated to give him an
honorable discharge, which it subsequently did. Yet Mc
Carthy called General Kalph W. .Wicker, who handled the
matter and claims he hiid no legal alternative than to do
what he did "unfit to wea. that uniform." Zwickcr was
decorated fm gallantry in action in World War II.
The remark was inexcusable, like so many McCarthy
makes, and which are broadcast throughout the country
by press and radio because a senator says it and therefore
it must be "news."
If this sort of thing continues there will he a widespread
demand to end all congressional immunity so a senator
can be prosecuted for libel and slander like anyone else.
Man Safe After Drilling 46 Days
nWSBANK, Australia if) Vik- Latvian burn, Zvejnicks put out
tors Zvcjnieks, 28. f taggered, m the dinghy J;in. from Thurs-
asiiore norm 01 cairns mouiiny, j i.ionj
...rr: r. ,l....lii J 1 a,1 'ana
BUIllTIJUK llt'lll IIIOIIIUII II l.'li MIIU
exposure, after drifting 450 miles
WASHINGTON - Secretary of
Defense Wilson is burned up over
the way Adm. Radford has been
pping around to the While House
behind his back to see the President.
Radford bv-passed Wilson and
ent straight to Eisenhower to
get Air Force technicians sent to
Indochina. He talked the presi
dent into the idea without even
taking it up with the Joint Chiefs
Staff.
Again last week, he pulled the
me maneuver. Radford slipped
to see Kisenhower and per
suaded him to increase the num
ber of aircratt carrier on active
duty from 12 to 14.
Radford took tha Chief of Naval
Operations, Adm. Robert Carney,
along with him," but didn't bother
to clear it either with Uie bee'
By DREW PEARSON
which arc now turning out to be
about 10 percent of that
BIG BUDGET DEFICIT As
sistant director of the budget Row
land Hughes has admitted behind
closed doors that the Eisenhower
budget was based on two assump
tions: 1, that unemployment would
remain between 2.000.000 and 2,
500,000 ; 2, that there would be no
change in the international situ
ation . . . But unemployment hasj
already soared over 3.500.000, and
the crisis in Indochina will cost
triple the Eisenhower estimate . . .
Government economists now pre
dict privately that the deficit will
be at least four billion more than
the president figured.
DUf,LES IS HAPPy-President
Eisenhower has been advised by
John Foster Dulles that the Ber
lin conference actually Improved
relarv of Defense, his boss, or the prospects for peace with Russia-
other joint cniefs wun wnom ne even muugn n laucn io seune any
is supposed to cooperate.
The first time Radford hy-passed
his boss, the Secretary of Defense
said nothing. The second time, he
hit the ceiling. Wilson figures that
part of the heavy expense of run
nine the Defense Department is
due to the inclination of the brass
hats to get the bit in their teetn
Victim's Rights
Canby Herald
Probably it is presumptuous of
a layman to look askance at a
Supreme Court decision, but
somehow the logic of freeing'
Bonnie Lee Kuhnhausen after her
conviction os a murder accom
plice ,on the grounds that her
rights were violated because
there was a three months delay
in bringing her to trial, is too
abstruse for us.
Inasmuch as she was adjudged
guilty, the worst she suffered was
that she spent the three months
in the county jail instead of in
the penitentiary. And most mur
derers and drunk-rollers we have
known would much prefer Sher
iff Fred Re.isecker's hotel on lop
of the Clackamas county court
house to the institution at Salem.
The constitutional rights of the
old man whom Bonnie Lee and
her male pal beat to death were
sort of trampled on, too.
J. B. McCulty of Salem, whose
father had been a member of the
state legislature in 1860, was in'
troduced to the senate.
Rotary International, founded
in 1905 by Paul P. Harris, CM
cago attorney, who met with
tailor, coal dealer, printer and a
few friends, had celebrated its
34th birthday.
Sears, Roebuck & Co. were of
fering a portable electric sew
ing machine with a value of $50
for $33.33.
Salem -Columbia market, 260
North Liberty street, had .three
tins of Campbells soup for 25c,
sliced salmon for 16c a pound and
three pounds of frcjsh lard for
ZDC.
Willamina had a "boom town"
appearance as preliminary work
on a $500,000 plant for Pacific
Plywood Co. got under way.
The government had authorized
a $500,000 air base for Tongue
Point.
Oregon's marriage business had
been reported "on the rocks"
after three months operation of
a law requiring mental and phy
sical examinations to weed out
the insane and venerally diseased.
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Play on Frustrated Wives
Rings the Bell in New York
By SAUL PETT
For HAL RTiVI.R
NEW YORK (VP) The other . because they want coffee, but be-
He'd Belter Know
Pendleton East Oregonian
Joseph K. Carson, former may
or of Portland and member of the
U. S. maritime commission, has
announced he will seek the Demo
cratic nomination for governor
of Oregon. Carson has been away
from Oregon for several years
which makes it difficult to esti
mate how he will run in populous
Multnomah county where he
should be strongest. He meets
people well and might irake hay
if he can get around to shake
enough hands.
We note in his announcement
of candidacy that he stresses
water resources development as
key issue. Hc s made no mis
take on that score. But he'd bet
ter be sure he knows exactly
what he's talking about before
he takes on the opposition in that
squabble. It is an involved subject
and an amateur must be wary
of numerous pitfalls.
PROSPERITY INDIVISIBLE
Pendleton East Oregonian
In a talk at linker last week
Ihe chairman of the Democratic
national committee, Stephen
Mitchell, said something that
eastern Oregon people learned
long ago to be true. Mitchell said,
'"Prosperity is indivisible. The
farmer and the city dweller must
share In it alike."
THE WORLD TODAY
problems . . . Dulles sent a spe
cial report to Ike at Palm Springs
saying that Molotn s stubborn
stand in Berlin clearly shows the
Russians arc gravely worried
about developments inside the Iron
Curtain . . . Because of this un
certainty. Dulles claimed. Premier
Tone of Red's Army Day Talks
Indicate War to Get Colder
By JAMES MARLOWl
WASHINGTON ifWhen did the I Eight davs later. Jan. 30. Mc
Army first learn Dr. Irving Peress ! Canity called Peress before his
Malenkov will sit tight and make I commissioned a captain and pro-! Senate
investigations subcommit-
and ru away with things. This is nj aggressive move in Europe, for moted to major, would not answer ; tee and said later the dentist, still
especially easv when another mili-1 onc' V""WS ' years ... quest0ns ahml subversive organ-1 an Army major, had cited the
tarv man is president of the Unit-1 , Not as reassuring as Igor t.ouz- izalions to which he might have j Fifth Amendment in refusing to
ed Slates. W was not belonged? answer quostion5 abmlt om.
So long as he is Secretary of Do-, tn ' ,
fensp. Charlie Wilson intends tn
run the Defense Department. If.
on the other hand, the military are
going to run the Defense Depart
ment, he'll resign.
SENATE SIGIl'I'S-Ncw York's
75-year-old Sen. Herbert Lehman
strolling down the corridor, hold
.-en. AicLariny ' it vvis. in an up-; mumst connections. McCarthy nev
roar with the Army over the case.'er explained how he learned' ahrail
irniy c .iii-n-r m-cios. iu imimk ii wasn i tinui last rercss case.
The Army Chief of Staff's office , August, after Peress had been in ; Three clavs later, on Fch. 2. Mc
has just granted a .special, un-, service many months. McCarthy Carthy announced he had written
nreccdented promotion to the en-1 complains that the Army kept him Stevens the dav before demanding
listed man in charge of docorat- on five months longer. : immediate court-martial of Peress
ing the tables at the Fort McNair , Actually according to the Pen- and investigation and possible
wiiiccts ciuo. lie is .ionn aani- lagun i-eress reiuseu io answer ; court - mania of Peress and in
strol ing down t ie corridor, '- ,, wi,0 was promoted overnight two months hefore he was called vesligation and possible cnur-mar-
ing hands Willi ins wite . . . ne (rom a s,.r!,t,,.,lU ,0 a chjl.f w;ir. to active duty, hut was called nev-' tial of Hose otficcrs "who had full
giiin chewing dnnncr.ilic leader. ram n(ia,r though it usually takes erlhelcss. and remained in service knowledge of his Communist activ-
icxas Sen. Lyndon Johnson, being wntn ,.Mmil,;,tiolls aml four ,3 months. i.ies and either took no steps to
out -chomped by Maryland's Sen
John Marshall Duller, sitting
across the aisle . . . Delaware's
quiet Sen. John Williams, t h c
scourge of the tax cliiselers. wav
ing alleclionately to his wife in
the senate gallery . . . Mrs. Pat
hair a deeper red every day. (Oth
er senate ladies want tn know the
name ol her new hair rinse ) . . .
night I saw a very funny play
called "Oh, Men! Oh, Women!"
It concerns a ycung wife who
is unhappy although her husband
is a successful actor, loves her, is
faithful and is a good provider.
She has a nurse for the kids, a
cook, maids, gardener, the works.
So, feeling bored and useless,
she goes to a psychoanalyst and
after a few sessions decides may
be she ought to assert her inde
pendence? She suggests a trial
separation to her husband. Being
a reasonable man, he blows his
top, gets loaded and tracks down
the analyst.
Why, the lurching actor asks the
doctor, do so many modern wom
en feel unimportant and useless in
the important job of running a
house and raising children? Why
do they envy those in the "out
side world? What do they think
they're missing? "And. finally.
doctor," the actor shouts, "tell me
this. Tell me, what's on the outside?"
At this point, both men and
women, from the $6.60 seats to the
last $1.80 seats in the balcony,
roared with laughter and stopped
the show with wild applause. It
was clear the play bad struck
home in many homes.
Obviously, while few wives have
cooks or nurses or psychoanalysts,
many wives have the same feel
ing of boredom, of uselessness, of
missing something. Why this
great wondrous envy of the mys
terious world on the outside, into
which husbands all over the coun
try disappear every morning?
In the play, the doctor never
answered the questoin. So let's
face it right here and now. Just
what is on the outside?
True, the outside has its rises
and falls, its triumphs and set
backs, its men who get a $10 raise
or are promoted to vice-president
or find a polio vaccine or win a
Nobel prize. But do wives really
know how seldom this happens?
Mostly the outside is millions of
men shaving, cramming down the
last piece of toast, rushing off and
being herded like cattle into the
cities in crowded commuter trains
and busses. Do they go gaily off,
as to a great adventure? They
do not. They sluff off, half-asleep,
numbed by the hypnotic motion of
sameness, driven by unseen whips.
The outside is millions of men
at the office glumly picking
through the morning mail, growl
ing over new memos from the
boss. The outside is millions of
men beginning another ungliimor
ous day, reacting to Uie pressures
ol half submerged ambitions, to
the pressures of their boss, to the
real or fancied competition of
their fellow man.
The outside is the midmorning
coffee break which they have, not
cause there lurks the hope that.
somehow, five minutes away from
the desk will bring new solutions,
new stimulation, new horizons. It
doesn't.
The outside is millions of men
talking shop at lunch, dissecting
what old T. J.' secretary said and
Uie way they said it and what Uicy
meant. The outside is lunch talk
about stocks or options or tha
raise the new man got and the
eternal threat that one day soon,
unless the company comes
thoungh, by gosh, I'm going to
make a break. It is dialogue that
is no more refreshing, imaginative
or soul-satisfying than wives' talk
about formulas, BM's, new deter
gents or how could that woman
ever afford a huge new sectional
couch that must have cost $900
and on his salary!
The outside is millions of men
coming back from too much
lunch, half-heartedly flirting with
the pretty recepUonist or secre
tary, and 99.9 per cent of the time
either party would be surprised
and a little frightened if anything
came of it. This is a semiauto
matic maneuver that goes with
manhood, a token gesture made
to hold on to the franchise.
The outside is millions of men
leaving a crowded desk at night
with a sense of unfullment, mil
lions of men being herded back
to the cattle cars, dully reading
the evening papers, making pei
functory conversation, secretly
wondering when the fun begins.
So relax, girls. The outside is
just the inside out.
Getting Even with L. A.
Astnrlan-Budget
Photographs have been appear
ing in some of the newspaper!
showing automobiles in Los An
geles hubcap-deep in mud brought
down by heavy rains into the
streets. To our mind, Los Angeles
has been having a slide and pre.
sumably it is a "ghost town" just
as Astoria was labelled as such
following our slide in January. At
least we are going to call it a
ghost town just to get even with
the television characters who
pinned that label on us.
Thr wmcf of lh pint ftrfit hp"ilht Cr
yrur hom- br NO EXCUSR ovfrfflmn all
dtngr.'iihlf rdnn.
ASK JfOR FAMILY SIZE ft ti T-n
ovfr lwlr Irn amn'int nttini by amir
Icadlna brands for thf stma prt?a.
Hint Airy Not Nauinunf Swfttntu
AN OMCON HODUCI
At ladtptfldant Grecart
Meal ticket for your family
...every month if Dad isn't here
years service for anyone else to On hen. 1. in a letter to Serre- have him removed or were re
make the warrant grade. tary of the Army Robert T. Stev- sponsible for his promotion there-
The reason for his sudden pro- ens. McCarthy protested that Per- after."
million was that Saliilini threat-'ess refused to answer a question-; That same day, Feb. 2. Peress '
ened to cpiit the army and go naire last August, was promoted stepped out of the Army at his 1
back to private catering. It hap-; In major in October and was hon- own request with an honorable dis-:
rwn lltril tlm lii, ,1, l'.ml -inn,. Kp-...- nmhli' His-h:irir.il fliic mnnlli ..liir.in
.xixmi. m in iin .hi in.. ......... (Io n,ns( nf ,nnr entertaining at Inis was he information given Stevens was in the Far East
growing more beautiful and her ,hp j.-ort j,cNalr officers' club, by a Pentagon spokesman on Per- while this was happening
and they like the way Salutini ess. a New York dentist, whom When he returned he wrote Mc
decorates their tables. So, in or- McCarthy calls a "Fifth Amend- Carthy on Feb. 16 that court-mar-
r!rr fit mnnKn him thv i-iitli,.1 mi nt Communist " ; h.il nf Pni-nc nn... .;.
Maine's attractive Sen Margaret throul.h spocjai orders to make The Army, needing dentists dur-! licahle" hecr.iise. first, he was out
him a chief warrant officer. mg inc Korean War, commissioned of the Army. and. second "the
The order was disapproved by Peress a captain Oct 15, li;2. and Army does not have av ailable facts
the army personnel section, but orl Oct. 27 and 28. 1052. gave him made."
Ihe chief of staffs officer over- three questionnaires ahoul mem- There ..eems to he no question
ruled the personnel section and mum ii. Minvcrie nrganizai ions, ol spying in this case. Peress.
through the Coral Sea in an open
I2-fnot dinghy without a paddle,
lit had been at sea 46 days.
just off the tip of
Cape York Peninsula, the north
ernmost part o( Australia. Some
days out, he lost hi paddles in a
storm.
Chase Smith, the only lady mem
ber, wearing a fresh red rose
sent her every day by a Washing
ton aulo dealer . . . Not to he
outdone. North Carolina's dignified
Sen. Clyde Hoey shows lip each
day with a red carnation in his
lnpcl . . . Handsome Sen. John
Pricker ot Ohio running his hand
over his silvery luck-, making
sure every wave is in place . . .
Washington's bachelor Sen. Henry
"Scoop" Jackson ('ashing around
the senate in a shabby brown
sweater . . . Tall, slim Papa Hub
ert kefauver listening intently
from the senate galle-y while Ins
son. Ksles, debates the Pricker
amendment . . . Idaho's self-conscious
Sen. Herman Walker glanc
ing up :t Ihe senate press gallery
to see whether Inlks are watch-
made Sergeant Sahitini a chief Peress refused to answer, citing a dentist, had an insensitive job.
was
although .McCarthy .savs he
recruiting lor communism.'
Stevens assured the senator he
was investigating to sec whether
there was "con.-pir.icy" in han
dling Peress and I lint he was tight-
warrant ollicer in charge ol fori rum nmrncnneni. wmcn says
McNair parties. a man can't be forced to give in-
WashiiiKlcin Whirl loi ni.itini. which might tend to in-
Adm. Arthur Hadford. reporting eliminate him.
secretlv to the senate foreign re- Two months later. Jan 7. 1::,;1,
Unions' committee, was so optim- I'eress was called to active duty.
istic about the Indochina crisis l'n l'-i. i. I'.ui. he was made a emng up Annv procedures to see
that Senator Humphrey of Minne- major. On Dec. 30. 1053, the Army that nothing lil.e this happened
sola scrawled a note and slipped "ended to release him. Why? In again. Stevens said in future simi-
it to Senators Mansfield of Mon- 11 l, ll,'r ,0 McCarthy on Feb. III. Jar cases a reserve officer will be
tana and Cillelte of Iowa. The sevens s.itci. I'eress case discharged under "other than hon
r.ole read: "I don't think we are
getting all the facts." iThey
-. . -'
Make sure your family w ill have
a regular monthly income from Prudential
life insurance to pay for their daily needs.
The Prudential
INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
S f I
:
4
ItRtr I. Mjnir
werrnl' . . . Some Male Depart-n-rnl
security a'rnls under Scott
Mct.ecd h:ne bren asking doctors
h,ul 'come to the Army' ntton- arable comliium
twin'' and he was being 'et n-.it On Fe't. IS two davs afler Stev
because n( his "unwilhngne .s In ens w role Ins letter anil H davs
'submit loyalty information" after Peress had left Ihe Armv
Since he had re!iied the infor- McCarthy called Ihr dentist before
. Sen. Frrd Payne of Maine. v,nIi,,p ,,rlr wrrw oal, a,lr malum two months before be was his siihrnnimillee and said later
inc
presiuing over me scnaie "n t,-, ai,u, ti,nr panrnts The doc
pn fessinnal poise, hoonung nut ' lor, ref,.,,
parliamentary decisions. 'He's
had more hours in Ihe chair than
anyone else, including the Vice VtOKKIMi AMI TAI.KINC.
President, who is the senate's of- j flood Rlv.-r News
ficial presiding officer.) j Cor((,n cont,m,s t0 d he work
fapilol Capsules ; jn the U.S. Senate lor Oregon and
IKK'S FACT PAPKR President the nation in general while Morse
Kisenhower now sends out a "fact docs the talking
paper" to all bureau chiefs, giv-
.1.. ..i -i ii I...- ii . .,. ... 1
ink mc iiiihiiii ii nut' Minor puncy
line on important questions He
has been working on a "fact pa
per explaining what officials
should say when asked about the
WIIKRF. IT III RTS
I'.W.S. in Siherton April--Tribune
cal'ed tn active duty, why did his he had refused to answer 33 qurs-
c.isr nave io ne calico in uie aircn- lions
lien of the Army, which already1 Al this same session McCarthy
had it? Repealed inquiries at ihe quired ling (Irn. Ralph w
Pentagon last night failed tn get Zwicker, commander of Camp Kil
an answer. nier. N J . where Peress had been
Steven, conceded in his letter slationed. Zwickcr refused tn an
to McCarthy that under the doc- swer questions about Peress' Armv
tors draft law "it has unfortunate- career He said he was forb:dden
ly been possible in the past for to by an executive order instruct
comiiussions to be tendered tn in- ing officers not tn answer security
dividual who might be iindesir- questions outside Ihe executive do
able " partment.
Although the decision to dis- Zwicker complained he was in
charge I'eress was made last lec. suited by McCarthy. Stevens or
30. he was not notified until Jan. dcred Army officers' not to appear
The income tax never bothered ir Then h n-.n inn h k kr.- ii .-.j u.-j ...
very embarrassing question of the me as much as getting an income released no later than April. He tifv himself' He' s due'lo face Mc
2,:iX so-called security risks, to tax. I was free to resign before then. i Carthy Thursday.
rrtdirlc . Smtllir, Ir.
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