REP. REID MAY QUIT GOP OVER VETO

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-01601R000300060001-5
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 9, 2000
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 18, 1972
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80-01601R000300060001-5.pdf177.36 KB
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i sg114110v ; P.OST Approved For Release 20014ii#Q : MA-RDP80-0160 The Washington Merry-Go?flonnn, By,. Jack: Anderson Rep. Ogden Reid (R,-N.Y.), whose forebears helped found the Republican Party 100 years ago, has made a slashing attack on President Nixon that raises the possibility Reid will leave the party. Reid, a grandson of a GOP vice presidential candi- date, accuses Mt. Nixon In a ,forthcoming article in Red- book of "utterly and com- pletely untrue statements" that' "distorted" the facts on Reid's controversial day-care bill. Unlike mavericks like Rep. Pete McCloskey (R-Calif.), Reid's Republican credentials are formidable. He was Presi- dent Eisenhower's Ambassa- dor to Israel, publisher-editor of the Republican New York Herald-Tribune; and a member of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's cabinet. Yet the vehemence of his at- tack on Mr. Nixon has inti. mates whispering. that he may kick over it century of GOP blood lines and join the Demo. crats. - Reid's $2.1 billion bill to pro- vide dayacare centers for work-i ing mothers was sabotaged by the White House, then vetoed by the President after it passed the House. "In his veto message," writes Reid, President Nixon "so distorted the facts about the program as to leave the American public with a vague feeling that day care Is some STATINTL kind of Communist plot to snatch children from their parents, destroy the family and infiltrate the country with four-year-old revolutionaries." The President Indulged in "fear tactics," said Reid. "It is utterly and completely untrue that, as the President charges, day care under our bill would diminish parental authority." The congressman, generally as cool and sleek as a seal, said Yresident Nixon killed day care to appease ,his right-wing supporters." Reid wrote passionately: "Presumably he finds such federal expenditures as $5 bil- lion annually on highways, $5.5 billion on farm subsidies, $3.5 billion on space explora. tion and $1.5 billion on civil works produce greater bene- fits for the country than help- ing our children grow into productive adults." Foote: Reid gave some clue I to his disaffection when he re- cently charged the Nixon ad- ministration. . with allowing 347 price Increases while it was granting only 57 wage lakes: He .also criticized the adminis- in Vietnam for assassinatingy alleged Vietcong leaders. Pompidou-Brandt Feud An awkward confrontation between France's President Georges Pompidou . and West Germany's Chancellor Willy Brandt,. according to secret in- telligence reports, took place not long ago in Paris. . The Central Intelligence mittee bill that loosens federal "were outwardly friendly, but a tough position was taken on substantive issues and no significant agreements were made. "A heated exchange took place after the Brandt-Pompi- dou dinner," states the secret report, "when (German) Eco- nomics and Finance State Sec- retary Johann Baptist Schoell- horn told Pompidou that France was profiting from and encouraging the inflation af- flicting other European coun- ries. "Schoellhorn went on to tell Pompidou that the FRG (Fed- eral Republic of ? Germany) was not. in accord with this policy and was not about to as- sist France in its pursuit. "According to members of Brandt's party, Brandt stood by and visibly enjoyed Ponipi- dou's discomfiture. Schoell- pidou was unable to refute. "T h e Brandt-Pompidou meeting got off to a bad start strong attack on FRG Econom- ics and Finance Minister Karl Schiller's economic policy, which Pompidou said benefit- ted only the U.S." Public ' vs. Polluters A bipartisan band of House conservationists has rallied to pass a clean water package In- stead of the public works com- pollution controls. The environmentalists, Ietf by Reps. John Dingell (D. llich.), Henry Reuss (D-Wis.) and John Saylor (R-Pa.), would set 1981 as a "zero discharge goal" for water polluters. They want tougher federal controls and favor citizen court suits to block big pollu- ters. The showdown between the clean water men and the sup- porters of the public works bill is expected shortly, with a bitter floor fight almost cer- tain. Cuban Rebuff Red China's invitation to the United States to play ping-pong began . what both countries hope will be an era of better feelings. But when a private film group in New York invited Cuban film directors to attend a festival for Cuban films, the State Department huffily re- fused to let the Cubans enter the United States. Nazi Hunter Dr. Zoltan Deak,. of New York City, died recently in the midst of helping us-seek out ex-Nazi supporters in the councils-of the GOP, The Hun- garian-American lapsed Into a final coma moments after tell- ing his wife to urge us to keep up our work on the World War II right-wingers. p 1972, United Feature 6Tndieats Approved For Release 2001/03/04 :'CIA-RDP80.-01601 R000300060001-5 TH MANC DISTER GUARD c Pfd Approved For Release 2001 /03/(' 1A-f'6P80-01601 R00 f k.114-11 warning hardly have Inserted the .IGI' -rl Reinhard Gchien brief, unsubstantiated pas, why. , .,? ?mian anti?Sovic, sage an Borinanit without a [or more than 20 little commercial prompting, ;or Rifler then for Hardly in keeping with his fast l e hen~t a honour as a German officer. niult.-:;bona] industry, ][is Our author knows a trick m;?nmic> ? complete with or two himself-about spying, that Martin about books, and about pub, rniano (liTh cted to Moscow ]icily, Ile was born in %t;'(l lived h,ippily almost ever Vicuna, of vaguely Greek. ,alter, have appeared in origin. Worked in a dozen Cerinany and are to be pub- countries as foreign and lished here by Collins in the political journalist.. British spring. a agent before and during the Seeker and NVarburl; are War (with spells in Dachau bringing out 'The Truth and 1P luckcd ~ his- tlans tcot from about (,: bleu and his spy a hamlet near Leeds' (" I R.rn " lY twb German Ic ) . esters aoctinientary edidence by the bagful of tn Cockridge . dis'rati,: writers in March. And, first off the ' mark in Britain, Hodder and Stoughton, are Publishing "Gchie.n : Spy of -the Century" by E. II. Cook. ticlge on Monday. C'ookridge, who has been wrkrklug c-1 his study for thrce. ya?rs, ehallcnges (k ht;'n nn 13ormar,n head-on. az?Y,c~~l Gehlet, )y guilty of raiviti9 misled e; tlicr the pnhlic in 1971, or the CIA end several German Federal 4jovernment offices in 1953 R 'V1, 1965. He jvs that in $s~40 he began invl,'stigations t%tu Bormann's :ttte, and In 1950s received reliable .i?,t rmation that Rnrinann wq,5 alive and in th. Soviet Uriian. Ygt he never disclosed ihl;, to anybody for 25 years. In fact, on at least two occa- Efons, lie officially informed the CIA and othr'rs of his superiors That, according to his invr?;Ugations. Martin Borman, died in the cross-, fire during the fighting in Berlin ort May 2, 1945." e.OOKRIDGig suggests, with ti,;tl~!'sar tl Iilg z~- r on the ._tvotil'd c u( mg a story, somehow omitted front. the General's memoirs, that Gehlen organised ' Nasser's Iritelli? Bence service, then switched to infiltrating Israeli agents, Into Cairo). Collins and Cehlen's American ublishers bounce back with the news that the English version will be bigger and better than the German, Cookridge, they sa_v, will be "much su r hrised?" Cookridoe. Mio claims to have spoken to the translator, doubts it. I STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000300060001-5