Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 17, 1957 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Section 1 Page 7 . Colleagues Doubt Sen. Knowland to Seek Presidency n I r 7!clcar 0' political pitfalls, some ot Governorship Bid hws coiioaVs think he iDrnhnhlv wnwA .,.. ..... . .l- uimntriy unless It's a Cinch By JACK BEI.L WASHINGTON w - Some col leagues of Sen. Knowland iR-CaP aid today they see less than a 50 n0 chance that he will seek the ln Kepublican presidential nom ination. They ' reached that conclusion after reassessing his announce. men! last week that he will leave the .Senate when his present term expires in January 1959. His surprise announcement was Interpreted widely at first as indi cating he plans to run for the Re publican nomination for governor in California next year. That move was considered a possible stepping (tone toward a bid for the presi dency. Knowland declined to confirm or deny the speculation. Gov. Goodwin J. Knight of Cali fornia hopes to learn on a visit here in the next few days whether there is any such possibility. Knight, planning to attend Presi dent Eisenhower's inaugural, ex pects to confer with Know-land. Knight, a Republican, has given every indication he wants to run for re-election next year. If Knowland should choose to geek the governorship, signs now point toward a primary battle with Knight. The winner, if elected gov ernor, then might pit himself against another Californian, Vice President Nixon, in the battle for the party's 1960 presidential nomi nation While he hasn't closed the door to this possibility, Knowland has gone a long way toward convincing some of hts associates that person al considerations were more influ ential than political reasons tor his decision to retire from the benale. Knowland is said to have com mented that his family har in the Oakland Tribune a property worth several million dollars which he believes needs his personal atten tion. He said at the time of his an nouncement he had always regard ed hir.isclf as a newspaperman and wanted to get back in that busi ness. He noted that his publisher father is S3 years old. Some of Knowland's colleagues believe Knowland might bow to a "draft" movement if Knight should chang his mind about running again. He might run, they said. If it became apparent there was lUDstantial opposition to Knight's candidacy among California Re publicans. But unless the path was fairly governor's race, It might be doubtful whether he could expect substantial support tor the presidential nomination without holding public office. B52 Flies From Merced Base to England Nonstop LONDON m A U. S. Air Force B52 Stratofortress. an eight jet heavy bomber, landed in Eng land .Thursday after a nonstop flight from California. The 650-mile-an-hour bomber of the Strategic Air Command put down at Britc Norton In Oxford shire. A spokesman for the 7lh Air Force said the bomber was on a training mission and would return to the United States within a few days. House Group Starts Attempt to Whittle President's Budget Ihower's budget message, subconv d T 1 mitt ?s arranged to begin scan Ill 2 1 OllClOS nine behind closed doors the fiscal Sn Hit by Some as Inflationary By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON (A - The House Appropriations Committee set out today to try to whittle down Pres ident Eisenhower's request to spend $71,807,000,000 during the next fiscal year. One day after receiving Eisen- needs of the Interior, Post Office and Treasury departments. Members hope to chop substan tial sums from the (73.300.ooo.ooo in requests for new appropria tions, some of which wou.d carry over to later years. Some Democrats and some Re publicans complained about the size of the budget for the year starting next July 1, referring to it as inflationary. And Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey cautioned that "we will I The site of the budget, a record have a depression that will make I 'or a peace year and the fifth in ine nauon 5 nisiory, congressional demands unless the gov- a it a ' "y1 1 1 u your hair curl" ing. He added that he probably would quit his job if, in the event of a depression, the Eisenhower administration tries to fight it with methods involving deficit spending. He said he wasn't criticizing the administration for the size of the budget. But he said the rising trend of federal budgets "should promptly be stopped." for sharp cuts in appropriations, on which spending is based. The President forecast a year end surplus of $1,800,000,000 which he said would be applied toward reduction of the 272-billion-dollar national debt, now costing more than seven billions annually in in terest charges. Some members are known to feel that if Congress could cut the planned spending total several bil lion more, there might be enough of a surplus to provide tax relief in 1938, a congressional election year. No sooner had Eisenhower's budget message been read than a partisan argument broke out on the House floor. Chairman Cannon (D-Mo) of the House Appropriations Committee called the budget "inflationary." And he complained that "there is no retrenchment, no economy." Up jumped Rep. Halleck of In diana, the assistant House Repub lican leader, to say that Cannon was showing a "new-found solic itude" about the effects of infla tion on the American people. Hal leck said that in past years Can non was one of those "feeding those fires of inflation rather than trying to put them out." In an interview today. Rep. Tabor ot New York, sanior Repub lican member of the Appropria tions Committee, said the budget "can and will" be cut by Con gress. "There is a tremendous lot of waste, especially in the Defense Department," Taber said. Rxiss Charge Yanks Aided Egypt Attack MOSCOW UP) Soviet Fleet, the navy newspaper, charged Thursday that B r i t i s h-French forces invaded Egypt last Novem ber "under the cover of U. S. naval and air protection."' Soviet propaganda, seeking to tar the United States with the same brush of "aggression" that It has used on Britain and France, kept its campaign going against U. S. Middle East policies. Soviet Fleet said the operation against Egypt was a "complex collusion of colonialists" and- the U. S. 6th Fleet in the Mediter ranean "played a sinister role in preparing and unleashing the aggression." Gas Dealers Ask Laws to Prevent Supplier Control ROSEBL'RG State laws to prevent major oil companies from putting any controls on retailers were urged Wednesday by the Oregon Retail Gasoline Dealers Assn. At a meeting here. fi.i dealers app.oved a program that would enable retailers to set their own prices and end contracts that per mit oil companies to designate the rtirms from which dealers buy tires, batteries and accessories. They also proposed a law to give retailers a 2 per cent tax credit for shrinkage caused by evaporation. A third proposal would have dyes put in gasoline sold to off-highway users, such as farmers and loggers, to simpnty checking on violations. Nehru ('ritieizes Mid-East Policy NEW DELHI (iB Prime Min ister Nehru said Thursday the Eisenhower Doctrine on the Mid dle East could make the situation there "more difficult" because it links military aid with economic assistance. "To give economic help to these countries is good." Nehru told newsmen when he arrived from Calcutta, "but to tie it up with military help ties it up with the coid war and makes the situation more difficult." Nehru's comments so far on the Lisenhower proposals are consid ered moderate. 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