LETTER TO FRANK THOMPSON, JR. FROM ALLEN W. DULLES
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80R01731R000100020074-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
16
Document Creation Date:
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date:
April 4, 2002
Sequence Number:
74
Case Number:
Publication Date:
July 27, 1956
Content Type:
LETTER
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CIA-RDP80R01731R000100020074-8.pdf | 1.65 MB |
Body:
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0
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House of spraa*
W aethtrsataa
.+ ear bor. X on=
' do
all pr.
There is an as
rnimi*$ the location
this Agcney=. I wosid
your remarks which d
quarters for the Coati*
.
as I feel there has been a
and I review the its as they actually
690 is s,eased.
ten followed by
r, on that poguea of
Compost first grs*tsd as authortuakka for the sea,
of this building in 1"4* and
consideration for t last two years. Also is 1
among others, w" a eotad by the C~ea S. of Iea
as a site already weld by the Government an which we might possi-
bly construct a batter to mew
In November of 1994 the question of
with the Director of the Office of l efaease
agencies writgn the eeuutive Branch. rfter Ir
interested a n-eisa:, we w,
standards an 31 Doee aber 19%.
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that I co ent on
z+essiaeeeui ecord
test.
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?
eon*id.red *very
eax site self we ,
sat . ia+eee rs of g r,
wa .d it to the enonel capital Pleasing Commission ter
atloa. As yea km ow, the law provides (40 U. S. C. 714(b)
that we locate at La leey. 1 accepted this reecum m
r free sad of the avai
preliminary r
lees, and to its final
registered its apps. I
wade to 7 that this Agency
key planning body for the metropolitan area, aaed by eae mesa t of
foundation. The eauesisa e's action had bees pwoesdeed by an afftr
t wtfve 5-3 veto at the Nam Capital . egiaasi Ptusiag COU"U"
appointment of =*&*or* of the Comm
area Immediately scent to the proposed sites Wiled that $ of
these property emirs bad no objection to the leeaa a of the C
Intelligence Aggeen ey at La a leey.
located. A privsts fo-ur,ey of directly affected prftw
residents of raenesvi a Magisterial )iretrict? is why Lana ey is
able to our locating at Laoeegley.
Planner Ca-sien, the
Arlington Counties and ties VAUS, Cbarch City
R.pr.seere atirr* Joel T. rofrhiii, from V1z da's Tea*
istrict, conducted a poll of his cortati nits whkede shrawed 74 fr favor
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AS
fey so*. the iris
to the *M6648ten of the,
$44 M. 00 for t
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IG: iSP:fm (27 July 56)
Distribution:
Orig & I - Add
2 - Signer
I - DDB'S
1 - OL/BPS
I - OGCC e1
2 - Leg.
cc: Congressman Joel T. Broyhill
Dire
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roved For Release 2006/11/05: Cl P80R01731 R000100020074-8
MEMORANDUM FOR: The Director
The attached letter has been approved
in substance by Colonel White. Col. White
feels that the material in the Congressman's
remarks was obviously furnished by Roger
Fisher & Company. Joel Broyhill agrees.
Broyhill also feels that this should not
give us any concern, because no one ever
pays any attention to the "Extension of
Remarks" apart from the Congressional
Record anyway. I would propose to send a
copy of this letter to Broyhill.
Congressman Thompson is a Democrat
from New Jersey, and is a member of the
Education and Labor, and House Administration
Committees.
27 July 1956
Norman Paul
Legislative Counsel
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0
5728 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX July 20
Italy Into Uruguay. The Uruguayan econ- eager ~~ cv~++ ~- Give
omy, these sources say, was unable to absorb production know-how. an even half- It was expected all along.
any such amount. As a result, it was trans- brained intelligence headquarters such in- First, there were the assurances from doc-know w
and m
ere tors, sur
ndi ferred into Mexico, and their into the United dustrial knowledge our forces,Ilwhere wehare operation weons as a greatesucace l suer dt the that the
States, n?ttinv our heaviest concentration, where dent was healthier than ever. Then the daily
nu... b Scnca wa uvw....- ..------. ---- -
stant reiteration, created an atmosphere of
extreme confidence in the President's
strength and endurance.
This is in no way an unprecedented tech-
nique. Something of the same approach to
a health problem was utilized in the fourth-
term campaign of President Roosevelt when
he was paraded through the rain in New
York and Brooklyn. Indeed, the fact that
Roosevelt was increasingly confined to a
wheelchair was consciously deemphasized
during the last years of the Roosevelt ad-
ministration.
It is important to point out, however,
that the. promotional technique is being
used, and that the President's health is a
real factor and a grave problem for the Amer-
ican people to consider. It cannot be
brushed off on the basis of a promotional
selling device.
The unvarnished fact is that President
Eisenhower has survived a coronary attack,
which curtailed his activity, and an ileitis
operation, which further curtailed his ac-
tivity, and that he is now convalescent. Eis
fitness to run for a second term is something
v
y,
su
a
a series of
more vital statistics about the United States he is capable and fit.
in 1 year than we get Soviet promises of His fitness to serve for a second term is
good behavior in Moscow. something that the American people have
And for all this the Soviets can spend got to determine at the polls in November.
freely. It costs nothing but gold. And And they are entitled to all the facts, which,
they've lots of that counterrevoluntionary to a degree, they have had. But the Ameri-
stuff. can people are also entitled to know that the
th f cts have been pre-
il e a
h
State of President Eisenhower's Health
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
or
HON. JOHN LESINSKI, JR.
OF MICHIGAN
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
a
manner in whic
sented is circumscribed by a promotional
planning technique, which leaves consider-
able information in fine print, like the ingre-
dients of a food package under food and drug
law requirements.
The announcement from Gettysburg was
no surprise. It would have been more sur-
prising if he declined. His health is still a
factor, And the state of any candidate's
health, Democrat or Republican, is an im-
portant consideration.
ship of companies which have vital defense Wednesday, July 18, 1956
contracts.
Mr. LESINSKI. Mr. Speaker, serious
REDS PLOT FINANCIAL GRIP ON UNITED STATES questions are being raised about the What Is the Eisenhower Administration
FIRMS techniques being used to sell the Ameri-
(By Victor Riesel) can public the idea that the present in- Trying To Do to the Seat-of-Govern-
NEW YORK.-TWO American financial cumbent of the White House is well and meat Concept Decreed by Article I of
wizards linked by the Senate with Com- quite capable of carrying on the duties the Constitution?
munist spy rings, have infiltrated Wall Street of the Presidency. The Republican pro-
and today are working for big investment motion campaign may be convincing
firms. some, but not all are being fooled. Even EXTENSION OF REMARKS
it is believed that their assignment is to
spot vital of the newspapers that have of
production and direct JR
the e stanchly supported Mr. Eisenhower in
effffo efforts to o buy them m up firms tie them ct them into Soviet
Russians' espionage and sa ge network the past are beginning to show evidence HON. FRANK THOMPSON,
in the United St tp rOVe' or ReleaselQt~ 110 i a 1 W Fp l R0 }C Q= F.RR NTATIVE3
ment witnesses. They will be questioned
about their knowledge of "hidden" owner-
share of the income taxes.
The Senate group's inquiries indicate that
in some cases American citizens have been
employed as directors in companies without
being aware that the companies actually are
controlled by foreign interests operating
through a brokerage, bank, or fictitious
name.
ENTITLED TO KNOW
A source close to the investigation said:
"Perhaps the owners of this foreign capital
have nothing to hide. But it seems to us
that the American taxpayer and stockholder
is entitled to know who these people are and
who are the true owners of the stocks that
have been bought."
Next Tuesday the Senate subcommittee
will hear testimony from Defense Denart-
.In enun naa,r?..........,- --- _ -_--
the owners' identities were hidden by num- filtrate so that slowdowns and sabotage Can
bered bank accounts--and the transfers were be ordered to hurt us.
by number only. Dr. Arthur Bloomfield, senior economist of
There is concern not only in the Senate the New York Federal Reserve Bank, pointed
but in other agencies of the Government and out that it was technically possible for
in some parts of the business world over hidden investors abroad to buy up our
the amount of capital within the United factories, but said he had no personal knowl-
States whose ownership is hidden. edge of any such coups.
The Senate subcommittee already has WALL STREET SOVTETEERS
pointed out the potential danger of a Com- But there are Senators Who have. Neither
munist infiltration into the United States fi- they, nor I, will name the two Sovieteers who
nancial world, using Russia's vast gold re- work high on Wall Street today. I can't
serves to buy into companies having defense even give their initials here.
contracts. One has been linked by Government in-
NO EVIDENCE YET vestigators to the notorious Victor Perlo spy
As yet, the Senate investigators are re- ring.
ported to have found no evidence that such The other, according to congressional rec-
a penetration has begun. ords, set up the structure of Communist
The subcommittee's aim as outlined by penetration of the Government by men
a committee source Is this: identified as Communist underground
1. To discover where the foreign-con- agents.
trolled money has been invested and who the But these two Red Wall Streeters are just
true owners are. a couple out of scores of others who are
2. To close any tax loopholes by which the penetrating United States industry through
inventory, and in-
foreign owners are paying a disproportionate
e
r
speci
l
1956
0
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX A57~'T
How, yields this miracle of strife: that two with a conventional Army, Navy, and Air Lion of the growing practice in this}
times two is five? Force. United States of raiding established bust-
It yields when great men greatly strive, Without saying that it is theoretically im-
When compromise is kept alive- Hess enterprises, especially those ern-
'Tis then that justice thrives. possible, it seems to me most unlikely that
a war as big as the Korean war, which con- gaged in national-defense work.
To Dr. Jos and Dr. SAM our glasses now we earned the U. S. S. R. and the United States Under the resolution which I intro-
raise: of America, could ever be fought again with- duced, an investigation would have been
To each and both let us invoke unnumbered out the use of nuclear weapons. The chances instituted to determine the identity of
happy days- would be very great that small atomic bombs the persons engaging in raiding practices
That party strife may justice raise, would be followed by bigger bombs and these and the sources of the money used by
And sportsmanship grace all our ways! by still bigger ones. The chances of gen- them and the effect of these activities on
eral war would be so great that a local wax the defense
on the Korean scale would be an incalculable United States and on production the capacity national a th-
military risk. It is not absolutely certain con-
.
but it is very probable that for the visible only.
The Radford Proposals Mr. Speaker, on that day in March of
wars of this type will be absorbed into the overall nuclear stalemate. This calcu-
1955 when I addressed this House, I
EXTENSION OF REMARKS lation should not prove to be an imprudent
urged that this resolution be adopted
of risk.
and I tried to point out the great danger
The assumption which lies at the root of which I thought confronted us at that
HON. LEVERETT SALTONSTALL the argument is that the alternative to gen-
time.
OF MASSACHUSETTS eral nuclear war is local conventional war.
It is of great interest, therefore, that
I wonder. It seems to me that the real
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES alternative is first guerrilla warfare and sec-
in today's issue of the New York Herald
Friday, July 20, 1956 ond, political infiltration and maneuver.
Tribune there appears a front-page arti-
cle written by Mr. Don Whitehead, which
Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, are the neher of
onal Amendan of military tells of
an investigation now under way
I ask unanimous consent to have printed forces prepared to be effective.
by an appropriate committee of the Sen..
in the Appendix of the RECORD an article What fighting there is in the world today
ate which is seeking to "unravel the
by Walter Lippmann, published in the is in Algeria and in Cyprus and in Palestine.
mystery of what happened to untold
Washington Post on July 19, entitled Such guerrilla warfare can be an effective
billions of dollars of foreign capital
"The Radford Proposals." I believe it kind of warfare in a sense that it wins con-
which entered the United States during
is the most discerning exposition con- cessions. But it is not the kind of warfare
the last few years and then disappeared."
for which American military power, nuclear
r. Speaker, I am pleased that the
cerning those proposals that I have read. or conventional, is prepared or even designed. Mr. being no objection, the article It follows, I believe, that if ever our vital other
body has taken up this important.
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, interests are involved in an outbreak of
question, and my only regret is that this.
as follows: local violence and disorder, for example in
House did not adopt my resolution which
TODAY AND TOMORROW the Middle East, we shall not again do what
was introduced more than 16 months
(TO AY AND Li we did in Korea. We shall not engage our-
ago, for I believe, Mr. Speaker, that a
Ppmann) selves in a big land war on the other side of
thorough investigation of this situation
THE RADFORD PROPOSALS the world. We shall remember that we are
is long overdue.
There are going on inside the Government a sea and an air power, and we shall tailor
Very recently Mr. Victor Riesel also
two big arguments about military policy. the shape of our intervention to the char-
The one has been brought into the open acter of our military forces. published an article dealing with this
through the Symington subcommittee, We are vulnerable in Germany, in Japan,
same subject matter.
prompted, it seems plain enough, by high in Vietnam, in Korea and in Formosa, not As
a matter of interest to my col-
but not the very highest officers of the Air to military aggression but to political in-
leagues, I attach the article by Mr. Don
Force. This argument is about whether the filtration and maneuver. Red China is Whitehead and the article by Mr. Victor
money asked for by the administration is working to make a deal with the Chinese in
Riesel :
enough to keep us ahead of the Soviet Union Formosa, and who can be at all confident
in the ultimate nuclear weapons. Out of that they will not succeed, if not now behind [From the New York Herald Tribune of July
this argument has come the action of Con- Chiang's back then later on when Chiang 20, 1958]
grass in voting $900 million more for the Air goes? The same kind of thing is underway UNITED STATES FLOOD
OF FOREIGN CAPITAL
-SENATE GROUP PROSES MYSTERY
Force than the President asked for. behind Dr. Syngman Rhee's back in South ON-SENATE second argument, which was brought Korea and behind Diem's in South Vietnam. (By Don Whitehead)
into the open in dispatches by Mr. Anthony In Germany negotiations with the East are WASrnNGTON, July 19.-Senate investiga-
Leviero, turn on proposals by Admiral Rad- not very far off and once Dr. Adenauer retires, tions are seeking today to unravel the mys-
ford to reduce the Armed Forces by about they are certain to take place. tery of what happened to untold billions of
800,000 men during the coming 3 yers. The critics of the Radford thesis, who want dollars of foreign capital which entered the
This would mean a smaller Army but one to maintain conventional forces big enough United States during the last few years and
armed with more deadly modern weapons, to fight another Korean war, may fairly be then disappeared.
The Radford doctrine would give up the idea asked at what place, where our interests are Preliminary inquiries have developed the
of being prepared to fight large local wars, at stake, a war of the Korean type might strong suspicion that the untraced funds
like the Korean, with conventional, that is break out. This is a fair question because have been used to an increasing degree to
to say without nuclear, weapons. a military establishment has to be designed buy "hidden" control of some American com-
There is a connection between the two for a wax with a particular adversary. It panies and to gain at least a voice in the
arguments. It is that the cost of maintain- cannot be designed for any kind of war any- management of others w ich have impor-
ing both kinds of TA FW le ' e ~ TIMI dg. ~t I 73ti 0flQ fl00a @tde7 racts.
nrohibitivw. 4. ..~ _qqe
~dA`fhS?
Approved For Release 2006/11/05: CIA-RDP80R01731 R000100020074-8
effect of this trend, if allowed to con-
tinue, could be to turn Washington into
a ghost city.
Washington has been aptly character-
ized in a recent magazine article as "the
pride of every good American and in
reality the capital of the free world."
It is your city and mine. To most of us
in this Congress, its stately buildings and
leafy avenues symbolize a second home.
To millions of tourists its gleaming
monuments are reminders of our Nation's
glorious past. To visitors from other
parts of the world, Washington stands
as a constant symbol of liberty and free-
dom-and of hope that these priceless
attributes may someday be attained by
the enslaved millions of the world.
Yet today, the security of this, the
world's most important Capital City, is
threatened by an indiscriminate flight of
Federal agencies to the suburbs. Al-
though this threat is less dramatic than
that posed by the H-bomb and inter-
continental ballistic missile, it can, if
allowed to continue, have the same effect
over the long term.
You can find the problem outlined
in headlines of the day: "City of Wash-
ington in Trouble," U. S. News & World
Report, July 6, 1956; "United States
Agencies Join Rush to Suburbs," New
York Times, July 15, 1956; "Undermin-
ing the Capital," Washington Star, June
12, 1956; "Agencies Scored for Leaving
District of Columbia," Washington Post
and Times Herald.
I shall quote briefly from some of these
news stories and editorials. On July 15,
a New York Times story bearing a Wash-
ington dateline announced:
The largest Federal construction program
in years is underway with proposed and ap-
proved projects involving more than $400
million in the Washington area alone. And,
like many citizens of this town, more of
the Federal agencies are turning to the sub-
urbs for their new homes. ? * *
All this, agency officials will explain, Is
because it is Government policy to disperse
for defense reasons, there are few suitable
sites left in Washington, and the modern
buildings they want to build would run into
trouble with the Fine Arts Commission.
But there is suspicion among some Mem-
bers of Congress that agency officials, who
generally have had free rein in selecting
their sites, simply want "hunt country" to
work in with plenty of free parking space
and plenty of lawn.
The trend is causing some concern. Home-
owners in the countryside are complaining.
Businessmen in the city are protesting that
the trend could be disastrous to Washing-
ton's economy.
A similar
Washington
June 12:
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And in its lead editorial-for June 14,
the Washington Post and Times Herald
scored the "current confused relocation
policy" which bases final decision for
moving Federal agencies out of Wash-
ington on "the whims and preferences
of individual agency heads."
REASONS FOR CONCERN
There is ample reason for this grow-
ing concern. The city of Washington,
with its thousands of white-collar work-
ers, small-home owners and small-busi-
ness men, depends upon governmental
activities for its very existence. Fed-
eral Government in this area accounts
for nearly half of all employment. It
also sustains a host of small businesses
which exist to service Federal workers.
Directly or indirectly, Government
accounts for the bulk of Washington's
retail sales, rental payments and other
basic activities. We already see a spiral-
ing budget and falling revenues in the
city-both largely caused by a popula-
tion movement to the suburbs. We see
Congress forced to refuse desperate re-
quests from the District Commissioners
for increased funds. Take away the
operations of the Federal Government
and Congresss share of maintaining
our capital pity would increase to truly
astronomical proportions.
These budget requests point up the
disturbing fact that Washington is al-
ready in trouble. As the U. S. News &
World Report put it in the magazine's
lead article on July 6:
The visitor, captivated by the Capitol's
lovely panorama and awed by the power
that emanates from its portals, does not
see the layers of troubles-governmental,
social, financial-that are piling up to over-
burden the Nation's first city.
Yet these difficulties. exist. In large
part they are similar to the socioeco-
nomic headaches suffered by other major
cities. They include the familiar flight
to the suburbs on the part of city fami-
lies, the dwindling tax base, the traffic
congestion, the rapidly mounting finan-
cial burdens and so on.
Today, gentlemen, I could take you
only four blocks from where we sit in
this Chamber and show you some of the
worst slums in the Nation-houses with-
out running water, and whose residents
are forced to use outdoor toilets.
All of these problems are magnified
by Washington's lack of any vote or
true government of its own. They
would be far worse were it not for the
bolstering effect upon the local economy
exerted by o
erations of th
F
d
l
p
e
era
e
concern was voiced by the
Star in its lead editorial on -Government.
It
t th
The public generally (has) cause to be con-
cerned over what seems to be happening
to the original concept of Washington as
the Nation's seat of Government. That
time-honored concept is seriously threatened
by a movement in some Government circles
toward abandoning the District as a site of
Federal activities in favor of decentralized
locations in the suburbs and beyond.
Equally disturbing is the apparent lack of
a national policy governing so-called reloca-
tion. Heads of agencies have been given free
rein, as a rule, in choosing sites for their
new homes. It is all very haphazard, with
planning agencies often assigned to subordi-
nate roles.
?
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
is agains
is background tuat a
growing number of agency heads are
deciding to relocate their departments
outside the District. At least six major
agencies are presently hoping to move.
They include:
The Central Intelligence Agency,
which plans to build a $56 million build-
ing near Langley, Va.
The Atomic Energy Commission,
which has started work on its new $10
million headquarters near Germantown,
Md.
The National Bureau of Standards,
which is planning a $40 million home
near Gaithersburg, Md.
A5729
The Weather Bureau and the Coast
and Geodetic Survey, which are plan-
ning a joint $31 million building near
Gaithersburg, Md.
The Geological Survey, which would
like to construct another building, cost-
ing $23 million somewhere on the Poto-
mac River in Maryland.
Still other agency officials are consid-
ering the possibilities of relocation. For
example, there has reportedly been se-
rious talk within the Navy Department
about moving to the Midwest.
How this will affect the Nation's Capi-
tal in loss of population is summarized in
the New York Times article from which
I quoted previously:
One estimate is that if all the proposals
for the Federal agency exodus were adopted,
some 50,000 residents of Washington would
move out. Washington over recent years has
lost a number of Federal employees to out-
lying areas, what with the Pentagon in Vir-
ginia and the National Institutes of Health
and the Census Bureau in Maryland.
Now, on the basis of the best estimates
available, it takes at least one person
to service each governmental employee in
Washington. Add to this the fact that,
according to Census officials, the average
Federal worker represents a family of
three. This means that, for each Fed-
eral employee affected by relocation, at
least four other individuals would be in-
directly affected. And if 50,000 em-
ployees moved out of Washington, as the
New York Times estimates they would,
200,000 people-or nearly one-third of
the total population-would feel the
consequences.
The President of the American Baptist
Convention
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
OF
HON. MC HARD L. NEUBERGER
OF OREGON
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
Friday, July 20, 1956
Mr. NEUBERGER. Mr. President, Dr.
Harry L. Dillin, the distinguished presi-
dent of Linfleld College, in McMinnville,
Oreg., was recently honored by his elec-
tion in Seattle as president of the Ameri-
can Baptist Convention.
Dr. Dillin, the second westerner to be
honored by the American Baptist Con-
vention as its president in 50 years came
west to Oregon 25 years ago, and was
named president of Linfleld College in
1943 when he was 36, the youngest college
president in the United States.
Linfleld College, under the dynamic
leadership of Dr. Dillin, has grown rapid-
ly in size and prestige. Dr. Dillin has
been noted for his civic work as well as
his role as a college president, and has
also served for two years as president of
the Oregon Baptist Convention.
Also honored at the recent Seattle con-
vention was Earl White, a Portland at-
torney and member of the First Baptist
Church, who was named a commissioner
of the American Baptist Convention.
A5730
?
731 R000100020074-8
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
Mr. President, Dr. Dillin is the second
Oregonian within a year to be named
head of his church. Dr. Paul S. Wright,
pastor of the First Presbyterian Church
of Portland, was elected moderator of the
General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church, U. S. A.
Mr. President, T. ask unanimous con-
sent to have printed in the Appendix of
the RECORD an excellent biographical
sketch of Dr. Harry L. Dillin by William
Hilliard, religious editor, from the Ore-
gonian of July 15, 1956.
There being no objection, the article
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows:
NEW BAPTIST LEADER GAINS RENOWN IN
BUSINESS, EDUCATION
(By William Hillard)
A little man eminently capable of doing a
big job-that's Dr. Harry Leslie Dillin, dy-
namic president of Linfleld College and new
head of the American Baptist convention.
The 48-year-old college preident was elect-
ed president of the large Baptist body 3
weeks ago at the convention's annual session
in Seattle. He will be president for 1 year.
Dr Dillin an active Baptist since child-
COLLEGE GROWS RAPIDLY
Under Dr. Dillin's leadership, Linfleld Col-
lege has grown tremendously. He has taken
part in the building or renovation of all but
one of Linfield's 19 buildings. Two dormi-
tories are under construction and will be
ready for occupancy this fall. The school
supervises all of its construction work, in-
cluding awarding of contracts and buying of
all materials.
When the American Baptist Convention
elected Dr. Dillin, it reached out for a man
well trained in leadership. He is a member
of numerous organizations and has inevit-
ably assumed the leadership of almost every
one of them.
He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Pi
Gamma Mu and an associate member of Sig-
ma Psi.
In McMinnville he is a member of the
chamber of commerce and a past president
of the Rotary club. He was district No. 154
governor of Rotary International in 1953. He
is a deacon of First Baptist Church in Mc-
Minnville and has served on the board of
trustees.
July 20
students-has a full year ahead of him as
president of the convention.
As chief officer, he will preside at all meet-
ings of the convention and of the general
council and will exercise general supervision
over the affairs of the convention, a body
representing a membership of 1,500,000 in
approximately 6,500 churches in 34 States
and the District of Columbia.
He takes off Sunday for meetings in Chi-
cago and Greenlake, Wis., on the first round
of activity that will keep him constantly on
the go for a year.
At home will remain his wife, Irene, and
two children, Harry Leslie, Jr., 14., and Kath-
leen, 12. A third child, John, 20, is a sopho-
more at Trinity University in San Antonio,
Tex.
Dr. Dillin is the second Oregon man within
a year to be named head of his denomina-
tion. In 1955 Dr. Paul S. Wright, pastor of
First Presbyterian c:ourch, was elected mod-
erator of the general assembly of the Pres-
byterian Church, U. S. A.
COLLEGE POSTS HELD
In addition, Dr. Dillin has served as presi-
dent of the Association of Independent Col-
leges of Oregon and chairman of the Foun-
dation of Oregon Colleges and the Pacific
Northwest Athletic Conference. He also
serves on two commissions of the American
Association of Colleges and is chairman of
the board of directors of the newly created
Linfleld Research Institute.
Working with the American Baptist Con-
vention will be nothing new to him. He
served as president of the Oregon Baptist
Convention for 2 years and was elected last
year to a term on the general council of the
American Baptist Convention.
First hint of any move to nominate him
for president was heard by Dr. Dillin in 1955
at the convention's meeting in Atlantic City.
Dr. Dillin addressed the convention on edu-
cation. Following his speech, he was ap-
proached by some delegates who thought he
should consider the president's post. Dr.
Dillin didn't take them seriously then.
This year is a year of reorganization in the
convention and Dr. Dillin thinks this move
was instrumental in his promotion for the
presidency.
EDUCATION TO BE STRESSED
"I think the people who promoted me were
looking for men with a background in busi-
ness and organization," Dillin surmised.
"And, too, I believe the convention wanted
to highlight education as a means of stimu-
lating interest among church people to
strengthen colleges."
Dr. Dillin said the American Baptist con-
.vention is constructed loosely of a central
organization "very disorganized." Much em-
phasis is given individual interpretation of
the scriptures and local autonomy, he said.
Under Dr. Dillin, the convention will seek
to unify. At the Seattle meeting the first
step in this direction was taken when the
general council was upped from 36 to 42
members and the council was augmented
with the creation of a coordinating staff,
equally divided with laymen and clergymen.
In line with the reorganization program,
it will be Dr. Dillin's duty to name nine
people as commissioners to reevaluate and
to study the work of reorganization in the
convention and to report to the national
body at the 1957 meeting in Philadelphia.
The commissioners will make their final re-
port at the annual meeting in 1958 and at
that time recommend further steps to be
taken in the reorganization program.
One of the commissioners will be Earl
White, a Portland attorney and member of
First Baptist church (White temple).
The "go go go" president of Linfleld-or
"fireball" as he is sometimes called by his
hood, is only the second westerner to gain
the presidency in the 50-year history of the
convention.
Oddly enough, the only other westerner
was elected at the only other meeting in the
Pacific Northwest. Corwin Shank was named
head of the convention in 1924 in Seattle.
Dr. Dillin, who stands 5 feet 71/2 inches
tall is one of the youngest men to be named
president of the convention and only the
second college president to head the group.
Born in the east, he came West 25 years
ago to teach math and economics at Linfleld
for 1 year and to "see the cowboys and In-
dians." After a summer vacation in the
East, he wired the college to see if his job
was still open, found it was and has been at
Linfield since.
Dr. Dillin was graduated from Columbia
University, New York, cum laude in 1928.
He followed this with graduate work at the
University of North Carolina, where he had
been accepted for a teaching fellowship. He
also has done individual research work at
the Universities of London and Michigan.
He received an honorary doctor of law de-
gree from University of Redlands, Redlands,
Calif., in 1944 in recognition of his outstand-
ing and meritorious service in the field of
Christian education.
His rise to the presidency of Linfield was
comparatively swift. He was appointed pro-
fessor of economics in 1936 and 2 years later
he was made controller of the college. In
1941 he was made controller-business man-
ager.
SUCCESS COMES EARLY
When named president of the school in
1943, Dr. Dillin as only 36 and was declared
by the trustees who elected him to be the
youngest college president in the United
States. At the time he was named presi-
dent he was professor of mathematics and
economics, business manager-controller and
investment analyst.
In addition to his teaching duties he was
tennis and golf coach. His court teams won
more than 100 collegiate matches and for a
number of years he held the course record
for 9 holes at Riverwood golf course, dis-
rupting part with a sizzling 31-5 strokes
under par. Dr. Dilling recalls his coaching
days as "the great joys of my years."
Still athletically inclined but unable to
find the time for golf and slowed down too
much for tennis, Dr. Dillin has taken up
water skiing and spends his spare time at
the family's cottage at Devil's Lake practic-
ing his new-found sport love.
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
HON. NORRIS COTTON
OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
Friday, July 20, 1956
Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, one of
the outstanding citizens of New Hamp-
shire whose fame and influence extends
far beyond the limits of our State is
Lawrence F. Whittemore.
Mr. Whittemore is a former president
of the New York, New Haven, & Hart-
ford Railroad; former president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston; and
former president, and now chairman of
the board, of the Brown Co., at Berlin,
N. H. The directorates upon which he
serves and his business connections are
far too many to enumerate here. He has
long been a leader in the civic, educa-
tional, and political life of our State and
of New England.
An interesting and inspiring bit of
biography appears under the caption
"Turning Points," in Dun's Review for
July 1956. I ask unanimous consent that
it be printed in the Appendix of the
RECORD,
There being no objection, the article
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows:
TURNING POINTS
What makes a man successful? The ques-
tion has always defied glib answers and is
most profitably explored on an individual
basis. In most men's experience major deci-
sions translated into action have proved to
be at least turning points. Mr. Warren
Vierow has asked several major business
leaders to relate the personal decisions that
did the most to place them on the path to-
ward success.
Here is one of the answers:
L. F. Whittemore: "After returning from
World War I in 1919, I found an opportu-
nity to work for the New Hampshire State
Tax Commission as an accountant. In 1922
the chairman of that commission put me in
charge of an estate carrying on an active
lumber business doing about a million dol-
lars a year. I was at that time 28 years
old and, while I had worked in the woods,
Approved For Release 2006/11/05: CIA-RDPSORU
ATOM LINER Souc nn
Toxvo, July 18.-$apan'a big OSK (Osaka
Shosen Kaisha) steamship line hopes to have
a streamlined, atom-powered liner on its
South American run by 1961-if it gets en-
riched uranium from the United States.
OSK said the ship could cruise at 25 knots
and carry 1,700 emigrants to South America
three times a year.
A winsome lass from Iowa and an oriental
ibeauty from Japan forgetting Pearl Harbor
as they help each other to register.
A contestant from Africa and a competing
beauty from Australia forgeting the isolation
of different continents as they try to figure
out American slang.
A shinto from Japan, a Buddhist from
Ceylon, a Christian from South America, a
Moslem from Turkey, a Jew from Israel and
a Taoist from Hong Kong forgeting religious
differences as they exchange hints on how
to parade before the judges.
And a gal from Brooklyn and a miss from
Texas forgeting mileage distances as they
kid each other about their accents.
All of these things add up to make the
Miss Universe Court of Beauty a virtual
United Nations in itself, leading to more
complete understandings of the countries
which sent the girls.
While the public whistles and claps and
the girls develop friendships to return to
their homes, the universe spectacle takes on
another importance in the field of human
relationships.
It is the appreciation of womanhood it-
self.
Particularly in the Orient, and to a con-
siderable degree in Europe, women have
traditionally been accorded a secondary place
in society.
In the Far East, custom in many places
has it that women must walk behind their
men in public places and cannot own prop-
erty. In Europe, women have been taught
that their mission in life can be litle more
than home and children.
But, thanks In a large degree to the Miss
Universe Pageant, new advantages, acclaim
and appreciation of beauty is coming for
womanhood.
Japan, where even the most attractive and
brilliant girls traditionally were accorded
second place in the family, has entered a
contestant since the pageant started.
Its attractive entries have been hailed in
America and in Japan have won new respect
for womanhood as a means of national re-
spect.
India entered a beauty in the first Miss
"U" contest, but national religious feeling
prevented subsequent entries. However, the ?
controversy stirred up discussions relating
to improvements of the rights of women.
Similarly, Ceylon has been noted for its
attractive contestants but is not entering
this year because of. Buddhist religious in-
junctions. Former entries brought new ac-
claim for women in Ceylon; the injunction
caused serious discussion of women's rights.
In Iceland, tradition has acclaimed women
on their intellectual ability. The Miss "U"
a
p
geant has stirred thoughts of their physical
beauty and this year the nation is sending
a contestant.
The pageant has rightfully focused male
eyes on milady and knowing men are recog-
nizing that women, as well as being things
of beauty, can perform important tasks in the
field of science and industry.
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --- A
PPEMIX
The Thoughtless Whims of a Few Eisen-
hower Appointees Threaten To Ruin and
Bankrupt Hundreds of Small-Business
Men
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
OF
HON. FRANK THOMPSON, JR.
OF NEW JERSEY
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, July 19, 1956
Mr. THOMPSON of New Jersey. Mr.
Speaker, I have been trying to discover
what the exodus from Washington to its
surrounding suburbs will mean to the
Nation's Capital in terms of lost pur-
chasing power and taxes.
I have introduced a measure, House
Joint Resolution 690, to preserve the eco-
nomic basis of the Nation's Capital by
establishing a basic policy and an orderly
procedure for the location of new Fed-
eral buildings in the metropolitan area
of the District of Columbia. The text
of this resolution is included at the con-
clusion of my remarks.
I am concerned with the consequences
of this thoughtless, unplanned exodus
to thousands of human beings-to small-
home owners forced to put their homes
on the block and relocate their fami-
lies-to hundreds of small-business men
faced with bankruptcy due to the loss of
customers-to thousands of white-collar
workers who, unwilling or financially
unable to relocate at the whim of agency
heads appointed by the President, would
be forced to give up jobs and would, per-
haps, become a drain on the local econ-
omy-and to churches, whose parish-
ioners would have to reestablish their
religious ties in other communities.
You would expect that, with much of
th
e fate and future of our Nation's Capi-
tal hanging in the balance, relocation of
F
d
July 20
Fantastic as it may seem, none of this
is true today. As the previously quoted
editorials indicate, Federal agency relo-
cation is currently being decided largely
on the basis of two factors-politics and
personal whim-with defense usually
quoted as the ostensible reason.
Now we all agree that civil defense
should have overriding consideration.
But the plain fact is that in these days
of the H-bomb and guided missile, much
of our defense thinking is as out of date
as the model T. Bear in mind that the
possible immediate fallout from an
H-bomb covers more than 200 miles,
and that varying amounts of demolition
are caused up to a radius of 20 miles.
I ask you gentlemen, how much protec-
tion can be afforded an agency by mov-
ing it across the Potomac and within a
few miles of the city? It seems to me
that our whole defense policy needs
clarification, and perhaps revision, in the
light of new developments in atomic
weapons.
When, for defense or other reasons,
an agency head decides he would like to
move his department out of the Capital,
certain types of clearances are theoret-
ically required. In securing approval to
relocate, agency officials are supposed to
contact the following authorities:
Bureau of the Budget and Congress,
on requested appropriations; General
Services Administration, on planning of
buildings and, occasionally, of the site;
National Capital Planning Commis-
sion-and, if the proposed move in-
volves the metropolitan area, National
Capital Regional Planning Council-on
planning aspects of the proposed relo-
cation; and Office of Defense Mobiliza-
tion, on civil defense phases.
PRESENT CLEARANCES INEFFsTXvE
But the sad fact is that these required
clearances are often ineffective. Many
agency officials are apparently unaware
that they even exist. Frequently, agen-
cies desiring to relocate omit steps in
the pattern or do not follow them in
logical order.
The city's two planning agencies-
National Capital Planning Commission
and National Capital Regional Planning
Council-Iack enforcement authority.
Therefore, they are all too frequently
regarded as merely a rubber-stamp
routine.
e
eral agencies would be subject to a - here Is a seriouin Europe, s deficiency inrthe man-
lo
gical procedure of careful investigation ner in which Federal agency relocations are
and fa,ff:_rq-_
of Government as a whole and the.cumu, Writes Max Wehrly, chairman of the
lative effect of such moves on the Capital National Capital Regional Planning
city C 1
o
unce .
Atom Liner Sought You would expect that, before an Steps requiring coordination through, and
ough, and
agency head were permitted to move his thr
reuntil administrative commit..
EXTENSION OF REMARKS department and his thousands of em- ments have been made, thus presenting them
of Ployees, he would have to present irrefut- With what is in fact a "fait accompli.Pla "
HON. HERBERT C. BONNER faces tanning , his eerinon and economic Furthermore, the entire patt
for
OF NORTH CAROLINA relocation has never been Pinned
You would also expect that some dem- and defined in any one law. down
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ocratic system' of checks and balances The result of the present haphazard
Friday, July 20, 1956 would exist In the relocation procedure, method of relocating Federal
to revent the Possible circ Mr. BONNER. Mr. Speaker, under by agency heads, either delibe atelyior dis, to a ecisi nlforemotent, to leave the
del
leave to extend my remarks in the REc- unintentionally, of any of the required vidual agency head. And the inevitable up to
ORD, I include the following newspaper steps for obtaining officials approval of consequence of th
ving is, is that Federal dis-
item: his decision to relocate.
persal has become a political football.
1956
0
CORESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
But what did happen? Representative
ADAM CLAYTON POWELL, Democrat, and one
the Negro leaders
amendment anyhow. it presented er
his an
issuo which Republican Congressmen from
districts where there are many Negro voters
couldn't dodge. No amount of persuasion
from Eisenhower could keep them from vot-
Powell amendment.
h
e
ing for t
As for southern Congressmen, they ab-
stained from voting so as to make sure the
Powell amendment supporters would have
a majority. They wanted the final measure
alatable on every side.
to be unp
But there are northern Republicans--
about 65 of them-who don't believe in Fed-
eral control of education and they too, voted
On final
for the knew it would help ekill the bill. because
l
passage, they joined with the souhern
Democrats to make a majority against the
Federal interference in schools on any score. Miss Universe Contest at Long BeacF
f
t
o
The theory that the Presidency is a sor
benevolent dictatorship and that the Con-
gress must become a "rubber stamp" has
lately become popular doctrine with many
The Civil Rights Bill Confusion Con-
founded Attack on States Rights
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
HON. LAWRENCE H. SMITH
OF WISCONSIN
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Monday, July 16, 1956
entire bill.
important was the action of north- Mr. SMITH of Wisconsin. Mr. Speak-
Also ern Democrats who helped to defeat amend- er, the Washington Evening Star of July
ments, proposed by Republicans, allocating 18 had a pertinent editorial entitled
the funds on the basis of the needs of the
States. This principle previously had been "Alice Outdone." This editorial poi.
indorsed, but the Democrats repudiated it. out that the civil rights bill is before the
The final bill, therefore, was unsatisfactory 'House guests that the bill political might pass the
and Republicans
Democrats favored Fed-
not pass the Senate and
eral northern
eral s aid and southern rn Democrats who didn't, , House but will
and thus was readily. defeated. the editorial goes on to say "It is a good
It is a bit bewildeing to see some of the so-called liberals ignoring what the south- thing, in our judgment, that it will not."
well Mr. Speaker, under leave to extend my
ern Democrats s did in helping the Powell
amendment to pass or what the northern remarks I am including the editorial in
Democrats did in defeating the Republican question'
amendments. And yet the defeat of the bill ALICE OUTnONE
f ba Execvtiv0 .. .~_~ a,.- TT-- with
o
t e C
u.-?r -rc______~
leadership. both Republicans and nor
The truth is there are 4 parties in Con- reacting in the usual way to political pres- land magazine of the Independent-Press
gress today. There hasn't been a 2-party sys- sure, will pass the civil-rights bill. There Telegram newspaper:
tee for 2 decades, and recent decisions of is an equally strong expectation that it will
the Supreme Court curtailing States rights not pass the Senate. that U. N. OF BEAOTY POWERFUL WEAPON FOR PEACE
mean that the 4-party bloc system will re- (By Spencer Crump)
In jment
main for many more years to come. It is a good r any, a our takes the,
ool bill it will not. For anyone who takes the trot One of the world's greatest forces in the
A significant aftermath of the school read the record
controversy is the discovery by southern ble to of the House debate e struggle for world peace, religious under-
Democrats of how near they came to being cannot fail to come away with the firm im- standing and betterment of woman's posi-
tricked by the argument that, if the measure pression that few, if any, House Members tion is in session here in Long Beach.
were passed without the Powell amendment, fully understand the implications of this The Miss Universe beauties are damsels
who would provoke an admiring whistle in
they should have objection It. For far-reaching bill, iris are more than
the fact is that Federal funds could ld be with- For example, Representative CELLER, Demo- any language.
held even without the Powell amendment or trot, of New York, one of the bill's sponsors, But the Miss girls g break down the
nal boundaries an-
its counterpart. The administration has a was asked whether it gives the right to sue beauties, as their charms
ges
or dam
egislature
for actssdo a ntthelexercise off their sworn guagebarriervariatios of in religion,land
legal opinion from the Department Jus-
Pee which being used every y day b by
beautfes continents.
for the Universe
president's interracial commission. It claims duty. Mr. CELLER wasn't sure. "That is a distances between
ing week, the right of the Federal Government at any difficult question to answer," he said, "but during the co for the i the
time to cancel any contract with any agency, I am inclined to believe it would not." festivities' understandings will decomp and no satia-
answers, s, a oquestions, about ovision which carry
public or loy, which permits di "r o- There
girls, as as stback to ars of thesfifth home.
fifth-and
tion in employment the basis of f "race ace or gives Attorney Generaa l provision to in- girls for them
creed or color national origin." g biggest yet-Miss Universe Pageant will be
The text or or text of this important opinion has tervene when someone is "about to engage joining in a United Nations of Beauty.
never been disclosed though presumably the in an act" which might curtail a civil right. j in past year, the spectacle of the
public has a right to know the exact contents Representative TUMULTY, Democrat, of New world's most beautiful girls spectacle be of the
a o r. that sun- Jersey, a civil-rihts supporter, was disturbed w-h i.,anirine and dramatis
It's the knowledge that a threat exists to
Sylvania, answered him with this question:
of use a Federal authority-even in the absence "Which part of the Democratic Party or
Powell amendment-to withhold funds
from schools in the South which may prevent what Democratic Party are you represent-
any school bill from ever being passed. It ing?"
may lead to a demand for a specific stipula- Perhaps the most appropriate exchange
tion in the law declarating that nothing in came between Mr. CELLER and Representative
this or in any other law gives the Federal DIES of Texas. Mr. DIES had been asking
Government the right to withhold funds ex- some needling questions designed to focus
cept for the reasons given in the measure it- thattentio on what he e bill. This rem ndedgMreCELLERaof an
self. nun- exchange between Alice and Humpty Dumpty
h A
hi
"
c
lib- in w
troversy is the assumption made by the
-~ dam orals" that those who voted for the Po which Mr. DIES riespondgdre"Did Alice write a d a s ar that li par at sons l from li of Icmead
amendment should be reprimanded by finding in c
when it comes to holding mirrors
ident Eisenhower for voting their express- this bill?" as they adjust coiffures just before parade
tions. They are being upbraided for express- It is our understanding that the Attorney nothing
ing themselves conscientiously. Because e General wrote mtihehad a hBut maye and init. AAteany time. ' or they are mostly Republicans, Eisenhower is Humpty y demonstrating the
being held responsible for their votes, rate its words mean, or could mean, so Many An Austrian of her beauty native ddemoemonSa Ling the
shows the intricacies of
One wonders who is responsible for what different things that we think it ought to fine points
nation's rhumproudlyba.
the southern fDemocrats don'trwathe undergo careful, nt study before it everhbecomes lave, searching c her contestant
votes
Promotes World Understanding
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
IION. CRAIG HOSMER
OF CALIFORNIA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Friday, July 20, 1956
Mr. HOSMER. Mr. Speaker, this eve-
ning, at Long Beach, Calif., part of Cali-
fornia's 18th Congressional District,
which I have the honor to represent, Miss
Universe for 1956 will be chosen from
comely contestants from many lands of
the free world. The annual Miss Uni-
verse contest, sponsored wholly by indi-
viduals and businesses in the southern
California area, is much more than a
mere beauty pageant. Free nations
throughout the world select and send
their fairest representatives to a- free
America for this important event. Ex-
cept for the chambers of the United Na-
tions, probably no spot in the world con-
centrates so many nationalities together
for a common purpose. By this means
a greater understanding and a more
peaceful intention flows between their
countries.
sed
These thoughts have been expres
more. adequately than I am able to do
in the following article by Spencer
events as:
Miss France and Miss Germany, whose
nations 3 times in 75 years warred, hlping
each other primp before parading before
judges.
A beauty of Greek Orthodox faith, an at-
tractive Roman Catholic girl from Italy,
and a charming Protestant contestant from
Sweden forgetting differences in their an-each
other adjust ribbons before posing for pho-
tographers. humid Panama
A57.
Approved For Release 2006/11/05: CIA-RDP80R01731 R000100020074-8
1959, {
CO?GRESSIONAL RECORD - APPEN? A5723
AMPLE OF CIA
f regard the Central Intelligence
Agency's campaign to build its" new
headquarters at Langley, Va., and relo-
cate all personnel there, as one out-
standing example of the inadequacy and
political aspects of present dispersal
methods.
This move is being proposed against
the advice of a large number of official
planners, and of qualified, disinterested
planning and economic consultants out-
side the planning agencies. It is occur-
ring over what the New York Times
terms "the vehement protests of-Lang-
ley-area property owners." From any
logical viewpoint, involving the city's
welfare and considerations of reason-
able cost, CIA's move appears totally
unjustifiable. Yet it has been allowed
to progress to the final appropriations
stage.
not have time here to outline the concern" over present relocation 11 eth- are fully informed on relocation r. ,.
ers-
oo
I d
ti
"
p
ng c
o
unstin
dure.
step-by-step development of this relo- ods, and pledging
cation project. But I would like to men- tion until a logical and orderely pro- Fourth. Give widest possible publicity
tion several facts in passing. cedure for Federal agency relocation is to iourt and problems involved publicity
From the very start, the project was finally secured." agency relocation.
opposed by leading planners and con- Both of the city's planning agencies will be launched be-
sultants on the grounds of inadequacy have launched studies with a view to . I fore the hope tthis study session ena Until i-
ut coming rum ro Pd relocation Procedure. is, the all-important matter of reloca-
of facilities at Langley, and the
_-- __-- . - - _ _ _---, ., o-1?.n which the
g
have on land use plans and community
relationships.
In a study of possible CIA sites made
by the two planning agencies at the re-
quest of CIA officials, more than 40 sites
were included-but the planners did not
even rank Langley in the first 20 possi-
bilities.
At least two District sites were con-
sidered far superior to Langley by the
planning agencies, but apparently
neither ever received serious considera-
tion by CIA officials.
One major consideration in CIA Di-
rector Allen Dulles' decision to relocate,
according to some reports, has been his
desire to provide his employees with a
"Princeton type" campus atmosphere.
However, the most interesting fact of
all concerns the manner in which final
approval for the Langley site was ob-
tained from the National Capital Plan-
ning Commission, chief planning agency
for the District. The Commission's
mP mherchin is made up of 12 persons-
psi ed
serving ex officio due to legislative or
enactment shall be obligated or- spent
governmental positions. for construction of any building space
In December of last year, Commission for any agency of the Federal Govern-
members disapproved the Langley site ment at any location outside the District
by a vote of 6 to 5. Soon after, two gov- of Columbia, but within 20 miles of the
ernmental employees serving on the zero milestone, without express approval
Commission were replaced by two other of Congress with respect to the proposed
individuals. One of those replaced was site for such construction.
Fred S. Administrator, , Deputy Public Build- By immediately adopting this resolu-
ings Ainistrwho had abstained tion Congress can establish a policy and
au-
om voting. The other was Leon Zach, formally recognize its own decisive au-presen Mr. Zac against Langley. . thority on relocation. I hope this will
re from the Chief Engineers
Mr. Za had voted ns. be done before the current session ends.
By a strange coincidence, immediately xEEn FOR STUDY
after these men were replaced, CIA re-
quested a reconsideration of its proposal However, I believe this resolution
to relocate at Langley. At the next should be followed by a full-fledged study
meeting of the Planning Commission, of present relocation methods, with a
when the reconsideration took place, the view to presenting specific recommenda-
two new men supported the site. Those tions to the next session of Congress.
were the only two votes that changed. These proposals would outline further
approving the Commission site, by a vote of 7c to 5 as methods improvements- which should f relocating Federal agencies.
You can find these facts documented This study should take due cognizance
in the printed record of hearings held of the new plan developed by General
June 1 before the House Appropriations Services Administration for location of
Committee's Subcommittee on Depart- public buildings within the District and
ment of Defense Appropriations, in con- its environs. In accordance with GSA's
nection with CIA's request for additional proposed Cprogram, the ommission is u io ntlY v i l
appropriations.
Mr. Speaker, I believe you will agree ing to establish a floor for Federal em-
that the entire manner in which CIA's ployment in Washington-a minimum
relocation request has been handled, level below which population should not
points up the urgent need for an air- be depleted by Federal relocation.
tight procedure free of politics and per- The study which I am now proposing
sonal whims. would go beyond these efforts with spe-
Fortunately, responsibile leaders in cific recommendations designed to:
Washington are already alerted to this First. Establish a standard operating
need. The alarm was sounded months procedure on relocation with adequate
ago-by the Federal City Council, when it authority to see it is followed.
spearheaded a factfinding drive to de- Second. Guarantee that planning
velop better relocation procedure. In agencies have sufficient time to study
June the District Bankers Association civic and economic effects of each pro-
added its support to this campaign by posed move.
NX:nru?. o.a......... ..--'------ very tuture of oul- 1.4-1 .? a vwr....,.... ----
However, we cannot shirk the fact so closely-will continue to be decided
that prime responsibility for study and on a basis of politics and personal whim,
adoption of a better procedure rests with rather than on sound engineering and
Congress. In Washington, as the editors economic principles, as these relate to
of U. S. News & World Report have preservation of the Capital City.
observed: In conclusion I would like to read the
All fingers point to Congress. All the big text of my House Joint Resolution 690:
decisions on affairs of the District of Co- Joint resolution to preserve the economic
establisri-
lumbia have to be made by District com-
mi of basis of the Nation's Capital the
acttioon non n the the floor Senate -j and ust like House, any followed ing a basic policy and an orderly procedure
acy national l for the location of new Federal buildings
law. in the metropolitan area of the District of
It was in recognition of our responsibil- Columbia
ities in connection with Federal agency Whereas Congress finds that there is a
dispersal that I introduced House Joint growing tendency on the part of Federal
Resolution 690 on July 17. This joint agencies to seek new locations in the vicinity
resolution sets forth Congress intent to of the District of Columbia, considering only
preserve the District of Columbia as the the desires of the particular agency and
seat of government as provided in article without regard to the interests of the Gov-
ernment as a whole or the cumulative effect
I of the Constitution. It calls for estab- which such moves will have on the District
lishment of a basic policy for location of Columbia; and
of new Federal buildings as one means of Whereas it is the intention of the Congress
implementing this intent. to preserve the District of Columbia as the
e + ~~ nrnvided in article I
Resolved, etc., That it is declared to be
the policy of the Congress that the de-
velopment of the National Capital region
shall be based upon the general concept that
the District of Columbia shall be the seat
of Government and that agencies which can
be accommodated in the District of Columbia
should be located there.
SEC. 2. All those responsible for the plan-
ning or construction of building space to
accommodate agencies of the Federal Gov-
ernment within the greater metropolitan
area of Washington shall be guided by the
policy stated in the first section of this joint
resolution.
SEC. 3. No funds appropriated before or
after the date of enactment of this joint
resolution shall be obligated or spent for
the construction of any building space for
any agency of the Federal Government at any
location outside the District of Columbia,
but within 20 miles of the zero milestone,
without the express approval of the Congress
with respect to the proposed site for such
construction.
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A5724 1#1\TGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
Julj 20
Address Delivered by Francis E. Walter, S dissenting-Justices Clark, Reed, and Min- such as the services protecting the Natsin's
Representative in Congress 15th Dis- ton-has invaded the powers of the Congress health and welfare, the education of our
s and of the President of the United States youth, agencies in charge of interstate and
trict, Pennsylvania, at the 38th Annual and has mutilated the law of 1950 and the foreign commerce, mailing rooms, archives,
Convention of the American Legion, T
President's Executive Order No. 10450 of 153. certain his unconstitutional ction of the judiciary become "h neycimbed With subversives," If
Department of Pennsylvania, COIIVen- branch took the form of a decision (Cole v. I may quote once more Justice Clark.
Young), which, in effect, amends the law by If we permit the decision of the Supreme
tion Hall, Philadelphia, Pa., on July 20, adding to it just four words. Four words Court of the United States to stand, we would
1956 which, in limiting the scope of the law, open simply open what Mr. Churchill so aptly
the entire United States Government to the called our "soft underbelly" to agents of the
infiltration of our mortal enemies. Communist conspiracy, who from that soft
EXTENSION OF REMARKS In plain words, the law-the act of August spot, skillfully worming their way upward,
or 26, 1950-is applicable to "any civilian offi- could easily reach the very nerve center of the
cer, or employee" of the United States. What Nation. In addition to that, if we do nothing
HON. FRANCIS E. WALTER it meant was simply that every civilian offi- about this decision, we would condone the
cer and employee who has the privilege of Supreme Court's attempt to invade that area
OF PENNSYLVANIA being employed by the United States Govern- of Government which, under the Constitu-
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ment must be without a peradventure of tion, is reserved to the Congress and the
Friday, July 20, 1956 doubt loyal to the United States and not as- President.
sociated with any subversive organization. The 3 dissenting Justices were quite
Mr. WALTER. Mr. Speaker, under To the words "any civilian officer, or em- outspoken in that regard, actually accusing
leave to extend my remarks in the REc- ployee" the Supreme Court has added four their 6 colleagues responsible for the Cole
ORD, I include the following address: words, "in a sensitive position," thus pro- decision of raising a question as to the con-
ADDRESS DELIVERED BY FRANCES E. WALTER, Tiding that out of the 2,300,000 civilians who stitutional power of the President to au..
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS, 15TH DIE, hold Government jobs, only one-fifth must tho:rize dismissal of executive employees
TRICT. REPR ENTATAT THE 3HT ANNUAL be loyal Americans and the remaining four- whose further employment he believes to be
CONVENTION PENNSYLVANIA, AN AT THE: LEGION, DAL fifths could keep their Federal jobs although inconsistent with national security.
CONVENT OF PTHE AwE NIA, CONVENTION their loyalty to the United States is ques- III reading the Supreme Court's decision in.
HALL, NT OF PENN ON JULY A, CONVENTION tionable and although they may remain un- the Cole case, I cannot help but feel that I
I would like to take the opportunity der Communist discipline. was right several months ago when in read-
offered Obviously, such preposterous thought ing another of our Supreme Court's decision,
by this great occasion to talk to you about never occurred to the Congress and it never I felt that the illustrious Justices dwell in
a matter of great importance, which is now occurred to the President of the United ivory towers with windows shut tight and.
before the Congress. States that such was the intent of Congress shutters drawn, carefully looking away from
Even at this very late hour when every- in enacting the 1950 law. the mortal danger facing our freedom-the
body in Washington seems to be eager to The le
i
l
ti
g
s
a
ve history of that law is ex-
see the Congress adjourn and go home in ceptionally clear, as legislative histories go.
order to do some work on mending of politi- Reports filed by committee of the Senate and
cal fences, I sincerely hope that the legis- of the House of Representatives, and the de-
lation I wish to discuss with you today will bate held on the floors of both Houses of
be enacted into law before we go to Chicago Congress, prove without a scintilla of doubt
and to San Francisco, as the case may be, that the law was meant to apply to every
to nominate presidential candidates. executive agency, not only to the "sensitive"
The thing I have in mind is a bill which ones-and to every Federal employee, not
I have introduced in order to restore good only to those who hold "sensitive" positions.
sense to the laws governing the United States No Member of the House and no Member
Government's power to dismiss civilian em- of the Senate contradicted when those state-
ployees when their employment is deemed to ments were made. In fact, no contradiction
be detrimental to the interests of the na- could have been voiced for there probably
tional security of this Nation. Is no one in the Congress who believes that
The purpose of my bill is to protect the there is in the entire Federal Government
United States Government from foreign in- one job which could be offered to a person
filtration by Communist agents through the whose loyalty to the United States is doubt-
hole opened by the Supreme Court of the ful,
United States. Also, it would serve to re- As Justice Clark-with whom
mind the Supreme Court of the United States Reed and Minton joined-stated in hj
istdis-
of the place it occupies in the Government senting opinion, "the janitor may prove to Nation
and
m velopia strange forg etthe sspofroptheriety to r de- be in as important a spot security-wise as
'
of the United States.
Realizing the clear and present danger
which the international Communist con-
spiracy and its methods of penetration pre-
sent to the United States, the Congress en-
acted, in 1950, a law designed to protect the
United States Government from infiltration
of disloyal employees. The President has
implemented that law in an Executive order
and as you well know, the so-called secu-
rity and loyalty program as it of e,'fe. ?..._
niece Its inception, been under a constant As a matter Of fact, think , think of ne rewhatmaains. char- the cns and of the United States"-Mr.
and sharp attack by the Communists, their Hutchins and his research specialists arrived
allies, and their dupes. w
hired to clean oman could find in an office that she is at the opposite conclusion.
One rather enterprising employee of the And think about the nonsensitive filed clleft. What the Congress found Is, of , of
erk little in erest to the Fund for the Republic
Department of Health, Education, and Wel- who moves freely around offices where and I wish therefore to invite their atten-
fare by the name of Kendrick M. Cole has highly classified documents are stored. tion to a most recent pronouncement coming
agreed to become the tool of those who want The Supreme Court of the United States from a source to which they might want to
to wreck this program, and after having been said in Cole v. Young, leaning over back- give more credence. I have in mind a major
dismissed from Federal employment because ward in order to misread and misinterpret pronouncement printed in the official organ
of his questionable activities and associa- congressional and presidential intent that all of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union,
tions he has taken his case to the courts. that was intended is to protect from sub- Pravda, just a few days ago, on July 16, 1956.
He was turned down by a Federal district versive infiltration only those activities of On that day, Pravda sounded a warning to
court and by a Federal court of appeals. the Government that are directly concerned the free world in general and to the United
He went to the Supreme Court of the United with the protection of the Nation, and not States in particular. Said Pravda:
States and there he won a victory which those which contribute to the strength of "One should remember that among people
represents one of the most stunning defeats the Nation "only through their impact on the who are insufficiently mature politically and
for the United States Government. general welfare." It clearly follows that the excessively credulous, there may be some
A divided Supreme Court of the United Supreme Court of the United States would who would fall for the contention that in-
States, with 6 Justices in the majority and not mind at all if agencies or parts of them, ternational connections of Communist par-
freedom which our laws are designed to pro-
tect and not to help destroy.
There is something uncanny in the stub-
bornness of some of our courts, including the
Supreme Bench, with which they refuse to
appraise properly the true meaning of the
new skin that the Soviet leopard has now
clothed itself. They refuse to see the same
old spots on the leopard's skin, thus aiding
and abetting the Soviet's effort to confuse
and disarm the free world by stressing their
peaceful intentions while intensifying their
attempt to conquer through infiltration
rather than through an open attack. It
could be that the Supreme Court is not fraid
of the danger of Soviet infiltration through
actions of the Communist conspiracy because
some of our Justices have shortsightedly
accepted the opinion of the Fund for the
Republic, the opinion which maintains that
the Communist Party is nothing else but a
political party of the United States just as is
the Democratic Party or the Republican
Party That opinion
the
t
ed in th
ut l
of the runs
- '
e repo
Tennessee
Valley Authorit
power for the most y- TVA supplies for the Republic, dated May 31, 1955, a report
important of our atomic for which Mr. Robert M. Hutchins, the fund's
plants. An electrician in a TVA power plant president, must accept responsibility.
is not classified as a "sensitive" employee. In spite of congressional findings made in
He certainly could not be so classified under two legislative enactments, the Internal Se-
the Supreme Court's ruling, and yet look at curity Act of 1950 and the Communist Con-
the extent of damage to our security that he trol Act of 1954, where. on the basis of irre-
could do. Think of the staggering blow that futable proof it was found that "the Com-
could be dealt to our atomic work if that munist Party of the United States, although
electrician would simply throw a switch to purportedly a political party, is in fact an
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. J. RES. 690
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
JULY 17, 1956
Mr. THOMPSON of New Jersey introduced the following joint resolution; which
was referred to the Committee on Public Works
JOINT RESOLUTION
To preserve the economic basis of the Nation's Capital by
establishing a basic policy and an orderly procedure for the
location of new Federal buildings in the metropolitan area
of the District of Columbia.
Whereas Congress finds that there is a growing tendency on the
part of Federal agencies to seek new locations in the vicinity
of the District of Columbia., considering only the desires of
the particular agency and without regard to the interests of
the Government as a whole or the cumulative effect which
such moves will have on the District of Columbia; and
Whereas it is the intention of the Congress to preserve the Dis-
trict of Columbia as the seat of Government as provided in
article I of the Constitution: Now, therefore, be it
1 Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives
2 of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
r
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2
1 That it is declared to be the policy of the Congress that the
2 development of the National Capital region shall be based
3 upon the general concept that the District of Columbia shall
4 be the seat of government and that agencies which can be
5 accommodated in the District of Columbia should be located
6 there.
7 SEc. 2. All those responsible for the planning or con-
8 struction of building space to accommodate agencies of the
g Federal Government within the greater metropolitan area
10 of Washington shall be guided by the policy stated in the
11 first section of this joint resolution.
12 SEc. 3. No funds appropriated before or after the date
13 of enactment of this joint resolution shall be obligated or
14 spent for the construction of any building space for any
15 agency of the Federal Government at any location outside
16 the District of Columbia, but within twenty miles of the
17 zero milestone, without the express approval of the Congress
18 with respect to the proposed site for such construction.
. J. RES. 690
JOINT RESOLUTION
To preserve the economic basis of the Nation's
Capital by establishing a basic policy and an
orderly procedure for the location of new
Federal buildings in the metropolitan area
of the District of Columbia.
By Mr. Tno irsoN of New Jersey
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Housed Representatives.U.S.
I,,tlLIC DOCUMENT
' FREE
. Respectfully referred for your
comment and suggestions.
NEW JERSEY.
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