FOR AN ALL ASIAN SETTLEMENT IN VIETNAM

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August 10, 1966
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Approve 18032 For Release 2005/06/29 CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE August 10, 1966 also remind you that to the best of my recollection, Secretary Dillon never advocated removal of the 41/4 percent interest rate ceil- ing on long-term government bonds, as you recently did before the House Ways and Means Committee. I will greatly appreciate your prompt at- tention to these comments, particularly in connection with the correction of the er- roneous and ambiguous statements made by Mr. Barr before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee on August 4. These statements must not be permitted to be part of the official record of the Congress. Sincerely, WRIGHT PATMAN, Chairman. THE UNDER SECRETARY Or THE TREASURY, Washington, D.C., August 10, 1966. Hon. WRIGHT PATMAN, Chairman, Committee on Banking and Cur- rency, House of Representatives, Wash- ington, D.C. DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN: Secretary Fowler has asked me to reply to your letter of August 9, 1966 concerning my testimony before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee last week. You are quite correct in stating that I mis- represented the provision of H.R. 14026. I evidently misunderstood Senator PRoxMIRE's question, and I did not correct his statement. I might add that none of the Treasury staff who accompanied me caught this error, and the lawyer who reviewed the transcript did not notice it. To set the record straight I have this morn- ing sent to the Chairman of the Senate Bank- ing and Currency Committee the following letter and asked him to distribute It to his Members. "DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN: On Thursday, Au- gust 4, 1966, in testimony before your com- mittee, Senator PRoxMIRE asked me the fol- .lowing question: 'Yes, Mr. Barr, as I un- derstand it, at one point the House Banking Committee passed a proposal to have a flat limitation of 41/2 percent on the interest pay- ments. Was that to apply to negotiable cer- tificates of deposit and what other savings instruments?' "I answered: 'Yes, sir; on all time and sav- ings accounts, which would include negotia- ble certificates of deposit.' "I evidently thought that Senator PRox- MME used the term 'considered' rather than 'passed' because my answer as printed is not correct. The correct answer is as follows: "'Senator PROXMIRE, the House Banking and Currency Committee has reported H.R. 14026 which provides for a temporary one- year ceiling of 41/2 percent on time deposits below $100,000. Negotiable certificates of de- posit are normally denominated in amounts of $100,000 or more so H.R. 14026 as reported would not have an appreciable impact on ne- gotiable C.D.'s: "I regret this misunderstanding, and r re- gret that neither I nor the Treasury staff caught this error before the record was printed. 1 am not certain as to what line of ques- tioning Senator PROxmrRE meant to pursue in the subsequent colloquy. If he meant to Inquire as to the impact of placing a ceiling on all C.D 's, my answers would stand. If he meant to inquire as to my opinions on the impact of the provisions of H.R. 14026, I would be pleased to supply this answer for the record. "Sincerely, "JOSEPH W. BARR." If Senator PROxMIRE asks me to comment on H.R. 14026, I would state that the impact of H.R. 14026 and a flat ceiling of 4%2 per- cent on all C D: s is quite different. Under the provisions of H.R. 14026 only about $18 billion out of an approximate $32 billion total outstanding C.D: s is covered. Thus, the Impact of H.R. 14026 would be much less drastic than a flat ceiling of 41/2 percent on all C.D.'s. However, I have testi- fled before your Committee that a law limit- ing the rate on C.D.'s under $100,000 to 41/2 percent might well have unpredictable conse- quences and that funds could move from C.D.'s into money market instruments bear- ing higher rates. I have no comments on the other points raised in your letter of August 9 and I be- lieve that the complete record as it stands, including the statements of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Federal Reserve Board, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation give a fair portrayal of the ob- jectives of the legislation supported by the Coordinating Committee on Bank Supervi- sion. Permit me to say that I regret this error in the record and appreciate the opportunity to correct it at once. Sincerely, HEALTH EDUCATION (Mr. CAREY (at the request of Mr, GILLIGAN) was granted permission to ex- tend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous mat- ter.) Mr. CAREY. Mr. Speaker, since its enactment in 1958, the National Defense Education Act has had far-reaching ef- fects in nearly every area of education. From the basic act, which concen- trated on the sciences, mathematics, for- eign languages, and guidance, we have progressed by including such areas as English, reading, history, geography, economics, industrial arts, programs for the disadvantaged, school library per- sonnel, and educational media specialists, Since 1936 we have provided assistance, including teacher training, In the field of vocational education and with the establishment of the National Founda- tion on the Arts and Humanities we ac- knowledged the importance of these areas as well. The one area in the curriculum which to date has received little or no attention from the Congress is that of health edu- cation and the training of teachers in that field. A great deal of confusion ex- ists as to what constitutes adequate health instruction. All too often it is combined with other subjects and taught by coaches whose primary interest is pro- ducing winning teams, or by English and home economics instructors. Just as the Congress has rightfully es- tablished and supported programs to strengthen the academic, vocational, and technical efforts of the Nation's schools, it is imperative that we now recognize the need to do the same for health edu- cation so that it may be placed on the same level as all other subjects. The first bill which I am introducing today would correct this oversight by amending the National Defense Educa- tion Act in two instances: First. It would make possible the ac- quisition of laboratory and other equip- ment by elementary and secondary schools under title III of the act so that our children can be trained in modern approaches to the health problems they encounter in daily living. Second. It would bring the teaching of health in line with current develop- ments by amending title XI to furnish support for teacher training programs to be conducted by our institutions of higher learning in order that the quali- fications of those who are or will be en- gaged in the teaching of health subjects can be improved. Fortunately, there are a number of colleges and universities presently offering specialized training in health education at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. Health education has a number of basic contributions to make to individual achievement. Studies indicate a direct correlation between physical fitness and academic achievement, showing that physical weakness is nearly 30 percent higher in children of low mental ability than in those of high intelligence. One out of five children today cannot pass a simple test of physical performance and one-third of all American young men are judged unfit for duty in the Armed Forces for health reasons. Like so many problems, the pattern of physical neglect begins early in life and the place to correct it is with our young. Action on the amendments which I am introducing today will strengthen health instruction and provide training institute for teachers in the field. Enactment of this legislation will indicate to educators throughout the country that the Con- gress does subscribe to the concept of a sound mind in a sound body. Mr. Speaker, closely related to the amendments I have just offered is a second bill which I am also introducing today to amend section 306 of the Public Health Service Act to make school health educators eligible for traineeships under the act. Under the present interpreta- tion of that section these persons are denied such opportunities at Institutions of higher learning that provide special- ized training in public health and school health education. What is urgently needed today is a national commitment to health educa- tion from the first school years through- out the individual's life. The legislation I have introduced to- day will provide the impetus and sup- port to school and college health pro- I ira0S. FOR AN ALL ASIAN SETTLEMENT IN VIETNAM The SPEAKER. Under previous order of the House, the gentleman from New york [Mr. FARBSTEINI, is recognized for 15 minutes. Mr. FARBSTEIN. Mr. Speaker, like many Members of this body, I have be- come increasingly heartsick over the tragic events occurring in Vietnam. More and more of our sons have been sent to fight there. More and more of them are being killed. Yet the war seems no closer to termination than it did a year or 2 years ago. Our President has, I am sure, been doing everything possible to end the war, using the strategy which to him appears wisest. I think it is unquestion- able that the national objective in Viet- nam is peace. The dilemma, however, has been how to achieve it. In the hope of resolving the dilemma, Mr. Speaker, I found gratification in the Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446F 000400100016-0 August 10, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --HOUSE 1962 1st 6 months 1966 Monday, Aug. 8, 1966 (close of High Low High Low business) Eastern________-_- 27% 15% 123% 74 90% National I--------- 12% 1% 104% 65% 76% Northwest '__-_--- TWA 16 14 b% 7 124% 101 58% 57% 1113 76? ....... % 17% % 9% 74% 49% s 6034 1 Adjusted for 2-for-1 split in 1965. 2 Adjusted , for 2-for-i split in 1964 and 1966. B Adjusted for 2-ford split in 1966. Even if a share of these stocks were bought at the 1962-highs and sold at the lows of the first half of 1966, the gains would have been from $32 per share, or 190 percent, to $53 per share, or 442 percent. On Monday, August 8, one month after the strike started, the closing stock prices were from 3 times to 11 times the highs of 1962- 200 percent to 1,000 percent above the 1962- highs. AIRLINE FARES The last general airline rate increase was February 1962-a 3-percent increase. Since then, several small selective decreases have taken place. August 1962-Family plan, first-class dis- count, 50 percent. June 1965-Family plan coach-two-thirds rate for second member and one-third for others, except during peak periods. August 1965-Baggage allowance liberal- ized. United cut first-class tickets of over 700 miles by 2 to 15 percent. No jet surcharge for short-haul jets. March 1966-Twenty-five percent excursion fare discount. Youth fares. The rate of return on investment last year for the 11 major airlines was 11.5 percent compared with the allowable 10.5 percent rate of return (allowable under CAB regula- tions). WESTERN GREYHOUND STRIKE Earlier this year, the workers of Western Greyhound were on strike for six weeks. Western Greyhound covers eleven western states. The average number of passengers per day is 135,000. But there was no talk in Washington of a national emergency. The number of passengers per day on the five struck airlines is 160,000. But almost as soon as the strike started, there was talk of a national emergency. Moreover, the Western Greyhound strike settlement provided $4.61 an hour for bus mechanics (to $5.09 in June 1968)-but the hourly rate for top-rated airline mechanics is $3.52. Yet when a bus runs into mechanical trouble, it can pull over to the side of the road, There is no roadside shoulder for a plane with mechanical trouble, SERIOUS ERRORS IN TREASURY DEPARTMENT TESTIMONY ON CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT LEGIS- LATION (Mr. PATMAN (at the request of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission to ex- tend his remarks at this point in the RECORD, and to include extraneous matter.) Mr. PATMAN. Mr. Speaker, on Au- gust 9, I wrote Secretary of the Treasury Fowler a letter pointing out serious mis- statements of fact in the testimony of Under Secretary Joseph W. Barr given before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee on August 4 concerning legis- lative proposals to end the high Interest- rate war between financial institutions. Today I received a response to the let- ter I wrote to Secretary Fowler from Under Secretary Barr. In order that Members of both Houses of Congress might be fully informed of the significant questions raised in this correspondence, I insert my letter to Secretary Fowler and Under Secretary Barr's response at this point in the RECORD: HOUSE of REPRESENTATIVES, COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY, Washington, D.C., August 9, 1966. Ron. lfieuaY H. FOWLER, Secretary of the Treasury, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. SECRETARY: After reviewing the testimony of Under Secretary Barr given last week before the Senate Committee on Bank- ing and Currency on S. 3687 and other bills related to the interest rate situation, I would like to make several comments in regard thereto. In response to a comment by Senator PaoxaniE, Under Secretary Barr stated that the House Banking and Currency Committee had approved a proposal with a flat 41/2 per- cent limitation on all time and savings ac- counts. As you well know, this is a de- plorable misstatement of fact, and I must register ray objection to this misrepresenta- tion in the strongest possible terms. H.R. 14026 as reported by this Committee con- tains a temporary, one-year ceiling of 41/2 percent on time deposits only and affects only those under $100,000 in size. Mr. Barr's testimony failed to include mention of these most explicit conditions contained in R.R. 14026 with respect to the 41/2 percent ceiling. Furthermore, he failed to mention that the 41/2 percent ceiling does not apply to re- newals of presently outstanding CD's carry- ing a higher rate nor that the bill provides that the 41/s percent ceiling can be raised by the appropriate agencies upon approval of the President. Furthermore, the essence of Mr. Barr's tes- timony is that, if the 41/2 percent rate ceiling is passed, it may very well cause a financial panic and recession. Unfortunately, Under Secretary Barr misled the Senate Banking and Currency Committee-unintentionally, I am sure--as to the action of the House Banking and Currency Committee, and I am hereby requesting that you take immediate action to correct the record. Mr. Barr's testimony also reveals a definite uncertainty on his part as to the impact of the Federal Reserve's action of last Decem- ber 6 setting off the current rate war. At one point, he states: "It seems clear first of all that excessive competition for savings is having a number of unfortunate effects that deserve attention." Later on in his testi- mony, Mr. Barr stated: "The purpose of this legislation is two-fold, sir. One, it is to try to curb any potential rate war that might develop in this country . While prob.. ably just a matter of semantics, the seeming contradiction in these two statements by Mr. Bair indicate a hesitancy on the part of the Treasury Department to even admit that we do have at the present time excessive interest rate competition of the worst kind and that the results are present for all to see. Perhaps if the Treasury Department had a more concrete grasp of the facts of the present situation, you would not have found it necessary to.witch your position several times on remedial legislation. In this connection, I do not see how the Treasury Can have any assurance that the present rate war will be ended by increasing the discretionary authority of the Federal Re- serve Board over interest rates. For instance, Senator DOUGLAS asked Mr. Barr this ques- tion: "Do you know what rate the Federal Reserve Board has in mind." Mr. Barr re- sponded, "No, sir; we don't." Apparently, you assume but you do not know that the Federal Reserve Board would choose a figure in the area of 5 percent for time deposits 18031 under $100,000. Let me call your attention to Chairman Martin's testimony before the House Committee last June 16 when he said, "The 5 percent ceiling, as of last month, would have had only a moderate overall effect in curbing banks' ability to compete for savings in small denominations. Only about 190 banks were offering rates in May exceeding 5 percent on consumer-type time deposits." That the situation has not ma- terially changed in this regard is evidenced by Vice Chairman Robertson's statement be- fore the Senate Committee the same day that Mr. Barr testified-August 4. He said, "In contrast to the 51/2 percent rate on money market CD's, available evidence in- dicates that relatively few banks are paying more than 5 percent on other time deposits." So, even if the Federal Reserve would do what you have no assurance they will do, the impact would be minimal and would cer- tainly fail to relieve the terrible shortage of mortgage funds which worsens day by day. Furthermore, If the Federal Reserve Board were really sincere in taking meaningful action to end the rate war and helping the housing situation, they would have used. their present authority to increase the mini- mum maturity on time deposits from the present 30 days up to at least 90 days or six months. Governor Robertson's testimony was exceedingly clear on this point, giving it his strongest personal recommendations. Yet, the Federal Reserve Board has refused to take this action which even the American Bankers Association has endorsed. I fail to see the source of your great con- fidence that the Federal Reserve Board can be depended upon to take voluntary action to correct the mistake they made last Decem- ber when they even refuse to admit that they made a mistake in the first place. I also would ask you whether in your of- ficial position as Secretary of the Treasury you support Mr. Barr's statement that "the fact that the Federal Reserve Board has per- mitted 51/2 percent on these large, very rate sensitive CD's has contributed favorably to our balance of payments position this year." This seems to be an endorsement by the Treasury Department of the now discredited "Operation Twist". For example, Governor Robertson of the Federal Reserve Board, who is taking a leading role in the administra- tion's balance of payments efforts, had this to say about the fallacy of artifically high short-term interest rates as a balance of pay- ments weapon: "Congressman TODD. I would appreciate some statement from the Board as to what errors may be contained in this paper be- cause it indicates that operation Twist in- creases the balance of payments by only $154 million and obviously this is not enough to be worthwhile. It means that Operation Twist was ill conceived, "Mr. ROBERTSON. It was, and that ought to be an answer to your paper." If there is a disagreement, as it appears to be, perhaps the Banking and Currency Committee should hold hearings on this question to consider the differing views. On the other hand, if the Treasury Department is in agreement with Governor Robertson's statement, then I would hope that you would see fit to correct the misleading inference from Mr. Barr's testimony last week that Operation Twist is still official government policy. In any case, your Under Secretary must certainly be aware that Congress has by law specifically exempt foreign official time deposits from the "Regulation Q" ceil- ings. (76 Stat. 953) Mr. Barr somehow failed to mention this crucial point. I might add that one of the last official positions taken by former Secretary of the Treasury C. Doug- las Dillon-a Republican, as you recall-was to criticize strongly the use of high, short- term interest rates as a balance of payments weapon. Mr. Dillon said that such a policy would merely be self-defeating., I would Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 August 10, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE report last week that the Government of Thailand is making an effort to combine with the other nonbelligerent nations of Asia to end the Vietnamese war. The Thai Government points out that Viet- nam is an Asian problem that most fit- tingly lends itself to solution by Asians. With this contention, I am in total agree- ment. The-Asian nations, meeting to- gether, can be expected to make power- ful and persuasive recommendations in behalf of a settlement. I believe the Governments of the Philippines, Malay- sia, Japan, Indonesia, and several other countries have already shown some in- terest in the wise and foresighted Thai proposal. I have written to the Secretary of State to urge that he offer very possible incen- tive to these Asian states to find a fair solution in Vietnam. I asked him to communicate our sympathy to them. I asked him further to say that we would welcome their mediation ideas. I called upon him to make clear that we do not consider our national interest in conflict with theirs. I note with satisfaction, Mr. Speaker, that since I sent my letter to the Sec- retary, Mr. MANSFIELD, the distinguished majority lea-der of the Senate, has ex- pressed similar sentiments. Mr. Speaker, I asked the Secretary of State to make clear to the nations of Asia that we would be pleased to with- draw our troops from Vietnam in favor of having Asian forces patrol a peace settlement. I can foresee, for instance, the strengthening of the forces in the buffer zone between North and South Vietnam. I would also approve of ex- tending that buffer zone into the area between Vietnam and its neighbors, Laos and Cambodia. Asian troops in this land would, I believe, be far more effective in keeping the peace than troops from the Western countries. One might also predict, Mr. Speaker, that Asians would be far more sensitive, given their community of experience, to the needs and desires of the Vietnamese people than westerners can be. We who have watched the Vietnamese war are conscious of the many errors our Gov- ernment, often in total good will, has made. through lack of understanding. The Injection of Asians into the effort to make peace may be a key to a solution that would appear fair to both sides. The That Government suggests that, for symbolic reasons, the next peace confer- ence ought not to be in Geneva, but in Bangkok or Jakarta. I agree with that position, Mr. Speaker. Finally, I might note in the That pro- posals the opportunity to welcome back Indonesia into the family of nations. By its own choice, Indonesia has been a her- mit state, in the diplomatic sense, for some time. But recent events in Indo- nesia have charged the situation com- pletely. It is time for the world to wel- come Indonesia back to the constructive work that it can do as an energetic and populous nation: This could be a satis- fying corrollary to the Thai plan. Mr. Speaker, the countries of Asia of which I speak want neither Communist nor American dominance in their affairs. They know that their welfare depends, above all, on stability in the Pacific area. In my view, ours does too. I believe we would be wise to put our confidence in the Asian nations who show an interest in acting as intermediaries for a peace settlement. I am grieved than an end to the war now seems so distant. I re- gard the Thai initiative as a most hopeful sign, which our Government should do its utmost to support. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The text of my letter of August 5 to Hon. DEAN RUSK, The Secretary of State, The Department of State, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. SECRETARY. I find the information very encouraging that the government of Thailand has undertaken initiative to in- volve other nations of Asia In a Vietnam settlement. I believe it is quite appropriate for Asian countries to look upon the Vietnam dispute as essentially an Asian matter. Their interest in resolving the matter is extremely gratifying. I would like to urge you to give every incentive to these Asian states, led by Thai- land, to find a fair solution to the war in Vietnam. I suggest that our sympathy for their objectives be communicated to them. I would go farther and say that we would welcome their mediation proposals. I be- lieve it should be made clear that we do not consider our national interest in conflict with theirs. I foresee, as another advantage to the That proposals, an opportunity to welcome back Indonesia into the family of responsible na- tions. Indonesia's participation in peace- making activities would lend substantial weight to any program put forth. I think we should make it particularly clear that we would favor a substitution of Asian forces for our own to patrol any peace settle- ment, that Is reached. I? believe it would be very salutary if some means could be found to extend the buffer zone not only between south and North Vietnam but also between Vietnam and its neighbors. I would be anxious to have Asians in the buffer zone between North and South Vietnam and along the Laotian and Cambodian borders. Such troops would be more influential than ours, I believe, in safeguarding the stability of a settlement. Most important, I believe we must put our confidence in the Asian nations who show an interest in acting as intermediaries for a peace settlement. They know that their own welfare depends, in large measure, on stability in the Pacific area. They want neither American nor Communist domination. I be- lieve they would be sensitive to the desires of the Vietnamese people. I regard the Thai initiative as a most hopeful sign, which our Government should do its utmost to support. Sincerely yours, , LEONARD FARDSTEIN, Member of Congress. HEALTH EDUCATION The SPEAKER. Under previous order of the House, the gentleman from Rhode Island [Mr. FOGARTY] is recognized for 30 minutes. Mr. FOGARTY. Mr. Speaker, in the event Members have not seen it, I rec- ommend that you read the article pub- lished in the May issue of Today's Health entitled "What Our Kids Don't Know About Health." I believe you will be as amazed as I was to learn how many mis- conceptions the average schoolchild has in relation to his own health and well being. This situation exists despite the 18033 fact that during the past three sessions, Congress has enacted 20 landmark meas- ures in health and 19 in education. Ap- propriations for health programs have doubled and the budget for the Office of Education has been increased more than fivefold. Major achievements in the health field include the medicare program; increased health services to domestic migrant agri- cultural workers;' expanded maternal and child health and crippled children's programs; 32 new clinics for retarded children; construction assistance for 1,300 hospital and health facilities to add more than 56,000 new hospital beds; fi- nancial support for more than 16,000 medical research projects and advanced training for 25,000 scientists, construc- tion starts for 62 institutions to enroll more than 2,400 additional students each year for training in the health profes- sions. Equally impressive are the accomplish- ments in education, including funds to improve educational opportunities for nearly 7V2 million underprivileged chil- dren in 20,000 school districts; summer Headstart programs for 560,000 pre- school children in 13,350 community edu- cation projects and year-round programs for 120,000 children; textbooks and other learning materials for more than 40 mil- lion children in every State; college work-study programs for more than 110,000 needy college students; and con- ?struction aid for 1,300 institutions of higher learning-including new class- rooms, laboratories, and libraries. All these are testimony to the fact that this Nation is becoming increasingly conscious of the advantages of good health and education. The thing that concerns me, however, and it should con- cern you, is the fact that the results of the money spent in health research are not being taught with the money allo- cated to education in practical, everyday language-capable of daily application. Children need to know about personal health practices such as care of eyes, ears, and teeth. They need an understanding of community health agencies and the services they provide related to health care, air and water pollution, sanitation fluoridation of water, and similar serv- ices. With television commercials de- picting cigarette smoking, the drinking of some particular brand of beer, the purchase of brand X cosmetic as as- surance that it will make one more at- tractive, there is a great need for stu- dents to know the basic facts about smoking, drinking, grooming nostrums- all those items we are repeatedly urged to buy. . There has been great misunderstand- ing about just what constitutes health education. It has been combined with physical education instruction on some occasions and taught by coaches whose primary interest is producing winning ball teams or by teachers trained to teach English or home economics or whatever. I strongly favor winning ball teams and good English, but let us not lose sight of both objectives. Qualified health educators should be placed in schools to teach health education as an academic subject requiring the same in- structional materials, and facilities as Approved For Release 2005/06/29 CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67B00446'R0004001 X10016-0 18034 those provided for other academic sub- jects. Many of us saw and probably took the national health test which was telecast by the Columbia Broadcasting System. You must have shared my shock at the inferior level of understanding which was revealed. More than one-half the par- Ucipating audience failed this elemen- tary test of health knowledge. This con- firms what the experts tell us-parents are no more equipped to teach children necessary health concepts than to teach them math or science. And our present methods of school instruction is no better. Very pertinent to this problem was the school health education study, guided by an outstanding committee of physicians, educators, public health personnel, and school administrators, who conducted a nationwide study which included over 18,000 students In grades 6, 9, and 12 who were tested to determine what they know and do about their health. This study, housed in the National Education Asso- ciation, determined where health educa- tion is taught, how it is organized and scheduled, who teaches it, how it is taught, who receives the instruction, what areas of health are emphasized, and what are the major problems confront- ing administrators. Glaring weaknesses and deficiencies were revealed In the areas of alcohol education, community health programs, consumer health edu- cation, environmental hazards, health careers, international health activities, nutrition and weight control, family life, smoking, venereal disease education, and others. The cause for these deficiencies was found to stem from grossly inade- quate school instruction, including, first, lack of support for and understanding of the value of health education; second, Inadequate time for instruction and fail- ure to use time provided effectively; third, a lack of qualified personnel as- signed to health instruction; fourth, a lack of progression in what is taught; fifth, repetition on some health topics and complete neglect of others; sixth, a need for local and State supervisory and consultant services; and seventh, a lack of teaching materials and facilities that are provided in other subject areas. This study revealed that financial sup- port Is urgently needed for: first, instruc- tional equipment, library and other ma- terials; second, advanced study insti- tutes for teachers and supervisors in service; and third, traineeships to meet the critical demand for qualified person- nel in colleges and universities that pre- pare teachers. All three of these immediate needs can be provided for by modification of exist- ing legislation. The first two would be covered by the National Defense Educa- tion Act if titles III and XI were extended to include health education. My first bill would make it possible for elementary and secondary schools, under title III of the National Defense Education Act, to acquire laboratory and other equipment necessary to train our chooichildren in a modern fashion about the health problems which they encounter daily. It would help bring the teaching of health from the horse CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE August 10, 1966 and buggy days to the jet age in which we live. The amendment to 'title XI would furnish support for teacher train- ing institutes conducted in our institu- tions of higher education to improve the qualifications of persons who are or will engage in teaching health education or in the supervising or training of teachers of health education. There are a num- ber of colleges and universities through- out the country which offer specialized training in health education both on the undergraduate and graduate levels. There are, In fact, 48 which offer a bachelor's program, 50 which offer. a master's program, and 26 which offer a program at the doctoral level. My second bill would amend section 306 of the Public Health Service Act to make it perfectly clear that the traineeships for professional public health personnel authorized under this section would be available to individuals who wish to increase their competence in the teaching of health education. I am informed that the persent interpre- tation of section 306 has been such as to deny these persons receiving trainee- ships at institutions of learning which provide specialized training In public health and school health education. Amendments to the two acts would provide tremendous impetus and support to school and college health programs and could have a significant impact on health instruction. In essence, what is needed, and what I urge, is a national commitment to health education from the first school years throughout the span of a person's life. To help solve this problem, I am introducing today two bills to strengthen the health education programs of the schools of this Nation which, when en- acted, will dramatically enhance the op- portunity for our children to know the facts about their own health and better prepare them to make future decisions in their own best interests. I yield to the gentleman from Wiscon- sin [Mr. LATRDI. Mr. LAIRD. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased. to sponsor, along with the Con- gressman from Rhode Island [Mr. FOGARTY], two bills which will materially improve the teaching of health in the elementary and secondary schools of this country. During the course of the past number of years, our Appropriations Subcommittee has heard countless hours of testimony relative to both the health programs and the 'education programs of this Nation. I have always been con- cerned somewhat by the fact that there has not seemed to be any effective tying together of these two programs. We have appropriated large sums of money for medical research and health pro- grams. We have appropriated large sums of money to support the educa- tional programs of the elementary and secondary and schools of higher learn- ing in this Nation. I was just as appalled, as was the gen- tleman from Rhode Island, and as I am sure were the other Members of this House, by the tragically poor score that was the result of the CBS national health test. As I have thought seriously about this problem, I am more and more forced to the conclusion that perhaps, to some degree at least, we have gotten the cart before the horse. It is awfully difficult to expect people to know some- thing that they have never learned. Now, I want to make it perfectly clear to Members of the House precisely what we are talking about. We are talking about instructions in health. We are not talking about physical fitness. We are not talking about physical education. We are talking about the better instruct- ing of children in our elementary and secondary school systems about the true facts as they relate to their own personal health and to their community's health. There are many number of examples of what I am speaking about, but let me cite just one. Studies show that our young people are beginning the habit of cigarette smoking at an increasingly early age. The reason for this trend Is not known, although there is much spec- ulation about it. But I believe that it would be in the best interests of every- one if children were taught and could understand early in life what it means to them to acquire what for many is a life- long habit. The bills which we are introducing to- day would do three things, and I would like to explain exactly what is intended. First of all, title III of the National De- fense Educational Assistance Act would be amended so that equipment needed for the modern-day teaching of health education would be available in the ele- mentary and secondary schools. Now the kinds of equipment to which I refer would include audiovisual materials such as films, filmstrips, slides, record- ings, posters, charts, vision and hearing testing equipment, displays, and video- tapes for closed-circuit television. It would also include simple laboratory for practical experiments where certain essential foods are denied in the diet. These would provide a visual experience for schoolchildren and bring to them very graphically the precise need for a balanced diet and well-rounded nutri- tional habits. Second, the bill would amend title XI of the National Defense Educational Assistance Act so that institutions of higher learning could conduct short.- term courses and institutes whereby teachers in our school systems could be trained in the modern techniques of teaching health education and be brought up to date on the latest scien- tific knowledge as It relates to health. and the health of schoolchildren. This would also afford an opportunity for the programing of health teaching in schools so that some items are not repeated and others omitted completely. Please bear in mind that the curriculums of these schools now include teaching in health practices or health habits and health education, but this is done in a most hap- hazard fashion. A recent study of school health education, referred to by the gen- tleman from Rhode Island, points out the fact that inadequate time for instruc- tion, the lack of qualified teaching per- sonnel, and a lack of progression in what Is taught with a repetition of some topics and the neglect of others is contributing to the presently extremely deficient sit- Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 18098 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100 16-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE - August 10, 1966 SEC. 3. Payments made pursuant to part D of title XVIII of the Social Security Act (as added by the first section of this Act) shall, for purposes of section 103(c) of the Social Security Amendments of 1965, be regarded as payments made under part A of such title XVIII. SEC. 4. The amendments made by the pre- ceding provisions of this Act are repealed effective July 1, 1968. 'ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS CUBAN REFUGEES Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts. Mr. President, earlier today I introduced a bill to amend the Immigration and Na- tionality Act, and permit the adjustment of status of Cuban refugees in the United States. My bill eliminates the technical re- quirement which requires aliens such as Cuban refugees to leave this country and reenter in order to become eligible for permanent residence and eventual citi- zenship. I do not question this require- ment for aliens who come to our coun- try through normal procedure and In casual circumstances, and then elect to have their status adjusted to that of permanent resident. I believe, however, the requirement has little justification in the case of refugees from Cuba. Their entry Into this country is anything but normal and casual-they are under duress and fleeing oppression. I should point out the bill I am in- troducing today would make retroactive the refugee's application for adjustment of status, to the time of his last entry into the United States. This is just and equitable. The talents of many Cuban refugees are going to waste because State profes- sional licensing laws keep those without permanent residence status from prac- ticing their skills and professions. This situation, and the expensive and labori- ous procedure to obtain this status under present law, is keeping refugees in vari- ous difficult circumstances, which do not befit our humanitarian traditions. I am thinking of examples all over our country, where, because of their immi- gration status, qualified Cubans have been unable to teach Spanish in the local schools. I am thinking of similar problems In- volving Cuban doctors, dentists, nurses, lawyers, skilled workers, and others. It is obvious that such refugees could fill an urgent need in our society if given the opportunity for adjustment of status. Moreover, the parole status of many Cuban refugees has inhibited the rather substantial Federal program of assist- ance administered by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The purpose of this program is to give effec- tive asylum by providing the refugees with opportunities for self-support. Ap- proximately $42 million in Federal funds were spent in the last fiscal year in the Cuban refugee program. The figure for the current fiscal year will approach $51 million, and officials in the executive branch have indicated a rise in that amount can be anticipated for fiscal year 1968. These sizable amounts Indicate clearly the importance that these funds be di- rected toward making the refugees self- sufficient, so that we can anticipate a title, and referred to the Committee on decline in expenditures in future years. the Judiciary. The bill I offer today will be extremely helpful in this matter. JOINT RESOLUTION TO AUTHORIZE I would also hope, Mr. President, that A COMPUTERIZED INFORMATION of Cn action refugees on adjusting would ng the e status encourage the SYSTEM TO PROVIDE STATE AND of Cuban u resettlement of some refugees to other LOCAL GOVERNMENTS WITH IN- countries In this hemisphere, where FORMATION ON FEDERAL PRO- refugee talent would contribute to eco- GRAMS nomic, political, and social development. Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts. Mr. Today, however, Unit,ted refugees States. hesitant t President, I introduce, for appropriate leave the e . Under Under their heir reference, a joint resolution authorizing , for the Advisory Commission on Intergov- they eent are immigration ot m assured of status reentry y if, for parolees, reasons, they choose Relations to study and investi- b will help to o remedy this s return. My gate the feasibility and design of an in- billl will help Mr. for some time I have system which would enable . President, and localities to participate more been problem I very much have for outlined concerned with the he effectively in federally assisted programs of the Judiciary tod today, and Subcommittee and to provide Congress and the Presi- ohairm airman dent with a better measure of State and on Refugees and Escapees, peess, , have have con- - local needs and performance under these ington and elsewhere which dramatically document the need for the legislation which I have proposed today. Recently, on July 14, Secretary of State Dean Rusk in response to questions before the sub- committee on refugees said he placed a "high priority" on legislation to adjust the status of Cuban refugees, and he strongly urged the Congress to take ac- tion in this important matter. Legisla- tion is also supported by the Depart- ments of Justice, and Health, Educa- tion, and Welfare. The adjustment of status for Cuban refugees has been pending in the Senate since February 1962, when our very able and distinguished colleague and former chairman of the Subcommittee on Refugees, Senator HART, first introduced a bill for this purpose. And I want to pay tribute to the Senator from Michigan for his leadership In this area. The Senate, In fact, provided for the adjustment of status for Cuban refugees in the general Immigration bill passed during the last session. Unfortunately, this provision was deleted at the last minute in Con- gress. I am delighted to note that hear- ings on this subject are being held in the other body. As Senators know, the record in the Senate is rather extensive on this matter. In order to consider the bill which I in- troduced today, and another related bill, of which I am a cosponsor, the distin- guished chairman of the Judiciary Com- mittee, and chairman of the Subcommit- tee on Immigration, has scheduled a public hearing to be held on Tuesday morning August 16. The witnesses will include officials from the Department of State, the Department of Justice, the De- partment of Health, Education, and Wel- fare, and a representative from the American Council of Voluntary Agen- cies. Legislative action adjusting the status of Cuban refugees in the United States is long overdue, and I hope the Senate will quickly reaffirm its consensus of 1965 on this matter. . The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be received and appropriately referred. The bill (S. 3712) to amend section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, introduced by Mr. KENNEDY of Massa- programs. The relationship between the Federal Government and State and local gov- ernments is an increasing paradox: As more and more Federal programs become available, State and local governments become less and less able to sort them out and decide which ones could help them most. The Federal programs are benefi- cial; the State and local governments want to benefit from them. But the very proliferation of Federal programs is be- wildering to the local communities for which they are designed. And this be- wilderment is working against the crea- tive federalism which President Johnson spoke of 2 years ago in a historic speech at Ann Arbor, Mich.: A federalism based on local initiative, Federal support, and close cooperation between Washington and city hall. No one in this Chamber knows more about the problems of making creative federalism work than the distinguished junior Senator from Maine. As chair- man of the Senate Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Relations, Senator MusxrE has dedicated his energies to finding ways by which we can strengthen the cooperative basis of our Federal sys- tem. The 3-year study recently completed by his subcommittee makes clear the benefits of creative federalism, and it also makes clear the problems which are raised by confusion and a lack of co- ordination between levels of government. Senator Musx1E has introduced a host of extremely constructive legislative pro- posals to overcome these problems. The legislation I Introduce today sup- plements his efforts and the efforts of others to build efficiency into Govern- ment. It is directed at one very im- portant part of the overall problem- the need to build an effective communi- cations system between local, State and Federal levels of government. We are all aware of the dramatic rise in the demands on State and local gov- ernments. This rise reflects increased public needs and responsibilities which have been shouldered by local officials. And there is every indication that these needs will grow because of the innumer- able problems associated with urbaniza- tion, economic expansion, and population growth. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100616-0 August 10, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -? SENATE participating under the program provided under such part A; to the Committee on Finance. (See the remarks of Mr. TALMADGE when he introduced the above bill, which appear under a separate heading.) By Mr. DOMINICK: S. 3710. A bill for the relief of Chief Petty Officer James G. Dole, U.S. Navy; to the Com- mittee on the Judiciary. By Mr. SPARKMAN: S. 3711. A bill to amend and extend laws relating to housing and urban development, and for other purposes; placed on the calen- dar. (See reference to the above bill when re- ported by Mr. SPARKMAN, which appears under the heading "Reports of Committees".) By Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts: S. 3712. A bill to amend section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality Act; to the Committee on the Judiciary. (See the remarks of Mr. KENNEDY of Massa- chusetts when he introduced the above bill, which appear under a separate heading.) By Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts: S.J. Res. 187. Joint resolution to authorize a study and investigation of an information service system for States and localities de- signed to enable such States and localities to more effectively participate in federally assisted programs and to provide Congress and the President with a better measure of State and local needs and performance under these programs; to the Committee on Gov- ernment Operations. (See the remarks of Mr. KENNEDY of Mas- sachusetts when he introduced the above joint resolution, which appear under a sep- arate heading.) AMENDMENT OF TITLE XVIII OF SOCIAL SECURITY ACT, RELATING TO CERTAIN HOSPITAL INPA- TIENT AND OUTPATIENT SERVICES Mr. TALMADGE. Mr. President, the basic purpose of medicare is to pay the hospital bills of older people. But, as matters now stand, many older Ameri- cans, through no fault of their own, will not have those hospital bills paid. They will not have those bills paid because of the fact that their local hospital does not participate in the medicare plan. That hospital may very well be the only medi- cal institution in an area of many miles. 'T'hese nonparticipating hospitals are staying out of medicare for a variety of reasons. They may not be able to meet the standards of quality of care required, or they may be unwilling or unable to comply with the title VI requirements of the Civil Rights Act. The key point which has been com- pletely overlooked in all of this hoopla is that the older person-of whatever race-is the one who suffers most in this situation. The hospital has a choice as to whether it wants to participate. The older individual, however, has no choice in the matter. He does not pick his hos- pital. He goes to the hospital with which his doctor is affiliated. The doc- tor chooses the time and place of treat- ment-not the sick old person. When his doctor happens to be on the medical staff of a hospital which is not participating in medicare, the older per- son has just two equally unfair choices. In order to get his care paid for, he can abandon the doctor who may have cared for him for 20, 30, or even 40 years and try to find a new physician on the staff 18097 of a participating hospital. In this case, to introduce clever and artistic legislative a longstanding relationship of trust and loopholes into medicare. understanding must go down the drain so What I want to see to, Mr. President, is that dollars can change hands in accord- that every older American who needs ante with regulations. The alternative and receives hospital care will have that to this sacrifice for the sick old man is care paid for in accordance with the U.S. for him to just dig down deep and pay Government's commitment. Let us for care out of his own pocket. honor and fulfill our promise. And that Those are tragic and terrible choices promise was made to people-not hos- to force upon sick, helpless, older Ameri- pitals. cans. Medicare was supposed to relieve Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- the "financial nightmare" of illness- sent that the text of this will be printed and not to substitute one bad dream for at the conclusion of my remarks. another. The PRESIDING OFFICER. (Mr. Now, I can understand that the ad- RUSSELL of South Carolina in the chair). ministration wants these hospitals to The bill will be received and appropri meet all of its tests and standards. But ately referred; and, without objection, the primary obligation of medicare is to the bill will be printed in the RECORD. the older people of this country-all of The bill (S. 3709) to amend title XVIII the older people of this country. The of the Social Security Act and related Congress intended that every single older provisions of other acts to permit ind.i- person who needed hospital care would viduals insured for benefits under part tth 4- 6' a care paid for-at least In large part. Of course, I do not think we in- tended to pay for care in a substandard hospital-substandard in the sense that it did not meet proper medical standards. But, any refusal to pay for necessary care-other than that in medically sub- standard institutions-reneges on our promise to 19 million aged Americans. Mr. President, the bill which I now introduce, for appropriate reference, is specifically designed to help fulfill that congressional promise to our fine older people. My bill would pay directly to the older medicare beneficiary 75 percent of the reasonable charges for his treatment in a hospital which is not participating in the medicare program. In order to as- sure that the care was provided in a hos- pital meeting proper medical standards, payments would be made only if the treatment were in a hospital accredited by the Joint Commission on Accredita- tion of Hospitals or the American Osteo- pathic Association. This benefit, effective as of July 1, 1966, would be available until July 1, 1968, so as to provide a reasonable transitional period during which many hospitals might make the adjustments and deci- sions necessary to permit them to par- ticipate in the medicare program. The Congress could reevaluate the situation in 1968, when the benefit would expire. The reason for selecting 75 percent as the basis for reimbursement was to offer significant assistance to the aged-but in an amount not great enough to offer hospitals a financial incentive to con- tinue to stay out of the medicare pro- gram. Benefits available under this transi- tional provision would essentially be sub- ject to the standard medicare limitations inpatient hospital services and outpatient hospital diagnostic services furnished to them by certain hospitals not participat- ing under the program provided under such part A, introduced by Mr. TALMADGE, was received, read twice by its title, referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: S. 3709 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That tittle XVIII of the Social Security Act is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new part: "PART C-TEMPORARY PROVISIONS FOR SPECIAL INSURANCE BENEFITS FOR CERTAIN SERVICES PROVIDED BY CERTAIN HOSPITALS NOT PARTICIPATING UNDER PART A "ENTITLEMENT; BENEFITS "SEC. 1891. Any individual who, prior to July 1, 1968, receives inpatient hospital serv- ices, or outpatient hospital diagonstic serv- ices with respect to which- "(1) he is not entitled to hospital insur- ance benefits provided under part A, and "(2) he would have been entitled to hos- pital insurance benefits provided under part A. if the hospital furnishing such serv- ices (whether directly or under arrange- ments, as defined in section 1861(w), with it) had, at the time such services were fur- nished, had an agreement in effect under this title, shall be entitled to receive a money pay- ment, with respect to such services, equal to 75 per centum of the amount of the actual and reasonable charge imposed by, such hospital for such services, if the hos- pital furnishing such services (whether di- rectly or under such arrangements with it) is accredited as a hospital by the Joint Com. mission on Accreditation of Hospitals or the American Osteopathic Association. on days of care authorized, kinds of sere- "PAYMENTS ices for which payment might be made, ",SEC. 1892. Payments to which individuals etc. The overall limitations would apply are entitled under section 1891 shall be paid upon application therefor to the Secretary regardless of whether care was.'provided (submitted in such form and manner, and in participating or nonparticipating containing such information as the Secretary hospitals. shall by regulations prescribe), and shall Mr. President, the proposal I offer is be paid by the Secretary from the Federal, not intended to serve as a means of en- Hospital Insurance Trust Fund prior to audit S ng is2esettlement by the General Account- abling hospitals to evade the Civil Rights in Act or any other legislation which may Orri." or may not apply to Medicare. I Want SEC. Section 1861(e) the i of ehpart Social thereof to assure Members of the Senate that my curity h Act is s paragraph a(1, b rt intention in developing this bill was not -sectionr1891 after "s ction)1814(d)sortfng Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 August 10, 19 pproved For CONGRESSIONAL EC DD67 SENATRE 00400100016-0 lated in the American way of life within one generation. However, I can briefly note that the Order of AHEPA has provided the type of leadership that has given great in- centive to the Greek immigrant and his family that has brought forth outstand- ing businessmen, labor leaders, profes- sional men, educators, churchmen, art- ists, writers, and leading figures in public life. George Christopher, former mayor of San Francisco, came to America as a Greek immigrant boy and Congressman JOHN BRADEMAS is the son of a Greek immigrant. Christopher is a Republican and BRADEMAS is a Democrat. I say this is an excellent example of the Greek im- migrant becoming fully assimilated in the American way of life. The Order of AHEPA with other na- tional Greek-American organizations in the early twenties helped to build church communities throughout the United States. AHEPA provided millions of dollars in scholarships to aid young men and women to gain a college education; urged its members and fellow Greek- Americans to become active in public affairs and public office; exercised its constitutional right of petition in urging Congress to amend the various immigra- tion acts and special acts to aid immi- grants from all foreign nations to come to America, to grant to Eastern-Greek- Orthodox faith a major religious faith status in the United States; and most important, urged the Americans of Hel- lenic linage to become outstanding American citizens while at the same time preserving the great Hellenic heritage that gave so much to the world and America. Mr. President, I know that the dele- gates to the AHEPA convention will give serious consideration to both domestic and international problems that will come within the expertise of the con- vention's special committees and have these views made known to their repre- sentatives in Congress. Mr. President, for the information of the readers of the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD I ask unanimous consent to insert in the RECORD some of the basic facts concern- ing the Order of AHEPA. There being no objection, the ma- terial was ordered to be printed in tht RECORD, as follows: Founded July 26, 1922 in Atlanta, Georgia. Local chapters: Order of AHEPA, 459 Chapters. Daughters of Penelope, 345 Chapters. Sons of Pericles, 165 Chapters. Maids of Athena, 156 Chapters. The AHEPA family (Order of Ahepa and its three Auxili- aries) have a total of 1,125 Local Chapters. Objects, purposes of the AHEPA: The Objects and Purposes of the Order of Ahepa are: (a) To promote and encourage loyalty of its members to the country of which they are citizens (b) To instruct its members in the tenets and fundamental principles of government (c) To instill a due appreciation of the privileges of Citizenship (d) To en- courage interest and active participation in the political, civic, social and commercial - fields of human endeavor (e) To pledge its -members to oppose political corruption and tyranny (f) To promote a better and more comprehensive understanding of the attri- butes and Ideals of Hellenism and Hellenic Culture (g) To promote good fellowship, &nd endow its members with a spirit of altruism, common understanding, mutual benevolence and helpfulness to their fellow man (h) To endow its members with the perfection of the moral sense (1) To promote Education and maintain new channels for facilitating the dissemination of culture and learning. AHEPA's contributions to worthy and charitable causes: The Order of Ahepa has contributed finan- cially to many worthy causes during its 44 years of existence. These contributions do not take into account the many local activi- ties of our Chapters within the realm of their local communities. Local Chapters of the Ahepa Family have always given generously and vigorously supported local community projects in the fields of education, charity and civic improvement. The national and international projects and contributions in- clude: 1. Relief of Florida hurricane victims. 2. Relief of Mississippi flood victims. 3. Relief of Corinth, Greece earthquake victims. 4. Relief for the War Orphans of Greece. 5. Relief of Dodecanese Islands (Greece) earthquake victims. 6. Funds for the Hellenic Museum in Greece. 7. Local, national and international schol- arships for needy and worthy students. 8. Relief for the fatherless children of Refugees, through the Near East Relief. 9. Support of the Greek Orthodox Semi- naries (Theological) at Pomfret, Conn., and Brookline, Mass. 10. Erection of the Ahepa Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial at Hyde Park, New York. 11. Erection of the Ypsilanti Memorial at Ypsilanti, Mich. 12. Erection of the Dilboy Memorial. 13. Relief of Turkish earthquake victims. 14. Funds for the Greek Orthodox Patri- archate at Jersalem. 15 Funds for the Greek Orthodox Patri- archate at Constantinople. 16. Ecuadorean Relief. 17. Kansas City flood relief. 18. Greek war Relief Program during and after World War II. 19. Construction of Ahepa Hospitals in Athens and Salonika, Greece following World War II. 20. Construction of 7 Ahepa Health Cen- ters in Greece following World War II. 21. Ahepa Agricultural College in Greece. 22. Ionian Islands (Greece) earthquake relief. 23. Ahepa Preventorium in Volos, Greece. 24. Daughters of Penelope Girls' Shelter .Home in Athens, Greece. 25. Construction of Ahepa Hall for Boys at St. Basil's Academy, Garrison, New York. 26. Construction of A?hepa School at St. Basil's Academy, Garrison, New York. 27. Sale of 500 Million Dollars in U.S. War Bonds during World War II as an official is- suing agency of the U.S. Treasury Depart- ment. 28. Contributions to the Truman Library, Independence, Mo. 29. Contributions to the Dr. George Papa- nicolaou Research Cancer Institute, Miami, Florida. 30. Erection of the Ahepa Truman Statue and Plaza in Athens, Greece. 31. Donation of 40,000 American and Ca- nadian books to schools and 'libraries in Greece. 32. Ahepa Medals for Scholastic Excellence for studies in the Greece Language to stu- dents. - 33. Presentations of 7-volume sets of the Greek Classics to schools and libraries in the U.S. and Canada. 34. CARE Tool Kits for students of voca- tional schools In Greece, 18107 35. Ahepa Refugee Relief Committee, to aid war refugees of World War H. 36. Sports Kits for Greek school children. Citizenship: Ahepa's requirements stipu- late that members must be American or Canadian citizens, or have indicated their intention to become citizens in which case the fraternity assists the new member in attaining citizenship. Ahepa Chapters assist newly-arrived non-citizens in attaining their full American and Canadian citizenship, and also instruct their members with the obliga- tions that go hand-in-hand with citizenship. Civic participation: The local Chapters of the Ahepa and its Auxiliaries are active in their own civic affairs and projects, all of which conforms to the fraternity's program of urging its members to be model citizens through planned civic activity. These Chap- ters are active in aiding and contributing to local fund drives. International relations: In the field of International Relations, the Order of Ahepa has constantly maintained an active interest in affairs aimed at further cementing the good-will and friendship between the peo- ples of Canada, the United States, and Greece, as noted in the heading of this Fact Sheet "Ahepa's Contributions to Worthy Causes." The fraternity takes an active part in America's "People-to-People" program which seeks a closer and more harmonious relationship between the peoples of the United States and other countries. Active roles have been taken by the Ahepa and its officials in several matters of international import nee concerning the United States and GreeceI V Mr. BREWSTER. Mr. President, one of the reasons I am so proud to be a Marylander is the Baltimore Sun, which is one of the leading daily newspapers in the United States. It was a matter of great interest to me, therefore, to read a Sun editorial this morning entitled "Mansfield on Asia." The editorial praised the pro- posal of the distinguished majority lead- er for an all-Asia conference on the Vietnam problem. As the editorial points out, the opin- ions of the Senator from Montana are "as valuable as any in this country." I believe that Senator MANSFIELD'S long expertise in Asian affairs is a valuable asset to this body. I am glad that the Baltimore Sun has paid tribute to this expertise. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that this editorial be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Baltimore (Md.) Sun, Aug. 10, 1966] MANSFIELD ON ASIA Peking's scornful rejection of proposals for an all-Asia peace conference, with Hanoi's rejection immediately following, does not mean that the idea must be abandoned. No one knows what form any discussions leading toward peace in Vietnam, when discussions finally come, are going to take. An Asian conference is surely one possible form, and it may be the likeliest. Among those who be- lieve so, and have believed so for some time, is Senator MANSFIELD, whose opinions on Asian affairs are as valuable as any in this country. For a good while Senator MANSFIELD has been urging a greater Asian initiative in the Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 18108 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ---SENATE August 10, 1966 solution of Asian. problems, including first of all the conflict in Vietnam. It is in line with this that he welcomes the conference proposal put forward by Thailand, the Philip. pines and Malaysia. Last spring he himself suggested that Burma or Japan try to ar- range such a gathering. Who arranges it does not matter, if it can be arranged, nor does the place of meeting matter. The site need not be Geneva: perhaps better some- where else. Mr. MANSFIELD says, "Let it be called in Rangoon or Bangkok, in Manila or Pnom Penh, or, for that matter, even in Peking" Of course no conference in Peking, or else- where, is immediately in prospect. The point is to keep the Idea of an Asian solution open, in the air, so that if this turns out to be the way to peace we will be ready for it. HOSPITALIZATION OF SENATOR 13ENNETT Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, the distin- guished senior Senator from Utah iMr. BENNETT] has been hospitalized at the Bethesda Naval Hospital since July 30, when a bleeding ulcer developed in his stomach. I am happy to report to the Senate today that my colleague is making a rapid recovery. His physicians were able to stop the bleeding within a few days after admitting the Senator to the hos- pital. He has been on atypical, ulcer diet for several days. I have been told that he now feels quite well. In cases like this, I understand, physi- cians like to keep their patients hospital- ized until full recovery is evident. On this basis, the Senator will be in the hos- pital until the end of next week, The ulcer has been described as quite small. In fact, it barely showed up on X-rays taken at the time he was ad- mitted to the hospital. I am sure that the Senate joins with me in prayers that the Senator's strength may be renewed so that he may return to his duties in the Senate on schedule. RULES COMMITTEE BEGINS HEAR- INGS ON SCHOOL MILK BILL Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I am delighted to be able to report to my Sen- ate colleagues that the House Rules Com- mittee opened hearings this morning on legislation that would, among other things, extend the special milk program for schoolchildren for an additional 4 years. This legislation, H.R. 13361, was reported from the House Agriculture Committee on July 29. It is similar to the Ellender child nutrition legislation passed by the Senate almost 1 month ago. A revised version of the Senate bill, S. 3467, was recently reported by the House Education and Labor Committee. The Rules Committee has not as yet heard all of those who wish to testify on H.R. 13361. Certain jurisdictional problems are created by the fact that the bill reported by the House Education and Labor Committee is quite similar. However, I am hopeful that the Rules Committee will meet again this week to receive testimony from the two or three remaining House Members who wish to make statements on the bill. I further hope that the Rules Committee will soon schedule the bill for floor action. Early passage is essential if the school administrators around the country are to be able to act with any certainty on school budgets for the year to come. Without quick action these administra- tors will be uncertain as to whether the Federal Government is going to continue to commit itself to paying part of the costs of midmorning and midafternoon milk breaks. GOVERNOR ROCKEFELLER'S TRIB- UTE TO ISRAEL'S PRESIDENT SHAZAR Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, it was my honor on August 1 to attend a dinner sponsored by the United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York in honor of Presi- dent Shazer, of Israel, at the Hotel Plaza, in New York. At this dinner, Gov. Nel- son A. Rockefeller, of New York, de- livered an eloquent tribute to President Shazer, to which I invite the attention of Senators. I ask unanimous consent that Gover- nor Rockefeller's address be printed at this point preceded by an introduc- tion of Governor Rockefeller by Max Fisher of Michigan, national chairman of the United Jewish Appeal. There being no objection, the intro- duction and the address were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: INTRODUCTION OF GOV. NELSON A. ROCKRFEL- LER AT UJA DINNER HONORING PRESIDENT SHAZAR, AUGUST 1, 1966 Mr. Max FessIES. The American Jewish community established UJA not only out of a sense of Jewish responsibility but also be- cause it was concerned with the basic right of every man to be safe and free. Because of this humanitarian concern, Americans of every faith give their support to the United Jewish Appeal. Our next speaker is one such American. Twenty years ago, one million and a half survivors of the Nazi massacres in Europe hovered on the brink of extinction, Right here in New York it was Nelson Rockefeller who took action to demonstrate that those homeless Jews had an urgent claim on the compassion of Americans, whatever their re- ligion. Nelson Rockefeller founded the Non- sectarian Community Committee for the United Jewish Appeal and became its first chairman. He played a significant role in helping UJA in its first $100 million cam- paign in 1946. Much has changed since that dark time. Those who were wasting away in the DP camps have found homes and new lives in lands of freedom. But one thing has not changed. Governor Nelson Rockefeller is still eminently concerned with UJA's hu- manitarian work. He still serves with dis-- tinctlon as honorary chairman of the Non- sectarian Community Committee of the UJA of Greater New York. He is with us this evening to express officially the greetings of the people of this state to our guest of honor, Ladies and gentlemen, Governor Nelson Rockefeller. EXCERPTS OF REMARKS By GOVERNOR ROCKE- FELLER, PREPARED FOR DELIVERY AT THE DINNER HONORING PRESIDENT SHAZAR OF ISRAEL, UNITED JEWISH APPEAL OF GREATER NEW YORK, NEW YORK, N.Y., AUGUST 1, 1966 On behalf of the' people of the State of New York, I bid you welcome, Mr. Presi- dent--Shalom, Hanassi. We welcome you as a distinguished scholar and gifted writer; we welcome you as a revered philosopher; and, most of all, we welcome you as the leader of a young, vigorous and vibrant democracy that has captured the American imagination and won the American heart. I am also delighted to welcome Mrs. Shazar to our shores-for she is a remarkable wom- an, a true Israeli Halutza-a pioneer-and a fine author in her own right. I'd like to point out, Mr. President, that you and I have a common responsibility. We are each accountable to about two and one-half million Jewish citizens, And cur nations are joined by so many bonds of hu- manity, history and common experience. In the last century, an impassioned American poet proclaimed the promise of America to the world: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses. . These words of Emma Lazarus are en- graved for all time on our Statue of Liberty in. the Port of New York. In this century, they could emblazon the ports of Haifa and Jaffa just as well. Both of our nations-one of the world's oldest democracies and one of the world's youngest-have opened their arms wide to millions. As in the dreams of the Hebrew prophets, we have both been enriched by the gathering of the Exiles. The more recent migration to Israel-still fresh In our minds-is one of the great, moving dramas of this age. Over a million people-a shattered remnant of the night- mare of Nazism-gathered at a small, bar- ren and all-but-forsaken land. They came from over 70 nations. They took root along- side those who came before them. And just as in this country, the immigrant-by his sweat and by his toil, by his vision and by his creativity-helped to forge a new nation. By these massive infusions of new blood, both our countries became half-brothers to the whole world-with something of almost every land to be found within us. In fact, long ago we almost became even closer. One of my scholarly friends recently pointed out to me a fascinating footnote to American history, It seems that our Pilgrim forefathers seriously discussed making He- brew the official tongue of the New World.. Other ties join us, but I want to mention just one more personal link between Presi- dent Shazar and myself. Some years ago, Mr. Shazar had an able special assistant, a charming young Israeli woman by the name of Lea Ostrovsky Ben Boaz. On my own staff, I have an able Press Secretary In Leslie Slote. Today, the former Miss Ben Boaz is Mrs. Slote. All of which both Les and I regard as an extremely favorable U.S. balance of trade with Israel. I would like to tell you of some thoughts I had when I received the kind invitation of the United Jewish Appeal to be here tonight. Two Images flashed through my mind. The first was of the Israel we know today: a na- tion that made the Negev bloom . a na- tion that swiftly created great seats of learn- ing-the Hebrew University, the new Tel Aviv University. the Weizmann Institute and the Technion . . . a nation throbbing with in- dustrial activity and new agriculture ... a nation of refuge and new hopes for human- ity. Then my mind rushed back to a time two brief decades ago when all this was only a dream ... and the only realities were tens of thousands of displaced Jews herded into the camps of Europe-and off In the distance a strange, untried land. The United Jewish Appeal played a heroic role in joining these people with that land. I remember going to Eddie Warburg back in those days when he was the UJA chair- man. I felt very deeply that the task of re- settling this exodus of homeless Jews was a challenge and responsibility not only of the Jewish community but of free men of all faiths. Therefore, I asked him if he would permit me to organize a Non-Sectarian Com- munity Committee for the New York United Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 August" 10, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE and rant about the roadblocks that were thrown in his way in his attempt to become a. minister. He was sputtering and almost exploding when Mays held up his hand and said, "Cool it, baby, I'm on your side." The youngster quieted down and Willie said, "If you want to be a minister, you can be. Don't let anybody stop you. I never lis- tened to anybody who told me I couldn't do something. If you do, you're defeated right away." Mays added, "When I was 10-that's about how old you are no0--I went zero for 24 with the Birmingham Giants. That was my first 24 times at bat, too. If I had lis- tened to all the poor months who were giv- ing me advice, I'd have quit baseball right then." "It takes a great deal of hardship to be a minister and you have to keep trying. But if you want to be one, you'll keep one trying and you'll fight and overcome." Cool it, baby. I went zero for 24. That's the kind of talk the youngsters listen to, and they can feel with Willie, because he made It the hard way as a child in Alabama. One can almost see the boys taking Willie's advice to heart. One youngster said he wanted to be a great athlete like Willie. Willie snapped back, "That's what you say. But you're smoking and you know you can't do that and be an athlete." The UAW Solidarity article reminds us, too, that the job corpsmen need a lot of under- standing. An analysis of the first 10,000 enrollees ac- cepted is enlightening, and it must be re- membered that to get the project off to a good start, the first 10,000 many have been less disadvantaged than later members. With a 17-year average age, most of the first 10,000 were more like 13-year-olds in size. Most had never slept between sheets, never shared a room with only one other. Some never had had electric lights. Nearly two-thirds lived in substandard housing. More than 60 per cent came from families in which the.primary wage earner was un- employed. The average corpsman had never com- pleted ninth grade and could read no better than a fifth grader. Fewer than one in 10 had ever held a job. We'll let Willie Mays close this editorial: "Kids today are no different than they were when I was a boy. They see television and they've got a right to dream. I was the biggest dreamer on our block. Then, when you're out of school a few years and you find you're drifting just like a lot of the older people, that's the time a kid says to himself: I gotta get out of this. Outl "When a kid gets to that age-like these kids-when they say they gotta get out, that's when society has to let them in. This Job Corps is going to save these boys. They're going to make It. Without this chance, they wkre dead. 'These kids are my heroes." SI VOLVEMENT IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, the Au- gust 1 issue of the Washington Evening, Star contained two thoughtful appraisals of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's recent state- ments on the war In Vietnam. Because of the timeliness of these articles, en- titled "Premier Ky Hits a Sensitive Nerve," written by Clayton Fritchey, and ".Red China Riddle: Why Not Let It Grow 'tTp?" written by Charles Bartlett, I ask ianimous consent that they be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, -as follows: PREmIzn KY Hire A SENsrriVE NERVE (By Clayton Fritchey) Everybody, It seems, is now jumping on Premier Ky-publicly in Congress, privately in the administration-for spilling the beans on what a victory in Viet Nam is finally going to cost the United States. It hardly seems fair. After all, the premier, like most generals, is a simple fellow politically, and all he has done is blurt out what seems to him to be the obvious truth about the situation in Viet Nam, It may be embarrassing to the Johnson administration, and perhaps Ky should have consulted his Washington patrons before let- ting the cat out of the bag, but the American people at least owe him a debt of gratitude for telling them what they can't learn from their own government, mainly, the price of "victory" (whatever that is). In recent weeks, the President has repeat- edly assured the public that the United States is going to fight to the finish, that we are going to win, and that "success will be ours in Viet Nam." It is a disturbing fact, however, that It has been impossible to wring from the President or any other administration spokesman just what is meant by "success," or just what American citizens are going to have to pay in the way of men and money to achieve it. The favored thought has been, just leave it to Lyndon and all will be well, Skeptics are shushed by claims of battle successes in the field, and the assurance that the ene- my can't take it much longer, especially the accelerated bombing. But U.S. success stories do not seem to have spoiled Premier Ky, who is also an air marshal and thinks he knows something about war, particularly in Viet Nam where he has been fighting for so many years. The premier already knows what Americans are soon going to learn, and that is that the air attacks on the Hanoi-Haiphong area are not producing results as predicted. They are not materially slowing down the enemy or breaking his morale. On the contrary, he is fighting harder than ever, as our own Mailnes can testify. In fairness to Marshal Ky, it should be remembered that he has obligations to his own country as well as to ours. Apparently, he feels that the South Vietnamese should understand the realities of the present situ- ation. As Ky sees it, the United States must launch an all-out invasion of North Viet Nam to win the war. He can see that this would probably mean war with China, but he thinks "it's better to face them right now" rather than later. The alternative to "destroying the Commu- nists in their lair," he says, is for the United States to go on fighting a guerrilla war "for 5 to 10 years." He frankly doubts that the United States has the "patience" for this. This Is a shrewd appraisal, for Ky recog- nizes that U.S. public support for the war is already shaky. It has been momentarily bolstered by hopes that the stepped-up bombing might be effective, but when these hopes are dashed there will probably be another sag in the public opinion polls. What then? The war already is costing us over $2 bil- lion a month. American casualties often exceed the South Vietnamese. Over 5 to 10 years, the cost would be $100 billion to $250 billion with casualities constantly mounting. It is no wonder that Ky feels that Ameri- cans would not support such a prolonged stalemate. From his point of view, he is right in promoting and all-out attack. Even if it triggers a world war, what has he to lose? He knows that if the United States ever makes peace with North Viet Nam, It is the end for him and his fellow generals. The State Department has decline direct 18123 comment. A spokesman merely repeated that the United States "does not seek any wider war," which is undoubtedly true, at least at the moment. But what will the President do when pressure mounts again for breaking the stalemate? Nobody knows, probably including the President himself. RED CHINA RIDDLE: WHY NoT LET IT GROW UP? (By Charles Bartlett) Premier Ky and the U.S. Senate have in- jected practical and immediate considera- tions into the controversy on what should be done about Red China. Ky's assertion that this is the time to deal with the Chinese Communists is a strident echo of President Kennedy's private expres- sions that the great decision of this decade would be whether or not to halt Red China's growth as a world menace by pre-emptive attack. This question has been laid aside since Lyndon Johnson became president and American forces became involved in Viet Nam. Washington's great aim now is to avoid conflict with the Chinese and many strategies, including the invasion of North Viet Nam, have ben subordinated to this ob- jective. Even Air Force commanders no longer find time to urge bombing raids on mainland China. Ky's proposal is motivated by a deepening awareness that Ho Chi Minh will probably not be permitted by Peking to give the orders that will end the guerrilla war. Washington recognizes this probability and is concen- trating as a consequence upon making life so hard for the guerrillas themselves that they will eventually stop fighting without orders from Hanoi. But icy is in a cocky frame of mind. His military move against the Buddhists suc- ceeded despite almost unanimous warnings from American officials that it was a fool- hardy step. He faces elections and he needs to demonstrate that he is not a puppet. He obviously hopes to rally support by stirring the nationalistic hatred of his people to- ward the Chinese. The tin-horn militancy of Ky's recent in- terviews stands in weak contrast to the com- posure with which Ho Chi Minh last week rejected the offer by the Soviet Union and East European states to send volunteers. HQ is also afraid of the Red Chinese and he doesn't want to antagonize them by play- ing host to Soviet volunteers. So he rallies his people by telling them they are going to win the war with their own hands and with the "climate, snakes and mosquitoes" as their allies. If Ho, who knows the Chinese well, doesn't trust them in their present mood and if the Russians, who also know them, find them irrationally dogmatic, why should the United States get involved with them? The Com- munists estimate that the Viet Cong and their families number only 800,000 of South Viet Nam's 17 million population. No major figure in the Johnson administration Is attracted by the folly of tackling 800 million Chinese to suppress a rebellion of 800,000 Vietnamese. The Senate reflected this nation's irresolu- tion toward Red China in its vote to censure the consortium of European nations which plans to build a steel rolling mill in China. A majority of 56 senators voted for the censure and implicity for the thesis that a thin and hungry Chinese is less dangerous than a fat one, The moderately fattened Russian is turn- ing out to be a better world citizen than his ragged, revolutionary predecessor and the evolution of Communist doctrine Into a prag- matic quest for a steadily rising standard of living is now regarded by most experts as a stabilizing factor in world affairs. Approved For Release 2005/06/291: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000460100016-0 18124 CONGRP,SSIONAL RECORD --SENATE Certainly Red China's present adversities bring no assurances of peace. The desperate search for food, actually causing Chinese agents to compete with Russians in the Canadian and Australian markets, cannot render the government more stable. The decision to educate fewer students in Chinese universities, because the economy does not provide jobs for an expanding number of graduates, will delay the emergence of the professional class which now exerts a con- structive authority in Moscow. Experts of the Defense and State Depart- ments have just sent to the White House an exhaustive study of the future that lies ahead for Red China. The short-term view is un- certain. No one can really predict how a government so beset by afflictions will react. But the long-term view follows the Soviet pattern-at some point the Chinese commis- sars will drop their visions of dominating the planet and turn to the real and pressing chal- lenges of development at home. The turn to maturity may come more swiftly in China than it did in the Soviet Union, where Joseph Stalin prolonged the revolutionary illusions. Containment, as in Russia's case, is apt to be a more maturing influence than the aggression envisioned by Ky or the deprivation sought by the Senate majority. ADDRESS OF SENATOR KENNEDY OF MASSACHUSETTS, TO THE ANNUAL CONVENTION OF THE SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEADER- SHIP CONFERENCE, JACKSON, MISS. Mr. HART. Mr. President, I ask un- animous consent that the address of Senator KENNEDY of Massachusetts, to the annual convention of Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Jack- son, Miss., August 8, 1966, be inserted at this point in the RECORD. It is a stir- ring and challenging message which merits widespread attention. There being no objection, the address was ordered to be printed in the RsicoRD, as follows: ADDRESS BY SENATOR EDWARD M. KENNEDY TO THE ANNUAL CONVENTION OF THE SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEADERSHIP CON- FERENCE, JACKSON, MISS., AUGUST 8, 1966 I come here tonight as a young man, with the hope of the young that today's crisis can become tomorrow's opportunity. Much of your success is due to the young people who have worked in your movement. I am proud to appear before this organiza- tion. For ten years, you have been in the forefront of the most important domes- tic Issue of our time. You have been jailed and bombed, beaten and stoned. But you have persevered. Your work has given Negro men and women a new sense of dignity and self-respect. Your courage under fire has kindled the conscience of the white people of this country. Over the noise of battle, clearer than the cries of extremists on both sides, we have heard your simple message of non-violence, telling us that evil can be overcome with good; that hate can yield to ove; and that it is better to suffer in dignity iihan to accept segregation In silence. Y6ur leader, Martin Luther King, has made his mark upon the world as a great spiritual leader who has also led the forces of social justice. His tradition is worthy of his teachers, Gandhi and Thoreau. I know the great respect that President Kennedy had for Dr. King. I am honored to share the platform with him today. And I am proud to come to Mississippi, a state whose men have always answered bravely and patriotically the call to the colors; a state with a past full of glory and tragedy; a present full of struggle and change; a future bright with hope and promise. This is a state with unlimited potential. From the rockets and shipyards on the Gulf to new industries in the north. Mississippi is gathering force for an advance which could, using the full energies of all its citi- zens, bring a greater day than it has ever known. I come from a state with a proud tradition of leadership in the field of human rights. It was a citizen of Massachusetts who was the first to urge the use of nonviolence in the cause of civil rights. His name was William Lloyd Garrison, and his statue stands in Boston today. In 1831, he wrote: "The history of mankind is crowded with evidence that physical coercion is not adapted to moral regeneration; that sin can be subdued only by love; and that the violent who resort to the sword are destined to perish with the sword." My state, as the other states in the North, has very difficult problems in the field of civil rights. I cannot come here to Mississippi and say that our hands are clean. We have done too little. We started quite late. The Negro in Boston, to our shame, goes to a segregated school, holds an inferior job, and lives in one of the worst parts of the city. Progress has been made, some important pro- grams just in recent days, but we have a long way to go. So I am delighted that this organization is extending Its work to the cities of the North. We need your help up there too. Twenty years ago, segregation was a fact of life in America, accepted by both races. The Capital city of our country was totally segregated, in law and in fact. Twenty years ago, the U.S. Congress could not even outlaw lynching. A distinguished Senator, Frank Graham, was turned out of office because lie signed a report saying that Negroes should have an equal chance in jobs. But then came the Supreme Court deci- sions. And the sit-ins, and the freedom rides, and your own bus boycott in Montgomery, touching off a movement that has brought about, in my opinion, the most important change in America in the last 20 years. Since 1959, Congress has passed three civil rights hills, and this year will pass a fourth. The walls of segregation have come down in many places, partly through government, but largely through the private efforts of groups like yours. Over two million Negroes have registered to vote throughout the South, one hundred twenty thousand in Mississippi in the last year alone. The caste system in politics is through. Next year, in this state, in every election, men and women, white and black, will have a chance to have a voice. I think this will make a difference. But in a larger sense, how far have we come as a nation? After all the decisions of all of the courts, how many Negro children really attend in- tegrated schools? In the South, less than 3 per cent. After all of the programs that Congress has passed, how much has the life of the average Negro really changed? Not very much. What good is a desegregated motel if you can't afford to stay there? What use is the right to vote if you risk your job and even your life in order to vote? Can a Negro soldier, drafted to fight for the freedom of the people of Vietnam, come back to his own country and enjoy full freedom and. Opportunity as an American citizen? I don't think he can. And that Is the shame and the challenge of American life in 1966. The rate of Negro unemployment is more than twice that of white-and the gap has increased in the past year. Even when the Negro finds a job, it tends to be in menial August 10, 19,66 occupations with extremely limited oppor- tunities for advancement. The proportion of Negroes living in sub- standard housing is almost three times that of whites, and that proportion is growing. The Negro continues to be segregated in the great urban ghettoes, and that segregation is increasing. Negroes today in the cities of the North live their daily lives farther separated from white America than the rural Southern Negro ever was. I find this country dividing more and more into separate societies, of the rich and poor, the white and the black, the com- placent and the despairing; where the whites have jobs and the blacks have unemploy- ment; where the whites live in suburbs and the Negroes in ghettos. Where each looks at the other with growing mistrust as the vise of apartne_s tightens. This situation is wrong-morally, socially, economically wrong. It saps our strength. It offends our deepest traditions. It sows the seed of insurrection and riot. I cannot think of a more dangerous fu- ture for America than the future we face if we let this situation develop as it has. This situation has been aggravated in re- cent months by the desire of some Negro leaders to pull apart from the white men who have been assisting them. Now I can fully understand the feelings behind this. For one hundred years since the end of slavery you have collaborated with white men and many Negroes have little to show for it. But the fact is that the greatest gains in civil rights have come when black and white have worked together. The very basis of integration is working together with white people. If you cast them off-if you isolate yourselves--you will be strengthening the bonds of the whole system of segregation. You will be crippling your own effectiveness in what is basically not a white or a Negro cause, but an American cause. Dr. King put it well when he said: "The Negro's destiny is tied to the white man's destiny. The Negro's freedom is bound to the white man's freedom. We cannot walk alone." I would add that just as the path of sep- arateness is a self-defeating path, the path of violence is a dangerous path. You can reason with the white man, and pressure him and even shame him-but you cannot scare him. Dr. King once said that the civil rights movement owes as much to Bull Conner as it does to Abraham Lincoln. And I say to you that your cause Is immeasurably hurt every time a young Negro throws a Molotov cocktail or a sniper fires on police from the roof of a ghetto. I would be less than frank with you If I did not admit a growing feeling of concern about the "white backlash" in our country. A Negro leader in New York last week said he had never been so fearful about the future of race relations in our country as he is now, because a terrifying white backlash has set in and the Negro still has gained so little. Let those who preach violence or the dis- honoring of our individual obligations to our country or the destruction of Western civili- zation realize what ammunition they are giving the enemies of reason and justice. But I would say just as strongly to the white man that you can no longer expect to keep the Negro "in his place." The only place for him is a position of full equality as an American citizen. If you think the Negro is pushing too fast, you are wrong. You cannot expect a man to go slow in ob- taining what should have been a part of his birthright. Seventy years ago a man named William Jennings Bryan spoke for the impoverished white man of the South and Midwest. What he said in his "Cross of Gold" speech ex- presses what many Negroes understandably feel today: "We have petitioned and our peti- tions have been scorned. We have entreated and our entreaties have been disregarded. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For( & g4&f( ,9R Rpp-i,7?@MffB00040010OQQfttst 10, 1966 Wick left for home late last February. He Most bags,rontained packets of cigarettes, American people. It is also a. concession to took with him two vivid` pictures: but some, youngters didn't resist the temp- their feeling and the Americans have a com- One, the picture of young Marines at war, tation to light up. the villagers were also plementary need to believe and practice it. with verve and with valor charging smack shown movies and given medical treatment. It provides the. only excuse far their presence Into the, enemy, mixing with the enemy, de- The "Friendship Kits" were the Innovation in Vietnam. At the same time it is the only feating the enemy. (Wick talked so much of the Denton Record-Chronicle's Viet Nam way by which they can deny themselves the. about the Marines on his return that his war correspondent, Wick Fowler. responsibility of what is happening around son up and joined the Marine Corps I) When he returned to Texas after three them, a way of shielding themselves from the Two, .the picture of these same young months of war reporting, he designed the ugliness of what is going on. In simple Americans, in the wake of battle, pouring kits and enlisted the aid of Gov. John Con- terms, it is a moral anesthetic. their hearts and their energies and their nally. Meantime, the Marines in Viet Nam These advisers say: "We are here to help resources into helping the Vietnamese agreed to distribute the kits as a test of their the Vietnamese help themselves". That is people. value in the Marines' civil action operations. exactly what they are doing-helping them- Wick vowed he wouldn't forget these two Two thousand kits, each containing a selves. This advisory capacity is a gimmick pictures. On his return to Texas, he greeting from the governor, were sent to Viet Invented by America to find a reason to inter- launched. himself on the lecture circuit, Nam by the Texas Guard, a civilian group, vene in developing countries. They come in rallying support for America's fighting men in cooperation with the Texas National all guises; "experts" under certain founda- and their efforts to assist the Vietnamese. Guard. From California, the kits were flown tions or missions. But he went further than that. He called across the Pacific by the California National Why America will not withdraw. The on Governor John Connally of Texas, ex- Guard. Americans are committed to protect the plaining to him about the Marine Corps' . The kits included 1,000 drawings by school South Vietnamese, it is a moral commitment. civic action program. Wick also spoke to children of Denton. And if they should withdraw now a blood officers of the Texas Air National Guard. Wapp, a marine platoon leader who had bath will ensue once the National Liberation And a new drive was under way, a drive to been wounded three times in eight months, Front gains control. Yet what is happening raise friendship kits to send to the Marines was assigned to the civil affairs program five now is a thorough blood bath without end. in Viet Nam to assist in their pacification days ago. Maybe if the Americans will leave there will efforts. "I've got six kids at home and I like being be a bloodbath with an end, but right now Just recently an Air Guard plane touched wit13 kids," Wapp said. "This gives me a there is no end to it.. It is better to have an down at the Da Nang Air Base. It was laden grew opportunity to do that." end with misery than to have misery without with friendship kits. _r ``V~ end. The kits, made of plastic mesh, contained 11 Why are the refugees crowding Govern- items such as pencil sharpeners, rulers, A TOURIST'S VIEW OF VIETNAM ment centers? I visited Mat Tam in one of needles, thread, soap, chewing gum, candy "WAR" - the centers and she said: "Bombings, it is and cigarettes. the bombings and fighting on both sides, that Each kit bore a message-in English and Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, one drive them to our centers." The refugees are Vietnamese-which read: of the greatest problems we have when told to say that they were fleeing from VC .This friendship kit has been assembled we come to consider great foreign policy terrorism and that they want a happy life by Texans, under sponsorship of the Texas questions such as foreign aid or Vietnam under the Government in Saigon.. Guard, as a message of our support of the The new type of American soldiers in Viet- cause of freedom for the people of South is our inability to recognize the extent nam. The majority of them are new types of Vietnam. John Connally, governor of to which the objectivity of our judgment dissenters, whose life has been disturbed Texas." is impaired by our own image of our- when there is no immediate danger to it- And that's how the Spirit of Wick Fowler selves. From time to time I have tried, has been ordered to go and fight in a distant returned to aid the Marines in Viet Nam- not with any great success I fear, to call war where the people are not even interested in the form of little friendship kits which attention to this failing of ours. to fight for themselves. He thinks the war will help a bit to brighten the lives of people Some of the clearest pictures which is "not worth a single American life, even a lon nice gesture, a lnd. Vietnamese big Texas have been drawn of the American people human life land he hates to needle sly kfor ill gesture. and character have been those of foreign for the view of a few people like President But then, Texas is a big state. And Wick observers. In this connection one thinks Johnson and his advisers. He wants his Fowler is a big man. immediately of distinguished names such country to pull out because, "I_do not think as those of Alexis de Tocqueville or communist control of South Vietnam will KITS IIELP SOOTHE FEELINGS-DURING SEARCH Bryce. A friend of mine in Arkansas, concern me in my life time." FOR CONG however, recently sent me an article of Another type of soldier is the angry one. DA NAxc, VIET NAM.-"Friendship kits" this nature written by a rather obscure- He wants to "bomb the -" out of the vil- from Texas were used to soothe hurt feelings at least to me-observer appearing in a lages and hamlets and let them get it. These today when a South Vietnamese hamlet was Philippine newspaper which could not are the most dangerous ones for. they do it searched for evidence of Viet Cong sympa- once in a while for fun and they might really thizers. have been expected to attract notice in do it more and more. The treats were handed out to Vietnamese this country. With due apology to the Another group are the professional army children and adults at a "county fair" opera- author, its style may appear not alto- men who must have wars to direct and fight tion in a tiny village about 10 miles north- gether that to which we are accustomed, for they are useless in a peaceful country, east of Da Nang. but I suggest, Mr. President, that its To them must be victory at any cost. Such operations are routinely carried out content is well worth considering. While Then there are the bitter draftees who axe in hamlets of, South Viet Nam where the I would not entirely go along with every- drafted because "they cannot afford to go to loyalty of residents to the government is thing in the article-for example the in- college". If they were in college they will been ex- U.S. questionable. of ft byference that the President has a low re- not be there since thesaid, "I would do have not believe marines, mo Local ve the militiamenvillagers , out their backed homes homes for interrogation and a methodical gard for human life-the author pre- empted. One of them that communist control of Vietnam is a search of the houses. sents an interesting view of ourselves as threat to ourselves. The commitment to While the village men were being ques- others see us. Vietnam is all out of proportion to the im- tioned to determine if any residents were i ask unanimous consent that this ar- portance of Vietnam." Another who was Communist sympathizers and to learn if ticle, entitled "A Tourist's View of the sounding like Lippmann said, "If we start there had been any Communist troops in the Vietnam `War'," written by Cecile Afable here we will be doing the same thing all over area recently, the women were given canned fish, rice, cooking pots and stoves to prepare in the Baguio, Philippines, Midland the world." a community lunch. The activity is designed Courier be printed in the RECORD. The bitterest, anti-ideologists said, "The to make the search for Communists more like There being no objection, the article people here have been fighting a guerilla war a picnic or county fair than a military was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, for 20 years, I don't know anything about operation. as follows: that kind of warfare. Must I die in it?" Lt. Glenn Wapp of Riverside, Calif., who A TOURIST'S VIEW OF VIETNAM WAR An Igorot, (not Lamen) looks at the war. was running the show, said "the Leather- The Americans express the belief that their necks tried to cook the rice but the villagers (By Cecile Afable) fighting in Vietnam is to oppose communists didn't like that." Advisers-a new breed of Americans, prod- China because this is the "expert" opinion of "They wanted to do it themselves," he said. uct of 20th century colonialism. Installed American experts. Yet they cannot prove After lunch, the "friendship kits" were in air-conditioned sanctuaries, they are paid that the North Liberation Front in Chinese passed out causing a mad scramble among to think and hence to give "advice". This beyond Hanoi. And to fight the Chinese the village youngsters. The kits included is taken very seriously. by the American offi- through Vietnam gives it a stint of insanity. candyt toothppaste, tooth brushes, pencils and cials especially the civilians. The Americans For here the death of the Vietnamese is un- balloons. Imitation 'Indian headbands- in Vietnam are supposed to be only just "ad- related to their lives. Do the Americans eonl I&'e with "feathers-were slipped Into viser", an excuse to make the American have to kill all the Vietnamese to stop the presence palatable to the world and to the Chin-f- fr^'-+. '' r *ening them? Then the some kits. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 August 10, 19-gproved Forfta/961F dW$P67BENATE000400100016-0 We have begged and they have mocked when spending two billion dollars a month to de- programs and efforts. The kits contain our calamity came. We beg no longer. We fend the freedom of 14 million people in items such as pencil sharpeners, rulers, entreat no more. We petition no more. We South Vietnam.. Why shouldn't we make the chewing gum, candy, and so forth. defy them." same kind of effort for tha 20 milli- r,eor~la going to solve this problem with riot guns freedom, and future Is also at stake? I carried several articles describing Wick"s and billy clubs. The police and public our- The time has come to stop the talk. and idea and how it was received by the dais cannot do the job alone. You cannot begin the action. Vietnamese. protect your communities against violence if Let us stop talking about the need for Mr. President, I ask that these articles you are unwilling to act against the condi- young educated Negro leaders and make sure be printed in the RECORD at this point so tions that breed violence. And you can no that every American who has the will and In- that other Senators may read for them- more justify violence and lawlessness In tellectual capacity has a chance to go to selves of the people-t0- Cleveland and Chicago with the slogan of college. people actions be- "White Power" than the Negro can with Let us stop counting the slums and start ing undertaken by Texans who are con- "Black Power." tearing them down-followed by the greatest cerned about international goodwill. My own Irish forebears were discriminated construction program in our history. There being no objection, the articles against just as fiercely in the last century Let us stop deploring unemployment and were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as the Negroes are today. As an American create the jobs that will beautify our coup- as follows: proud of my country, I know that much of try and make our cities better places to live. To VIETNAM: FOWLER RETURNS-IN SPIRIT -its strength is drawn from the contributions Let us desegregate our schools, but let us minorities have made as they have been given spare no effort to be sure that our children DA NANG, VIET NAM,-Wick Fowler-one of opportunities. I know that America will in school today have the educational oppor- the biggest Texans of all-has returned to prosper best if we white men open wide the tunity to give their lives meaning and hope. Viet Nam. In spirit, that is. doors of opportunity to you. All these things should be done not just But Fowler in spirit is bigger than many If we can prosecute the War on Poverty, because they will stop the riots-although men in their entirety. It will help white people as well as black, they will; not just because they will strength- Fowler, in person (who is huge enough If we can train more men for jobs, and end en our economy-although they will. These without even considering the spirit!), came discrimination In jobs, it will increase the things should be done because they are right to Viet Nam last December as a special com- wealth of all, and decent and the moral things to do. bat correspondent for the Denton Record- If we can eliminate the slums and lm- So let men of both colors complete the Chronicle. prove the schools of Chicago and Cleveland agenda of freedom-together. A retired Dallas newspaperman, he was a .and Boston, It will make them better cities Let us together work so that a James combat correspondent in World War lI in for everyone who lives there. Meredith can walk down the highway here Europe and the Pacific. We need a program of action which can in Mississippi free from the threat of violence. Upon his arrival in Da Nang, headquarters help bridge the gap In opportunity-and we Let us together wipe out the immoral sys- of the III Marine Amphibious Force, Fowler need it now. Of course, we should continue tem of jury discrimination so that the men immediately endeared himself to the Marines to press for full legal rights for all citizens-- who kill for bate will pay the price of their as well as to members of the civilian press the right to vote unintimidated; the right crime. So the men who killed those four corps. to be effectively protected from violence; little girls in the 16th Street Baptist Church He reported the war, as combat corre-, the right to equal justice, free from jury In Birmingham will be brought to justice. spondents are supposed to do. But more discrimination; the right to go to school and Let us together work for the day when chil- than that, he was an entertainer. live in a home free from arbitrary segrega- dren of both races, in whose young hearts There grew a saying that the only thing tion. But In addition we need a, massive prejudice does not exist, can go to school. to. wider than Wick's ample girth was his even commitment of national resources to the up- gether. wider repertoire of homespuntales and jokes. grading of Negro life in America. Let us together create open cities, free of And Wick fired them at the Marines just We need community projects that can be slums, in every part of America--cities where as they fired their rifles and machineguns at done this summer and this fall: Construe- men can reach new heights of civilization and the enemy-rapidly, effectively, and on the tion of swimming pools and recreational people can live where they wish. target. parks in the ghettoes; installation of sprin- And let us keep working together until the There was a rumor that a Marine troop- klers for children in hot weather; better gar- last remnant of poverty, the last barrier to carrying helicopter, which usually carries bage collections and block clean-up cam- prosperity, the last obstacle to equal oppor- seven gear-laden Leathernecks into battle, paigns; typing classes, and athletic instruc- tunity is gone from American life. couldn't get off the ground once Wick en- tion. Through these projects we can show President Kennedy was the first President tered it-alone! young people that their communities do care of the United States to state publicly that The rumor was, never verified. But there about them-that there is hope for improve- segregation was morally wrong. If his life is proof that a C130 cargo plane, with Wick went, and that there are more creative out- and death had a meaning, if the life and aboard, did manage to stay airborne all the lets for their young energies than violence death of Reverend Reeb and Medgar Evers way on a flight from Da Nang to Saigon. and disorder. and Jimmy Lee Jackson had a meaning, it His fellow passengers testified to that- But we need more than these stop gap was that we should not hate but love one an. with great sighs of relief. measures. There must be no less than a other; we should use what power we have not On another occasion, Wick boarded a Navy major up-grading of our schools and our to create conditions of oppression that lead troop-carrying ship prior to Operation Double cities, and of the housing and job oppor- to violence, but conditions of freedom and Eagle, which was to be the largest Marine tunities for Negro Americans. Many of the opportunity that lead to peace, amphibious assault on enemy territory since programs to accomplish these objectives al- No one denies the difficulties of your tasks. the historic landing at Inchon, Korea, in ready exist. No one can forget your courage and deter- 1951. What we must do now Is determine to urination. The morning of the landing loomed dark, spend the money necessary to make these No one can blur your vision and your dismal and rainy. The sea buffeted the huge programs work. We must expand, not cut dream. Navy vessel as sailors began lowering landing back, on our commitment to the War on It is the vision of Americans and the dream craft over the side. Poverty. We must expand not cut back on of justice and opportunity for all of us. our programs to equalize and upgrade edu- Let us work together to make that dream Then the netting was tossed over the rails cation and, most important of all, we must reality, realizing that the greatness of our on either side of the ship, and Marines began expand not cut back on our programs to country depends on our success, scrambling down the nets toward the landing revitalize the ghetto and provide decent craft, bobbing and plummeting in the wild housing for all Americans. sea. I consider the segregation of our urban PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE ACTIONS Wick had every intention of following the ghettoes the basic cause of the racial crisis UNDERTAKEN BY TEXANS Marines. He was prepared to go over. But a that will continue to plague, us. For as long cautious Marine company commander pro- as the Negro is isolated from white Ameri- Mr. TOWER. Mr, President, Texans hibited him from doing so. cans and denied mobility and access to de- have many things to be proud of. But Some onlookers thought it was because, cent housing, his children will go to segre- the folks around Denton have the added well, because the Marine officer was concerned gated schools of inferior quality, he will pay privilege of being proud-and fond--of about Wick's; safety (much to the rotund more for the inferior housing to which he Wick Fowler. writer's chagrin.) Such a large man, and does have access and he will be cut off from Wick is a retired Dallas newspaperman certainly not nearly as young and agile as the the power structures of government-unable Marines. to communicate or participate in the white who has been covering the Vietnam war But others wondered if it wasn't because society that surrounds him. recently for the Denton Record- the Marine officer was worried that Wick The expansion of these programs will cost Chronicle. While there, he hit upon the would take up more space in a landing craft s great deal of money; but we can afford it. idea of friendship kits to be sent from than a squad of Marines! We have the resources many times over. The the United States to the marines in Viet- Anyway, that was Wick Fowler and he did only thing we may lack is the will. We are. nam. to assist them in their civic action eventually get ashore on the operation. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Aug s' 1966 Approved C'64tggIl/f 6f9~ ROI i-qR 468000400100016-0 Americana are involve in killing people to Plan to attack the educational and living Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, it is show-other people to stop threatening them. conditions which breed Negro discontent. my understanding that the distinguished Or do the Americans want to show the Chi- Although Mr. Bundy named no figure, it chairman of the subcommittee, the Sen- nese to stop threatening the Vietnamese, would appear that he had roughly the same ator from Alabama [Mr. SPARKMAN], the whom they are killing anyway? Then the figure in mind in his suggestion of a nation- distinguished ranking minority member Chinese threat obscures in advance the na- wide effort to help the Negro. of the committee, the Senator from Texas ture of the enemy. Shucks. Even if several billions of dollars are sub- t d earl for rograms already under [Mr. TOWER], and the distinguished ac p e y y Who really is the enemy of the Americana r in Vietnam? What does this enemy want? way, it is clear that both of these men en- senior Senator from Delaware [Mr. Why do the Americans always fail to recog- visage massive expenditures. WILLIAMS] will have some remarks to nize nationalism and its human aspirations? Three questions present themselves at make on this bill but that it will not be Not recognizing it they destroy it. By op- once: (a) is such a program needed, (b) can concluded this evening. posing it as is happening in this country, the country afford it, and (c) will it do the Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, the they drive it to self-defeating dependence trick? committee bill, S. 3688, has as its pur- ism major communists powers. National- It does not seem to us that there can be ism is a taboo subject in Vietnam. any doubt but that something of a massive pose to stimulate the flow of mortgage The Vietnam soldier's part in this war. and deep-going nature is needed. Efforts so credit for FHA- and VA-assisted resi- They are undisciplined, they are lazy and far have clearly not succeeded in outrooting dential construction. they smoke and chat too much while on the cause of racial unrest, Indeed, such un- This would be done in two ways: First, patrol duty according to their American rest appears to be spreading. It is by now it would provide new borrowing authority counterparts. Their disinterestedness is a truism that the racial situation cannot be to the secondary mortgage facility of the shocking and they are consistent deserters. permitted to drag along, gradually worsening, Federal National Mortgage Association Then they are said to create situations in without some new, inspired and workable ef- Federal Nzi o FNMA to issue de Association order to increase American involvement in fort to correct it. by authoribentures. the war. "They would rather join bicycle , Although we assume that Dr. King's figure up to 15 times its capital instead of the races than help us fight their war," said one was merely a general one, it would seem that current authority of. 10 times. The effect soldier, who also suspected that the Viet- the American economy (estimated to be of this is to add about $2 billion new namese is more interested in making a "fast presently growing at the rate of between $40 purchasing authority under this facility. buck than anything else." and $50 billion a year) could absorb without Second, the bill would further increase Medicine man America. To an Igorot like too great sacrifice such an effort. Indeed, FNMA's purchasing authority by author- exercise America is a medicine man who is out to the question might arise: Can America af- ford not to make such an effort? Further- izing an additional $1 billion in its special exeocise the "forces of evil" from a people more, if such a program is reasonably suc- assistance function to purchase FHA and who refuse to give it up. That their p- cessful, it could be expected to accelerate VA mortgages which do not exceed Igorot "divinationMumbonong" (priestess). than that Take their y the nation's economic growth, becoming $15,000. "domino theory" as an example, a clear thereby in whole or in part self-liquidating. One of the most critical problems fac- thinking American cannot believe this and It is, of course, utterly impossible to say frig our economy today is the shortage there are many more of them than their op- whether even an effort of this size will, in posites. Where did the American policy mak- fact, "do the trick." of mortgage capital for home financing. ers get the idea that if Vietnam falls to Com- It depends upon the extent to which these The homebuilding industry is suffering munist control, the whole of Southeast Asia programs are oriented both toward providing one of its worst setbacks, from which it will be swallowed? greater opportunities and toward encourag- may not recover for many years to come. if America wants to play medicine man ing those improvements in mental, moral, Building materials producers, real estate to the entire world they should start learn- and social conditions which will enable slum- brokers, furnituremakers, and many ing more subtle techniques in divination and dwellers to make adequate use of improved other related activities are feeling the more gentler methods of exercising "forces conditions. Spending large sums of money pinch of the mortgage credit shortage. of evils." This is only proper for their pres- will not solve the problem unless it stimu- More important, families seeking homes ent role as the greatest, richest and most lates the deep-seated changes in attitudes, cannot buy even those houses already advanced nation in the world. education, standards of conduct, and em- ployability which are at the heart of the built because of the shortage of mort- A MASSIVE PROGRAM Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts. Mr. President, on Monday I delivered a speech in Jackson, Miss., in which I called for a much greater commitment to the upgrading of the life of the Negro in this country than we are making now. In this connection I ask unanimous consent to enter into the RECORD an editorial from the Christian Science Monitor . of August 9, which shows quite forcefully the steps we must take in this direction and the reasons we must take problem. gage credit. A year ago, following the Watts rioting, Mr. President, a recent survey of the these columns called for massive, nation- impact of the credit shortage on future wide effort on behalf of the Negro. We be- lieve that such a need is even more apparent plans of the Nation's homebuilders re- today. But such an effort will be fruitless vealed that residential construction unless it simultaneously accomplishes three starts will be down by about one-third things. The first is the elimination of the for the remainder of this year: The physical conditions of slum living. The sec- latest monthly starts figures from the and is the elimination of those barriers of Department of Commerce show residen- prejudice and discrimination which have tial construction proceeding in June at helped force the Negro into the alums. The third is the elimination of those mental, so- an average annual rate of 1,264,000- cial, and moral legacies of the past which down 18 percent from June of 1965. help perpetuate the problem. There are predictions that this rate will drop substantially below this in the coming months. There being no objection, the editorial A1-IMULitlION ur? irlr; .V W W ur' Mr. President, this situation is very was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, MORTGAGE CREDIT FOR FHA- disturbing to me, as I am sure it is to as follows: AND VA-ASSISTED RESIDENTIAL others who are concerned not only about [From the Christian Science Monitor, Aug. 9, CONSTRUCTION homebuilding, but also about providing 1966] Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I decent housing for our people. We real- A MASSIVE PROGRAM consent that the Senate ize that the basic cause of the mortgage It seems likely that the American people ask unanimous credit shortage is the overall shortage of will soon be asked if they are prepared to proceed to the consideration of Calendar capital needed to finance an economy spend large sums of money (and how much) No. 1393, S. 3688. operating at full capacity levels. I un- for an all-out attack on those conditions The PRESIDING OFFICER, The bill derstand this, but I do not believe that producing today's racial unrest. When two will be stated by title. it is fair for homebuilders and home buy- such national figures as McGeorge Bundy, The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK, A ers to have to carry such a heavy share former Wfiite House special assistant and bill (S. 3688) to stimulate the flow of of this burden. now head of the Ford Foundation, and mortgage credit for Federal Housing Ad- America's foremost Negro public figure, the There are a number of remedies pro- Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., raise the ministration and Veterans' Administra- posed to ease the shortage of capital on same question at almost the same moment, tion assisted residential construction. our economy and to create a better cli- we can be fairly sure that here is an issue The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there mate for mortgage lending. The Com- about which we shall all hear much in the objection to the request of the Senator mittee on Banking and Currency is con- near future: from Montana? sidering these proposals and may make Dr. King has proposed'that during the next 10 years the United States spend $10 billion There being no objection, the Senate some recommendations in the future. yearly for a kind of homefront Marshall proceeded to consider the bill. Unfortunately, there are many problems Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 18128 Approved For Release 2005/06129..; CIA RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August in developing a consensus on the steps to take for a long-range remedy because of the involvement of so. many groups whose interests may be seriously affected by the pending proposals. Fortunately, however, the committee knew of no serious disagreement about the FNMA proposal now before us and gave strong bipartisan support for its quick passage by the Senate. Senator JOHN TOWER, ranking minority member of the Banking and Currency Committee, had introduced in the Senate S. 3482 which contained a FNMA provision sim- ilar in part to those in my bill S. 3529 which I had introduced on June 21. Sen- ator TOWER can speak for himself, but I believe he strongly supports the bill now before the Senate. Mr. President, the bill before the Sen- ate has two sections. Section 1 would provide new borrowing authority to the secondary mortgage facility by authoriz- ing FNMA to issue debentures up to 15 times its capital instead of the current authority of 10 times. The effect of this is to add about $2 billion new purchasing authority under this facility. Mr. President, I have a table which shows the status of the secondary mar- ket operation under FNMA. Under ex- isting law, FNMA's borrowing authority is $4,016,256,930, whereas, under the pro- posed amendment, its borrowing author- ity would amount to $6,024,385,395, which amounts to an increase of about $2 bil- lion. The existing unused borrowing au- thority is now $746,926,930; so that once this bill becomes law, the association would have a total unused borrowing au- thority of about $2.7 billion. I ask unan- imous consent to place in the RECORD the FNMA table. There being no objection, the table was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Federal National Mortgage Association, secondary market operations, private bor- rowing authority Capital and surplus (author- ized at June 30, 1966)-.---- $401,615,693 10-fold borrowing leverage (authorized) -------------- 4, 016, 256, 930 15-fold borrowing leverage (authorized plus 50 per- cent) S. 3688-------------- 6,024,385,395 CAPITAL AND SURPLUS AT JUNE 30, 1966 Preferred stock authorized-- Common stock subscription and paid-In capital sur- plus --------------------- Preferred and Common equity ------------------- BORROWINGS AT JUNE 30, 1966 Debentures ---------------- 2, 180, 050, 000 Short-term discount notes__ 1, 089, 280, 000 U.S. Treasury, Interim ------- 0 Total ---------------- 3,269,330,000 Borowing authority June 30_- 4, 016,256, 930 Approximate unused borrow- ing authority------------- 746, 926, 930 At June 30, 1966, $141,820,305 preferred stock was being utilized. Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, ':FNMA has placed restrictions on the purchasing of mortgages under its sec- ondary market operations because of the concern that its funds would be quickly dissipated under current conditions. It has placed a ceiling of $15,000 on the amount of the mortgage it will buy. It has reduced the price to as low as 95 for 53/4 percent mortgages and it has lim- ited its purchases to highly selective and good quality mortgage loans. Despite these limitations, the offerings have been so great that FNMA has purchased in the last month at an average weekly rate of about $43 million. The pending bill would alleviate FNMA's problem and permit it to revise upward its ceiling of $15,000 and remove much of its present restrictions. Section 2 of the bill would also in- crease FNMA's purchasing authority under its special assistance function with a $1 billion new authority in order to provide funds for financing low-cost housing which is not available under existing market conditions. This pro- vision would limit the mortgage amount to $15,000 on FHA- and VA.-assisted mortgages. The funding would come from two sources-$500 million from the Presidential authority, which now has an uncommitted balance of about $1.8 billion, and $500 million new Treasury borrowing. In view of FNMA's new au- thority to sell participations, the impact on the budget of such borrowing should be minor. There has been some concern that the $500 million to be taken from the Presi- dential fund will deny some funds to the FHA section 221(d) (3) program. This concern is without foundation because $950 million of that fund is now sched- uled for use in 1968 and 1969. All the amendment would do is to borrow from that part of the Presidential fund which the President has reserved for fiscal year 1969. Our problems today surely ought to be taken care of first before we worry about 1969. Those who express concern about this should be assured that ade- quate funds will be available to take care of section 221(d) (3) when the need is truly demonstrated. The purpose of the new purchasing authority is to provide adequate funds for FNMA operations so that it can buy higher priced mortgages in its secondary market function and at the same time provide a market for lower priced mort- gages in its special assistance function. These two operations, acting in conjunc- tion with each other, I believe, will be a helpful support to the mortgage money market at this particular period. I understand there has been some con- cern expressed about the $15,000 ceiling in the bill for the special assistance mortgages. Some homebuilders claim they cannot build homes today within this ceiling and therefore it should be raised or removed. I cannot understand this because I have figures to show that FHA is insuring at prices well within this ceiling. According to figures given to me by the Federal Housing Administration, the range of averages for mortgages insured wider section 203(b) during the last quarter of 1965 indicates that FHA has been insuring at levels well within the proposed $15,000 ceiling. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to place in the RECORD a table show- ing the FHA average mortgage amounts by State and by region for section 203(b) mortgages during the last quarter of 1965. There being no objection, the table was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows : Average mortgage amount for proposed new homes with FHA-insured mortgages under sec. 203(b), 4th quarter 1965--Range of averages within region Connecticut______________ (1) Maine (1) Massachusetts ------------ $15,01,11 New Hampshire, ---------- (1) Rhode Island------------- (1) Vermont---------------- (1) Middle Atlantic______________ -------- New Jersey_______________ 16, 160 New York______________ 15, 065 Pennsylvania_____________ 14,692 East North Central__________-------- Illinois ___________________ 16,255 Indiana----------____-- 14,961 Michigan ----------------- 14, 725 Ohio--------------------- 15,628 Wisconsin ------------ - 15,995 West North CcnLnil__________ Iowa--------------------- 15,981 Kansas-------__-- (1) Minnesota________________ 17,388 Missouri.. _ _ ______________ 15, 519 Nebraska---------------- 16,234 North Dakota ------------ (1) South Dakota ------------ (1) South Atlantic_______________ _____ __ Delaware____16,462 District of Columbia_____ (9 Florida_____________15,604 Georgia------------------ 15, 568 Maryland________________ 14,167 North Carolina-__________ 15,327 South Carolina----------- 14,917 Virginia__________________ 16,012 West Virginia ------------ (1) East South Central___________ ________ Alabama----------------- 16, 008 Kentucky________________ 14,270 Mississippi_______________ 14,560 Tenn essee----------------- 15,124 West South Central_________ -------- A rkansas --------------- 14,773 Louisiana________________ 17,072 Oklahoma________________ 14, 410 '1'exas____________________ 14,965 Mountain ------------------ ----------------------- Arizona________ _____ -- - 15,236 Colorado_________________ -16,409 Idaho____________________ 16,938 Montana_________________ 16,569 Nevada------- --------- 17,306 New Mexico______________ 16,943 Wyoming--------------- (1) Utah_____________________ 16,114 Pacific Coast States__________ ______ California________________ 19,493 Oregon------------------ 14,586 Washington______________ 17,125 Alaska_______________________ 29,298 Hawaii--------------------- - 21, 970 Puerto Rico__________________ 15,598 Low sic, 051 14, 167 16,462 - ------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------- -------- -------- ---- -------- 14, 586 19, 493 Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, these figures clearly show that home- builders have, in fact, been building at levels averaging around $15,000 in almost all regions of the United States. It seems to me that when the Federal Government uses special assistance funds, they should be only for homes priced at a level that families of low and moderate income can buy. The need is obviously greatest at this level and I believe that the Fed- eral Government should direct its great- est effort to the greatest need. Mr. TOWER. Mn President, I ask unanimous consent that during con- sideration of the FNMA bill, the housing bill, the urban mass transportation bill, and the comprehensive city demonstra- tion bill, that necessary and appropriate staff members be given the privilege of the floor and admitted to the Chamber. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 August 10, 196bApproved iEet4b#MM9lW6fQDCUMRBIi~1fl7ETI1 000400100016-0 A4217 well with strained meat blended with the old standby. The University of Hawaii has become ex- tremely interested in the case. Nutrition experts there have been corresponding with the Morrison and ask to be kept informed of the infant's progress. And the parents, needless to say, are re- lieved-and thankful. "We aren't calling Teresa Wyatt Urp any- more," Morrison said with a grin. `Now I suppose we'll have to come up with some 11 sort of a Hawaiian nickname for her ... French Guiana: A New "In" Place Russian Missile Launchers? EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. DONALD RUMSFELD Or ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, August 10, 1966 Mr. RUMSFELIi Mr. Speaker, a re- port of particular importance to the United States, by Richard Lewis in the Chicago Sun-Times of August 7, 1966, discusses the possibilities of the estab- lishment by the Russians of rocket- launching facilities in the Western Hem- isphere, as a result of the French-Soviet agreement on space exploration. Mr. Lewis speculates on the implications that the French launching site may have for the security of the hemisphere as a whole and of the United States in par- ticular. Considering the acute prob- lems that have developed between France and the United States-with which President Johnson has not yet come to grips-the question is obviously an im- portant one. This report Is timely and merits se- rious attention and -I insert it in the RECORD at this point: FRENCH GUIANA: A NEW "IN" PLACE FOR RUSSIAN MISSILE LAUNCHERS? (By Richard Lewis) While details of the Franco-Soviet deal on space co-operation have not been made public, American space experts concede it has opened the door for Russian missilemen to reestablish rocket launching facilities in the Western Hemisphere. This time, the scene would be French Guiana on the northeast coast of South America, about 2,000 miles south of Cuba from which Russian rocketeers were evicted in 1963. France is completing a rocket range there in the northern part of the territory, on a strip of land 180 miles wide overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. The launch site is 5 degrees north of the equator, making it ideal for launching sat- ellites and probes into equatorial orbit, and ment signed by French Foreign Minister the conditions of sharing Guiana space Maurice Couve de Murville and Andrei A. facilities with any nation would be the sub- Gromyko, Soviet minister of foreign affairs, ject of a special agreement with each one. contemplates Russian use of the facility. The official French-Soviet declaration on However, spokesmen for the National Aero- the matter issued June 30 states only that nautics and Space Administration and the "the ministers of foreign affairs signed a co- State Department's space "desk" say they operation agreement for the study and ex- have not seen any details of this agreement. ploitation for space for peaceful ends, as well Dr. Daniel Frerejacques, French scientific as an agreement on scientific, technical and attache in Washington, said that both economic co-operation." ELDO and NASA had been invited to launch Under such an agreement, the Russians their own rockets from Guiana. The French could launch French satellites from space- expected that NASA would pay the cost of its ports in Central Asia or use launch facili- own service towers and launch control fa- ties on French soil. cilities if France provided the pads, he said. So far, American space experts have been Asked if a similar invitation had been content to and see what Guiana facility offers extended to Russia, Frerejacques said it had Scientifically, the Ons not. The Russians have not requested several that adedvarntagis ess as u rotaa tion launch siteprovides. a launch facilities, hey would. and further, he tional boost to a satellite on an easterly doubted that hat they One . Asked what his government's policy would launch, as at Cape Kennedy. be if the Soviets should request the same So far, the possibility that the Russians rocket launch privileges as NASA and ELDO, might sneak missiles back across the At- Frerejacques said this would require a de- lantic under their space agreement with cision at the highest government level. France has not raised visible concern in range would open a missile corridor to the soft underbelly of the United States early warning systems. Except for surveillance apparatus by the U.S. Southern Command in the Panama Canal Zone, the main elec- tronic pickets of the North American Air Defense Command look north, to the Arctic. So far, there is no official concern in this country that Frence would allow Russia to use the Guiana launch pads to threaten the United States. I h described the Guiana e late about it "at this point in time," as NASA people are fond of saying. It may be that American space officials are hesitant to raise questions publicly that might irritate the sensitivities of the French government and abrade already taut relations. But these questions are being raised pri- vately1 So far, no answers have been made The enc av range specifically as a space research launch W ' F d b rance s y facility only, built and operate Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, or space Nixon's Candid Appraisal of the Vietnam study center. It will replace the Ham- Buildup maguir proving grounds in the Sahara, which France must evacuate by mid-1967 under an agreement with Algeria. Consequently, it is assumed in NASA that any rockets the Russians take to Guiana would be designed for peaceful space projgcts. Speculatively, however, it has been pointed out that Soviet satellite launch vehicles are missiles, just as are U.S. Thor, Atlas, and Titan rockets. Further, it is un- likely that the Russians would? allow their larger space carriers, which are secret, to be launched by French crews. Since France has invited the United States to use Guiana, it could scarcely keep Russian missiles out. The only means of doing so would be to bar all foreign missiles from Guiana pads, allowing other nations to use only French space carriers launched by French crews to put their satellites in orbit. No such re- striction was spelled out in the invitation to the United States, and no one who has studied the matter seriously believes there is any in the Franco-Russian space agreement. In fact, such a restriction would make the Guiana port useless to the Russians for space research, since the only space launcher the French have developed is the Diamant. This three-stage rocket standing 82 feet high is capable only of lofting a 175-pound payload into low Earth orbit. Its payload capability is equivalent to that of the U.S. Not far away is France's old, infamous penal Scout rocket, smallest space launcher in the r t i y. nven o colony of Devil's Island. American The French have invited the United States, Russian satellites have been heavy since our President's lugubrious foreign policy the European Space Research Organization the beginning of the space age. Sputnik I, statements. and the European Launcher Development launched nearly nine years ago, weighed 185 Mr. Speaker, I have unanimous con- Organization to use the Guiana range. In pounds-nine pounds more than Diamant's sent that the aforementioned editorial the case of the United States, the invitation present payload. On the other hand, if the be reprinted at this point in the RECORD: was accompanied by a suggestion that some French allowed the Russians to haul big VIETNAM BUILDUP financing would Pe helpful. rockets to Guinea, it would undoubtedly The first section of the range, which is 12 generate serious tension in the Western Richard M. Nixon has been accused of play- miles wide and about 90 miles long, is to be world and in Europe. tug some kind of political game in advocating opened in 1968, when the French expect to Speculation about the Franco-Soviet the commitment of more troops and more air- begin using it to test upper stages of their agreement in South American journals has power to the war in Viet Nam. But the fact Diamant rocket. touched on this problem. So far, French seems to be quite to the contrary. EXTENSION OF REMARKS of HON.. ROBERT H. MICHEL OF ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, August 10, 1966 Mr. MICHEL. Mr. Speaker, the Wash- ington Evening Star in their editorial of August 9, comments very favorably upon Dick Nixon's latest assessment of the sit- uation in Vietnam. The President con- tinues to disavow the reports that his military advisers are asking for a bigger commitment of troops and materiel for the Vietnam conflict as a condition prec- edent to any foreseeable end to the hostilities there. True, Dick Nixon can be an artful po- litical partisan, but he has always been responsible in his criticism and in his assessment of our situation abroad, He has just as good a grasp of the world situation today, with all his traveling and contacts, as he did when he served with such distinction as our Vice President. As a matter of fact, his candid appraisals and forthright statements are in marked Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 .A4218 Approved For H~ R9 J 67 400100016-0 ~ August 10, 1966 Nixon made his statements as he was leav- ing Saigon after meetings there with our high echelon military and diplomatic leaders. Un- doubtedly his comments were a reflection of their views. The former vice president called for a "sub- atanttal" increase in American ground forces and intensified bombing in the North. He apparently had in mind an increase in Ameri- can forces to around 600,000 men. He thought that this, with heavier bombing, could bring a military conclusion within two or perhaps three years. Without this greater effort, he seemed to think the war might drag on for 10 to 20 years, as has been sug- gested by some American military command- ers, by Marshal Ky and even by Ho Chi Minh.. Nixon said he understood the difficulties confronting the President in such a call-up, and added that no President could make this decision "in a political vacuum. Unless the American people support such a decision it would be self-defeating. It is time for the United States to be united in this struggle. Further debate as to our goal and objective in Viet Nam can only delay the end of the war, can only encourage the enemy." As far as we can see, there is no partisan political gimmick in any of this. On the .contrary, coming from one of the two front- running Republican presidential aspirants, it could be helpful to the Democratic admin- istration. The President, for understandable reasons, has not publicly mentioned any figure for the eventual size of the American commitment in Viet Nam, and there has been considerable equivocating In the Pentagon as to the prob- able duration of the war. One reason for this probably is that no one knows the precise answers. It seems perfectly evident, however, that the American buildup will continue, and may very well reach 500,000.. Nor does an early end to the war appear, likely. In these cir- cumstances, it seems to us that the Nixon statements were those of a responsible Amer- lean, not the comments of a partisan nit- picker. Great Society Fiscal Policies Trigger Cur- rent Labor-Management Difficulty EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. E. Y. BERRY OF SOUTH DAKOTA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, August 10, 1966 Mr. BERRY. Mr. Speaker, the pres- ent airline strike and the possible inter- vention by Congress in this dispute point the finger of blame at the actual root of the trouble which is the Great So- ciety's unwise fiscal policy. Inflation, skyrocketing Government spending and a 3.5 percent jump in the cost of living in the past year are the principal reasons why the American public is now inconvenienced by the strike. No one can realy blame American labor for their fear that any contractual gains will only be lost in the galloping inflation. And no one can really blame business which is feeling the pinch re- sulting from inflation. More than likely Congress will act this week, but the chief cause of the difficulty will remain. Administration-fostered inflation will continue to hamper both business and labor. Civil Rights Act of 1966 the dream of an open society which wel- HON. JAMES H. SCHEUER OF NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, August 9, 1966 The House in Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union had un- der consideration the bill (H.R. 19:765) to assure nondiscrimination in Federal and State jury selection and service, to facilitate the desegregation of Rrublic education and other public facilities, to provide judicial re- lief against discriminatory housing prac- tices, to prescribe penalties for certain acts of violence or intimidation, and for other purposes. Mr. SCHEUER. Mr. Chairman, I will vote for the 1966 Civil Rights Act al- though I am concerned and disappointed that title IV of the bill has been amend- ed to eliminate large areas of housing from its provisions, .and although I be- lieve that the amendment to title V in- troduced by the gentlemen from Florida represents an unfortunate response to an unfortunate situation. However, Mr. Chairman, this legisla- tion, and particularly title IV, is of the greatest of significance for millions of Americans whose rights it assures and protects. And, importantly, it also pro- tects the rights of those who follow us. For, by 1975, the population of the United States will jump to almost 223 million, a rise from present levels of about 25 million citizens, equal to the entire U.S. population in the immediate pre-Civil War period. Between 1960 and 1975, the urban population alone will skyrocket from 125 to 171 million. In 1975, there will be roughly 91/2 million more households in the United States than presently, and more than 20 mil- lion new housing units will be built in new suburban and exurban communities which will virtually double our Nation's metropolitan areas, The great question then, Mr. Chair- man, is whether a large portion of those new people in those new households, in addition to the current population, will face discrimination in housing merely be- cause of their skin color, religion, or na- tional origin? How many of those new people would have to face the stigma of living in a slum or a ghetto if we do not pass title IV of the 1966 Civil' Rights Act-even in its weakened form as amended? Mr. Chairman, it would be the great- est of tragedies if the new communities which will explode across the face of our nation during the next decade are not open to all citizens on a free and equal basis, as their purses and their tastes lead them. This legislation mandates a national commitment to close the door once and for all on those backward few among us who would welcome only some Americans into these.new cities, and who would exclude by group label millions of other American citizens. At last we will have placed the ma- jesty of our Federal Government behind comes all Americans into free and equal participation. Knoxville Endorsed Tax Sharing EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. W. E. (BILL) BROCK OF TENNESSEE IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, August 10, 1966 Mr. BROCK. Mr. Speaker, last year I introduced legislation-H.R. 10696- which would authorize the Federal Gov- ernment to return up to 5 percent of its income to the States to help finance their educational systems. I have been heart- ened by the support the tax-sharing con- cept has received from educators, econ- omists, Governors, Members of Con- gress, and local governments. Now, I am 'hppy to include among the support of this legislative approach to relieving the financial pinch on local and State gov- ernments the Knoxville, Tenn., City Council. I have unanimous consent that a resolution adopted on June 28, 1966 by the city council be printed in the Ap- pendix of the RECORD: RESOLUTION 3429 Resolution of the Council of the City of Knoxville endorsing a proposal calling for the return of a portion of Federal income tax funds to local communities without conditions as to use Whereas, conventional methods of local taxation throughout the United States and specifically including Knoxville and Knox County are rapidly approaching the limits of financial endurance by local taxpayers; and Whereas, the 19,66 United States Confer- ence of Mayors has adopted a resolution calling upon the President and Congress to consider and adopt a tax sharing program under which a portion of the Federal Income Tax will be returned directly to local com- munities without conditions as to use; and Whereas, such a program will reduce the need for the ponderous and costly Federal bureaucracy which currently operates to dis- tribute Federal Funds to local communities and units of government through Federal grants; and Whereas, the delays encountered in processing applications for Federal Funds and in returning such funds to Local Gov- ernments would be eliminated to the benefit of the local taxpayers from whom such funds are derived; and Whereas, the leaders of local units of Gov- ernment are in the best position to deter- mine the needs of their own communities and make proper use of such funds; and Whereas, the provision of Federal Funds through restrictive and complicated Federal programs seriously encroaches upon the right of the people to govern themselves, does not make the most economic use of the tax dol- lar, and does not allow the most proper management of local fiscal affair. Now, therefore, be it resolved by the coun- cil of the city of Knoxville: SECTION 1. That this Council does hereby commit Its unqualified endorsement to the proposal that a percentage of the Federal Income Tax collected be returned to the communities from which it is derived, with- out restriction or conditions as to the use thereof. SEC. 2. That the members of Congress rep- resenting this area, the Senators of the State Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100016-0 Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67 00446R00040010DI-6-0 August 10, .1 966 CONGRESSIONAL RLCORD -HOUSE 18025 based upon a belief that such an alien could easily return to his own country to procure a visa, it is clear that such as assumption is not valid for Cubans because they Can- not return to their homeland for that pur- pose. The Department favors and supports the objectives of H.R. 15183 and, accordingly, the Department of Justice recommends en- actment of this bill... ATTORNEY GENERAL SAYS CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT TARGET OF COMMUNISTS' (Mr. EVINS of Tennessee (at the re= quest of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted per- mission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and td include ex- traneous matter.) Mr. EVINS of Tennessee. Mr. Speak- er, the wave of riots and anarchy which has erupted in many of the larger cities has been a cause of great concern to all of us. One of the most disturbing aspects of this civil strife has been the similarity of the consistent pattern 'and techniques that appear in these outbreaks of vio- lence and the modus operandi of the Communist Party in its agitation around the world. This has raised a question as to whether, and to what extent, these riots have been influenced by Commu- nists. Columnist Jack Anderson said in the Washington Post of July 27 last: The FBI has positive evidence that pro- fessional Communist agitators have helped to stir up recent Negro riots. I am aavlsea Gnus 411V Investigation has found indications that ter- overwhelming majority of civil rights leaders tain of these riots are Communist inspired in this country, both Negro and white, have and agitated. In this connection, I would recognized and rejected Communism as a now like for you to send me a substantive menace to the freedoms of all. But there are report on the result of the FBI's investiga- notable exceptions-dangerous opportunists tion Into what the this has Increasing what isactin form an alliance with any aorganization, re- has been taken, what action is being taken gardless of its nature, to advance their own and what specific action is planned. power and prestige." An immediate report on this is urged and With regard to suggestions in the public will be appreciated. press that some of the recent strife may have With kindest regards and best wishes, I the Revolutionary Act on,Mo ement (RAM), am Very sincerely yours, or similar organizations, I can say that we JOE L. EvfNS, do not have sufficient evidence at this time Member of Congress.- to support such a conclusion. Every effort is made to keep abreast of DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, August 8,1968. s E , vIN Hon. JOE L. House of Representatives, of Investigation has always provided excel- Washington, D.C. lent coverage of Communist Party and other DEAR MR. CONGRESSMAN: This is in reply subversive activities, and all pertinent in- to your letter of July 27, 1906, concerning formation developed by the FBI Is regularly the possible Communist-inspired or -agitated furnished to the appropriate riots and civil strife. executive departments and agencies of the With reference to those demonstrations di- Federal Government. When sufficient evi- rected primarily against our policy in Viet- dence is available to show that a federal eta- nam, the organization known as Students tute has been violated, this Department will tak appropriate ction. for a Democratic Society 9, key participant. has nt it In prI trmptl ust th tothe fo egoingawill be of assist- been an organizer or r key p P October of 1905 the Attorney General in- ance to you. If I can be of help in any other structed the FBI to determine the extent matter, please do not hesitate to communi- of Communist infiltration in the SDS. cate with me. Literature distributed by the SDS die- Sincerely, 'closes that in 1905 a group of students and J. WALTER YEAGLEY, young professionals banded together to form Assistant Attorney General. the Intercollegiate Socialist Society which in 1017 changed its name to the League for In- From the Washington (D.C.) Post, July 27, dustrial Democracy. The literature claims 1966] that during the 1020's the Student League for . SAME REDS IN 2 CrrIE's' RIOTS Industrial Democracy, the student depart- (By Jack Anderson) ment of the League for Industrial Democracy, The FBI has positive evidence that rofes- distributed socialist literature, organized aid i it it t h h 1 d to eve a r e l C In the same connection, I wrote the for striking workers and the unemployed. Honorable Nicholas deB. Katzenbaoh, fought R.O.T.C. programs on college campuses, and organized student strikes for Attorney General of the United States peace. According to the literature, the Stu- on October 20, 1965, and again July 27 dent League for Industrial Democracy was last; requesting an investigation to de- reorganized in 1960 as the Students for 'a termine whether, and to what extent, Democratic erated an autonomous cnd since 162has - CommuniAt infiltration and incitement ra d a and the bodeissued. a In joint ito 1op 1965 had contributed the riots and civil the ment in which they mutually agreed to sever strife that have been occurring. connections and disassociate. By letter dated August 8, 1966, Mr. J. Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director, Federal Bu- Walter Yeagley, Assistant Attorney Gen- roan of Investigation, has reported in "Tur- eral, Internal Security Division, Depart- bulence, on the Campus" as follows: ment of Justice, has written to me in "At the core of the extremist elements of reply to my letter to Attorney General the New ft are doctrines civil this edi- Katzenbach, pointing up the investiga- the ence, and a disrespect for to rour evolt against constitutional pour roo- tions currently underway, and making e111, co- nomic, political, and social system. One of Other pertinent comments regarding the the most vociferous groups in the New Left, violence, which I believe will be of in- is the Students for a Democratic Society, subversive activity for purposes of formulat- ink policy, initiating prosecutions, and pro- n ommu S ag a o s p s ona stir up recent Negro riots. This doesn't mean that the riots were pro- voked or controlled by the Communists. However, some of the same agitators who helped fire the mobs in Los Angeles were spotted egging on the rioters in Chicago. The FBI also has evidence that the teen- age gangs were taking orders from adults be- hind the scenes. Some messages were ac- tually transmitted in code over a Chicago radio station. What worries government officials is that similar riots are planned for other cities, in- cluding New York City, Baltimore and Wash- ington. (Mr. CRALEY (at the request of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission to. extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) [Mr. GRALEY'S remarks will appear hereaftel\In the Appendix.] Post dated July 27, 1966. "'We are a socialist youth organ and con-n I EFFE~I~- OF VIETNAM CONFLICT The letters and article follow: Sider ourselves a revolutionary organizatio __ ,,..,ro.,...., ,a,. ,,,,+ t,ai+a"" Fo Ipty ran ON AMERICAN POLITICS terest to my colleagues and others. many of whose members dress in beatnik I ask unanimous assent that the letter style. Here are some typical comments heard from Mr. J. Walter Yeagley be included at a recent meeting of this group: in the RECORD, together with my own - "'When we have this utopia where every- letter to Attorney General Katzenbaoh, body only works two hours a day, the proc- and the press report in the Washington esscs of redistribution of power and economy will take care of themselves.' " Hon. NICHOLAS DEE, KATZENBACH, be reformed as it presently exists.' " (Mr. CRALEY (at the request of Mr. Attorney General of the United. States, With reference to disturbances involving GILLIGAN) was granted permission to ex. Department of Justice, - - racial issues, the Attorney General and the GIL his remarks granted this point it the Washingtion, D.C. - Director of the Federal Bureau of Investiga-tend DEAR MR. ATTORNEY GENERAL: On October tion have pointed out on a number of oe- RECORD and to include extraneous 20, 1965, I wrote you requesting an investiga- casions that the civil rights movement is an matter.) . - . -- tiori of the extent of Communist infiltration obvious target for Communist Infiltration, . Mr. CRALEY. Mr. Speaker, I should - and incitement of the riots and civil strife and its leaders should continue to be alerted like to include in the RECORD the contin- that have been occurring-and are continu- to this possibility. uation of a series of articles on the ing to occur in major cities of our Nation. Mr. Hoover, in an address delivered before American economy, the first of which I It appears that rather than diminishing the the Pennsylvania Society and the Society of American to the RECORD first of The riots are increasing to the point that in Pennsylvania Women, stated: some cities Virtual anarchy prevails in cer- "Let me emphasize that the American civil article, taken from the New York Times, rain areas. Approved For Releas?gibLv111A'kbpm461O6?6 Tom Wicker's Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDPVBOO46R000400100016-0 CONGI;.,._~;i1ONAL RECORD - HOUSE August 10, 1966 analysis of the effects of the Vietnam conflict on the American economy, this one discussing the impact on politics: POLITICIANS SEE WAR ISSUE HURTING DEMO-. CRATS IN FALL-PARTY'S CANDIDATES EX- PECTED To SUFFER UNLESS THE CONFLICT?Is 'GOING WELL'-JOHNSON'S GRIP FOUND WEAKER (This is the second of four articles in which correspondents of The New York Times estimate the impact of the Vietnam war on the American economy, the nation's politics, the lives of its citizens and its for-. eign policy.) (By Tom Wicker) WASHINGTON, August 8.-Glenn Carney, whose work as a lobbyist and public rola- tigns man for the Anaconda Copper Com- pany has made him an astute and experi- enced analyst of Montana politics, was asked recently what effect the war in Vietnam would have on Democratic Senator LEE MET- CALF'S re-election chances. "The better the war goes," Mr. Carney said, "the more it helps the Democrats. The worse it goes, the more it helps the Republicans." The answer was somewhat paradoxical be- cause the Senator has been a mild critic of the war, one of 15 Senators who signed a letter to President Johnson in January ask- ing him not to resume the bombing of North Vietnam. His conservative Republican op- ponent, Gov. Tim M. Babcock, intends to make that letter a campaign issue. Nevertheless, polticial analysts, candidates, reporters and strategists across the nation tend to agree with Mr. Carney's assessment of the impact of the war on American politics. They also tend to agree that the war, as yet, is not "going well enough" to be of assistance to the Democrats in this year's elections. In fact, most politicians believe that if anything, the war issue is likely to be damaging to Democratic candidates this year. Gov. Grant Sawyer of Nevada, for example, a supporter of the Johnson policy, neverthe- less believes that the frustrations and uncer- tainties of the war will do him more harm than good in his re-election campaign. Eu- gene Nickerson, a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Now York, has said that he expects his party to "get it from both sides"-from those who want a. greater peace effort and those who want a stronger war effort. - There 1s even wider agreement among po- litical figures, however, that no sure predic- tions can be made. The dominant fact of politics today is that candidates and man- agers all over the country are nervous about what the war means to them, hesitant as to the safest or most profitable position to take, and in many cases reluctant to discuss it publicly. Despite the prevailing uncertainties about Its direct effect on the over-all campaign this year, or any specific election this year or later, it is plain that the impact of the Vietnam war on American politics has been sharp and perhaps in some ways lasting. JOHNSON ON THE SPOT It has embroiled the President in the major controversy of his career, cracked if not shat- tered the overwhelming consensus he was able to build up and maintain well past his land- slide election in 1964, shifted attention from the domestic legislative achievements that he and his party registered in 1064 and 1965, shaken his once powerful influence in Con- gress, reawakened the liberal-to-left opposi- tion his domestic successes and his campaign against Barry Goldwater had silenced, and may well have focused his political future and that of isi Administration on the out- Because he has loyally supported Mr. John- son on the Vietnam issue, Vice President HUMPHREY has been damaged With the liberal elements of the Democratic party on which he has based his career.. ? Aside from the fact that he must sink or swim with Mr. Johnson's policy, Mr. I-lUM- PHaEY at the very least has net been able to enhance his own chances for a future Presi- dency, and probably has seen those chances diminish. KENNEDY WINNING SUPPORT On the other hand, as Mr. Johnson's left flank has become politically exposed,. Senator' ROBERT F. KENNEDY of New York has become the most obvious rival to the President for the leadership of the Democratic Party. By cautiously dissenting from the heavy re- liance of the Administration on military ac- tion, and by suggesting such diplomatic ini- tiatives as direct dealings with the Commu- nist Vietcong, Mr. KENNEDY has earned favor among liberals who had formerly distrusted him and appears now to be the political heir of his brother, President Kennedy. So sharply has M. KENNEDY emerged as an apparent rival to the President that some .danger may exist of a premature Presidential boom on his behalf. He has denied any In- tention to seok the Democratic nomination in 1968 and few serious political figures at- tribute any such ambition to hiln. However, if a strong liberal move in his behalf should develop-and it is talked of in some political circles-it could seriously em- barrass the President and Mr. KENNEDY, and disrupt both the Democratic party and the already strained relations between the two men. On the Republican side, the issue poses both opportunity and danger, in 1966 and 1968. Although many Republicans hope that a protest vote against Democratic man- agement of the war will bring them signifl- cant gains this year, most Republicans have backed the President, either from conviction, bipartisanship or a reluctance to appear to be "playing politics with the war." Thus, they cannot freely exploit whatever public dissatisfaction with the war there may be. For 1968, widespread and general frustra- tion with the war and Mr. Johnson's leader- ship would clearly provide the Republicans with their best-perhaps their only-hope of victory. Yet the party might experience con- siderable difficulty in taking advantage of such a situation. For one thing it would require some sophis- ticated political footwork for the Republican party to provide a clear alternative to Mr. Johnson's policy without becoming vulner- able to charges of offering-in the President's phrase of 1964-"more war or more appease- ment" For another thing, the gap on the Viet- nam issue is widening between the two lead- ing Republican Presidential contenders. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon has consistently advocated a harder military line, and could hardly campaign for the Presi- dency on any other policy. Gov. George Romney of Michigan, although he has both muted and fuzzed his dissent, has clearly tried to remain flexible enough to run some- thing of a "peace campaign" if he is nomi- nated in 1968. Thus, a split on the Issue at the next national convention could add to the already deep divisions of the Republican party, RADICAL WING DEVELOPING There also exists, as a result of the Viet- nam controversy, a possibility that could have even more lasting effects than these. There is now visible a movement toward a Seizing on the "peace Issue," numerous candidates have entered Congressional races-in Connecticut, California, Now York, Wisconsin, Oregon, New Jersey, Indiana and elsewhere. Most are running as Democrats, some as independents, but almost all outside of or without the blessing of Democratic leaders and organizations. So far, little success for these candidates is in sight-and two of the most vigorous have gone down to defeat. In Oregon's Democratic primary, Howard Morgan lost a statewide race for the senatorial nomination to Representative ROBERT B. DUNCAN, despite the strong support of Senator WAYNE MORSE, In California, a youthful radical editor, Robert Scheer, offered a well-organized and tough opposition to Representative JEFFREY CoHELAN, an old-line liberal from the Berkeley-Oakland area, but Mr. Scheer lost a close race in the Democratic primary. Nevertheless, the vigor and numbers of the "peace candidates"-who "are distinct from those otherwise regular Democrats who may dissent from the President's lipo-is impres- sive, and the Vietnam issue, if it remains alive until 1988, could crystallize the so- called "new left" into a potent new political force. NEGRO VOTE CITED This prospect particularly' worries some Democrats because they see the possibility that the now left might absorb great num- bers of Negro voters who in recent years have supported Democratic tickets. Their reason- ing is that these Negroes might become con- vinced that war expenditures of money and energy have halted the momentum of the civil rights movement in the United States. A politically powerful new left built on the Vietnam and civil rights Issues appears un- likely to most professional politicians. The most far_sighted of them, however, are dis- missing the possibility. Nevertheless, for the immediate future, only Glenn Carney's proposition that a suc- cessful war is likely to benefit President Johnson's party has any wide acceptance. The basic problem for most politicians is that they do not know whether to gamble on that success, or on the alternative, possibility that the war will drag on indecisively and arouse strong opposition to those who have managed and favored it. This dilemma Is heightened by the fact that many political figures today have two elections in mind. Even those reasonably convinced that there will be no striking suc- cess in the war by November, 1066, cannot be sure that such success will not have come by the Presidential year of 1968. "SUCCESS" NEEDS DEFINING Another complicating question is how to define success ' in the war. Would a negoti- ated settlement provide a popular ending,, or does the public mood nOw demand some demonstrable military victory? Opinion polls, after all, showed public ap- proval both of the President's January "peace offensive" and his decision in July to bomb the oil dumps near Hanoi and Haiphong. Ultimately confusing the issue are two po- litical truisms: One is that patriotism de- mands support for American troops in ac- tion, even from those who do not approve of the war. The other is that In foreign crises the general tendency of the American public usually has been to support the President of the United States. - For all these reasons, only those candi- dates this year who have firmly held views of their own and who are willing to risk the consequences of stating them are likely to take particular issue with W. Johnson's policy of a limited war for limited aims. However, even those who are willing to uvuao-..~ vvv. Americans thou ~1~ S@o fr~B04i446R 4iQ6 0ih8 t China. Others stall in voting for him. weakened the Republicans, wish to reduce by various means the present Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67B0044JR000400100016-0 August 10, 1966 CONGRESSIONA _ RECORD - HOUSE level of the military effort, although most stop short of urging complete withdrawal.. NO CLEAR-CUT PATTERN Thus, as this year's political season moves toward its climax in November, no clear-cut pattern has developed around the' Vietnam issue. Instead anomalies, contradictions and surprises abound. Here are some examples: Many members of Congress who would normally be eager to got home to their cam- paigns in an election year are hoping the current session drags on into the fall so that they will not have to face too long a period of challenge about Vietnam. President Johnson, however, in several early campaign forays, has made it plain that he intends to make support for the war a primary issue this fall-in defiance of the uncertainty of other politicians, of the gen- eral belief that his party's domestic record provides a better political argument, and of the fact that the most intense criticism of the war has come from Democrats such as Senators MORSE of Oregon and J. W. FCL- BRIGHT of Arkansas. - The prime political concern of the Demo- cratic party this fall is to return to office many of the bumper crop of freshman Demo- crats who were elected to the House in the Johnson landslide in 1064, and 48 of whom won seats away from Republicans. However, 25 of these freshmen Democrats have tended ,toward criticism of the war effort, some even to sharp disagreement. it is generally believed that Gov. Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon, one of the nation's better- known Republicans, unnecessarily risked his chances for election to the Senate by taking a strong position in opposition to the war. Now he is rated not much better than an even bet against Democratic Republican Duncan, who supports the President's policy and probably would not have been in the race had Mr. Hatfield not raised the Vietnam issue. In what in widely considered the most im- portant race of the year-that between Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California and his Re- publican challenger, Ronald Reagan-the war is not an issue at all, and neither candidate gives any indication that he will mention it. Finally, most political analysts believe that the war, its frustrations and its peripheral effects--after prices and "tight money," for example-have badly damaged the President's always tenuous popularity. These same ana- lysts concede, however, that the "safest" po- sition on the war is probably one of simple support for the President's policy, because he is assumed to be the man "in the best position to know what to do." (Mr. GONZALEZ (at the request of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) [Mr. GONZALEZ' remarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix.] (Mr. GONZALEZ (at, the request of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) [Mr. GONZALEZ' remarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix.] the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) Mr, FARNSLEY. ' Mr. Speaker, I would like to include in the RECORD an article that appeared in the Washington Post of August 10, 1966, by Rowland Evans and Robert Novak about "LBJ and the Cities": INSIDE REPORT: LI3J AND THE CITIES (By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak) Although saying little publicly about the 18027 tions in the Negro ghetto. 'rne 1.nszrres or- flcials said no, they could never get enough lifeguards. Acting under presidential mandate, Cali- fano discovered by one telephone call to the Red Cross that a nonswimmer could become a full-fledged lifeguard within four weeks, a swimmer withth one week. The hydrants wore turned on and pools were ordered. Still another example. A month ago, the President's top priority to the racial crisis in the big cities, the demonstration cities bill, was marked down as dated. Now, be- growing crisis of the Negro revolution in the cause of presidential missionary work, it's big cities, president Johnson is working given at least a 50-50 chance. overtime in quiet ways to defuse the Nation's Although public silence conceals these worst domestic problem. presidential initiatives, they prove how . One revealing glimpse of Mr. Johnson's deeply aware Mr. Johnson is of the disaster private efforts came in a conversation (fruit- 'that lurks in major American cities today. less, as it turned out) with Senator ROBERT BYRD of West Virginia, a conservative Demo- crat and former Johnson ally who is now systematically opposing Great Society Pro- grams. The call had one purpose: To line up BYnD's voto in the Senate Appropriations Committee last Thursday, when the rent- supplement bill was to come up for decision. Although this bill contains only $20 million for a pilot rent-subsidy program designed to break up Negro housing patterns in the big cities, BYRD was adamant. He. told the Presi- dent nol Said the Presiden, according to BYRD's own account a few days later: 'All I'm trying to do is to help these people got out of the ratholes and let? them see a little sunlight." BYRD, whose state has no major cities at all, was unmoved. The problem, he told Mr. Johnson, Is the Negroes themselves, not the Government. When the President warned that failure to make a start now at helping the Negro masses in the North would guar- antee a -far worse crisis in the future, BYRD only shrugged his shoulders. When the rent-supplement program was approved in committee on a close vote last Thursday, BYRD showed up with a couple of proxies of absent Senators and cast them, along with his own, against this modest pilot program. What the President attempted to do with BYRD is only one small example-the tip of the iceberg-of his desperate effort to take the violence out of the Negro revolution. For example, it is a well-kept secret that Mr. Johnson has dispatched a top-level team of White House aides to at least four major cities in the North, and one in the South, to discuss education, employment, housing- and the racial crisis-with university and political experts. Headed by Joseph Califano, these White House teams are giving the President new insights into the problems of the big city, the flight of the whites to the suburbs and the dynamics of the Negro revolution. Harry McPherson, the White House counsel, and Douglass Cater, the President's chief for edu- cational matters, also have been assigned by the President to this work. Beyond that, Mr. Johnson's personal inter- vention in a problem right on his doorstep- the possibility of a racial flare-up in the Capital-is now being studied in governors' offices across the country. When Mr. John- son react a story in The Washington Post that Negro children could not turn on the fire hydrants in a bitter heat wave and play in the spray (a problem that triggered the riots on Chicago's West Side), ho ordered Califano to stop in. ran s, e his office. Why no y Califano summoned District authorities to neys' fees will be an "amount equal to he d t manded? h d the reasonable value of the services ren- ATTORNEYS' FEES BILL (Mr. HATHAWAY (at the request of Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD, and to include extraneous matter.) Mr. HATHAWAY. Mr. Speaker, it is indeed a pleasure to testify before this distinguished subcommittee on a pro- posed reform which I consider of the utmost importance. H.R. 12530, which I introduced in Feb- ruary of this year, would remove arbi- trary limitations upon attorneys' fees for services rendered in proceedings before administrative agencies. At present, most Federal agencies are hampered by statutory restrictions as to attorneys' fees. Many of these limita- tions are outdated and most award fees which are not sufficient compensation for the legal services rendered. The cost of living has increased substantially since many of these limits were set. In some cases, attorneys are paid different amounts when practicing before different agencies though the nature of the work is very similar. My bill is in the spirit of the Admin- istrative Procedures Act. For years, Congress has sought to establish in the administrative agencies as much uni- formity as possible considering the many diverse roles and responsibilities the Fed- eral Government has assumed. The Administrative Procedures Act is a testi- mony to the success with which many of the procedures of these agencies have been simplified and their various proce- dural differences minimized. H.R. 12530 provides that all agencies which are stung by restrictions as to attorneys' fees would be governed by one flexible standard in lieu of their present economic differentiations in the matter of attorneys' fees. The basis established in this bill for determining attorneys' fees is one that has long served the legal profession well This is the rule of reasonableness. The affected agencies will be enabled to enact such rules and regulations as they deem proper to insure that attor- LBJ AND THE CIT How much? No one knew. "' .?? ~' """ Califano demanded immediate answers present maximum and minimum limita- (Mr. FARNSLEY (at the request of and got them. The amount of water ex- tions and any penalities which are pres- Mr. GILLIGAN) was granted permission penned woulldl bbeei minuscule. What about ently imposed when these limitations to extend his a hit s~? ~ >l b/Ly ngG 181 f~ 446 4o 100016-0. - No. 131-11