U.S. POLICY IN SOUTH EAST ASIA

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CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7
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July 12, 1965
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. -, - - - - _ - proved For lRd1b fiB A I 6 b~~ 300180003-7 A3705 coin and the conclusion of the Civil War, Rev. Edgar H. Gray prayed: "Glory be to Thy -name, 0 God, that the Republic still lives, the Nation survives, the country is safe. Glory be to Thy name that our heroic efforts have been, crowned with victory, so that the desolations of war have ceased, and the ground no longer shakes beneath the tread of armies. We praise Thee with thanksgiving that the statue of Freedom now looks down from our Capitol upon an entire Nation of freemen." At the first meeting of the House on June 28, 1919, after the signing of the Versailles. Treaty, Dr. Henry N. Couden's prayer went like this: "We thank Thee that a peace treaty has been signed by a majority of the leading natiorls; and while it may not be adequate to the needs of the world we most fervently pray that it may be a steppingstone to a higher civilization from which shall spring spontaneously from the hearts of all men and of all nations a peace pact which shall spare the word from a holocaust through which it has just passed, leaving it inexpressibly sad and mournful in the loss of men and means." One of the most beautiful of Dr. Bras- kamp's prayers was the one he gave after V-E Day, May 8, 1945, when he was substi- tuting for Dr. Montgomery: "0 Lord God Omnipotent, who maketh wars to cease unto the ends of the earth, we praise and mag- nify Thy holy name, for through Thy might and Thy mercy we have been brought to this day of grace and victory. When we call to memory with pride, gratitude, and love that vast multitude who struggled so heroically and endured so valiantly, giving their very lifeblood in order that this day might be possible, we cry out, 'Alas, alas, next to defeat, the saddest thing is victory at such a cost.' We pray that we may earn- estly and faithfully endeavor to prove worthy of their sufferings and sacrifice." On the day of the conference at San Fran- cisco to establish the United Nations, April 25, 1945, 20 years ago, Dr. Braskamp prayed in part: "Today we are joining struggling and war-torn humanity in its prayers for Thy special blessing upon those chosen rep- resentatives who are now seeking to organize the good will of the nations of the earth for a lastjng peace." The day after President Truman ordered General MacArthur to support the Republic of South Korea, June 28, 1950, Dr. Braskamp prayed in part: "Grant that in these days of strife an confusion, of storm and tumult, we may carry on in the glad assurance that the Lord of Hosts is with us, and the God of righteousness is our refuge and strength." When President Kennedy was killed, the Chaplain, Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, prayed in part: "God of the living and of the living dead: as in this hour we bow in the shadow of a people's grief, Thou Bost hear the sobbing of a stricken nation. But we come with the comfort that Thou know- est what is in the darkness, and that the darkness and the light are both alike to Thee." These historical facts and quotations which I have brought to you this morning are Illustrative of a very important but little publicized institution in government The total effect of these prayers through 'the generations cannot be measured. It is cer- tain, however, that they are symbolic of the deep purpose of the men who have been re- sponsible for the direction of our govern- ment since its inception. They demonstrate clearly that we as a people have always tied and stilt do tie-the destiny of this Republic to the spiritual ideals of our people. There is no chaplain in the` Cornin tern- but this is a nation under God. Governor Scranton's $10 Billion 10-Year Pennsylvania Highway Program HON. JAMES G. FULTON OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Mr. FULTON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, a State's highways are truly its lifelines-for commerce, communication, and personal mobility. Gov. William Scranton's bold new $10 billion 10-year highway improvement program is a giant step forward to place Pennsylvania first in highways in the Nation. Announced February 1, 1965, the program has begun projects in 50 counties under the able direction of State Highway Secretary Henry D. Har- ral. A new computerized system for tracking all highway projects has been instituted to assure competent, efficient administration of this forward-looking program. To show the progress being made in Pennsylvania, I insert for the RECORD the following letter and news clippings. COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,. DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, Harrisburg, June 30, 1965. DEAR CONGRESSMAN JAMES FULTON: The de- partment of highways is dedicated to serving all Pennsylvanians by making technically possible Governor Scranton's $10 billion, 10- year highway revolution. As early evidence that this bold program is on the move, we thought you would be in- terested in these recent news clippings. Sincerely, HENRY D. IIARRAL, Secretary of Highways. PENNSYLVANIA STORY-HGHWAYS DEPARTMENT PROVING IT CAN HANDLE $10 BILLION LOAD (By Mason Denison) HARRIssuaG.-The State department of highways apparently means business in its efforts to prove it can handle the $10 billion highway program proposed by Governor Scranton. Within the last month the department has: (1) made four major appointments; (2) sub- mitted a record $292 million construction budget; (3) established the highest mark ever for advertising projects for construction. And, when the columns are counted for the fiscal year that ends June 30, the high- est value of projects advertised for construc- tion in 1 year are indicated for the books. Listing the accomplishments, State high- ways secretary, Henry D. Harral, was quick to point out that the marks were established by any organization using many outmoded ad- ministrative practices which since have been changed. "All I can see are great days ahead," he told this column when asked to outline what was going on within the department since February 1, when the Governor proposed his $10 billion plan. He admitted being somewhat "conserva- tive" in his approach to the Governor's plan at first but now is one of Its most enthu- siastic supporters. Since directing many ad- ministrative changes within the framework of the department, Mr. Harral has seen a rapid increase in the output potential of the department. ,,The Governor's plan has attracted wide attention in the engineering field," the sec- retary said. He explained, for example, that the announcement has stimulated recruiting of professional people. In fact engineers from 47 States have filed applications for em- ployment in the department. Within a week, when the fiscal year ends, Mr. Harral said a record high of nearly $276 million in construction plans will have been advertised during fiscal 196-65. This is $56 million above the $219 million for fiscal 1963-64. He attributed the sizable production in- crease to a new plans review procedure that saved time in putting projects under con- struction. Put into effect right after the Governor presented his ($10 billion) mes- sage, the new procedure was responsible for starting projects in 50 counties that repre- sented more than 300 miles of improvements. Four recent appointments in high admin- istrative posts in the department are credited by the highways chief with helping to accel- erate production upward. (The appoint- ments are Victor W. Anckaitis of Easton, chief engineer; Robert C. Rosser of Mt. Joy and David C. Sims of Camp Hill, deputy chief engineers; and Robert G. Bartlett, Bethle- hem, special assistant for administration.) A new computerized system for tracking all highway projects has been initiated to "eliminate human failures" and maintain construction schedules. The department has nearly $2 billion of plans on the drawing board. These plans will build 4,500 miles of highways. Each plan now will be watched closely by the computers. Interestingly, Mr. Harral feels that with- out the computerized system the $10 billion program "wouldn't get off the ground." (This also will play an important role in the State's first long-range construction program to be announced before July 1 by the State highway commission.) "We recognized early that it was necessary to change many of our operational efforts and to 'look at the department as the one-half billion dollars a year business it is," Mr. Harral said. The department's total budget this year is $593 million-of which $292 million is for construction, $67 million will be for acquir- ing rights-of-way and $45 million will be used for major maintenance improvements. To maintain an accelerated pace the high- ways department during 1965-66 expects to advertise $340 million in construction plans in comparison with the $275 million produc- tion record established in fiscal 1964-65. TIME-SAVING PROGRAM INITIATED To SPEED HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION A time-saving innovation to speed high- way construction will get its baptism of fire this year in Pennsylvania, Highway Secre- tary Henry D. Harral said today. The State highway department will estab- lish mobile testing laboratories in three areas to bring quality control standards closer to the job. Tests previously were monitored at the department's laboratory in Harrisburg. FIELD LABORATORIES The location of the field laboratories in Scranton, Franklin, and Indiana will even- tually eliminate the practice of sending materials and samples to Harrisburg for testing. Harral said this procedure is not adequate in meeting today's accelerated high- way construction program. The first mobile lab should be in opera- tion by June. It will serve the Scranton district with headquarters at Dunmore. Ma- terials will be tested for Lackawanna, Lu- zerne, Wayne, Bradford, Susquehanna, Pike, and Wyoming Counties. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 A3706 Approved "E?ilM*t0RBG RBF $bbkU 00030018000&t1'y 12, 1965 At the Franklin district, a steel fabricated laboratory building is scheduled to be in operation early this summer. It will handle general field tests of materials. As much as a week will be saved since only random and quality tests will continue to be run at Harrisburg. Laboratory technicians and en- gineers will augment the Franklin staff to perform these essential services. The Frank- lin district includes Erie, Crawford, Mercer, Lawrence, Venango, Forest, and Warren Counties. Harral said the branch laboratory at Indiana will be operating by midsummer. Tests will be run for the Indiana, Clearfield, Hollidaysburg, Pittsburgh, and Uniontown districts. Plans are currently nearing completion for an estimated $250,000 renovation program to convert the old Indiana County maintenance building, 4th and Chestnut Streets, into the testing laboratory. At the start of operations, material testing will be limited to aggregates, sand and anti- skid materials but, eventually, the plan calls for virtually all types of testing at the facility. In most instances, it Is hoped to have tests completed and returned to the job site within 24 hours. The technical staff Is ex- pected to be increased. When the first three facilities are opera- tive, the department plans to establish field and branch labs to serve the remaining dis- tricts, Harral said. The highway secretary said the $10-billion 10-year highway improvement program pro- posed by Governor Scranton to place Pennsyl- vania first in highways in the Nation, will be accelerated by the branch and field labs program, supervised by Cyril D. Jensen, head of the materials testing and research bureau. ac's-C B,ina Q ,rV U.S. Po' ' outheast Asia EXTENSION OF REMARKS of HON. GEORGE HANSEN OF IDAHO IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, June 30, 1965 Mr. HANSEN of Idaho. Mr. Speaker, on May 17, 1965, the Honorable Douglas MacArthur II, Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations, speak- ing to the annual convention of the Na- tion Congress of Parents and Teachers in Albuquerque, N. Mex., gave an ex- tremely thought-provoking address on U.S. policy in Vietnam. Very simply, very clearly, and very forcefully, Mr. MacArthur refutes the arguments of those who say we should unconditionally withdraw from Viet- nam-or who would have us believe that negotiation is a miracle drug that will, in itself, automatically restore peace and brotherhood to the world. .As a statement of the policy of the United States in regards to Vietnam, I am sure these words of strength, assur- ance, and determination will be hailed by free peoples everywhere. The address follows: U.S. POLICY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA (Address by the Honorable Douglas Mac- Arthur II, Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations, to the annual con- vention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, Albuquerque, N. Mex., May 17, 1965) l: am delighted to have the opportunity to appear before this distinguished group this evening. My pleasure comes partly from my recollection of a very inspiring discussion which I had with your president, Mrs. Moor- head, and a group of members of the Na- tional Congress of Parent-Teachers' Associa- tions in Brussels in the summer of 1964. But more fundamentally, r am happy to have this opportunity because I want to thank you for something you have done, and to encourage you to continue to do it. I refer to the efforts you have been engaged in to make America's schools better than they already are-ever more equal to the ever more challenging task of preparing Amer- ican men and women for the work that their country and the world will increasingly de- mand of them. The Department of State is deeply in- terested In the efforts being made to teach social studies, history, and the other dis- ciplines needed for an understanding of the world situation. Our interest is not un- selfish. Why? Because whether we like it or not our country has had a mantle of free world leadership thrust upon it in a chang- ing world. And with change comes new and difficult problems in every corner of the earth demanding new insight, understand- ing, and imagination. Thomas Jefferson, our first Secretary of State, once said, "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civiliza- tion, it expects what never was and never will be." And so today as the world grows more complex, as foreign relations becomes more and more interwined with the daily lives of all Americans, so it becomes more and more important that our schools help equip our young people to understand and cope with those problems. To meet this tremendous challenge in the years that lie ahead, our Foreign Service must seek young men and women-your sons and daughters-who are equipped to meet that challenge. We need the best, the finest of young America. Therefore we hope that the youth of our country, now in the public schools and the high schools of the Nation, will be given the kind of educational background which will both encourage them to think of the Foreign Service as a career and enable them to qualify for it. Thus they can play an active part in the great struggle for a better world in which there will be peace with freedom and justice for all peoples. And when we speak of the struggle for peace with freedom and justice, one part of the world-southeast Asia-immediately comes to mind. There, a struggle-a crisis is occurring that may appear very complex but which at the same time is simpler in its essential meaning for the American people than any other of the troubles in which this troubled time abounds. The central crisis on the American agenda today is the struggle in Vietnam. On no other front are American vital interests so deeply and directly involved. In no other part of the world today is there such im- mediate peril to the security of free peoples and to the cause of peace with freedom and justice for which the United States stands. The history of Vietnam and the struggle there is a complicated one. But the issue is simple. Bluntly stated, the question is, "Can aggression be made profitable?" Let there be no mistake on this point. What is happening in Vietnam is not a civil war. It is not an insurrection. It Is not a popular uprising, nor is it, in the terms Hanoi and Peiping prefer to use, "a war of national liberation." It is aggression, pure and simple. I was in France in 1939 when hundreds of thousands of German troops, armed to the teeth with all the latest devices of warfare, went boiling across the borders of Poland on their way to conquest. I was in France in 1940 when hundreds of thousands more Ger- man troops smashed into neutral Holland and Belgium and then into France. I re- member debates as to what America's reac- tion should be--but I cannot remember any debates as to whether or not Nazi Germany was committing aggression against its neighbors. In 1950, North Korean soldiers in great numbers rolled across the 38th parallel where for three bloody years men from Korea, the United States and other free nations re- sisted their aggression so that a small na- tion that was minding only its own business could remain free. I can recall that there were differences over how to cope with that aggression. But I do not remember any respected segment of opinion which denied that aggression had indeed taken place. Aggression does not lose its character be- cause efforts are made to conceal its naked character or because the time schedule is drawn out-or because trained men and weapons of war are introduced by stealth across frontiers and then unleashed in a savage assault on free peoples-or because the aggressor's troops speak the same lan- guage as their victims. This is what has been happening and is happening today in Vietnam. We are, in short, confronted with aggres- sion by the Communist regime in Hanoi, spurred on by Peiping, against the Govern- ment and people of South Vietnam. The United States is helping the South Viet- namese at their request, in their interest; in our own clear, unmistakable national interest and In the interest of the free peoples of southeast Asia and elsewhere as many of them have made clear to us. This proposition has been challenged in some quarters on several counts. The chal- lenge deserves analysis and response. First, we are told that the requests for help came from an earlier South Vietnamese Government. Originally, they did.- But in spite of changes in Saigon, every succeed- ing Government has renewed the original re- quest for help in its struggle to remain free. Today the present Government there remains as -firmly committed to the struggle against Hanoi's aggression as any of its predecessors have been. And the people of South Viet- nam., when they are not terrorized Into passiveness by the Vietcong-by murder, kid- napings and other savagery-demonstrate persistent support of their Government. We sometimes hear that cases of South Vietnamese collaboration with the Vietcong are an indication that the South Vietnamese do not have their hearts in the war, Let me again draw on my own experience. I was in France for over half of the Nazi occupation. Many Frenchmen obeyed the orders of their armed and ruthless Nazi conquerors. They felt they had no other choice if their families were to survive. A few--a very few-actively collaborated. The collaborators were never mistaken by the outside world as being the true spokesmen of France--and those who complied with Nazi demands backed by threats to lives of their families reacted, I think, as most of us would react in the same circumstances. Today in certain areas in South Vietnam we have a similar situation. There is another aspect of the picture I would like to mention. The North Vietna- mese have repeatedly referred to their at- tack upon South Vietnam as a "war of na- tional liberation." Some have implied that Hanoi and Peiping are reacting only to our presence in South Vietnam-that the Viet- cong represent an armed popular rebellion in South Vietnam against an unpopular gov- ernment and army. Let's look at the statistics. In January of 1964 there were 223 Vietcong military at- tacks. But in that same month, these so- called "liberators" carried out 1,244 acts of terror against innocent civilians, killing 148 civilians, wounding 160, and kidnaping 787 others. In December 1964-12 months later-the number of armed attacks against South Vietnam Government forces dwindled to 96, while the number of acts of terror had grown to 1,719. In that month, 112 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 Jruly 12, 196pproved FoaM51~M7A80300180003-7 civilian's were killed, 161 seriously wounded; For the other side negotiations In the past and 598' kidnapped. And all this, violence have meant something different. They have directed by'the Communist regime in Hanoi served as a smokescreen behind which against innocent and peaceful civilians, was stealthy and concealed aggression has con- carried on in the name of a "war of national tinued. Let me emphasize that the United liberation. This is, I 'suggest, not a people States insists upon an honorable settlement In arms rising against an unpopular govern- for the Republic of Vietnam that will pre- ment. This is simple thuggery, directed from serve its Independence. We will not resort North Vietnam against the people of South to negotiations as a cloak for capitulation. Vietnam, in an effort to impose upon them I have heard it said the so-called loss of the Communist system of the north. face we might suffer in simply withdrawing The State, Department white paper of Feb- from Vietnam "is not worth the death of one ruary shows conclusively what the SEATO American." I agree. "Face" is not worth Council meeting in London stated less than the death of one American or one Vietnamese 2 weeks ago that the struggle in Vietnam is or one old blind mule. But we are not talk- "an aggression organized, directed, applied ing about saving "face." We are talking and supported by the Communist regime in about the fate of the people of South Viet- North Vietnam, in contravention of the basic nam-and what is even more important- obligations of international 1a-, and in fla- about the people of every nation in the free grant violation of the Geneva Agreements of world. 1954 and 1962." Indeed it is the Hanoi regime itself that Nor is this a new conclusion, announced makes this clear. General Giap, commander now to a hitherto unsuspecting world. A of the North Vietnamese Communist Army, year ago, at the conclusion of the ninth has stated publicly "South Vietnam is the SEATO Council meeting, the members of that model of the national liberation movement of organization found that the Vietcong attacks our time. If the special warfare that the were "an organized campaign, directed, sup- U.S. imperialists are testing in South Vietnam plied and supported by the Communist re- is overcome, then it can be defeated every- gime in North Vietnam." where in the world." Let me repeat-"every- And 3 years ago-in 1962-the Interna- where in the world." tional Control Commission, consisting of In- In the 1930's, when I was a young Foreign dia, Poland, and Canada, reached a similar Service officer in Europe, young men with conclusion in a majority report. A year be- swastikas on their arms were marching fore that-in 1961-the State Department through the streets of Germany, singing the publication, "A Threat to Peace," set forth anthem of the Nazi movement, the Horst voluminous evidence that this same cam- Wessel song. "Today Germany is ours. To- i commitments anywhere else can be depended on. In 1939, Germany finally went to war-her appetite having grown by what it fed upon since 1936. Every historian of the crucial days just prior to the invasion of Poland agrees that the German Government went to war secure in the assumption-solidly based on the history of the preceding 3 years-that Britain and France would not abide by their commitments. These commitments existed, and they had been made as specific and as pointed as words could make them. They lacked only one crucial ingredient-credi- bility. From the lessons of the 1930's we have learned, I believe, that freedom is indivisi- ble-that as the area of freedom shrinks from aggression our own security and our own freedom are threatened. We cannot, we must not repeat the tragic error of the 1930's. We cannot afford to encourage fur- ther aggression and eventually invite another kind of Pearl Harbor. So let us renew our commitment to the defense of freedom in the world today. Let us show that this commitment is credible. But at the same time let us continue to make clear that we are prepared to discuss without conditons an honorable settlement that asks nothing for the United States and seeks only the continued freedom and inde- pendence for the people of the Republic of Vietnam. paign of aggression was go ng on. morrow the entire world. Some Americans I have heard some people say, "Even if this thought this was a joke. Others thought The Proposed 25th Amendment to the is aggression, we should end it by negotia- that it was purely an internal German affair. Constitution on Presidential Disability tion, not by war. Why isn't the United States Others thought the Nazi appetites could be willing to negotiate?" satisfied by negotiation. We heard every and Succession The answer to that is very simple. We argument against stopping the Nazis that we are willing to negotiate and we have been have heard in favor of withdrawing from willing to negotitate for over 10 years. Vietnam. In 1954 the United States and e ght other And what happened? We listened when nations, including the Soviet Union, Com- the Nazi jackboots marched into the Rhine- munist China, and the North Vietnamese, land. We listened when the Horst Wessel were together at the conference table in song was sung in Vienna following the rape Geneva where agreements were hammered of Austria. We listened when the Sudeten- out to protect the freedom and Independence land was torn from Czechoslovakia and when of the South Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cam- what was left of that once free country be- bodian peoples. came a reichsprotectorat. We listened later We agreed to respect that agreement. when Poland was savagely smashed, when The Hanoi regime was also committed to neutral Holland and Belgium were crushed, respect it. However the ink was hardly dry and devoured and France overrun. And we before Hanoi began to violate it by ordering were to listen later to the burning of London, its agents to go underground, caching arms the ravishing of Yugoslavia, the sound of in South Vietnam and organizing secret bases panzers in Athens, and stukas over the for future aggression. Soviet Union. And we were to listen later Again in 1962, the United States sat down to the smashing of bombs and the crackle at the conference table with 13 other coun- of flames as Pearl Harbor went up in smoke tries in our effort to preserve the independ- and gallant Americans died in a sea of flames. ence of Laos. Again, the Soviet Union, the But there was a voice in the 1930's that Chinese Communists, the North Vietnamese many did not listen to. Many did not listen, were present with representatives of Laos, after Munich, to a Member of the British South Vietnam, and other countries immedi- House of Commons who told his country and ately involved. Again agreements were the world: hammered out that if observed would have "Do not suppose that this Is the end. This brought peace to Laos and preserved its is only the beginning of the reckoning. This freedom. Once again, the ink on the agree- is only the first sip, the first foretaste of a ment was not dry when Hanoi proceeded to bitter cup which will be proferred to us year violate the prohibitions on the presence of by year unless, by a supreme recovery of foreign forces and then directed the Com- moral health and martial vigor, we arise munist Pathet Lao to resume their savage assault on the forces of the peaceful little again and take our stand by freedom as in Kingdom of Laos. the olden time." .And more recently, with what I believe Eventually, of course, we and other free must be considered commendable patience, peoples listened to Winston Churchill. We we have invited Hanoi to enter into uncon- listened almost too late, but not quite. And ditional discussions, only to have that offer, we prevailed. up until this time, rebuffed. But at what a tragic cost. But even if the other side proves willing to Today we have been given fair warning negotiate-and we hope it will-I would of Hanoi's and Peiping's intentions. If we emphasize that negotiations and peace are withdraw, if we do not stick by the Repub- not the same thing, as our experience in 1954 lic of Vietnam whose only desire is to remain and 1962 makes quite clear. Negotiations free and who asks our help we will encourage are net, an end unto themselves. For us the belief that aggression pays off and can they are a`means to reach an honorable set- succeed if disguised as a war of national tlement that will respect the freedom and liberation. independence of a small country-the Re- And if we show that we are not prepared public of Vietnam-that asks only to be left to stand by our commitments to South Viet- alone. nam, no one else is likely to believe that our SPEECH HON. EDWARD R. ROYBAL OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, June 30, 1965 Mr. ROYBAL. Mr. Speaker, I rise to urge prompt ratification by the legisla- tures of the several States of the pro- posed 25th amendment to the Constitu- tion relating to succession to the Presi- dency and Vice-Presidency and to cases where the President is unable to dis- charge the powers and duties of his office. This proposed amendment, overwhel- mingly adopted by both House and Sen- ate, can be of vital importance in helping clear up some 175 years of constitutional uncertainty and in assuring the conti- nuity of the legal Government of the United States whenever the questions of Presidential disability or succession arise, or a vacancy in the office of the Vice President occurs. As cosponsor of the joint congres- sional resolution which proposed the amendment, I believe we have come to realize more fully than ever before, espe- cially since the tragic assassination of our late beloved President John F. Ken- nedy, that we can no longer afford, :n this nuclear space age, to gamble with the future stability of our Government by leaving its fate to the uncertain whims of chance. Nothing less than the safe and sure continuity of the legal Government of the United States is at stake. This es- sential continuity has been endangered many times in the past, and in some in- stances, only good fortune has pre- vented possible disaster. Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-R0P671300446R000300180003-7 A3708 Approved FcC SSQ1?fIL15tEC 7BOWSRO0300180003d7uly 12, 1965 For more than a year after Lyndon Johnson became President, our national luck held out, and we were all witnesses to an impressive demonstration of the true inner strength of America's demo- cratic traditions. The new President firmly and quickly took up the reins of leadership, to assure continuity of the Government in the midst of a great constitutional crisis, to begin to heal the Nation's wounds, and to reinstill in our people a sense of unity and brotherhood and faith in the future. This experience has again focused public attention on the critical issue of Presidential and Vice Presidential suc- cession, as well as the related, and in some ways more difficult, problem of Presidential disability. As a result, there has developed a strong national consensus in favor of re- solving these issues in a positive way, so that there will be no doubt concern- ing the constitutional provisions for handling such problems in the future. As an 'affirmative response to the need for a solution to these problems, the joint congressional resolution proposes to amend the Constitution in three re- spects: first, it confirms the established custom that a Vice President, succeed- ing to a vacancy in the office of the President, becomes President in his own right instead of merely Acting President; second, it establishes a procedure for filling a vacancy in the office of Vice President; and third, it deals with the problem of Presidential disability. Section 1 of the proposed amendment provides that in the case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death or resignation, the Vice President shall become President. Section 2 provides that in the event of a Vice-Presidential vacancy, the President can nominate a new Vice Pres- ident, who will take office when he has been confirmed by a majority vote of both Houses of Congress. Section 3 enables a President to de- clare his own disability to exercise the powers and duties of his office, thus voluntarily turning over those powers and duties, but not the office, to the Vice President who then becomes Acting President, until such time as the Presi- dent declares that the disability no longer exists, and he resumes the powers and duties of his office. In the absence of a Presidential decla- ration of disability, section 4 permits the Vice President, with the approval of a majority of the Cabinet, or such other body as Congress may stipulate, to make such a declaration, and to assume the presidential responsibilities as Acting President. It also provides for quick and orderly congressional resolution of any dispute over the President's ability, by authorizing him to resume discharging the powers and duties of his office unless two-thirds of both House and Senate agree with the Vice President and a ma- jority of the Cabinet--or such other body as Congress has stipulated-that the President is unable to perform those duties. This proposed amendment, though not perfect, represents a sincere effort on the part of many persons who have studied the admittedly complicated issues in- volved.to offer a workable means of solv- ing difficult and delicate problems affect- ing the continuity and perhaps even the life of our Government. A variety of suggestions have been made to improve this proposed amend- ment, and Congress has given full and thorough consideration to all these sug- gestions, and, in fact, has incorporated several of them into the joint resolution. For these reasons, Mr. Speaker, I strongly urge our State legislatures to act without unnecessary delay, for the sub- ject is important to the future stability and peace of this Nation, and we cannot afford the risk that further delay would entail in this vital matter. As President Johnson stated in his message to Congress: Favorable action * * * will, I believe, as- sure the orderly continuity in the Presidency that is imperative to the success and stabil- ity of our system. Action * * ^ now will allay future anx- iety among our people-and among the peo- ples of the world-in the event senseless tragedy or unforeseeable disability should strike again at either or both of the principal offices of our constitutional system. If we act now, without undue delay, we shall have moved closer to achieving perfec- tion of the great constitutional document on which the strength and success of our system have rested for nearly two centuries. Notes United Arab Republic Publication of Book on the Nile by Jew EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. RICHARD L. OTTINGER OF NEW YORE: IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, July 6, 1965 Mr. OTTINGER. Mr. Speaker, I would like to call the attention of our colleagues to a very wonderful book on the Nile River, "Nile: Lifeline of Egypt", Scarsdale, N.Y.; Garrard, 1965, written by a well-known American au- thor, Mrs. Violet Weingarten. No greater tribute could be given this work than that paid by the Egyptian Government which has purchased the rights for its publication in the United Arab Republic in Arabic. I believe that this is the first instance in modern his- tory of United Arab Republic purchase for publication of a book written by a Jewish author. Perhaps it is a presage of better relations to come between the Arab world and the Jews. I hope so. At the least, it is a deserving honor to a fine author and her very worthy book, "Nile: Lifeline of Egypt." CHANGE OF RESIDENCE Senators, Representatives, and Delegates who have changed their residences will please give information thereof to the Government Printing Office, that their addresses may be correctly given in the RECORD. PRINTING OF CONGRESSIONAL RECORD EXTRACTS It shall be lawful for the Public Printer to print and deliver upon the order of any Senator, Representative, or Delegate, extracts from the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, the person ordering the same paying the cost thereof (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 185, p. 1942). GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS FOR SALE Additional copies of Government publica- tions are offered for sale to the public by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 20402, at cost thereof as determined by the Public Printer plus 50 percent: Provided, That a dis- count of not to exceed 25 percent may be al- lowed to authorized bookdealers and quantity purchasers, but such printing shall not inter- fere with the prompt execution of work for the Government. The Superintendent of Documents shall prescribe the terms and conditions under which he may authorize the resale of Government publications by bookdealers, and he may designate any Gov- ernment officer his agent for the sale of Gov- ernment publications under such regulations as shall be agreed upon by the Superintend- ent of Documents and the head of the re- spective department or establishment of the Government (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 72a, Supp. 2). CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY The Public Printer, under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing, may print for sale, at a price sufficient to reimburse the expenses of such printing, the current Con- gressional Directory. No sale shall be made on credit (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 150, p. 1939). LAWS RELATIVE TO THE PRINTING OF DOCUMENTS Either House may order the printing of a document not already provided for by law, but only when the same shall be accompa- nied by an estimate from the Public Printer as to the probable cost thereof. Any execu- tive department, bureau, board or independ- ent office of the Government submitting re- ports or documents in response to inquiries from Congress shall submit therewith an estimate of the probable cost of printing thb usual number. Nothing in this section re- lating to estimates shall apply to reports or documents not exceeding 50 pages (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 140, p. 1938). Resolutions for printing extra copies, when presented to either House, shall be referred immediately to the Committee on House Administration of the House of Representa- tives or the Committee on Rules and Admin- istration of the Senate, who, in making their report, shall give the probable cost of the proposed printing upon the estimate of the Public Printer, and no extra copies shall be printed before such committee has reported (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 133, p. 1937). RECORD OFFICE AT THE CAPITOL An office for the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, with Mr. Raymond F. Noyes in charge, is lo- cated iii room H-112, House wing, where or- ders will be received for subscriptions to the RECORD at $1.50 per month or for single copies at 1 cent for eight pages (minimum charge of 3 cents). Also, orders from Mem- bers of Congress to purchase reprints from the RECORD should be processed through this office. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, droved For R~'FT9CI~~B6(~d0180003-7 A397 Railway fought the Interstate 'Commerce Two and a' half months 'ago President Those who worry about bridges and barracks Commission for 2 years to be permitted to Johnson spoke to the world about Vietnam and ammunition dumps would do well to lower the freight rates made possible by at the Johns Hopkins University in Balti- give their sympathy instead to the daily "Big John. " After another 2 years' opera- more. Today I wish to talk to you on the victims of terror in South Vietnam. I t suc tion, Southern is reporting on the effect of same subject-to you who know tha the Big John savings to the grain user. Here problems have deep roots, to you who have is the score. In the Southeastern States in lived through and worked upon such prob- the past 2 years 23 new feed mills have lems before, and to you who know that been built and 41 existing feed mills have such matters can gravely affect the future been expanded. In these 2 years 35 new of our Nation and the prospects for general cattle feed lots have been opened and 17 peace. existing cattle feed lots have been expanded, The struggle in Vietnam has continued 16 new hog feed lots have been built, and since April and indeed has grown the more 3 existing hog feed lots have been expanded. severe. The harsh resistance of the Conunu- In these Southeastern States and in these nists to any form of discussions or negoti- ,2 years' 2 new packinghouses have been built ation continues. The effort to destroy the and it existing packinghouses have been ex- freedom of Vietnam has been expanded. panded. Thus, savings through lower freight The trial by fire of the people of Vietnam rates on grain from the Midwest to the goes on. Their own resistance has been Southeast have brought a healthy and vig- courageous, but the need for American reso- orous market expansion for southern live- lution and for American action has in- stock farmers, feeders, processors and new creased, jobs for people all along this line of ex- AGGRESSION FROM THE NORTH pansion. The root of the trouble in Vietnam is to- In Appalachia the Duke Power Co., offers day just what It was in April and has been to invest $700 million in electric power pro- at least since 1960-a cruel and sustained at- duction that would bring expansion of job tack by North Vietnam upon the people of opportunitiees to a tri-State area. The fa- South Vietnam. Now, as then, it is a brutal cility is planned as the Keowee-Toxaway war-marked by terror and sneak attack, and plant in Pickens and Oconee Counties in by the killing of women and children in the South Carolina. And, who objects? The night. This campaign of terror has con- U.S. Government in the person of Secretary tinued throughout the spring. of the Interior Stewart L. Udall. Secretary Those of us who have not served in Viet- of the Interior Udall says that Duke could nom may find it hard to understand just how buy its power from the proposed Government ugly this war of aggression has been. From powerplant at Trotters Shoals and from other 1961 to the present date the South Viet- places. Secretary of the Interior Mr. Udall's namese armed forces have lost some 25,000 proposal comes with poor grace. A Fed- dead and 51,000 wounded. In proportion to eral, power group 2 years ago stopped Duke population, these South Vietnamese losses from building a plant at Trotters Shoals. are 10 times as great as those suffered by What Duke proposes would cost the people Americans in the Korean war, and larger nothing. What the Department of the In- than our losses in World War II. terior proposes would cost the people the Even more terrible than these military price of the Federal powerplant and millions losses are the cruelties of assassination and in tax dollars. And, the point is this. A .kidnaping among civilian officials and ordi- way' s l agency delayed the Southern Rail- nary citizens. In the last 18 months, for way's use of "Big John" grain cars 2 years by example, more than 2,000 local officials and forbidding Southern to lower the freight civilians have been murdered. When an of- rate. A Federal agency stops private power finial is not found at home, often his wife development to build its own public power and children are slain in his place. It is as if empire. Only the voter can trim the Federal in our own country some 35,000 civic leaders Government's stranglehold on private enter- or their families were to be killed at night prise. by stealth and terror. These are the methods of the Vietcong. This is the test to which the people of Viet- Superb A es _.of' ecretary Dean Rusk nam have gallantly responded. EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. W. J. BRYAN DORN OF SOUTH CAROLINA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. DORN. Mr. Speaker, Secretary of State Dean Rusk delivered a magnifi- cent address on June 23 before the American Foreign Service Association here in Washington. I commend this timely address, "Viet- nam: Four Steps to Peace," to the atten- tion of every Member of the Congress, to the people of our country, and those throughout the world who are striving for a just and honorable peace in south- east Asia-a peace which will end ag- gression. VIETNAM: FOUR STEPS TO. PEACE It Is a very great pleasure for me to be here. It Is a: privilege for me to salute my colleagues, present and retired, of the For- eign Service and to express to you the grati- tude , of President Johnson and of the American people for a service which is marked by so much competence, dedication, and personal commitment. Meanwhile, from the north, heavy infiltra- tion has continued. Intelligence now shows that some 40,000 had come down before the .end of 1964. Toward the end of that year-' well before the beginning of our own air oper- ations against North Vietnam-the infiltra- tion of regular North Vietnamese army units was begun, and important elements of that army are now known to be in place in South Vietnam and Laos,. where they have no right to be. And so we face a deliberate and long- matured decision by a persistent aggressor to raise the stakes of war. Apparently this was their answer to our own repeated affirma- tion that we ourselves did not wish a larger war. Apparently a totalitarian regime has once again misunderstood the desire of dem- ocratic peoples for peace and has made the mistake of thinking that they can have a larger war without risks to themselves. And hence the airstrikes against military targets in North Vietnam. These actions have made infiltration hard- er. They have increased the cost of aggres- elon. Without them Sputh Vietnam today would face still stronger forces from the north. These measured air operations have done what we expected them to do-neither more nor less. For air attack alone cannot bring peace. I cannot agree with those who think it wrong to hit the logistics of aggression. It is the aggression itself that is the wrong. The other side is obviously not yet ready for peace. In these last months, the friends of peace in many lands have sought to move this dangerous matter to the conference table. But one proposal after another has been contemptuously rejected. We and others, for example, have sought to clear a way for a conference on Laos, and a conference on Cambodia-two neighboring countries where progress toward peace might be reflected in Vietnam itself. But these efforts have been blocked by North Vietnam and by Communist China. Twice there has been an effort at discus- sions through the United Nations-first in the Security Council after the August at- tacks in the Tonkin Gulf, and later this ,-April, when Secretary General U Thant con- sidered visits to Hanoi and Peiping to explore the possibilities of peace. But in August there was a refusal by Hanoi to come to the Security Council. And In April both Hanoi and Peiping made it clear that they would not receive U Thant, and both regimes made plain their view that the United Nations is not competent to deal with that matter. Repeatedly our friends in Britain, as a co- chairman of the Geneva conference, have sought a path to settlement-first by work- ing toward a new conference in Geneva and then by a visit of a senior British statesman. But the effort for a conference in Geneva was blocked, and the distinguished British traveler was told that he should stay away from Peiping and Hanoi. Twice in April we made additional efforts of our own. In Baltimore the President of- fered unconditional discussions with the governments concerned. Hanoi and Peiping call this offer a hoax. At that time the 17 nonalined nations had appealed for a peaceful solution, by negotiations without preconditions. This proposal was accepted on our side. It was rejected by Hanoi and Peiping. And some of its authors were la- beled monsters and freaks. The President of India made constructive proposals-far an end of hostilities and an Afro-Asian patrol force. To us this proposal was full of interest and hope. But by Hanoi and Red China it was rejected as a betrayal. Our own Government and the Government of South Vietnam, in May, suspended air attacks on North Vietnam. This action was made known to the other side to see if there would be a response in kind. This special effort for peace was denounced in Hanoi as a wornout trick and denounced in Peiping as a swindle. To those who complain that that so-called "pause" was not long enough, I would simply report that the harsh reaction of the other side was fully known before the attacks were resumed. And I would also recall that we held our hand for more than 4 years while tens of thousands of armed men invaded the South and every attempt at peaceful settlement failed. Reports in the first half of June have confirmed that all these violent rejections are in fact what they appear to be-clear proof that what is wanted today in Hanoi is a military victory, not peace, and that Hanoi is not even prepared for discussions unless it Is accepted in advance that there will be a Communist-dominated, government in Saigon, and unless too-so far as we can determine-American forces are withdrawn in advance. So this record is clear. And there is sub- stance in Senator FUOBRICHT's conclusion that "It seems clear that the Communist powers still hope to achieve a complete vic- tory in South Vietnam and for this reason ,,Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 A3698 Approves ftM&wWfk:/1"/ gp?iiB W IWR0003001800A3ty7 12, 1965 are at present uninterested In negotiations for it peaceful settlement." For the simple truth is that there Is no lack of diplomatic procedures, machinery or process by which a desire for peace can be registered-that there is no procedural miracle through which peace can be obtained if one side Is deter- mined to continue the war. As I have said, Hanoi is presenly adamant against negotiation or any avenue to peace. Peiping is even more so, and one can plainly read the declared doctrine and purpose of the Chinese Communists. They are look- ing beyond the current conflict to the hope of domination in all of Southeast Asia-and indeed beyond. But one finds it harder to understand Hanoi's aversion to discussion. More im- mediiately than the Chinese, the North Viet- namese face the costs and dangers of con- flict. They, too, must fear the ambitions of Communist China in Southeast Asia. Yet they are still on the path of violence, insist- ing upon the forceful communization of South Vietnam and refusing to let their brothers in the south work out their own destiny in peace. In recent weeks, after 2 months of reduced activity, the enemy has sharply quickened the tempo of his military action in the south. Since early May, major Viet Cong units have returned to the battlefield, and already a series of sharp engagments has shown us that the fighting through the summer may be hard. Setbacks have occurred and serious defeats have been avoided only by the com- bination of continuing Vietnamese bravery and effective air and other types of support. Losses on both sides have been heavy. From April 1 to date, we have had confirmed reports of almost 5,000 Vietcong dead, almost 3,000 South Vietnamese, and almost 100 Americans. We must expect these losses to continue-and our own losses may increase. ROLE OF U.S. FORCES Since March we have deployed nine bat- talions of fighting men to South Vietnam. Six more are on their way. For as the Presi- dent said in April, "we will not be defeated. We will not grow tired *. We will do everything necessary * * * and we will do only what is * * * necessary." Our own battalions in South Vietnam have three related tasks. Their first assignment was and is to guard such major installations as the airfield at Da Nang. A second and closely related task is that of active patrol in nearby areas. And the third is to join in combat support of Vietnamese forces-when such help is requested and when our Com- mander, Geheral Westmoreland, believes it should be given. American forces so committed will carry with them the determined support of our people. These men know, as all our people know, that what they do is done for free- dom and peace, in Vietnam, In other con- tinents, and here at home. SUPPORT FOR U.S. ACTION In authorizing combat missions for our ground forces in Vietnam, the President acted to meet his constitutional responsi- bilities as Commander in Chief. He has rec- ognized the obligations of this Nation under the Southeast Asia Treaty, which the Senate approved by a vote of 82 to 1. He has acted under the joint resolution of August 1964, which passed the Senate by a vote of 88 to 2-and passed the House with no opposing vote. This resolution expresses our national readiness as the President determines---"to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the United States" and "all necessary steps, including the use of armed force" to help Vietnam and southeast Asian members of the SEATO who ask for help to preserve their freedom. The President has acted on the unanimous advice of the American leaders in Saigon and his senior civil and military advisers in Wash- ington. He has acted in full consultation with the Government of South Vietnam. And he has acted on his own considered judgment of what is necessary at this time to stop aggression. This decision-like all of our decisions in Vietnam-is open to review by Members of the Congress and open to reversal if it does not have their support. But the leaders of the Congress have been kept in close touch with the situation, and no such prospect should stimulate the hopes of enemies or the fears of friends. For America is not divided in her determination nor weak in her will. In Vietnam today we face one more chal- lenge in the long line of dangers we have, unhappily, had to meet and master for a generation. We have had to show both strength and restraint-courage and cool- ness---for Iran and for Greece, for Berlin and for Korea, in the Formosa Strait, and in the Cuban missile crisis. We mean to show the same determination and coolness now. In 1954 President Eisenhower pledged our support to the Government of Vietnam, to assist that Govermnent, as he put it, "in developing and maintaining a strong, viable state, capable of resisting attempted subver- sion or aggression through military means." And this determination was reaffirmed again and again by President Kennedy. "We are going to stay here," he said. "We are not going to withdraw from that effort." And that is our position still. FIRMNESS AND RESTRAINT Now, as in April, as the President put it, "We will use our power with restraint and with all the wisdom that we can command." For it is others, and not we, who have in- creased the scale of fighting. It is others, and not we, who have made threats of gravely widened conflict, The firmness with which we resist aggression is matched by the firm- ness with which we will refrain from ill- advised adventure. A few-a very few-may believe that un- limited war can take the place of the sus- tained and steady effort in which we are engaged, just as there may be a few-a very few-who think we should pull out and leave a friendly people to their fate. But the American people want neither rashness nor surrender. They want firmness and restraint. They expect courage and care. They threaten no one. And they are not moved by the threats by others. ROLE OF SOUTH VIETNAM This contest centers in the defense of freedom for the people who live in South Vietnam. The sustained and increasing in- filtration from North Vietnam has required the measured use of air attack on military targets in the north. We alone cannot de- termine the future-could we do so there would be a prompt peace. The other side, too, must decide about the future. And we must hope they know-as we do-that in- creased aggression would be costly far beyond the worth to the aggressor. The political turmoil in South Vietnam has continued. It is easy to be impatient with our friends in Saigon as they struggle to establish and sustain a stable government under the stress of war. We see there the ferment of a society still learning to be free, even while under attack from beyond their borders. We must remember that this ancient peo- ple is young in its independence, restless in its hopes, divided in its religions, and varied in its regions. The turmoil of Vietnam needs the steadfastness of America. Our friends in Vietnam know, and we know, that our people and our troops must work and fight together. Neither of us can do the work of the other. And the main responsi- bility must always be with, and is fully ac- cepted by, the South Vietnamese. - Yet neither of us can "go it alone." We would not be there without the urgent request for assistance from those whose land this hap- pens to be. We have a tested faith in the enduring bravery of the people of Vietnam, and they, in turn, can count on us with equal certainty. FORMULA FOR PEACE The people of Vietnam long for peace. And the way to peace is clear. Yesterday the Foreign Minister of South Vietnam set forth the fundamental principles that can provide a just and enduring peace. Those principles, in summary, are: An end to aggression and subversion. Freedom for South Vietnam to choose and shape for itself its own destiny "in conform- ity with democratic principles and without any foreign interference from whatever sources." As soon as aggression has ceased, the end- ing of the military measures now necessary by the Government of South Vietnam and the nations that have come to its aid to de- fend South Vietnam; and the removal of foreign military forces from South Vietnam. And effective guarantees for the independ- ence and freedom of the people of South Vietnam. Now these are the fundamental steps. This is what the arguing and the fighting is all about. When they are carried out, we can look forward, as we have stated previously many times, to the day when relations be- tween North Vietnam and South Vietnam can be worked out by peaceful means. And this would include the question of a free decision by the peoples of North and South Vietnam on'the matter of reunification. This forthright and simple program meets the -hopes of all and attacks the interests of none. It would replace the threat of con- quest by the hope of free and peaceful choice. A LOOK TO THE FUTURE And even while these hopes of peace are blocked for now by aggression, we on our side and other nations have reaffirmed our deep commitment to the peaceful progress of Vietnam and southeast Asia as a whole. In April the President proposed to the nations of Asia and to the United Nations that there be .constructed a new program of support for Asian efforts and called upon Mr. Eugene Black to assist them. Now in June this work is underway. The Mekong River project has been given new life. A new dam is ready to rise in Laos. A billion-dollar bank is in the making for the development of southeast Asia. And in Vietnam itself new impetus has been given to programs of development and education and health. So let us call again on other nations-in- eluding the Soviet Union-to join in turning this great region of the world away from the waste and violence of a brutal war. For the hope of Asia is not in relentless pressure for conquest. It is in unremitting hope for progress-a progress in which rice production could be multiplied manyfold, where the ex- pectation of life could be doubled, the edu- cation of the young could be tenfold what it is today, and there could be an end of cholera and tuberculosis and intestinal parasites and other human afflictions. In April the President offered determina- tion against aggression, discussion for peace, and development for the human hopes of all. And in June we reaffirm that threefold policy. Aggression has Increased, so that determi- nation must be greater than ever. Discussion is rejected, but our efforts to find a path to peace will not be stopped. We have welcomed the new initiative of Prime Minister Wilson and the Commonwealth con- ference and regret that it has received so little reception on the other side. Beyond the terror of the aggressor and the firmness of our defense, we must, neverthe- less, look to the day in which many new dams will be built, and manj, new schools Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, 196.Pproved For iGR$ $MA$, : ?B67BA4 Q0300180003-7 A N99 opened, and fresh opportunities opened to the peoples of southeast Asia. For we must look beyond the battle to peace, past fear "to hope, and over the hard path of resistance to the broad plain of progress which must lie ahead for the peoplps1$ southeast Asia. cate that' the great majority of the South Vietnamese oppose them. With regard to Vietnamese support for the American effort in Vietnam, it should be noted that almost all the leaders of all polit- ical and religious groups with the exception of the Vietcong have publicly stated their appreciation of American assistance to their country. Some student leaders have criti- t0 Some Probing cized some aspects of the method of adminis- tering American assistance, but even they EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JEFFERY COHELAN tude for American support and desire that it be continued. 2. "The second fact is that most of the military equipment used against American and South Vietnam military forces has come neither from Communist China nor from " OF CALIFORNIA North Vietnam but from the United States. IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES It is true that the Vietcong use weapons TI; 1 h h S th 1954 t t t d Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. COHELAN. Mr. Speaker, I have great admiration and respect for the very able editor of the Saturday Review, Nor man Cousins. His writing and analysis in numerous fields has made a fine con- tribution to a new awareness and a bet- ter understanding of many public issues. I was, accordingly, deeply troubled by two of his recent articles: "Vietnam and the American Conscience," February 27, 19,65; and "How America Can Help Viet- nam," March 20, 1965. In response to my request for a point- by-point analysis, the Department of State has provided me with a reply which I consider to be thoughtful, informative, and responsive. I include it for our col- leagues' attention and considered re- view : DEPARTMENT OF STATE, Washington, July 7, 1965. Hon JEFFERY COHELAN, House of Representatives. DEAR CONGRESSMAN COHELAN: Thank you for your letter of June 3, 1965, requesting the comments of the Department on two recent editorials in the Saturday Review, by Nor- man Cousins. The Department of Defense has also referred to us your letter to them concerning these editorials. The conclusions in Mr. Cousins' articles are based on a number of assertions which are either oversimplifications or largely in- accurate. The major assumptions on which he bases his arguments are discussed below. 1. "The first fact is that the United States does not have the backing of the Vietnamese people In whose name it went into Vietnam in the first place and whom it is seeking to save today." "In private briefings U.S. offi- cials concede that the large majority of South Vietnamese are opposed to the U.S. presence." This is not accurate. While many Viet- namese just wish to lead their own lives and do not actively support either the Govern- ment of Vietnam or the Vietcong, the major- ity of the South Vietnamese have already shown that they do not wish their country to be taken over by the Communists and that they appreciate American efforts to as- sist them in protecting themselves. Nearly 1 million North Vietnamese refugees rejected communism by moving south in 1954 Over 500000 Vietnamese soldiers are e ou cache in . s a so rue at Vietnamese, from 1961 until today, have lost over 39,000 weapons, but in the same period the Vietcong lost over 25,000, and so the Vietcong gains have netted them only some 14,000 arms. This is only 10 or 15 percent of their total requirements or, most favor- ably, only 30 percent of the requirements for their regular, "main force" units alone. The remainder-over 35,000 weapons for the regular, "main force" Vietcong troops, and between 50,000 and 100,000 for the Vietcong irregulars-must, and have, come from out- side. Related to this, it is heartening to observe the trend in weapons losses in 1965. For a long while, the ratio of losses was 3 to 1 in favor of the Vietcong. But this year the ratio is 1 to 1-a favorable sign. 3. "The third fact is that the legal justifi- cation invoked by the United States for its involvement in Vietnam has long since been nullified." The enclosed leaflet entitled "Legal Basis for U.S. Action in Vietnam" discusses this question. 4. "There has been an outpouring of anti- American sentiment not just in Asia but throughout the world-and it would be a mistake to charge it all to Communist manipulation or propaganda." It is true that the American effort in Vietnam is opposed by the leaders of some countries and by some elements of the pop- ulation in most countries. Many more lead- ers and groups throughout the world have expressed concern at the situation in Viet- nam, a concern which is shared, of course, by responsible officials in the American Gov- ernment and by all men interested in peace. However, even many of those expressing con- cern recognize the necessity of assisting the Vietnamese Government and people. Gov- ernment leaders of over 60 countries have either publicly or privately voiced support of our policy in Vietnam as compared to the approximately 25 countries which openly oppose it. Thirty-eight countries are now providing assistance to the Republic of Viet- nam or have agreed to do so. 5. "The United States did and does have an economic program in Vietnam and Laos but that program lacks grandeur." The enclosed leaflet entitled "U.S. Assist- ance to Vietnam" shows the large scope of our nonmilitary aid to that country, and President Johnson discussed our economic assistance in greater detail in an address on May 13, 1965, a copy of which is also enclosed. now serving in the Armed Forces of the 6. "The repeated changeovers in the Viet- Republic of Vietnam-3,411,000 persons took nam Government indicate that the problem part in the government's municipal and pro- of stability is not represented solely by sub- vincial council elections held on May 30 of version from the north. One way or another, this year. No political or military leader of the principle of self-determination, at the note has defected to the Vietcong, even dur- cbre of historic U.S. foreign policy and tradi- ing the days when a number of them were tions, does not now exist in Vietnam." actively opposed to President Ngo Dinh Diem. After centuries of domination by Chinese, While it is impossible to prove what exact French, and JapaneseTt would seem fanciful percentage of the South Vietnamese support to expect the Vietnamese to emerge after or oppose the Vietcong, these facts do ihdi- the signing of the Geneva accords with a well-trained, experienced and effective lead- ership group and well-informed, conscien- tious electorate, both groups able and con- fident in the operation of governmental in- stitutions with which they have had no pre- vious contact. Is it realistic to require that their Government be as democratic as ours before we will assist them? The progress that has been made since 1954 should not be ignored: the increasing responsiveness of the Government to various groups now be- coming vocal on matters of policy, the con- tinuing efforts of the Government to improve the social and economic position of its cit- izens, and the progress toward an effective administration. One example of their ef- forts was the successful provincial and municipal elections held throughout the country on May 30. 7. "American newsmen have had a more difficult time in getting unmanipulated news out of Vietnam than out of almost any crisis center in recent years." Enclosed is an article from the June 20 Chicago Tribune which gives the opinion of an impartial observer on this subject. Mr. Cousins' conclusion is that we should "* * * involve the United Nations, with all its limitations, to the fullest possible extent." It should be noted that the United States has attempted more than once to use the machinery of the United Nations to help solve various aspects of the Vietnam situation. When in May 1964, Cambodia complained to the United Nations Security Council of South Vietnamese military incursions into Cambodian territory, the United States pro- posed that a United Nations peacekeeping body be established on the border. The Se- curity Council sent a mission of three of its members (Brazil, Ivory Coast, and Morocco) to examine the border situation and to make recommendations as to how these incidents could be avoided. Hanoi and Peiping con- demned even this limited United Nations initiative in southeast Asia. The Vietcong warned that they could not guarantee the safety of the mission and would not accept its findings. In August 1964, the United States re- quested an urgent meeting of the Security Council to consider the serious situation created by the North Vietnamese torpedo boat attacks on two U.S. destroyers in Interna- tional waters. After hearing the U.S. report of the defensive measures taken in response to these attacks, the Council stated that it would welcome such information relating to this issue as North or South Vietnam desired to make available either by taking part in the Security Council discussion or in a form they might otherwise prefer. The Republic of Vietnam expressed its readiness to offer the Security Council Its full cooperation. How- ever, the North Vietnamese maintained that the Security Council "has no right to examine the problem" and replied that any "illegal" decision on the U.S. complaint by the Security Council would be considered null and void by the North Vietnamese authorities. On June 25, 1965, in a speech at San Fran- cisco on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the United Nations, President Johnson called upon "this gathering of the nations of the world to use all their influence, individu- ally and collectively, to bring to the table those who seem determined to make war. We will support your efforts," he continued, "as we support effective action by any agent or agency of these United Nations." The machinery of the United Nations has been extremely valuable in easing tension in many parts of the world. But any peace set- tlement, to be effective, must be agreed to by parties who are willing to work out and abide by such an agreement. The responses to the President's proposal on April 7 have not given Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7' A3700 Approved F CpPa MAIU/ AIRBPQ-IRQDSOf 0030018000 1y 12, 1965 us any encouragement that Hanoi or Peiping are interested in even considering discussion toward peace. Referring to reports that Secretary Gen- eral U Thant had offered to visit several capi- tals of the world, in Peiping a People's Daily editorial on April 12 had this to say: "* Mr. Thant wants to come to China and the DRV (North Vietnam) to seek a settlement of the Vietnam question. Obviously, he is knocking at the wrong door. * * * The Viet- nam question has nothing to do with the United Nations" and that "no meddling by the United Nations is called for nor will it be tolerated." Finally, Hanoi's declaration of April 19 noted that It would be inappro- priate for the United Nations to Intervene in the Vietnam situation. It is Peiping and Hanoi, not the United States, who oppose an effective role for the United Nations in southeast Asia. In conclusion, we would like to quote the following paragraph from Mr. Cousins' edi- torial entitled "How America Can Help Viet- nam," which well states.the fundamental problems in Vietnam: "The original problem in Vietnam is rep- resented by an unremitting Communist campaign of terror, assassination,' and bru- tality against the South Vietnamese people and government. The campaign has its or- igin in North Vietnam but many South Viet- namese are part of the undercover army, known at the Vietcong. What concerns the United States at least as much as the disorders in South Vietnam is the spread of Chinese Communist Influence or dominion in southeast Asia." If the Department can be of further assist- ance, please let me know. Sincerely, DOUGLAS MACARTI3UR II, Assistant Secretary for Congressional Relations. [From the Office of Public Services, Bureau of Public Affairs, Department of State, Washington, D.C. ] LEGAL BASIS FOR U.S. ACTION IN VIETNAM Although Congress in fact has not made a formal declaration of war, the sense of Con- gress has Indeed been expressed. Congres- sional leaders have been consulted continu- ously by the administration, and many Sen- ators and Congressmen have made their views known both in private discussions and public speeches in Congress, A joint resolu- tion (Public Law 88-408) was passed in Au- gust 1984 by a combined vote of 502 to 2, which stated, among other things: "That the Congress approves and supports the determi- nation of the President, as Commander in Chief too take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggres- sion * * *" and that "the United States regards as vital to its national interest and to world peace the maintenance of interna- tional peace and security in southeast Asia * * *" and that "* * * the United States is, therefore, prepared, as the President deter- mines, to take all necessary steps, including the use of armed force, to assist any member or protocol state of the Southeast Asia, Col- lective Defense Treaty requesting assistance in defense of its freedom." It has not beep considered desirable or necessary to declare war in the Vietnam situation. Should a declaration of was become necessary or de- sirable, Congress would, of course, make such a declaration, since it is recognized that the power to declare war is solely with- in the province of the Congress. Article II of the Constitution, makes the President Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and vests in him the executive power. This article has also been interpreted by the Supreme Court as making the President the "sole organ of the Nation" in the field of foreign affairs. Thus the President has authority to deploy U.S. military personnel abroad. Furthermore, the United States and Viet- nam are parties to the agreement for mutual defense assistance in Indochina of Decem- ber 23, 1950, which was concluded pursuant to Public Law 329, 81st Congress. This agreement provides for the furnishing by the United States to Vietnam, inter alia, of military assistance in the form of equipment, material, and services. The Manila Pact, ratified in February 1955, which established 'SEATO, included South Vietnam as a protocol state. This treaty was approved by the Senate by a vote of 82 to 1. .A Presidential decision was made in 1954 to extend aid to South Vietnam; President Eisenhower said in a letter to the Presi- dent of South Vietnam: "The purpose of this offer is to assist the. Government of Vietnam in developing and maintaining a strong, viable state, capable of resisting attempted subversion or aggression through military means." U.S. ASSISTANCE TO VIETNAM Since its formation in 1954 the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) has received over $3.5 billion in U.S. economic and mili- tary assistance. This large amount of aid for a relatively small nation (approximately 15 million population) has been necessary because of Vietnam's location on the borders of Communist Asia and the external and in- ternal pressures it must resist to remain in- dependent. In furtherance of U.S. policy in Vietnam bath economic and military as- sistance programs are being carried on. During the past fiscal year ending June 30, 1984, $233.9 million was provided in eco- nomic assistance, as follows: Some $46.8 million for the counterinsur- gency program which finances technical as- sistance and commodities for strengthening rural development, the national police, com- munications, public works, and similar proj- ects. Under this program U.S. technicians are living in and providing advisory assist- ance to the 45 rural provinces; commodities such as medical kits, radios, building ma- terials, school equipment, livestock and pesticides are provided for direct use in counterinsurgency and self-help activities at the village level. There was $113 million for the commercial import program under which essential im- port requirements such as raw materials, fer- tilizer, and some industrial equipment are financed so as to maintain the country's eco- nomic foundations. Under this program U.S.- financed imports flow through private com- mercial channels. There was $68.2 million of U.S. surplus agricultural commodities under the food-for- peace program, Public Law 480, of which $39.2 million (title I) was sold to meet basic needs for foodstuffs and agricultural raw mate- rials, $26.8 million (title II) was given to support counterinsurgency activities, such as food for resettled families until the next crop harvest, $2.2 million (title III) was donated for distribution to needy persons by U.S. voluntary organizations. Some $5.9 million for improvement of edu- cation, health and telecommunications fac- ilities, and other economic development pro- jects under the advice and guidance of U.S. technicians. Under the military assistance program, over $200 million of military equipment, sup- plies, and services were programed for Viet- nam in fiscal year 1964, and some 53,000 U.S. servicemen are currently assisting in train- ing, logistical support, base defense, and com- bat operations with the Vietnamese armed forces when requested by the Government of South Vietnam, in the war against the Com- munist guerrillas. [From the Chicago (Ill.) Tribune, June 20, 19651 REPORTER FINDS VIET WAR EASY-PROVIDING (By Arthur Veysey, London bureau chief) SAIGON, VIETNAM, June 19.-Covering the war in Vietnam is easy for a reporter. Stories are everywhere, waiting to be told. Contrary to often stated charges, reporters willing to leave the air-conditioned hotels, restaurants, bars, and the press conferences of Saigon are free to travel where they like. They find a welcome everywhere among American military men. Military transportation of all types is open to the reporter for the asking. He even gets preference on scheduled flights carrying troops and supplies. If no scheduled flight is available, the reporter need only wait on an airfield and sooner or later a plane will come along. The pilot happily gives the re- porter a lift. TALKS OF CENSORSHIP There is no censorship. In 2 months mov- ing about the country, I met no restriction that I considered unreasonable. Of course, the reporter is expected to use his common- sense. The reporter who, for example, files a story that planes have taken off for North Vietnam while the planes are still on the way is quite properly shunned by fliers who feel the reporter's irresponsibility endangered their lives. In Saigon, the reporter lives in a hotel or apartment he provides for himself. Army dining rooms, bars, shops, post exchange shops, and movies are open to him. In Da Nang, the military has- taken over a seaside motel for reporters covering the war from there. Elsewhere, the reporter bunks with whatever outfit he happens to be with at mealtime or bedtime. The outfit usually gives him the best it has and charges him 50 cents or a dollar. SACKS PIO'S EFFORTS Each military outfit has an officer or ser- geant assigned as public information officer. By and large, the PIO's do their best to see that the reporter gets the story he seeks, as well as transportation and quarters. Some reporters accuse the command of using the PIO's as "prison wardens" to make sure reporters "don't get out of line." But my experience is that the PIO's are a much greater help than hindrance to an experi- enced reporter who understands military ways. The best PIO's see that the reporter gets to the people with the story, introduces him, and then leaves him to get the facts him- self. Sometimes, PIO's who have had unfor- tunate experiences with reporters sit in on interviews by reporters they are meeting for the first time. Some inexperienced or lazy reporters ex- pect PIO's to do the work for them and give them the story. Ironically, these same re- porters are usually those who protest about "restrictions" and "spoon feeding." The reporter's worst problem lies in poor communications between Saigon and the rest of the world. The cable service is bad and 24 hour delays are common on big news days. The service is expensive-about 25 cents a word to American cities. This is one of the world's highest press rates. Agen- cies are arranging their own radio circuits, These would tie into existing cable networks in Manila, Hong Kong, or Tokyo. Despite the ease with which a reporter can travel within Vietnam, most of the reporters spend most of their time in Saigon. A daily briefing by the command PIO in the air conditioned U.S. Information Service audi- torium supplies the raw material for the bulk of stories filed daily from Vietnam. RECEIVE MIMEOGRAPH PAGE At the briefing, a PIO officer hands out two or three mimeographed pages listing in- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 july 12, 1-W%roved For I Wa L9A 7iB0t$ 00180003-7 -.A3701 cidents.,eporters can ask for further., de- by the age of 14 he was totally blind. He as "Twin Vision Books" combined tails, but rarely get them. Sometimes, the did not sit long in idleness. Within 3 braille and inkprint storybooks. PIO produces one or two military men di- reedy involved in some incident. These men years he was an active participant and Dr. tenBroek has served on numerous seem to speak from carefully prepared state- officeholder in local blind organizations advisory committees and study com- ments and seem to hedge when asked for in Berkeley, where he went to attend the missions for State and Federal Govern- further details. California School for the Blind. By 1934 ments; recently, for example, he wag a The briefings lead to charges that the mill- he had joined with Dr. Newel, Perry, consultant to the Subcommittee on Spe- tary is guiding the news. If a reporter is Perry Sundquist, and others to form the cial Education of the U.S. House Com- content with the briefings as his main source, California Council of the Blind-a proto- mittee on Education and Labor, and was of material, the charge sticks. But any re- type of the State level of the National a member of the California Governor's porter is free to seek facts elsewhere and as Federation which followed 6 years later. Study Commission on Public Welfare. soon as he leaves headquarters he finds a free world for news gathering. From its inception the national move- After 21 years as president of the Na- This is no new situation. It existed in ment of the organized blind was shaped tional, Federation of the Blind, Dr. World War II and in the Korean war. In in the image of the revolutionary ap- tenBroek retired in 1961 at the time of those wars, censorship and long distances proach to blindness which was preached the federation's Kansas City convention. between, the fronts and the cable head made and practiced with equal brilliance by its His resignation did not, however, bring .th the r which strole reporter more difficult founder. It was preached up and down an end to his active participation in the p meets today the land, in convention and conference, Vietnam. to blind and movement of which he had been founder si ht d d g e au fences alike, in and chief architect. He subsequently a continuous succession of.. memorable accepted a position as the NFB's delegate public addresses stretching over more to the World Council for the Welfare of than 20 years. the Blind. In that capacity he attended But the new philosophy of normality. the meeting of +v- --A ---11- ... H., ~..' ' the summer or 1962. HON..PHILLIP BURTON during his twoscore years in office. It I have known Dr. tenBroek for many or, CALIFORNIA was also practiced. In the same year in years. He has been a constant source of h h h t ' is e Federation was founded, inspiration to me as we have worked IN T49 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES a TenBroek received his doctorate in juris- Speaker, in 1940, when the National Fed- search fellow at Harvard University, and with my colleagues in the Congress his eration of the Blind was formally in- was appointed a tutor at the University address delivered at the second anniver- _. -- traordinary social. movement. The blind versity of California, moving steadily THE FEDERATION AT 25: POSTVIEW AND PREVIEW people of the United States, long im- upward through the ranks to become a (An address delivered by Prof. Jacobus ten- mobilized in the protective custody of full professor in 1953 and chairman of proek at the 25th anniversary convention almshouse and lighthouse keepers, were the department of speech in 1955. In banquet, the National Federation of the 1963 he accepted an appointment t as pro- Blind, Washington, D.C., July 8, 1965) at last on the move-and on their own. 1963 of political science n the as p Berkeley Wilde tells us: "Most modern calen- One of the men who met at Wilkes- fessor dars mar the sweet simplicity of our lives by Barre-founder of the national federa- campus. reminding us that each day that passes is tion and creator of the vision which in- During this period Dr. tenBroek pub- the anniversary of some perfectly uninterest- spired it-was a 29-year-old California lished more than 50 articles and mono- ing event." We must approach the task of professor named Jacobus tenBroek, graphs-plus 3 books-in the fields celebration and review with some pause and whose own blindness had not deterred of welfare, government and law, estab- some humility, neither exaggerating our im- him from earning a college degree and lishing a reputation as one of the Na- portance nor underestimating it, it is my three postgraduate degrees in political tion's foremost scholars on matters of task in this spirit to capsulize our history, convey our purposes, and contemplate our 'science and law-a fourth degree from constitutional law. One of his volumes- future. Harvard was later to be added. "Prejudice, War, and the Constitution"- The career of our movement has not been D;, tenBroek's own successful strug- won the Woodrow Wilson Award of the a tranquil one. It has grown to maturity the gle for independence stood in stark con- American Political Science Association in hard way. The external pressures have been trast to the stifling atmosphere of over- 1955 as the best book on government and unremitting. It has been counseled by well- protective shelter, enforced dependency democracy. His other books are "Hope wishers that all would be well-and it has and foreclosed opportunity which every- Deferred: Public Welfare and the Blind," learned to resist. It has been attacked by where prevailed among the agencies and 1959 and "The Antislavery origins of the fight back. It hasadministrators been scolded by guardians institutions for the blind. The worst 14th Amendment," 1951. In the course and caretakers-and learned to talk back. effect of this prejudice, in his view, was of his academic career he has been a fel- It has out its eye teeth on legal and political to isolate these sightless "wards" not only low of the Center for Advanced Study in struggle, sharpened its wits through count- from normal society-and from their the Behavioral Sciences, at Palo Alto, and less debates, broadened its mind and deep- self-appointed "custodians"-but even has twice been the recipient of fellow- ened its voice by incessant contest. Most from significant association with one ships from the Guggenheim Foundation, important of all, it has never stopped moving, another-by depriving them of the In 1956 he was awarded the honorary de- never stopped battling, never stopped march- means and responsibility for mutual ef- gree of doctor of letters by Findlay Col- ing toward its goals of security, equality, and opportunity for all the Nation's blind. It fort and collective self-advancement. lege of Ohio. has risen from poverty substance, from It might almost be said that for ten- In 1950 Dr. tenBroek was named a obscurity to global reputation. Broek the end of sight was the beginning member of the California State Board It is fitting that the anniversary of our of "vision"-the vision of a democratic of Social Welfare by Gov. Earl Warren. own independence movement should coincide people's movement in which blind men Subsequently reappointed three times to with that of the Nation itself. The two and women would no longer be led but the policymaking welfare board, he was revolutions were vastly different in scope but would take the lead themselves in their elected its chairman in 1960 by the other identical in principle. We too memorialize own cause, and in so doing point the way members, and served in that capacity day of independence-independence from to a new age of individual independence until 1963. y a wardship not unlike that of the American and social integration for all blind colonists. Until the advent of the National He has been the president since 1945 Federation, the blind people of America were American . of the American Brotherhood for the taken care of but not represented; protected Born in 1911 as the son of a prairie Blind, an educational and charitable but not emancipated; seen but rarely heard. homesteader, young tenBroek lost the foundation which publishes an inter- Like Patrick Henry on the eve of revolu- sight ,of one eye as the result of an acci- nationally circulated braille magazine, tion, we who are blind knew in 1940 that if we to dent. at the age of,7. Thereafter, his re- the Blind American, and has pioneered f th wishes m be free, if, we meant to gain inestimable privileges ed participation maining vision rapidly deteriorated until in the provision of such notable ventures for or which we had so long yearned, , then we then we Monday, July 12, 1965 prudence from the University of Califor- together in the field of social welfare. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 A3702 w r Approved e , gQ@M101'ZWC( RD 00030018000T3tkJ 12, 1965 must organize for purposes of self-expres- sion and collective action; then we must con- cert to engage in a noble struggle. In that spirit the National Federation of the Blind was founded. In that spirit it has persevered. In that spirit it will prevail. When the founding fathers of the federa- tion came together at Wilkes-Barre, to form a union, they labored in a climate of skep- ticism and scorn. The experts said It couldn't be done; the agencies for the blind said it shouldn't be done. "When the blind lead the blind," declared the prophets of doom, "ail shall fall into the ditch." But the federation was born without out- side assistance. It stood upright without a helping hand. It is still on its feet today. At the outset we declared our independ- ence. In the past 25 years we have estab- lished it. Today we may say that the Na- tional -Federation has arrived in America- and is here to stay. That is truly the "new outlook for the blind." We have not reached our present stand- ing, as all of you know, by inertia and idle- ness. The long road of our upward Move- ment is divided into three phases-cor- responding to the first decade, the second decade, and the third half-decade of our ex- istence as an organization. Each of these three, periods; though a part of a con- tinuum, has had a different emphasis and a different character. Let us look at each of them. The federation was not born with a silver spoon In its mouth-but, like the Nation it- self, it was born with the parchment of its principles in its hand. Our basic philosophy and purposes-even most of our long-range programs-existed full-panoplied at our origin. We were dedicated to the principles of security with freedom; of opportunity without prejudice; of equality in the law and on the job. We have never needed to alter or modify those goals, let alone com- promise them. We have never faltered In our confidence that they are within our reach. We have never failed to labor for .their implementation in political, legal, and economic terms. The paramount problems of our first dec- ade, the 1940's, were not so much qualitative as quantitative; we had the philosophy and the programs, but we lacked the membership and the means. The workers were few and the cupboard was bare. Each month as we received our none too bountiful salary as a young instructor at the University of Chicago Law School, Hazel and I Would distribute it among the necessaries of life: food, clothing, rent, federation stamps, mimeograph paper and ink, other supplies. So did we share our one-room apartm8nt. The mimeograph paper took far more space In our closet than did our clothes. We had to move the mimeograph machine before we could let down the wall bed to retire at night. If on a Sunday we walked along Chi- cago's lakefront for an hour, 4 or 5 fewer letters were written, dropping our output for that day to fewer than 25. The decade of the forties was a time of building: and build we did, from a scattering of seven State affiliates at our first conven- tion to more than four times that number in 1950. It was a time of pioneering: and pioneer we did, by searching out new paths of opportunity and blazing organizational trails where no blind man had before set foot. It was a time of collective self-discov- ery and self-reliance: of rising confidence in hitch our joint capacity to do the job-to up our own wagon train and hitch it up we acter denied. Plans have been laic, acZivi- We have nouns new and dynamic leader- did. ties undertaken, and concerted actions set in ship, in the person of a president imbued In the decade of the forties we proved our motion for the clear and unmistakable pur- with youth and creative vigor. We have re- organizational capacity, established our rep- pose of bringing about our destruction. gained our fund raiser-the wizard of St. reseptative character, initiated legislative Nothing less Is sought than our extinction Louis-and with him has come the prospect programs on the State and National levels, as an organization." of renewed resources. We have restored and and spoke with the authority and voice of No Federationist who lived through that rejuvenated the Braille Monitor, as not only the blind speaking for themselves. In these decade, can, forget how the battle was the voice but the clarion call of the federated very terms the decade of the fifties was a joined-in the historic struggle for the right blind, We have reached across the seas, ex- time both of triumph and travail. The tri- of self-expression and free association. The umph not unmixed but the travail was single most famous piece of legislation our passing. - r movement has produced-one which was Our numbers escalated to a peak of 47 never passed by Congress but which made its statewide affiliates with membership running full weight felt and its message known to the tens of thousands. Our resources throughout the world of welfare and the multiplied through a campaign of fund- country of the blind-was the Kennedy- raising. Our voice was amplified with the - Baring bill. inauguration of the Braille Monitor as a It is fitting that John F. Kennedy, then the regular publication In print, braille and tape, junior Senator from Massachusetts, was a which carried the word of federationism to sponsor of that bill of rights for the blind, the farthest parts of the Nation and many who gave his name and voice to the defense distant lands. of our right to organize. With the funds to back us up, with a broad Eight years ago he rose in the Senate to base of membership behind us, with con- introduce and speak for his bill "to protect structive programs of opportunity and en- the right of the blind to self-expression." largement, with growing public recognition He told how some 43 State associations of a t f d t d i " n o e era e blind persons had become and understanding, the federation in the fifties galvanized its energies along and ex- single nationwide organization, the National "It ed l d " panding front. We sent teams of blind ex- perts into various States, on request of the Governors, to prepare master plans for the reform of their welfare services to the blind. We aided our State affiliates in broad pro- grams of legislative and administrative im- provement in welfare and rehabilitation. We particpiated in opening the teaching profes- sion to qualified blind teachers in a number of States. We assisted in bringing to com- pletion the campaign to secure white cane laws in all of the States so that blind men might walk abroad anywhere in the land sus- tained by a faith justified by law. We shared with others the credit for in- fusing-into Federal welfare the constructive objective of self-care and self-support, pro- gressive improvements in the aid grant and matching formula, and the addition of dis- ability insurance. Over the unflagging op- position of the Social Security Adminis- tration, we secured the acceptance by Congress, in progressive amounts, the prin- ciple of exempt income for blind aid recipients; at first temporary, and finally per- manent permission for Pennsylvania and Missouri to retain their separate and rehabili- tative systems of public assistance; and we began to lay the groundwork by which our blind workers in the sheltered shops might secure the status and rights of employees. We pushed, pulled, and persuaded the civil service into first modifying, then relaxing, and finally scrapping its policy of discrimi- nation against blind applicants for the pub- lic service. i _-- ....i a inst the dM- enter g ses as In io f t ance o trinaire, aloof resis ------1 we had the cordial good will, practical un- cidedly "soft on custodialism," overfriendly derstanding, and humane regard of an ever- to the agencies which opposed us. There growing number of Congressmen. were others with a burning passion for lead- All of a sudden, in the furious fifties, the ership and office, an ambition which burned National Federation of the Blind was very the deeper as it burned in vain. There were much noticed. Our organizations became the still others whose grievances were personal; objects of intense attention-if rarely of af- real enough to them if not substantial in fection-on the part of the agencies, ad- fact. All of these factors combined in the ministrators, and their satellite groups which 50's to form a temporary crisis of con- had dominated the field. fidence and collaboration. As the organized blind movement grew in But then, as suddenly as it had begun, the affluence and in influence, as affiliates sprang civil turmoil ended. Those who had desired up in State after State, county after county, power for their own ends or for itself; who across the land, as a ground swell of protest had sought to change the character and rose against the dead ends of sheltered em- officers of the movement, departed to form ployment and segregated training, of welfare their own organizations. Shaken in its programs tied to the poor law and social unity, depleted in resources, diminished in workers bound up in reds ape, the forces of membership, the Federation began the hard custodialism and control looked down from task of rebuilding and rededication. their lighthouses and fought back. That task has been the primary assign- "The National Federation of the Blind," ment of the sixties, and today, at the half- said its president In 1967, "stands today an way point, we may report that it has been embattled organization. Our motives have accomplished. During the 5 years past we been impugned, our purposes reviled, our have regained stability, recovered unity, and : ec ar He Federation of the Blind. is important that these views be expressed freely and without interference. It is im- portant that these views be heard and con- sidered by persons charged with responsibil- ity. *. * *" He pointed out that in various communities this freedom had "been preju- diced by a few professional workers in pro- grams for the blind." He -urged that "our blind citizens be protected against any exer- cise of this kind of influence or authority to interfere with their freedom of self-expres- sion through organizations of the blind." The Kennedy bill was simple and sweeping in its purposes: to insure to the blind the right to organize without Intimidation; and to insure to the blind the right to speak and to be heard through systematic means of consultation with the responsible agen- cies of Government, That bill of rights was not enacted; but It gained its ends in other ways. Lengthy and dramatic public hearings were held by a committee of Congress, at which dozens of blind witnesses both expert and rank.- and-file testified to the extent of coercion and pressure brought against them by the forces hostile to their independence. "Little Kennedy bills" were introduced in a number of State legislatures and enacted by some. The forces of opposition called off their at- tack -upon the organized blind and beat a strategic retreat. - Meanwhile, in that second decade, the federation faced another bitter struggle within its own house. Not all federationists Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 1 19,0proved For R ~ / 67 tQ Qk300180003-7 lr obi the Lowell'Optic, May15; 1965]` June 'ARTiiUR L. ZNo,'A REMEMBRANCE The death of Justice Arthur L. Eno, pre- siding officer of the Lowell District Court, is an occasion of mourning and of remem- brance for the city. of Lowell and all of her era t fat even now seems so remote, yet con taiped` th.sg Ingredients that would be bound together to fashfon a living city. In his `birth' and youth he attended upon the closing days of another' century. As a first generation American. he would be caught up in the crucible of the great "melting pot" from which this Nation would draw her greatest strength .. Of his origins among the tenement people of Lowell 's "Little' Canada:" he would ever be mindful: `And" for" these people among whom he was nurtured there would ever be gratitude ' respect, and remembrance. At the ae of 25 he served in the conflict hailed 'as r he war to end all` wars." He re- ceived a commission as second lieutenant in the Department of the Army. Two'years later, in 1'919, he returned here to renew his place in the life of the community. His"civic career would be highlighted by his cherished 'participation in the work of the Lowell Memorial Auditorium Building Commission from 1919 until 1922. Admitted to the State bar in' 1914 at the age of 22 years he would be appointed a special justice of the district court 13 years later In 1927, His career In the judiciary would reach its apex in October of 1944 as then Gov. LEVERETT SALTONSTALL appointed Eno presiding justice of the Lowell District Court. For over two decades Judge Eno lent to the judiciary those energies and talents that had in earlier life earned for him the recognition of a grateful community. ' But If Judge Eno's career is to be best understood, it must _need be equated in terns Of his contribution to the people of Lowell. In the administration of justice his could not be described as an attitude. of 'detached dis- interest. While he applied himself in the judicial exercise with impartiality it was never Without an awareness of social context. Judge Eno gave countless hours away from the bench in attempting to bridge the gap between fathers and mothers, husbands and wives, caught up in the anxieties and prob- lemspeculiar to those with such difficulties. As presiding justice of the State's third oldest and sixth largest district court 'lie maintained an acute interest in the proba- tionary function of the court-always mind- ful that the end to which .any punishment may be given is correction and reform. His membership in a variety of civic, mili tary, and social organizations bespoke an abiding interest in the life of the community. It was In the Lowell Historical Society, how- ever, that Judge Eno would find his one great, interest fulfilled. For asone who was to have played himself so prominent a role in the contemporary annals of the city, it was only natural that he should have so highly valued the respect for and importance of local his- tory: He cherished a prize collection of memo- rabilia on Lowell and her people. This inter erst was not static, however. He pursued al- ways an Interest, in later years increasingly detached from direct involvement owing to demands of healt and age, in the continu- Ing gvolution of local governmental, social, afid ,cultlar""allife and activities. He was in tjie_i'ullest sense a true. child of I4owell, .I,n the 74 .years that would be al- lotted' huh. by, providence he would make good use, His emotional, e)cperiences would be thgee,gf his people, of his city, and of his 06u4 try and the world. As a lover story he proved himself to be a lover of h s fellowmen, Thirty-nine years ago Judge Arthur L. Eno sat in Lowell's Memorial Auditorium to hear another contemporary, Frank K. Stearns, address these parting words on the occasion of this city's centennial observance: "We are but the trustees of a fleeting mo- ment. Our problem so huge and pervasive, will not be solved in the lifetime of any here present. What shall we do, however, during our stewardship must have incalcula- ble importance in the results of a far distant future; and on us, the people of Lowell now in being, devolves a duty as imperative as any that beset the men of 1826. "Right worthily did they perform their tasks. Right worthily may we, in our differ ent condition, emulate them. They were men and women of vigor; men and women of heart. They were men and women moved in all parts alike as we are, often discour- aged, often perplexed, often tempted. They did their work; they held their peace; they faced their crises, and they have left us a priceless heritage. It is our task to go for- ward as bravely as did they; to deal as re- sourcefully with what now disquiets or perplexes us, and to rear on the foundation which they have so well and truly laid, a monument which later centuries may not disdain to honor. "'Build the more stately mansions, 0, my souls As the 'swift seasons rolll Leave thy low-vaulted past! Let each new temple, nobler than the last, Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast Till thou at length art free, Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's un- resting sea' " tank, Vietna Defies Communists EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. DONALD RUMSFELD OF ILLINOIS IN THE, HOUSE 0F.R9P,4ESENTATIYk8 Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. RUMS]?'ELD. Mr. Speaker, the second in the series of. articles written by Mr. Lloyd Wendt, editor of the Chicago's American who is now in Viet- nam on a factfinding mission, reports on one of the special-forces officers of the U.S. Army and his thoughts con- cerning the war in South Vietnam. I commend it to the readers of the RECORD : YANK, VIETNAMESE FORTRESS ATOP ROCK DEFIES COMMUNISTS (By Lloyd Wendt) Nui BA DEN, SOUTH VIETNAM.-Anyone who believes the war in Vietnam can't be won by our side hasn't talked to Capt. James M. Kennedy. Captain Kennedy and his 18 special-forces officers of the U.S. Army and Air Force are dug in atop Nui Ba Den, which translates "Black Virgin Mountain." They advise a strike force of Vietnamese volunteers and are building a radar installation in the heart of Vietcong country. The Vietcong surround this hill, about 60 miles northwest of Saigon. They know all about the installation. For a year they've been trying to do something about this fortress in the sky, without success. The site is vital, near the Ho, Chi _Minh trails which, supply the -Vietcong and near the A3693 Cambodian border, whence the Vietcong gets men and guns from North Vietnam via jungle trails through Laos. Except for U.S. helicopters, .Captain Ken-. nedy and. South Vietnamese Lieutenant Lich, the local commander, are cut off by the Viet- tong. Yet morale was never higher., The radar goes up in plain view, 3,200 feet in the. sky; patrols from Nui Ba Den slip down through the jungle to hit and .cut up Viet- cong forces, using their own. guerrilla tactics. The time will come, Captain Kennedy pre diets, when more bases like this will enable, the Government , to. cut. the supply routes and infiltration trails of the Vietcong, and that will be the beginning of the end for the invasion from the north. '.'We're going t' win this war," says Ken- nedy, a dark, handsome young Californian from Palo Alto who, gave up plans to be a preacher when he joined the special service forces. "We have proved, repeatedly, that our men can fight and cut up the Vietcong. When we get the strength to shut off sup-, plies and reinforcements for the Vietcong they will dry up. It's that simple. "The Vietcong aren't supermen, Our pa- trols from the strike force fight and defeat them repeatedly. Don't believe. what you may hear about the South Viets not being fighters, they are excellent. My life and the lives of my officers depend on them and we couldn't be in safer hands." Kennedy issues a few quiet orders to the barefoot men in jungle camouflage who are packing supplies up to headquarters from our helicopter. Then he returns to his fav- orite theme. "We'll end the war when we make it clear to North Vietnam and to China that what they are trying to do will be unprofitable. It will simply cost them too much. Once they realize that, they'll have to go back behind the demarcation line (at the 17th parallel) and the Vietcong in the south will dry up, We do not have to drive out or kill every Vietcong to win. Plenty of them are discouraged. already. , "The` South Viet people, on the whole, simply want to be let alone. They go along in this area because they are terrorized by the Vietcong. The guerrillas come out of the jungle, take over a village and kill or threaten to kill hostages unless the village goes along with them, So, until our strength here grows, naturally the village goes along. "But let me tell you, the Vietcong doesn't attempt to attack us in force. They know better than to get into a real fight." Captain Kennedy looks like a movie hero in a mountain setting wilder and stranger than anything Hollywood has yet devised. His native forces, under command of Lieu- tenant Lich, swarm over the mountain, man- ning guns, mortars, rocket launchers, and booby traps designed for welcoming the Viet- tong. The men are small and tough and as hard to see as the tigers and cobras that also inhabit this area. Except when they come out, as of now, to pack up the supplies from the "choppers." "You can reach Nui Ba Den only by "chop- per," which the Vietcong diligently attack by gunfire as they come in to land. We came over with Capt. Ernest Strum and his "Rat Pack Six" aboard a UHIB "Huey" chopper. Our machinegunners on each side of the chopper poured some fire down on the Viet- cong occupying Nui Can ridge half way up the mountain as we came in. This disturbs the accuracy and enthusiasm of the Vietcong gunners on the ground, Captain Sturm ex- plained. It also checks out the guns, in case they're really needed. The fortified camp is a bleak stretch of tan rocks and tan sandbangs bristling with weap- ons. The jungle has been cleared for a quarter of.4 miledown_the slopes to rob "Charlie"- the Vietcong-of any cover should he decide Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7; A.3694 Approved FCo6 IgIEIONAL RECORD DPAPPENDIX00030018000Ju y 12, 1965 to advance. The strike force men on duty now are Cambodian inhabitants of South Vietnam. Different ethnic groups train and serve together and come to the peak for 6 week tours of duty. Captain Kennedy and his officers, desig- nated by their green berets, serve continu- ously, 7 days and night a week, for weeks and months on end. They live armed to the teeth, ready for emergency, as the, work they're directing slowly takes shape. Kennedy is 29, soft spoken but fervent as he talks about the meaning of this South Vietnam war. In 1954 he was graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He also was a lay reader in the Episcopal Church and had about decided to go into the min- istry after serving his army time. But then the fire and mission of the special forces got into his blood. "Where could a man of my age do more?" Kennedy demands, speaking of his bleak life on this hill. "I am responsible for the lives of several hundred people. Where would I get a job like that in cizilian life at my age? I know that we are going to save this country for these people. Where could you find work more rewarding that that?" Kennedy and his men were in special good humor because we were leading a pack of choppers bringing in supplies. It was the first good weather in days. "We've been living on K rations," Kennedy explained. "Last night, though; we had a feast when our strike force killed and cooked a python. It was delicious. Too bad you didn't get here sooner. Nui Ba Den is in the heart of war zone C, where operations are of maximum toughness.. Not only the Ho Chi Minh trails but the Cambodian and Laos jungle nearby make it impossible for the area to be sealed off from the north. The rice and vegetable growers on the plains are almost defenseless when the Vietcong rolls out from the jungle. The villagers can only fight when they vol- unteer to serve in the popular force like that commanded by Lieutenant Lich. Then they have guns provided by the United States, through the South Vietnamese Government, and a base protected by the U.S. forces in cooperation with South Vietnam. The presence of a base like this, and forces like those under Lich, tell the people of Tay Ninh Province that all is not lost. Since Nui Ba Den must be maintained from the air, the men are trained elsewhere and flown in. The base is so firmly estab- lished that the Vietnamese troops bring in their wives, who have established a small village part way down the mountain. There also, the U.S. forces aided in the building of a new Buddhist pagoda, replacing the one on the mountaintop, Which is now a fort. The mountain got its name by the death in an- cient times of a young woman dressed in black who was killed by a tiger as she was en route to the pagoda to be married. "There are still some tigers here," said Kennedy. "I saw one only a few days ago." The Americans, all 19, live in three stone galleries about 10 by 24 each. One is the galley and dining room, the others are for desks and bunks. The cave-like living was enlivened a few hours ago when a krait slithered out from a crack in the walls. It's the Asian version of the deadly coral snake and it was quickly stomped to death. "Life is rugged up here but we can take it because we know we are doing useful work that is going to succeed," said Kennedy. "There is nothing wrong with the situation in Vietnam that some hard work won't cure. This country is a really rich rice bowl, which is why the Communists want it. When they do get an area they take most of the rice for their troops. This is what will always hap- pen. The South Vietnamese have no wish at all to raise rice for China. "Once we get the Vietcong off the people's backs by cutting their sources of supply you'll find this war here will end relatively fast." As you look around at Kennedy and his men against the backdrop of rocks and guns you realize that the rugged individualism that made America free is still alive in to- day's young men. You share Kennedy's faith in the tough, tiny South Vietnamese all around you. You know, after you talk with evangelical young Kennedy at Nui Ba Den that this war is going to be won by our side some day. Voting Rights Act of 1965 SPEECH of HON. EDWARD R. ROYBAL OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Friday, July 9, 1965 The House in Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union had under consideration the bill (H.R. 6400) to enfore the 15th amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Mr. ROYBAL. Mr. Chairman, I want to join with my colleagues from both sides of the aisle in urging the adoption of H.R. 6400, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, to enforce the 15th amendment to the Constitution, in order to guarantee that the full and free exercise of the right of citizens of the United States to vote will not be denied or abridged. Events in many parts of the country in recent months have again clearly shown the need for additional Federal legisla- tion to guarantee this right for all Americans. No one can deny that the safety, and even the lives of our fellow citizens are at stake. In my opinion, the full majesty and full resources of the United States must be exerted to preserve and protect the precious heritage of freedom and equality we all are entitled to enjoy. President Johnson, in his eloquent ad- dress to the joint session of Congress, voiced a deeply moving and forceful call to action on this vital legislation. I urge that the Members of the House now answer that call with speed and de- termination-to assure, once and for all, the unrestricted exercise of the right to vote, possessed by every American by virtue of his citizenship in this "land of the free." Certainly, 95 years after ratification of the 15th amendment is not too early for the Nation to make good on its promise to protect the elementary right of all its citizens to full suffrage. This bill provides for automatic sus- pension of literacy or any other tests or devices used to discriminate against would-be voters where less than 50 per- cent of the voting-age population was registered or voted in the 1964 presiden- tial election. In addition, it authorizes use of Fed- eral examiners to register and assure the right to vote for all citizens previously unable to exercise that fundamental right. Another strong feature of this legisla- tion is its outright ban on the poll tax as a requirement for voting in State and local elections, in the same manner as the 24th amendment to the Constitution, ratified in January 1964, outlawed the poll tax in Federal elections. All in all, the measure represents a clear, practical, effective, and legisla- tively responsible way to enable citizens to vote without the fear or threat of dis- crimination. For that reason, I hope the Members of this House will pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 without further delay, so that the Congress may again take a leading part in the noble crusade to create a better America, to banish the phrase "second-class citizen" from our vocabu- lary, and to fulfill the revolutionary dream of freedom and equality for all Americans. EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. RICHARD T. HANNA OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, June 24, 1965 .Mr. HANNA. Mr. Speaker, the day is long past when the Pacific Ocean was merely America's geographic and eco- nomic backyard. For, today a Pacific nation, Japan, stands as America's most important customer, second only to Canada. A Pacific State, California, now leads the Nation in exports. Fur- thermore, two developments of great his- toric moment and of profound concern to this country are presently occurring in the Pacific Basin-the emergence on the one hand of a dynamic and growing Pacific community of free nations, a community which has become an in- creasingly important factor in the growth of our economy, and the emer- gence on the other hand of a militant Red China as a real and growing threat to that community, to our own security, and to world peace. These crucial de- velopments, Mr. Speaker, demand that we turn more of our attention to mend- ing our diplomatic fences in the Pacific. Nowhere is this more urgent than with. respect to our most important partner in Asia, Japan. Now, I have, from time to time, pointed out specific areas of difference between our country and Japan where I felt we could take more positive approaches toward achieving mutually satisfactory solutions. In this regard, I would like to call the attention of my colleagues to an editorial from yesterday's Washington Post which suc- cinctly presents a full portrayal of prob- lems affecting our relations with Japan, problems which can and must be solved. Entiled "Our Pacific Partner," this edi-? tonal makes the point' that yes, this country did very generously help Japan achieve her present eminence, but now vie would be very wise to take positive action in good faith to solve our differ- ences with Japan in order to insure our present good friendship for a future in which we are very much going to need it. I think that the point is well taken. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, YApproved For Fie / @qA: AW-W07-139ARM00180003-7 as ~ helped American institutions of higher education is not. a new one inside Congress or out, but a House, subcommittee has lately been giving the subject its most intensive scrutiny to date on Capitol Hill. The initiative came from the House Gov- ernment Operations Committee's new Sub- committee on. Research and Technical Pro- grams chaired by Representative HENRY S. REUSE, Democrat, of Wisconsin. This sub- committee, established in February, is the latest among several groups formed in the House to consider the conduct. and implica- tions of the $15-billion-plus-a-year Federal research and development effort. REuss's subcommittee based its investiga- tion on 3 days of hearings in mid-June and a canvass by letter of some 300 "selected faculty members in a number of fields, as well as university administrators and other dis- tinguished citizens." About 170 replies were received in time to allow the subcommittee staff to put together a compendium intended to provide a cross section of opinion and to publish it as a committee print in advance of the hearings? About half of the 170 responses are represented either by full letters or excerpts. There are plans for in- eluding later replies in the published record of the hearings. ANSWERS TO A QUESTIONNAIRE The. subcommittee's "poll" was based on questions grouped under five major headings and, according to the introduction "to the committee print, the questions were "com- piled from extensive literature which has appeared in the last few years. They seemed to the committee to summarize the. salient aspects of the problem." The questions are clearly not the sort that can very usefully be answered yes or no. Because of the'broad focus of the questions and the variety of viewpoints expressed, the results of hearings and the canvass are in- eVltably inconclusive. Eut'the subcommittee has made a solid contribution by giving seri- ous attention to a number of Interrelated questions which have been vexing people in higher education since the rise of big science, And the record of the investigation will be a useful pne, not least.,becaifse thq net was cast wider in the, academic community than usual and brought in a number of people besides those wl o by virtue of achievement or position are, ex cathedra, perennial wit- nesses before Congress. Both the letters and the testimony in the hearings reflect a consensus that the war- time marriage between Government and the universities is, for better or worse, perma- nent; in general, they support the judgment of the Carnegie survey of 2 years ago that, on balance, the relationship is beneficial to the universities. This Is not to, say that on a number of counts there were not expressions of serious concern.. The quality of teaching under- graduates are getting was the subject of fairly widespread although certainly not uni- versal worry. Sharpest concern was directed to the independent liberal arts colleges, which are seen as suffering, indirectly at least, from emphasis on'research in the uni- versities. Most pessimistic perhaps was one un- named member of the faculty of the Colum- bia University graduate school of business who said: "Small liberal arts colleges are threatened not (so much) by Federal grants as by economics of scale in higher educa- tion, which raises the question whether these institutions,are viable." 11d11c11Yic.t$Pical was a view that liberal arts cpileggs must and can do more to create 1 "Qoniligt. $.e ,yieell the Federal Research Programs and the Nation's Goals for Higher Education,'y availablefrom the Committee on Government Operations, House of Repre- sentatives, Washington; D.C. an atmosphere in which research-particu- larly in the sciences-is an integral part of education, as has been successfully done in a number of the "prestige" colleges. It was generally recognized that the key to the problem is faculty and that able young scholars in fast-moving fields will not emi- grate to the colleges and stay there if such action forecloses their chances for a research career. Most of the suggestions for mitigat- ing the isolation of the researcher in the liberal arts colleges implied establishment of new or modified Federal programs as well as cooperative programs among 'institutions. The main recommendations were for ar- rangements to lighten the characteristically heavy teaching, loads in the colleges, to make it easier for college faculty to use the library and laboratory facilities of the universities and national laboratories, and to enable college scholars to work periodically for sus- tained periods with leading men in their fields. As for undergraduate education in the uni- versities, it was acknowledged that teach- ing may be left largely in the hands of grad- uate teaching assistants. This can be unsat- isfactory, but a fairly strong segment of opin- ion held that this is not necessarily a bad thing. One who expressed this latter view without sounding like Pangloss was C. H. Braden, a professor of physics at Georgia Tech. "Perhaps the principal consideration," wrote Braden, "is the increasingly large frac- tion of the college age population that at- tends college. This, coupled with the in- crease in population, means that colleges must employ mass production techniques that deliver a good quality education to large numbers of'students. In the future it will be a graduate degree, rather than simply a college degree, that will be a mark of aca- demic distinction, and it will be in the gradu- ate program that the close contact between faculty and student will be achieved which formerly marked the undergraduate pro- gram also. "This new order of things need not im- ply an inferior undergraduate education. On_ the contrary, many mass production colleges offer programs of the highest com- petence. The generally accepted way to of- fer such a program is to place the under- graduate program under the close supervision of distinguished faculty members who have an interest in undergraduate teaching, and such faculty are not rare, and then pro- vide much assistance in the way of junior in- structors, technicians, and student assist- ants, Moreover, many young instructors are superior teachers because of their enthusiasm and close contact with problems of current interest." On the final morning of the hearings when several representatives of research-supporting Federal agencies appeared, the discussion turned to agency regulations which have pre- vented graduate assistants working on fed- erally funded research from teaching. The National Science Foundation, an agency with a special sensitivity to university opinion and with room to maneuver, because of its re- sponsibilities for education as well as re- search, has revised its rules so that its graduate-student beneficiaries can do some teaching, and the general trend among the agencies would appear to be toward more flexibility. A crucial factor in the matter, however, would appear to be university in- sistence that graduate students teach as part of their regular program and teach well. Criticism of teaching standards elicited a counterattack from Lloyd V. Berkner, direc tor of the Southwest Center for Advanced Studies, Graduate. Research Center of the Southwest, who was expressing a hard line not uncommonly held by senior men in the hard sciences. "In my opinion," said Berkner, "the com- plaint against the teaching in our great re- A3687 search universities arises primarily from stu- dents (and their indulgent parents) who would like the university to be a kind of advanced high school-a continuation of the sheltered life the student has enjoyed at home. "The university must assume its students are mature Individuals who attend because of their dedication to learning and desire careers in a society that today fully depends on sufficient education. , The basis of that learning must be books and a modern, rigor- ous curriculum. This means that the teach- ers at the university level, though dedicated to the highest standards of scholarship, can only be supplementary guides to a student who is forced to assume responsibility. These qualities of the institution will themselves assure the quality of the undergraduate (and graduate) education which it offers. To ma- ture its students, to give them self-discipline, the university must be tough. The intellec- tual: competition is high, and to develop qualities of independent decision and lead- ership expected of university graduates by society, the university cannot hold the stu- dent's hand or cajole him. In such an en- vironment the success of the student must depend primarily upon himself-his intellec- tual qualifications, his growing self-disci- pline, his inquiring mind, his self-develop- ment toward qualities of leadership. "Graduate' students have to teach because they must learn to teach and they have to start somewhere. Moreover, the teaching experience by the grduate student requires that he think more clearly, formulate his presentation more precisely. Teaching is an important part of his own graduate experi- enceequally important, it is conducted under, the tutelage and guiding hand of men who, through their own research in creative frontiers, are holding themselves in the forefront,of today's science." Berkner also. doubts that humanistic studies,are.:suffering as the result of Federal expenditures on science. He argues that Federal support of scientific research has re- leased large sums for the development of nonscientific university activities. In addi- tion he feels that research in the "hard" social sciences-those that submit to quan- tification-should be supported by the Gov- ernment, but that the "soft" social sciences "uncontrolled by experiment should be left to private support." ANOTHER VIEW A diametrically opposed view was expressed by one in quite a different field and stage in his career, Norman S. Care, an instructor in the philosophy department at Yale. Care argues that there is little money available to support research in the hu- manities. He points out that humanists are on the short end of a salary differential be- tween them and scientists and, on top of that, d scientist can usually count on the Federal Government's underwriting summer research while his colleague in the human- ities often must teach to piece out his salary. Another hurdle to research in the human- ities, says Care, is generally heavier teaching loads for humanities faculty compared with the sciences. "The upshot," says Care, "is that aca- demicians in the humanities, are not only materially deprived, but also made out to be professionally second rate. There is a form of status attached to having research grants, and lack of opportunity to secure such aid is sometimes interpreted as a sign that one's discipline is somehow not respectable in a vigorous and practical society. I have encountered this kind of artificial ranking among both students and faculty in my experience on the campuses of two major State universities and one large private uni- versity. However, it is worth adding that this form of grading is not common on campuses with strong traditions of education in the liberal arts." Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 A3688 ApprovedC REase89 LI V RDAP7PEN R 0003001800 3 T 12, 1965 apolitical scientist, whose name was with- held by request, wrote complaining about grants to the social sciences. "Apparently only research prafects which are Completely susceptible to quantification and computer- ization will be considered by NSF," he said. -This appears to be an artificial limitation which can only have an adverse effect on the kinds of research undertaken by political scientists. I have no quarrel with quantifl- cation where it is applicable, but strongly disagree with the notion implicit in such a requirement that only that which can be measured and counted is significant." On the fundamental matter of concentra- tion of Federal funds for university research in science projects and in a relatively few institutions, there seemed to be virtual unanimity among witnesses and those who responded to the questionnaire that there should be no major redistribution of funds or discontinuance of the project grants which have been instrumental in creating the present pattern. Rather, it appeared there was fairly strong sentiment for, putting addi- tional funds into programs which will im- prove the research atmosphere in liberal arts colleges and the quality of instruction and research in universities which fall distinctly short of excellence. Sentiment for the greater use of "institutional" grants to strengthen aspiring universities seemed strong, although there was equally firm espousal of the principle that Federal funds should not be spent without reasonable assurance of significant improvement in the institution receiving them, One interesting excursion into high policy occurred on the final day of hearings: when it was asked if many of the problems being discussed might not be solved if education programs were consolidated under the juris- diction of one agency. On hand were Com- missioner of Education Francis leppel, Com- missioner Mary I. Bunting of the Atomic Energy Commission, and representatives of NSF, the National Institutes of Health, the Office of Science and Technology, and the Bureau of the Budget. While the subject was not pursued at length, the clear consensus was that present diversity is regarded to be of advantage to both the Federal Govern- ment and the universities. The task of the subcommittee is now to review the record and decide what, if any, action is in order. Congressman REUSS says he emerged from the hearings disturbed by the patent fact that, "Unless we do some- thing about it, there's going to be a very considerable shortage of university teachers in the next few years. Maybe closed circuit TV and computers can do the job (the in- evitability of such measures was mentioned during the hearings), but If we do short- change the undergraduate and graduate stu- dents In the universities we are not only go- ing to hurt them, but we're going to hurt the Nation too." He said that the investigation had con- firmed in the minds of the subcommittee that the Federal research program is indis- pensable, "but some nagging questions- pre- sent themselves." "Many research grants do take teachers off teaching. "The Federal research program has re- sulted in a great imbalance between a few favored universities with graduate depart- ments and the other thousands of colleges and universities in the United States. "Teachers have lost caste s * ? and Fed- eraI research grants have in part made it so. "There is an observable imbalance between the support of science on the one hand and of the social sciences and the humanities on the other." REUSS has no ready solutions for these problems, though he does say -We must make up our minds whether we want the Federal Government to support the humanities the way it supports-science." RECOMMENDATIONS COMING The end product of the subcommittee in- vestigation will probably be a report recom- mending legislative and administrative changes. The subcommittee is supposed to deal with problems which transcend depart- mental programs and committee lines of au- thority. Specific action would appropriately be left to the Committees with authorization authority. Examination of the conflict between Fed- eral research programs and goals for higher education was the first venture of the new subcommittee, and the experience of wres- tling with a formidable subject does not seem to have daunted it. Next In prospect, al- though not scheduled, is consideration of problems in such areas as transportation technology, sewage and waste disposal, and building construction, which are important to the public but have been the object of relatively little federally financed research. An effort would be made, says REUSS, without batting aneye at the far-flung implications, to look at the relative payoff of various Gov- ernment research programs.-John Walsh. Thirty Thousand Communities Without Water EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JOHN R. SCHMIDHAUSER or IOWA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. SCHMIDHAUSER. Mr. Speaker, I would like to call to the attention of the Members of the House of Represent- atives an excellent discussion of the wa- ter problem in rural America. The article was written by Mr. Clyde T. Ellis, general manager of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. It appeared in the July issue of Rural Electrification: THIRTY THOUSAND COMMUNITIES WITHOUT WATER (By Clyde T. Ellis) The above is the title of a booklet recently published by the Farmers Home Administra- tion. I think the fact that the adjective rural does not appear before the word com- munities is significant. It would be super- fluous. Even city folks would know at once that the reference must be to rural com- munities, for it would be inconceivable to them in this age of "space walks" and "moon shots" that an urban community in the United States could be without a water- supply system. This statistic in the booklet's title drama- tically underscores the wide gap between city and rural life in much the same way as did the statistic used in 1935 relating to the lack of electric service in rural areas. It seems to me that the statistic does something else too. It virtually cries out for a massive, full- scale program directed at eliminating the disparity in water service. According to FHA, all of the 30,000 com- munities without water systems have less than 2,500 population. About 15,000 are un- der 100 population. Moreover, one out of every four farm homes and one of every five rural nonfarm homes do not have running water. This figure cannot be interpreted to mean that the 75 to 80 percent of rural homes which have water necessarily have a dependable and safe source. Many are contaminated now. In many sections, cis- terns, wells, and ponds often go dry and there is frequently the possibility of contamina- tion. As the water table keeps dropping, the necessity of hauling water during periods of sparse rainfall is becoming more widespread. Nitrates from fertilizers, detergents, and waste products pose a constant threat of pollution to shallow wells which thousands of people in rural areas still must rely on. Cities, on the other hand, are able to dig deep wells or buy equipment to purify other- wise unsafe water. But little- towns and vil- lages, and rural areas generally, usually do not have sufficient financial credit to develop adequate sources and treatment plants, Rural American cannot attain its rightful place within the Great Society-which Presi- dent Johnson sets forth as a present-day objective-until something major is done to solve the water problem. There are hopeful signs of progress in this direction. At present, many bills are pending in Congress which would provide increased amounts of loans ad grants to rural areas. One bill (S. 1766) which Senator GEORGE Arxs:N, of Vermont, introduced in early April Is concerned entirely with meeting the need in rural areas. It would authorize $25 mil- lion annually in grants of up to 40 percent for rural communities of under 5,000 for the purpose of development and improvement of water systems. In addition, it would provide for grants to help communities prepare plans. The Farmers Home Administration would administer the program, combining it with ,its on-going water system loans activities. FHA's loan-insuring ceiling would be lifted from $200 million to $450 million, making a great deal more funds available for water system loans. Lack of adequate pure running water is a big hindrance to rural areas development, to the war on poverty, to the rural electrifi- cation program, to wholesome rural living. Lack of modern water service is also a serious handicap to rural areas, not only in their' efforts to attract new, job-creating enterprises but also to provide recreation and other facilities for their residents. I am sure that you will be interested in following the course of this legislation. Our legislation and research staff will keep you of the rural electric systems informed. One aspect of Senator Alxzu''s bill which seems extremely significant is that 93 of the 100 members of the Senate have signed it as cosponsors. This certainly is an impressive indication that the problem of rural water supply is being recognized as one of deep national concern. While legislation can do much to help bring water service to rural America, as legislation helped to bring electricity, it alone cannot do the job. It will take concentrated local group action and leadership and know-how. Many of our rural electrics are already fur- nishing this type of assistance. Many- more, I am sure, will want to lend their support to continue the progress of rural America toward modern living. 410- Sri. The Vietna W(az/A Wit "Wes Scene Amid Death, Terror EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. DONALD RUMSFELD OF ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. RUMSFELD. Mr. Speaker, the following report on the situation in Viet- nam, the first of a series written by Mr. Lloyd Wendt, editor of the Chicago's American, will be of interest to the read- ers of the RECORD. Mr. Wendt, a news- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, 1 roved For I-llf=Bf11R>11700180003-7 A3689 papermar Of long experence and great ter about the bombings. The deadly attack ability, is on a factfinding mission in on My Canh restaurant is fresh in their Vietnam. His first-hand observations minds and there is no doubt there will be more such attacks. A jovial major exclaims: are of particular value in gaining up to "Nine more days and a wakeup and I go date perspective on the situation in that home." The wakeup is his actual day of strife-torn co ingytry: departure. He?"can't stop talking about it. THE VIETNAM WAR: A WILD WEST SCENE The advisers are professionally optimistic. ANjti.D_pEATH, TERROR But no one asserts that the war is going (By Lloyd Wendt) well. 'Despite the step-up in the U.S. com- mitment, there is no discernible improve- SAIGON, SOUTH `gIETNAM.-This beleaguered ment. You gradually realize that this is city is 12 hours away from Chicago 'as time because we're re-fighting the French and flies, half the world awa geographically, and about 200 years back as wars go. To get the Indian wars in Vietnam and it will take some time before our modern know-how is or some other good Indian war story from America's colonial iiast. That's the trouble with this war. There are the good Indians and the bad Indians and it's very hard telling which is which. The bad Indians, called the Vietcong, have come down from the north, recruited some locals, and are everywhere. 'in this city a Vietcong"(Communist) who looks like anybody else, may blow up the place next door, or garrote you as you ride in a pedicab. lie may lead his forces out of the darkness to murder, with sadistic torture, every man, woman, and child in a village a few miles away. Then he fades into the jungle or the mangrove swamp. The Vietcong fights from ambush, hits and runs, controls one-third of the population in this country of 14 million by his terror. He can't be made to stand and fight, except when he chooses. Professional U.S. fighting men grow grim when they speak of the Vietcong. Our side, the good Indians-the South Vietnamese, are excellent fighting men, too. But you can't fight the Vietcong when you can't find him. When you come down at Tan Son Nhut airport from Chicago, you know at once there's a war on, and it isn't going too well. This is the capital, yet from your plane you can see the smoking wreck of an Air Force ' C-123, shot down by Vietcong ground fire to crash through three homes only 15 miles out, Sixteen dead. Two miles north of the airport a. B-57 Canberra has just been shot down. At the airport are troops, sandbags, con- crete revetments, planes armed with bombs, and other ,planes returning from a strike, their drag chute blossoming behind them as they land. A block from where you put Lip with the troops, in what is humorously called a hotel, they are setting up posts before it wall of sandbags where tomorrow some Vietcong terrorists will be shot. Not all of them get away. In the jungle, the swamps of the delta, and on the central highlands, the war is strictly from the American wild west. Troops and posses hunt the raiders. Em- boldened by the monsoons, which keep the cloud cover heavy and the planes away, the Vietcong increases his attack. He gets fresh forces and supplies from the Commu- nist North across more than 1,000 miles of jungle border, and another 1,000 miles of coastline. The jungle is so thick a plane can crash into it and never touch ground'. Here in Saigon, of course, there's a slight variation on the wild west theme. It's more like Kipling. A backdrop of the exotic east, millions in the ' streets in this war-glutted capital. Soldiers and barbed wire everywhere as Air Vice Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky, new boss of the Vietnam` Republic; tightens security. The trim, pretty Vietnamese women in pa- jama-like gowns are everywhere, conducting the town's yast business, including the con- struction of streets and buildings. The war- boom is huge and thrilling, and'it's worth your life to try to cross a street against Renaults, motorbikes, and pedicabs. At headquarters, where the increasing thousands of American advisers plan new techniques to, aid our" Viet allies, men mut- adapted to the ancient problem. Yet, things may not be as bad as they first seem. An Air Force (SAC) strike first called a bust turns out to be at least a minor success. In a battle not far from the capital, at Dinh Tuong, a Communist defector enabled our side to ambush the bad guys. We killed 30 and captured 29, including the entire politburo [high com- mand] of the province. And the Air Force finally got through to deliver 16 strikes, despite the weather, to aid our entrapped force in at Tou Mourong. Maybe that force, written off as lost, can still be saved. The capital is by turns glum and optimis- tic. At night you can hear the sounds of howitzers and mortars only 15 miles away. Still, the Vietcong have been 15 miles away many times. There are no lines, no fixed positions, and no assault in force can pos- sibly come to Saigon. All the bad Indians can do is hit and run keep up the war of fear, slip in men and supplies from the north as attrition sets in, and hope the United States gets dis- couraged and tired. If the United States gets too discouraged and tired and withholds its support, that will be the end for Saigon and South Viet- nam. But nobody In his senses around here thinks that could happen. So, Saigon grim- ly carries on'the fight, and also-does business as usual, only five times as much. Professors Were To Blame for Berkeley Mess EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. J. ARTHUR YOUNGER OF CALIFORNIA " IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, Judy 1 2, 1965 Mr. YOUNGER. Mr. Speaker, a great deal has been printed and discussed about the situation at the University of California, known as the Berkeley mess. Recently Dr. Rafferty, State superin- tendent of public instruction in Califor- nia, who is also a member of the board of regents of the University of Califor- nia, made a talk before the Common- wealth Club of California. Flashes from that address of June 25, as published in the Commonwealth of July 5, follow: "PROFESSORS WERE To BLAME FOR BERKELEY MESS-REAL FIGHT IS OVER UC CONTROL"- DR. RA-FFERTY (From Address by Hon. Max Rafferty) In a book I wrote a few years ago, I listed the following almost certain outcomes of the kind of life-adjustment, progressive educa- tion we were conducting in practically all California schools: 1. Violence: When an educational philos- ophy is almost completely permissive-lets a child express himself at any cost, holds we must avoid frustrating or inhibiting the child in any way, then the result is indiscipline, discourtesy, and doing what comes naturally; this means violence, for a human animal is a violent one. 2. Immortality and obscenity: When we educators began replacing "Evangeline" and "Silas Marner" with "Catcher in the Rye" and James Baldwin's latest, we were just asking for what we have since gotten. Some English teachers, fascinated with so-called "avant garde" literature, assigned it indiscriminately to children, and sowed a whirlwind of literary filth which has since grown into wholesale obscenity on the part of too many young people. Once you agree that there are no positive standards, no eter- nal truths, no lasting values in life or in education-then anything goes. CHILDREN MUST BE CIVILIZED 3. Decline of personal morale: It was the new behavioristic. psychology which warned educators and parents against any interfer- ence whatsoever with the divine right of the child to express himself--even if this self- expression turned out to be at the expense of those around him and at the cost of school discipline generally. The outcome was pre- dictable: the beards, the sandals; the long, lank hair; the general aura of unwashed disinhibition. Education exists to take kids who are nat- urally disposed to nature in the' raw, and show them finer things in life to aspire to. When you permitted an educatioanl philos- ophy to take over in this State which holds that the words "the good, the beautiful, the true," are all meaningless-that everything in life is relative-why, you were just asking for what; you got. And you certainly got it, did not you? 4. Contempt, for law, and. the democratic process: This country has just as large a per- centage of decent, law-abiding youngsters as it ever had. But the minority, who always got into trouble in the past, are getting into worse trouble now. "EASY WAY OUT,". PREVAILING DOCTRINE Why? The doctrine of "permissiveness"- another name for,the "easy way out"-took over both the homes and the schools two decades ago, and produced the least re- pressed and worst behaved generation this country has ever seen. For months now the entire country has been gazing unbelievably at Berkeley. In the sacred name of free speech, police cars have been bashed in and campus police held prisoners. The university president resigned, and then un-resigned. So did the chancellor. The board of regents, charged with determin- ing university policy, became so palsied at 'the mere possibility of bruising some beat- nik's constitutional rights that for months it was afraid even to bring the matter to a vote. The people of California are outraged. ' No other word fits. Almost every letter I get these days winds up with: What's causing this Berkeley mess? College kids have always raised Ned. But they have always been punished too-until now. Now they get away with everything from kidnapping to outraging public decency, and nothing happens to them. PROFESSORS BLAMED Why? Not due to the administration or the regents. But because of the professors. They're responsible in two ways-directly and indirectly. Too many of them openly or tacitly en- dorse disorderly, or even criminal conduct by their students. We got nothing but ob- struction from those professors who con- trolled the different faculty senates and com- mittees. The professors fouled things up indirectly because the administration and some regents Approved `For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 A3690 Approved e8 i to 1 RECORD RDAPPENDIX 0003001800Quly 12, 1965 were afraid some professors would quit. Many of the regents are appalled at the prospect that several of their more prestigi- ous professorsmay resign out of sympathy for the poor downtrodden filthy speech boys, deprived of their sacred right to bellow obscenities over the campus public address system. PROFESSORS WON'T GO Not me. I'm the only regent except Dr. Kerr who is a professional educator-I know my own kind. And I know we leave a teach- ing job voluntarily only when, offered a bet- ter job elsewhere. We leave it to better our- selves--not to show sympathy for some loud- mouthed showoffs who are doing their best to disrupt the scholarly pursuits of a great university. For every professor who will quit if we apply discipline at Berkeley, two will quit if we don't. `Why,! you ask, "should intelligent, scholarly professors act in such strange ways." Well, one thing they're trying to achieve is control of the university by the faculty, instead of by the people. They're seemingly enamoured of the European way of running a university. Over there, you know, the professors are the university. They make the rules. They establish policy. They hire and fire each other. Here, we Americans have long held the somewhat quaint idea that a people's university ought to be run by the people, not by stray groups of employees or students. WHO'S GOING TO RUN UNIVERsrry? The real fight at Berkeley is over who's going to run the store. Are the people, who spend hundreds of millions to subsidize and support the university, going to turn the institution over to the inmates? Here's my recipe: (1) Put all discipline in the chancellor's hands and out of the faculty committees. (2) Tell the chancellor to do whatever is necessary and let him do it. (3 If the chancellor can't or won't do it, fire him and get one who will. (4) If any students or professors don't like It, remind them that they can easily go elsewhere. REAL STUDENTS HAVE REAL GRIEVANCE After law and order have been reestab- lished, the job has just begun. There is a very real if somewhat incoherent grievance on the part of the sincere and sober students with which all of us should concern ourselves. This Is a loss of identity, erosion of self- respect, increasing inability to identify as an individual with a "multiversity" numbering almost 28,000 souls. It's a kind of creeping facelessness. One Berkeley undergraduate wrote me re- cently: "I sit in a lecture class with 600 other students and I'm No. 327. The professor's lectures are piped in electronically. I never see him. The tests are collected automati- cally, corrected automatically, handed back automatically. I engage in group activities, group health services and group recreation. I came to the university to find myself-to learn how to become a person. Instead, I've become a number." We're all to blame. We've let the univer- sity become a factory. We've been too will- ing to let George do it. Always and forever, we who cherish the proud title of Californians will keep a spe- cial place in our hearts for the Berkeley campus. To us, she and she alone will al- ways be "Cal." She belongs, thank God, to us all. Too great to be defiled by fools. Too wondrous ever to be turned over by default to any others save ourselves alone. ANSWERS TO WRITTEN QUESTIONS FROM FLOOR Question. (C. K. Gamble) : Too many egg- heads on Berkeley's teaching staff? Answer. Most professors are eggheads in some ways. But I'm more concerned with lack of balance in certain fields, particularly economics, po- Iitioal science, and to some extent history. Question. (Wilson E. Cline) : Character of Berkeley different from other U.C. campuses? Answer. Yes; no other campus like it. Low- cost housing adjacent where many nonstu- dents and hangers-on live; at other campuses it's 15 miles away-makes it difficult to mount spontaneous demonstrations after driving 15 miles and thinking about it. Question. (Richard Johnston) : Student unrest justified? Answer. For. vast major- ity---yes. They've lost touch and can't call it "alma mater" now. It was easy to identify with Berkeley years ago. This is important- look back to your own college days; aren't the things you remember the ways in which you identified with your university? But the rioters had no grievance. They were put there. The brochure they published on the regents was a slick job-very clever-done professionally, not the work of students, nor financed by students. Question. (John A. Rowe, Jr.) : Should students use campus as soundingboard? Answer. Yes, but there should be both sides by men of equal glamour-not Gus Hall, brought in with trumpets, and answered, 5 months later, by a kindly, if doddering, local professor. EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JAMES B. UTT OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. UTT. Mr. Speaker, under unani- mous consent to extend my remarks in the Appendix of the RECORD, I wish to include an address by Mr. Robert R. Gros, vice president, public relations, Pacific Gas & Electric Co., San Fran- cisco, Calif. This address was given be- fore the Advertising Association of the West in Honolulu, Hawaii, and was en- titled "The Fifth Freedom." Mr. Gros points up the importance of the incen- tive system which has produced the abundant life in America, and compares it with the Socialist Systems operating in other countries. He gives ample warning against the creating of a welfare state, which would reduce us to a country of mediocrity. He states that we must fight the concentra- tion of power in Washington, or in any State capitol, and that we must hold taxation within reason. He states that excessive taxation erodes freedom. I highly recommend the implementation of his recommendations: One of the best things that I can say to you fellow advertising people today is that even the Russians finally have decided it pays to advertise. As you probably have read, on May 4 Pravda printed an article which said, among its otherwise doctrinaire ver- biage, that advertising brings "higher turn- over, faster selling, and other economic benefits." Pravda astonishingly went on to say: "The famous expression 'advertising is the motor of trade' no doubt has sense." That expression does have a great deal of sense because you and I long have known that advertising functions as the yeast of American business. And it is American busi- ness and American productivity that under- pin the good life in this country. What's been happening to this good life of ours? Or, put another way, is our good life in jeopardy of being taxed and welfared to death? When I walked into this room today, it occurred to me that the gratifying attend- ance at this luncheon quite possibly might come from a rumor among the Waikiki out- rigger set that I was going to reveal the low-down on the new income tax revisions or that I had some hot poop on the Federal budget. Recently we've had some tax cuts, thank heavens. However, the 1966 Federal budget stands at about $100 billion-no small figure in even the space age. Necessarily that budget provides more money just to service the national debt's interest than the entire Federal budget amounted to as recently as 1940. Clearly there has been no decrease in the Government's spending-just more reve- nue produced by our prosperous economy. I can't begin to comprehend a budget of nearly $100 billion. In the first place, the Federal budget's very language is a tongue foreign to my business-trained ears-it is characteristic Federalese, replete with double talk and, in parts, I suspect, with the purpose of confusing rather than convincing. Nor can I really comprehend the astronomical figure of 100 billion anything. I do know, though, that there have not been nearly 100 billion seconds since the birth of Christ. To spend $100 billion you would have to get rid of a mililon dollars a week for more than 19 centuries. So long as I'm free to speak my mind, my conscience forces me to cry out in protest when our Government plunges even further into the Grand Canyon of debt to provide so many things we Americans don't need, don't want, and can't afford. I'm sure you'll agree that we're being taxed today for many projects we'd be better off without. In other words, we're geting more government than we need. It would be good if we actually got all the government we pay for. But big government isn't about to remove its fingers from my pocket or your billfold. A huge, impersonal tax machine doesn't have much regard for the dignity of the dol- lar you and I earn. It's not much consolation to see a sign, such as the one displayed in a New York bank, that reads: "Remember, part of all you earn belongs to you." The fact is that America has become the House Beautiful, with wall-to-wall taxa- tion. And unless we take positive action now we could well lose our mansion of freedom. Now let me assure you that I'm neither a pessimist nor a cynic. To the contrary, I'm the kind of optimist without whom the poor old pessimist wouldn't know how happy he isn't. America Is still the greatest nation ever to exist on this planet-but we didn't get that way through phony economics or through the big spending bureaucrats in Washington. Our United States was not built by govern- ment ukase. It was built by the energies of a self-reliant people who did things for them- selves and through cooperation with each other. It was built by a people who pushed across the western plains in wagon trains, who created homes in the wilderness through log-rolling bees, who reclaimed and lands by their own efforts-whose missionaries sailed to these beautiful islands, bringing civiliza- tion with all its boons and problems. I ad- mire them the more if the Old saying is true that they "came to do good and stayed and did well"-for they obviously did both. Yes, our forebears were men and women who con- stantly demonstrated their capacity to fend for themselves. And they worked for honor- able profit. This Is the American way-this is the way of freemen. As a natural consequence of our heritage, plus the harsh facts of today's cold war, to most Americans the concept of freedom means political and religious liberty. The inalienable rights of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were declared as God- endowed by the free and farseeing statesmen who founded our Republic. Soon after, they Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July` 12, 199Oproved For NAI':' P IDf 10018 f either of these were adopted as an axrendmgnto, file Constitution, it would be provided that one house of a State legisla turP~R3ud be afrortioned on a basis "other tl{iri population provided that the voters of the Mate approve of such an arrangement by rN'en This proposal is one of several approaches designed for the purpose of attempting to rev,r?se the dictate of the Constitution as presently written and as first ruled upon in concrete situatiorra by the Supreme Court in the cAse of aicer v. Carr in f962 and in' other eases since' that time. In these and other cases it was held in substance that one person's vote should 'have the same weight as another person's vote without re- gard to an individual's station in life, whether rich or poor, man or woman, highly educated, or, poorly educated, without regard to religious belief, to political belief, to race or color or national origin, and without re- gard to the section of a State in which he happens to reside. It is precisely the struggle for, the foregoing objective that consumes many chapters of the history of representa- tive government. Time and time again de- vices have been forced or foisted upon the people having the effect of producing govern- mental coercive authority, on the basis of some, consideration "other than population," devices for the objective of either disallowing any vote at all or for the purpose of reduc- ing some individual's vote to a minute frac- tion of another individual's vote. It is with reluctance that the melancholy fact must be recognized that such propositions are still seriously argued in approaches such as that contained in the Dirksen proposal. The Dirksen proposal only pretends to pro- vide for apportionment in one house on some tion shall have more representation than an- other similar sector of the population; it in fact provides that because of differences in people, whatever those differences may turn out to be, one persons' vote shall be counted as much more important than another per- son's vote. The distinction may be based on place of residence, so that an individual is given much greater representation because his home is surrounded by several acres of forest or farmland. The distinction may be based.on artificial boundaries, such as those marking off a town, city, or county, so that an individual is given much more representa- tion because he happens to reside within such boundaries. Whatever the reason or justifi- cation, or excuse, there is no escape from the fact that"the scheme provides for more vot- ing weight for one class of persons than for another class of persons, all of whom make up the population. There seems to be no doubt that the pur- pose of the Dirksen proposal is to provide greater representation for the so-called rural inhabitant and smaller representation for the so-called urban inhabitant; and by pro- viding that such disproportionate voting strength shall come into existence only by approval` of all the voters in a referendum, a bow is made to the concept of "one man, one vote." In other words, the creation of a. body of the legislature on the basis of 10 votes for 1 person and one-tenth of a vote for, another person should be all right and acceptable if such an arrangement is adopted on the basis of "one man, one vote." The Dirksen proposal tells the American people that they should vote away a large part of their voting rights. In terms of the procedure set up by the Dirksen proposal, it is ,exact y the same as if the amendment provided that 'freedom of speech, shall be abridged if a majority of the voters in -a State so provide, or that freedom of wor- ship, or4freedom of assembly, or freedom to petition for redress of grievances, or any one of them, shall be abridged or limited or re- duced if not eliminated in any State in which a majority of the 'voters so determine in a single election. Such a principle opens up a route by which `all individual rights can be tampered with, and it should be rejected for that reason alone. But, finally, the so-called rural elements should look more deeply at the threat to their own rights which is imbedded in the Dirksen proposal. By allowing representa- tion in one house on a basis "other than population," a large Pandora's box is opened because no limitation is placed on what the other basis or bases shall be. In an attempt to increase power, such standards ' as per capita income could be' used, or amount'of taxes paid to the State` per capita, or amount of wealth owned or' controlled, or amount of formal education attained on the average by each citizen. Every one of these stand- ards would tall under' the category of a basis "other than population," resulting in one class of of citizens having more voting strength than another 'class. Everyone of them ? has existed or been proposed in the past as a standard for disproportionate vot- ing strength. And every one of them would today favor the so-called urban voter and re- duce the representation of the so-called rural voter. In the matter of political power, such temptations should not be dangled before the urban population. Under a banner of favor to them, rural voters should not` be deceived into supporting a method by which their own future voting equality is placed in jeopardy, for a constitutional amend- ment looks not only. to today but also to the far future, and there is no certainty'that future urban political force's shall be always self-restraining. ` ften Today's urban dweller is more o than not the son or daughter or grandson or gether that there 1s very little substance to the rural-urban conflict so-called; but these filial ties will weaken as time passes, ' leav- ing rational standards as the principal lim- itation on the struggle for political power. Whatever the other differences between in- dividuals, the principle that each person is the same in the voting booth is one which enhances the dignity and solemnity of each Individual and is most likely`to produce the feeling of stability that breeds confidence in American institutions:, Therefore, be it Resolved, That the Prince Georges Demo- cratic Forum strongly opposes not only the specific provisions contained in the Dirksen proposal but also any other proposals em- bodying the philosophy that one citizen's vote in any State is to be counted either as more or less important than another's, no matter what the justification expressed for such discrimination; and be it further Resolved, That copies of this resolution be sent to such State and Federal elected offi- cials as determined by the board of directors of the Prince Georges Democratic Forum. Reds Rouktd--iron1' Vietnam Ri HON. DONALD RUMSFELD OF ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. RUMSFELD. Mr. Speaker, the editor of the Chicago American, Mr. Lloyd Wendt, who is in Vietnam on a factflnding mission, reports in the third of his series of articles on an important Victory of the South Vietnamese against the Vietcong and the efforts to recon- A3685 struct and rehabilitate the area involved. Of particular interest are are Mr. Wendt's observations' on the relations between the Americans in Vietnam and the peo- ple of that country: REDS ROOTED FROM VIETNAM RICE BOWL (By Lloyd Wendt) GO CONG, So7TB VIETNAM -We are deep in the delta rice bowl, where cleanup opera- tions against the Vietcong have yielded 255 Vietcong killed, according to reports. Our sector, Go Cong Province, the smallest in Vietnam, is quiet now. .Col. Roy Preston, of Miami, Okla., com- mandingthe advisers here, and his. assistant Maj. Earl Scales, of Baraboo, Wis., already are busy with their pacification and reconstruc- tion chores. Go Cong, on the Mytho River, appears in a jubilant mood as the news comes through of government victories. Just a few days ago the South Vietnamese troops ambushed the Vietcong in nearby Mytho Province and cap- tured Muot Ha, the Vietcong province chief and his entire politburo.. It is hailed as one of the most impressive of government victo- ries and has been followed by the cleanup today. There Will still be some Vietcong in this area, they once controlled about 30 percent of the villages and hamlets. But the tide of war in this area Is running against. them, and this is where the rice comes from. "Now our own local guerrillas can be more active," said Capt. Anthony Harring, of Cairo, N.Y., an aide to Preston. "Where the Viet- cong had control they heavily taxed the farmers.. Those. who have been freed are glad to have their freedom. They'll fight to keep it." In this area the Vietcong had maintained control by raiding villages for hostages, by recruiting some of the young men, and by the continued aid from former Viet Minh, men who fought the French and who object to any form of central government. The disorganization in the area is a heri- tage of the French regime. Few were edu- cated, there was little local self government, and in the past resistance to injustices was left to the Viet Minh, or Communists, trained by leaders from the north. Now the Americans are trying to change things, setting up schools, aiding in village reorganization, and bringing in technicians to aid with the rice problems. The area is an a salt dome and the salt water regularly comes up to attack the crop. Consequently, Da Cong province raises only one rice crop a year. The salt can be de- feated, it is believed, by the creation of fresh water reservoirs. The acceptance of the new American pro- gram is obvious. The people clearly want to be friends. They are taking advantage of the hamlet reorganization program. And the "Chieu hid" program, the government's plan for welcoming converted Vietcong back into village life, seems to be working. There now are 45 Vietcong men and 18 women in the district jail, getting reorientation train- ing. All will be put to work on reconstruc- tion projects, and ultimately they'll get their freedom. "They are well treated," said Preston. "This makes sense. When word gets out that the Vietcong who gives up is treated well there'll be an increase in conversions. We won't have to kill 'em or drive 'em out to win." The provincial chief, Lt. Col. Nguyen Viet Thanh, was not about to exhibit his Vietcong prizes, however. Thanh was too occupied to take visitors to the jail. So Preston's word for it that prisoners are not mistreated was accepted. Preston is proud that in Go Cong Province there was an election, democratic style, May 31. "There were nine candidates for six Approved For Release 2003110/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7, A3686 Approved EffAtek%%aft6W1 J1 0k1 Ij DA00030018000 -7 y 12, 1965 provincial council offices," he said. "Consid- ering that the Vietcong tries to kill elected officers, this is pretty good. There was an 89-percent turnout of the registered voters. Try to match that In one of the United States.' , We were invited to a hamlet reorganiza- tion meeting hi the home of the chief of Long Ong, population 318. The meeting was attended by the chief and his advisers, Preston and his aids, Gail Friemark, the American district rehabilitation adviser, 39 chattering children, and one black duck, which marched solemnly about the room throughout the proceedings. It was the task of the village officials to prove that Long Ong had met six conditions of rehabilitation. As it turned out, the ham- let had held an election, it had purged itself of the Vietcong, It had a flourishing yellow Buddhist pagoda, and it otherwise qualified. The village officials, in their western busi- ness garb, were pleased to learn that Long Ong would henceforth be recognized as loyal to the government. When the meeting con- cluded each picked up his gun, the armed guards outside dispersed, and the women came out of the kitchen to resume their household chores. "These people want democracy once they've learned how to get it," said Preston. "We have excellent relations with the local popu- lation. This province will ultimately be com- pletely restored to the government." Preston certainly proved that Americans are welcome here. The big, sandy haired Oklahoman towers above the Vietnamese as he goes about the village and the Province with minimum protection. He'd make' an easy target for the Vietcong. "It's perfectly safe," he insisted. "Naturally, we are careful, and we don't go about at night." Those are the chores the soldiers have when the fighting stops. If a single day's demonstration of their work is an adequate criteria, the Americans here'are doing OK. Poverty War Saps American Spirit EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. ROBERT McCLORY OF ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. McCLORY. Mr. Speaker, the various ramifications of the so-called war on poverty have brought to light waste, Democratic partisan activity, misman- agement, and disregard of State and local prerogatives. Recently, my friend, Wil- liam H. Rentschler of Illinois, who was a Republican candidate for the U.S. Sen- ate in the April 1960, primary, reported on a startling activity in the war on poverty which should shock every Mem- ber of this House. I commend this article to my col- leagues in the House and to the Amer- ican public: POVERTY WAR SAPS AMERICAN SPIRIT (By William H. Rentschler) .[ was jolted by a phone call the other day. It came out of the blue from a Princeton University lad who told me he was lining up summer jobs for college students, and asked if the .company which I head could find a place for a student or two. I told him I thought he was a little late- well into July-to be talking about summer- time employment. "Oh," he said brightly, "I'm talking about next summer." That really floored me. I said I couldn't possibly tell what our needs would be a year from now and sug- gested that he get back in touch with me in April or May of 1966. Then I asked, "Are you looking for a job for yourself next summer?" "No, sir," came the reply. "I'm trying to find job opportunities for other students." My next question was, "Well, why can't they get in touch with me direct?" "I suppose they could, but that isn't the way this program works, he replied. "What program?" I inquired, by now a lit- tle baffled. "Are these students hiring you to find summer jobs for them?" "Oh, no, sir, this is part of the, uh, part of the poverty program, you know, the pov- erty program the Government is running." When I regained consciousness, I had just enough strength left to ask still another question: "Do you mean to tell me that the poverty corps is sending you around now to find jobs for college students next summer?" "Yes, sir." All I could do was splutter. "Incredible. Do you get paid for this mission?" "Oh, sure, and it's really helping me out this summer," the young man said earnestly. "I can use the money." Perhaps I lack understanding. I may well be dumb, unsympathetic, and hardhearted. Maybe my arteries and attitudes are getting brittle. But I can't for the life of me see any pos- sible justification for this sort of activity in- of all things-the poverty program, or, for that matter, In any other Federal appendage. Back 15 or so years, I myself was a Prince- ton undergraduate. Despite the contrary opinion of my children, that really wasn't the "Dark Ages." Students were just as hard- up then as they are now. - But if they needed jobs, they went out and knocked on doors and made their own phone calls and sold themselves without sending around in their behalf gray flannel envoys and/or budding undergraduate bu- reaucrats at taxpayer expense. Poverty czar Sargent Shriver really ought to be ashamed of himself. I freely admit that my impression of the whole "poverty" effort from the very begin- ning has been skeptical at best and down- right negative at worst. Demagogs and shrewd politicians down through the ages have scaled the heights by pledging to wipe out poverty and create an idyllic, unscarred land of milk and honey. But history shows that Government-guided poverty programs invariably fail to do the noble job and just as invariably add scads of bureaucrats and precinct captains to the public payroll. This Nation has come closest to eradicat- ing true poverty-not through an endlessly inventive sheaf of Government programs- but rather because the unique American free enterprise economy has brought more people more material well-being than any system yet devised by man. The Johnson -Shriver "attack" on poverty differs little from all the rest, except perhaps that it is more wide-ranging, more ingenious, and embellished more by massive modern- day public relations technique. It is some- thing of a political grab bag, a fountain of cascading dollars over which Democratic politicians are already scrapping and snarl- ing. Stripped bare of its glitter, it is a pro- gram calculated to elect and then perpetuate incumbent administrations and politicos, and only secondarily will it get at the tough, demanding job of really reducing the rolls of the poor. It is both cynical and unfair to make lavish promises and lift the hopes of the genuinely needy while Ivy Leaguers and other leaguers are paid to ferret out next summer's jobs for presumably able-bodied, even if not filthy rich, college students. In one of John Steinbeck's books, a tired old man who long ago led a wagon train west- ward across the American plains and moun- tfa.insto the Pacific offers this doleful lament: "Westering has died out of the people. Westering isn't a hunger any more. It's all done. * * * It is finished." Perhaps the spirit that shaped America is "all done * * * finished." I hope and pray and believe in my heart it is not. But if a trace of the old daring remains, the poverty program and others akin to it, by damping the inborn initiative of pliable, impressionable young people, is surely stifling the spirit and character which made Amer- ica great in its "wagon train" era and which must prevail to make it greater in this "age of astronauts and automation." To nurture what remains of that flickering spirit, we must challenge and stir and uplift our youth. We must inspire them to dream. We must hold out the promise of oppor- tunity-not security. We must instill the hunger to serve mankind-not be served. We must demand the best they can give- and not readily accept less. Through the Peace Corps, Sargent Shriver rekindled for one brief shining moment the rare, irresistible spirit of a younger Amer- ica. But now he has lost it. What con- fronts us this day is no job for bureaucrats or planners, for Federal moguls or Federal agencies. It is plainly a task and stubborn challenge for each individual American. Research Subcommittee Has Made a "Solid Contribution" to Evaluating the Impact of Federal Research Grants on Higher Education, Science Magazine Says EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. HENRY S. REUSS OF WISCONSIN IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, July 12, 1965 Mr. REUSS. Mr. Speaker, in its July 2 issue, the magazine Science, published a comprehensive article on the investiga- tion by the Subcommittee on Research and Technical Programs of the impact of Federal research grants on our colleges and universities. The author of the article, John Walsh, comments that: The subcommittee has made a solid con- tribution by giving serious attention to a number of interrelated questions which have been vexing people in higher education since the rise of big science. And the record of the investigation will be a useful one not least because the net was cast wider in the academic community than usual. The article goes on to provide a concise account of some of the most important statements and findings in the subcom- mittee's investigation. Because I believe this matter will be of interest to many Members and particu- larly to institutions of higher education in their home areas, I include the full text of the article: SUBCOMMITTEE SURVEYS EFFECTS OF FEDERALLY SUPPORTED RESEARCH ON HIGHER EDUCA- TION The question of the extent to which Fed- eral support of research has harmed as well Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, 19 oproved For R G DC 14AL D7-BOQP M"Qr0300180003-7 ute the fact that there is of necessity a basic discretion vested in the police officer in deal- ing with this kind of situation. Afterward,, no one can fairly judge whether the pounds of pressure exerted by his fist or by his billy were scientifically calculated to be the least amount of physio'al force needed to subdue wait for someone else to can. Initiate the discussion yourself. What else do you do to achieve equal law enforcement? Here is a checklist of specific measures designed to achieve equal law en- forcement and more effective law enforce-, ment: this person. And also in dealing with violent. 1. Keep police-community eommunica- crime, the Police officer who knows that his tions open. own life is in jeopardy has legal discretion to take any reasonable means to protect it. And in such measures he deserves the sup- port of the community which he serves. But there are some situations which aren't in these categories. If the police have a pri- soner. with his-arms handcuffed behind him and four officers on the scene, it ought to be possible to bring him into a precinct station intact. Furthermore, I have often tried to figure out exactly how you would go about it if you were deliberately undertaking to develop a 4-ipch cut on the top of the head by "falling on the precinct steps." But in the early months of my administration as Police Commissioner, I saw some reports which literally described this somewhat fan- tastic feat as having been accomplished by a shackled prisoner. This doesn't mean that every error made by a police officer is fatal or requires dis- charge. He deals with difficult and com- plicated problems. But if he deserves cor- rection, he should have it, as in any other walk of life. As a matter of fact, any situa- tion where the truth is allowed to be covered up by official reports is productive of the greatest amount of hostility toward and dis- regard for law. This is a major source of problems in the area in which we are speak- ing. Direct Investigation of Important civilian complaints by the civilian head of the police is essential..'. The .community relations bu- reau or complaint bureau should be manned by permanently assigned officers chosen for intelligence and courage enough to face hos- tilityinside and outside of the department. Their reports should go directly to the civi- lian heads or heads of the department. 'Secondly, the administration of the de- partment should make it known that it will not tolerate the institution which, is best known in police circles as "alley court." Our law never has allowed for alley courts. The Constitution does not allow for them. But it has been an institution. There are police officers who are sincerely convinced that un- less they are allowed to bolster their author- ity in the street by administering punish- ment by fist or billy when they feel it is necessary, they cannot maintain peace and order. The law prohibits this. Our total society prohibits this... Punishment is not the function of the police. It is the function of the courts. The function. of the police is to detect and apprehend and to bring into court for punishment. "Alley court" is ordinarily used against a minority group. If it is used, It inflames the attitude of that group-in this case the Negro population. It produces the cries of "police brutality." And it deprives the police department of the most important ally that it can have- the support of the law-abiding populace residing in the core areas of the city for the police department's war, against crime. There are relatively few police officers who believe in "alley court." They cannot be allowed to perpetuate an utterly indefensi- ble institution. Thirdly, the administration of the police department should open and maintain means of communication between the police department and all sections ..of the com- munity it serves. Particularly in this dec- ade, this must be done with the, Negro community and its leaders. _Be available to meet with them to exchange information and to try earnestly to resolve problems. If you are conscious of a problem, don't 2. Provide for direct staff investigation of civilian complaints and final decision on them by the highest civilian authority in the police department. 3. End "alley court." 4. Identify police troublemakers on the force and transfer them to noncritical jobs. 5. Ban "trigger words" in police action. 6. Enforce politeness in the giving of traf- fic tickets. 7. End investigative arrests. 8. Increase law enforcement in high crime precincts. 9. Drive out organized crime-and pay par- ticular attention, to its manifestations in the core areas. 10. Actively seek cooperation of all citizens for law enforcement-particularly in high crime areas. 11. Make certain that equal opportunity exists for all in police department-recruit- ment, assignments and promotions, 12. Ban the use of police dogs in core area police work. A dog companion for a single patrolman on a lonely beat may be useful. That same dog at a racial demonstration is a symbol of race hatred. 13. Integrate police teams-particularly make certain of the integration of details employed at racial demonstrations and the careful selection and integration of "ready forces" employed to respond to street con- flicts. 14. Seek more police officers. 15. Seek better training for police officers. 16. Seek better pay for police officers. I make no suggestion that any, of these items are ones which can be the subject of a simple order and then be forgotten about. Least of all do I suggest that by listing these items I would necessarily claim that any police department had completely accom- plished them. I do suggest that if they are sincerely held objectives, if they are ten- aciously sought, then significant progress can be made. These are policies of the Police Department of the city of Detroit, as I have reviewed them recently with the present Police Com- missioner. They have been since the begin- ning of Mayor Cavanagh's administration. While the inauguration of these policies brought many predictions of dire results from prophets of doom inside and outside the police department, the results have been quite different. During Mayor Cavanagh's administration Detroit has done significantly better than the national FBI crime trend index. By what I have said it must be obvious that I believe wholeheartedly in civilian con- trol of police forces. There are many pro- posals for achievement of this, including civilian review boards. The best mechanism in my view, by far, Is that of a civilian police administration-dedicated to vigorous, effec- tive, fair and equal law enforcement-which has both responsibility for law enforcement and control of police practice. The great majority of police officers, I be- lieve, want no part of any abusive practices. They want and will support higher standards of training, of pay, and of performance in their profession. Federal assistance in relation to some of these local police needs should be sought- particularly, I believe, in relation to, police training, Recently in Washington I pro- posed the founding of a National Police Training College, organized, staffed, and financed at a level to make it comparable in police work to a West Point or an Annapolis. 15871 Such an institution could do more to en- hance the level of local law enforcement than any other single program I can think of. And now, finally, a word about a slogan which seems to me to be tremendously im- portant. I would like to see more public concern about police work-not less. I would like to see citizens feel that they .have a tremendous stake in how their police de- partment operates and feel a duty to support it in the proper discharge of its duties. I would like to see them willing to "get in- volved." What about the woman murdered in Queens last year within sight or hearing of 38 people-not one of whom called the police? They didn't want to get involved. What about the police officer engaged in a desperate struggle to prevent a would-be suicide from throwing himself off an express- way bridge recently in Detroit? When the officer asked for help in trying to lift the man to safety, one citizen gave it. Others passed by, not wanting to be involved. What commentaries these are on our civi- lization. The effort to involve citizen support for law enforcement is basic in a democratic society. Without it the police effort can degenerate into an occupation army atti- tude. With citizen support the police are the community's right arm in fighting the evils which make city living difficult. Let me quote briefly from a speech I made to a national police-community relations conference in 1963: "In precinct 10, our most difficult precinct, we had a community relations meeting just a month ago that was supposed to be a regu- lar quarterly meeting, but it wasn't a very ordinary affair. There were 450 citizens (90 percent of them Negro) seated in the police garage-the only place we had that was big enough to accommodate them. They were seated on hard folding chairs, and they stayed there for 3 hours to talk in detail with the precinct inspector and the officers in the precinct about law enforcement in the precinct. During the course of this 3-hour meeting there was not one complaint about discrimination or brutality. "The most popular man in the meeting was the precinct Inspector who was bringing the most vigorous kind of law enforcement to the 10th precinct. What they were asking for was more enforcement in their particular block or neighborhood, rather than wanting to have the police removed. They were tell- ing us where stills were, or where blind pigs were operating, or who was pushing people around in their neighborhood. This is the kind of information which makes, the law enforcement job so much easier. We gave out 10 department citations for dramatic work of assistance to the police on the street. For instance, two gunmen had gone into a bar, held it up. Three of the Negro citizens who were at that meeting, when the gunmen left with the swag, went out the door after them, chased them, caught them, and held them until the police got there. Now, we don't really recommend that with civilians in our town. But after it was done, we couldn't very well do anything but say that it was an act of considerable courage. "What we do encourage is having people tell us when they see things going on. Most of the other nine citations were given to peo- ple who had done that. They had seen something suspicious that ended up being the commission of a crime. Through this we get help for law enforcement. "The sort of communication that was represented by that precinct 10 meeting, magnified a thousandfold, is the essence of democratic participation in law enforcement. Such avenues of communication have to date served in this great industrial area to let us move toward further progress in human rela- tions without the eruptions of violence Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 15872 Approved F BSZM411D/IMMAL4RBP6 R0003001800d3* 12, 1965 which plagued other great cities this past summer. May this progress continue." In general I think I can report that such progress still continues. Basically, all good law is the codification of the wisdom and morality of past ages. It is never safe to deal long with practical problems without relating them to moral standards. Let me end with such a state- ment. In Romans, chapter 13, we find these lines: "Owe no man anything, but to love an- other; for he that loveth another hath ful- filled the law. "For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other com- nlandment, It Is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. "'Love worketh no ill to his neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law. "'And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now Is our salvation nearer than when we believed. "The night is far spent, the day is at handy let us therefore take off the works of dark- ness, and let us put on the armour of light." they knew him because he made the war real, it hardly seems that long. Millions of others know him Only as a legend. Ernie had landed on Is Shims with the 77th Infantry Division just the day before. He had a hacking cold. On the way over, he put on a jacket for the sea breeze was brisk. "I'm the old one-hose shay," he told Bill Me,Gaffin of the Chicago Daily News. He was a health-worrier-constantly fussing about his ailments. The operation on le Shima was expected to be a snap. The island is only a dot off Oki- nawa. But later, when Ernie saw a GI get blown up by stepping on a mine, he remarked to Milton Chase of Radio Station WLW, Cincinnati: "I wish I were in Albuquerque." STRATEGY TALK lished, and have remained in our files for the past 20 years. Now we are publishing them for the first time starting next Mon- day in the Washington Daily News and other Scripps-Howard newspapers. We want them to serve as a memorial. But, more than that, we would share the Pyle magic with those younger Americans who never had the privilege of knowing him. FOLLOW-UP In these last 15 stories, Ernie writes about 42 Americans. We have tried to locate as many as we could to find out what has hap- pened to them over the years. We have been surprisingly successful, all things considered. These were among the last men Ernie talked with. They still speak of him with warmth and affection; the shock of his death still lingers. Some recall he had a premoni- tion of death: he felt his string had run out. They have mementos of him; a cigaret lighter, a short-snorter, or some GI joke they will never forget. Not surprising, many feel they were the last he talked to, the last to see him alive. They sometimes feel they were his best and closest friends. This is not surprising either. Ernie was that kind. Ernie Pyle has been dead for 20 years. But he is still very much alive, as the stories we have dusted off, and the memories of his GI friends, will show. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further morning business? If not, morning business is closed. Ernie arose early on the morning of April 18, he chatted briefly with Maj. Gen. A. D. Bruce, commander of the 77th, at his com- mand post on Ie Shima. "I gave him the latest dope and our future plans," the general recalled later. "I was surprised and pleased that he came to the same conclusions I did." That was Ernie. He knew war intimately. About 10 a.m., he set out in a jeep with Lt. Col. Joseph B. Coolidge of Helena, Ark., commanding officer of the 305th Regiment, to look for a new command post site. Three others were with them: Maj. George Pratt of Eugene, Oreg., Dale Bassett of Baush, Colo., and the jeep driver, john Barnes, of Peters- burg, Va. Except for an occasional mortar round, or a red flag indicating a mine, it was quiet, routine. Another Jeep preceded them. Ahead were some trucks. MACHINEGUN As they neared a junction outside the little settlement of le, a Japanese machine- gun opened up from the left, cutting up dust in a nearby field. It was too close for com- fort. Why the gunner had let the other ve- hicles pass andzeroed in on Barnes' no one will ever know. Barnes braked sharply. The men piled out and took cover in a ditch. The gunner had a clear field of fire. Pyle, Coolidge and Barnes were safe as long as they hugged the ground. Pratt and Bassett were a little forward. Ernie and Coolidge raised their heads. Pyle spotted Pratt and asked: "Are you all right?" Those were his last words. ERNIE WAS DEAD "The Jap let go again," Coolidge wrote later. "He had had time to adjust his sights. Some shots chewed up the road in front of me and ricocheted over my head. After ducking, I turned to ask Ernie how he was. He was lying face up, and at the time no blood showed, so for a second I could not tell what was wrong" Ernie was dead. He bad been hit in the left temple. Coolidge called to some sol- diers nearby to ask for a medic. None was available, but it didn't matter. Ernie was buried in Ie Shima. A few years ago, I watched a representative of the Japanese Government place a wreath on the site of that grave. Later, his body was removed to Hawaii. UNPUBLISHED WORK The Scripps-Howard Newspapers con- tinued publishing a number of Ernie's col- umns after his death. "We believe he would have wanted us to; as a great reporter, as a great newspaper- man, and a great person, he would have wanted his stories to go through," his editors explained. But 15 of Ernie's columns were never pub- REMEMBERING ERNIE PYLE Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, there are many persons throughout the Na- tion who recall the warmth and the clarity of the war reporting of Ernie Pyle, whose vignettes of war from the level of the average GI were so unfor- gettable. It was 20 years ago, on April 18, 1945, that Ernie Pyle died of a sniper's bullet on Ie Shima. Earlier this year I offered a bill, S. 1673, proposing a commemora- tive stamp. Ernie Pyle was a native of Dana, Ind., and a graduate of the In- diana University School of Journalism. Today an article in the Washington Daily News, which Ernie Pyle once edited, recalls the circumstances surrounding his death. It.also reveals the existence in the Scripps-Howard files of 15 unpub- lished trnie Pyle columns which will ap- pear in the papers of the chain in the days ahead. I shall look forward to reading those dispatches, so long after. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the article to which I refer may appear in the CONGRESSIONAL REC- ORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: FIFTEEN UNPUBLISHED COLUMNS BY ERNIE PYLE RELEASED (By Jim G. Lucas) It was April 18, 1946. In newspaper offices all over the world the bell on the wire service ticker jangled for an Incoming bulletin. It read: "At a command post in Shima, Ryukus Islands, April 18-Ernie Pyle, war corre- spondent, beloved by his coworkers, GI's and generals alike, was killed by a Japanese me- chinegun bullet through his left temple this morning. "The famed war correspondent, who had reported the wars from Africa to Okinawa, met his death at 10:15 a.m., about a mile forward of this command post ? ? ?." ONLY YESTERDAY? That was 20 years ago. To the men who knew and fought with Ernie at their side, to the millions who read him daily and felt LEGISLATIVE BRANCH APPROPRIA- TIONS, 1966 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the unfln-? fished business be laid before the Senate. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The LEGISLATIVE CLERIC. A bill-H.R. 8775-making appropriations for the legislative branch for the fiscal year end- ing June 30, 1966, and for other purposes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the Senate will proceed to the consideration of the bill. The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill. the Saturday Evening Post of July 17, there appears an article with Washing- ton dateline by the distinguished jour- nalist Stewart Alsop. And in the Wash- ington Post of July 11, there appears a feature with a Saigon dateline by John Maifre, a reporter who is in the tradition of courage and straightforwardness and dedication which the American press corps in Saigon has built in recent years. Both articles deal with the critical Vietnamese situation. Both shed addi- tional light on the complexity of the problems which confront us there. It is not and has never been, as is now becom- ing all to apparent, an open and shut affair, a simple do or do not proposition and these articles are most useful in stimulating the kind of thought which is essential if we are to deal with the situa- tion effectively. For that reason, I com- mend them to the attention of the Senate and ask that they be included at this point in the RECORD. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 19 proved For RCONG I; 1'.3I 4AI 00300180003-7 158'73 There peing no objection, the articles merit of organized units to the' Vietcong. President Johnson had taken the almost were ordered to be printed in the RECORD,. The process has now reached a point where unprecedented step of assigning a senior as follows' it is "academic," as a U.S. military spokes- career diplomat, U. Alexis Johnson, as Tay- man, in Saigon has said, to distinguish be- lor's deputy, and Johnson was waiting as [From the Saturday Evening Post, tween indigenous Vietcong guerrilla forces Taylor stepped from the plane wearing a July 17, 1965] and organized units from the north, because white suit, a radical switch from his four- A TIME OF TROUBLE there as so many of the latter. But this in- star uniform as former Chairman of the (By Stewart Alsop) vasion has_, produced no shocked reaction, Joint Chiefs of Staff. here or abroad. Also at the airport was then Lt. Gen. Wil- WASHINGTON.-The mood of this city has This covert invasion has in turn forced liam C. Westmoreland, head of the Military changed sharply in the last 6 months, the President to commit American ground Assistance Command, Vietnam, who would be Last January, in the wake of Lyndon troops to combat. The process is sure to go getting his fourth star as a full general Johnson's massive triumph at the polls, there further. Behind closed doors, Secretary of within 3 weeks. was a confident feeling that, with this re- Defense Robert McNamara has talked of the Taylor read a brief statement including markable man running things, nothing could possible necessity of committing to South the protocol sentence, "I have the greatest go really wrong. Now the confidence has been Vietnam as many as 300,000 U.S. troops. He respect for General Khanh and his colleagues replaced by an uneasy, foreboding sense that has said flatly that a war on the scale of in the government who carry the responsi- the President and the rest of us may be in the Korean war "may have to be accepted." bilities of leaders." Then he drove in a black for a time of great trouble. Consider the differences between the Lincoln limousine to the cramped Embassy On the domestic front, the uneasiness is Korean war and what "may have to be ac- near the waterfront to begin work. like "a cloud no larger than a man's hand." cepted" in Vietnam. The Korean war was A week earlier, Henry Cabot Lodge had Its chief source is a single speech, delivered a response to overt aggression, a war officially vacated that Embassy. Last Thursday, a in early June by William McChesney Martin, sanctioned by the United Nations, supported year and a day after Taylor's arrival, it was Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, by this country's allies and fought when announced that the general was quitting the Martin listed a series of 12 "menacing like- this country had a virtual atomic monopoly. place-in favor of Henry Cabot Lodge. neSses" between the present economic situa- A Korean-scale war in Vietnam, if that is in Taylor inherited an unusually large Em- tion and the situation in 1929, before the store, will be a very lonely war. We will have bassy staff when he took possession a year great depression. no United Nations sanction, no support ago, a staff whose internecine quarrels over ' Martin was careful to point out differences worth mentioning from any ally, and the the fall of President Ngo Dinh Diem were too, but the "menacing likenesses" were passionate opposition of France and the en- not yet completely stilled. He also took much more striking. The President's eco- tire uncommitted world. But that is not over a U.S. Operations (AID) Mission and a nomic seers, like Treasury Secretary Henry all. U.S. Information Service staff totaling nearly Fowler and Economic Adviser Gardner Certain Republicans disgracefully ex- 1,000 civilians, and a force of more than Ackley, remain guardedly confident. But the ploited Truman's war for political gain. But 16,000 servicemen who were advising South Martin speech was followed by a sharp, ner- all responsible opinion recognized that Vietnam's warriors in their fight against the vous drop in stock prices. And the uneasy President Truman had no real choice but to Vietcong, feeling persists that the present boom, the oppose the overt aggression in Korea. Presi- The day Taylor arrived, the Pentagon re- longest since the 1929's, cannot last forever, dent Johnson has no real choice but to op- vealed that 146 Americans had died in action and that some sort of economic trouble surely pose the covert aggression in Vietnam. But in South Vietnam since January. 1, 1961. lies ahead. partly because the aggression is covert the The day before, almost prophetically, the On the foreign front, the clouds are Vietnamese war is widely unpopular and very first Australian military adviser had died visible-they seem to bigger and blacker and little understood, when the Vietcong attacked a remote Special uglier every day. The Dominican affair has According to a recent Gallup poll, 54 per- Forces camp in the highlands named Nam- raised the old specter of Yanqui imperialism cent of the voters want to "stop military dong. in Latin America, and elsewhere in the world action," or "withdraw completely," or "stop A FRANTIC TWELVEMONTH America-hating Is becoming an international fighting, start negotiations." If Korean- In the year since then, the military, politi- pastime. Charles de Gaulle's France, which scale casualties now ensue-33,000 American cal, and economic picture has Changed dras- used to be known as "America's oldest ally," dead, as against a few hundred so far in the tically. Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh lives in is acting more and more like a hostile power. Vietnamese war-the war could become the polite banishment in New York, a bewilder- NATO seems to be coming apart. But the most divisive in a hundred years. ing series of civilian successors and uni- real source of the dark sense of foreboding Partly this is because a lot of people-not formed aspirants has come and gone and that has been eroding Washington's self- only the intellectuals-feel an obscure sense today another military junta is in power. confidence is Vietnam. of guilt about the Vietnamese war. Senator Some 300 more Americans have died as the There is a tendency nowadays, especially JOHN SHERMAN COOPER recently cited one pace of war has increased. There are now abroad, to suppose that President Johnson is reason why: "What do the South Vietnamese nearly 60,000 American troops in South Viet- an impulsive fellow. In fact, he made his people want to do? Stay independent? Join nam, including 9 combat battalions that decision last February to bomb North Viet- the North? Keep the Americans there? have gone on the offensive, and at least 6 name only after long delay and much agoniz- Unless we ask the South Vietnamese what more battalions are on the way. ing. All his advisers told him the same they want to do, our presence there looks like U.S. 7th Fleet aircraft have pounded North thing-that otherwise the Vietnam war an occupation." Vietnam for 5 months as well as launching would be lost. Thus the President had no The Communists are highly unlikely to ac- incountry strikes against the Vietcong, real choice. cept a cease-fire or the other obvious pre- sweeping South China Sea avenues of infil- All his advisers hoped, and some certainly conditions necessary to "ask the South Viet- tration and sending cruisers and destroyers believed, that American air power alone namese people what they want to do." But to bombard shore positions. would be enough to bring the Communists the gesture of offering to ask them ought to The U.S. Air Force, using almost its full to the conference table in a mood to negoti- be made, if only to erase that sense of guilt. range of Century jet strike aircraft, has ham- ate. As noted in this. space about a year Above all, the present policy on informing mered the enemy in both the north and the ago, it is a favorite American illusion "to the American people about the Vietnamese south and at least 15 Army helicopter com- suppose that air power is an adequate sub- war ought to be radically changed. Under ponies are providing rapid air mobility which statute for what the British call the PBI, or that policy, a State Department public-rela- partly offsets the Vietnamese troop shortage, Poor Bloody Infantry." It is clear by now tions underling lets slip the fact that Ameri- frequently carrying recently introduced U.S. that, as in Korea and again and again in the can ground troops are to start fighting in Marine Corps and airborne combat units. Second World War, the jab the Air Force started will have to be finished, if it can be Asia, as though that were a matter of no im- Other American units have pitched in to finished, by the PBI. portance. If a Korean-scale war is really in help an Australian infantry battalion that What has happened is what a minority of prospect, then a time of very great trouble was getting its first taste of combat; the apf surely lies ahead, and a combination of ob- Philippines have provided a surgical team; the President's advisers feared our might 'hahap- sessive secrecy and rosy pressagentry is no South Korean engineers are supporting the ppenen. , When we a instrument rdvi so military pressure-il- way to prepare the country for that time. South Vietnamese; a New Zealand artillery North Vietnamese Communists 11, battery is expected, and soon there may be presorted to theirs: human bodies. But the [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, July the largest "third country" contribution of they 1965] all: a complete South Korean combat divi- have done so in a clever way. An overt, fuli- scale, conventional invasion of South Viet- A YEAR OF ESCALATION FOR TAYLOR-VIETCONG, Sion. nam, like North Korea's invasion of South HOWEVER, STEPPED UP ITS TEMPO A BIT ENEMY BOLSTERED, TOO Korea, would have had a .shock effect, which FASTER THAN WE DID In brief, what was once a counterin- might have "produced a really massive re- (By John Maffre) surgency effort Is moving toward full-scale action, SAIGON- Just a year ago last Wednesday, war. Unfortunately, however, this war is still Instead, the Invasion of South Vietnam Maxwell D. Taylor stepped from a presiden- going in favor of the Vietcong. have ely tia jet at the airport here, a proconsul with Massively reinforced by North Vietnamese h s larg has invisible. by slow rt stages, and y authority rare in American diplomatic his- cadres and equipped with a new family of ply increased, very steadily, their commit- tory. Communist-bloc weapons, largely from Red Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7. 15874 Approved F g f (/1 BD-E6g R00030018000 ?y 12, 1965 Chinese, the Vietcong's regular and para- military strength is now well in excess of 100,000. They dominate a far larger share of the South Vietnamese countryside than they did a year ago, particularly in the high- lands, and they have regularly overwhelmed government forces in regiment-size attacks, sometimes even using motorized transport. There have been some pluses on the Ameri- can side. For one thing, the United States has backed a positive policy of full commit- ment to aid South Vietnam in preserving In- dependence, notably by striking north and ~servmg notice that there is no longersuch a thing as an Inviolate sanctuary. Other U.S. pluses are less striking. The official thinking of the American mission here Is that despite the merry-go-round of govern- ments, at least none has been unfriendly to the United States. Militarily, the United States has provided the logistics for an increase of 100,000 in the government's paramilitary forces and has helped double the once feeble national police to at least 42,000., Economically, in addition to herculean efforts to expand and diversify the productive base, the United States so far has been able to stave off the threat of runaway inflation. NO HINT OF TALKS The minuses are ominous. There is still no strong, stable government demonstrably responsible to the people. The downward military trend since early May persists and despite an Increase in recruiting, the strength of the Vietcong relative to that of the gov- ernment grows steadily larger. Most important, efforts here and elsewhere have not convinced Hanoi--or Pelpiug-that it would be best for its leaders to send a delegation to a conference table. It was sometime last autumn that the conclusion was reached that South Vietnam by itself could not generate sufficient energy to get the war effort off dead center. Attacks on the 7th Fleet in August had demonstrated that the "Democratic Republic of Vietnam"- Hanoi-was prepared to act in a big way. Within a few months, a startling increase in Infiltration from the North had forced South Vietnam and the United States to a more realistic appraisal of the odds against them. This increase In the odds,, was con- firmed in February by the discovery of an enormous cache of Chinese Communist weap- ons which has been ferried into Vungro harbor on the central Vietnamese coast. The relatively modest plans for an increase in American support were revised upward. Other plans were made to help the Viet- namese boost their total pf men under arms- how fewer than 600,000-by 160,000. The serious American military assessment, how- ever, is that this level will not be approached before the middle of 1966 and that it may be 1967 before it is realized. In the Interim, It was concluded that a large infusion of U.S. combat units was vitally necessary. Marine and Army troops have poured into such strategic areas as Danang and Chulai, a harbor is being pre- pared farther south at Camranh Bay and air- fields are being guarded at Bienhoa and Vungtao, closer to Saigon. In the opinion of one senior officer, the Vietcong strategy aimed at full victory in 1965 has been blunted but has not lost its thrust. Their success is becoming more and more evident in this capital. Power blackouts caused by sabotage are becoming more frequent. Prices of food- stuffs from the Mekong Delta in the south and the highlands around Dalat are rising because of shortages. The increasing threat of terrorism was evidenced last week by the evacuation of the largest American officers' billet-in the Reg Hotel-because of a bomb scare. As far as the American mission Is con- cerned, it has achieved greater coheslveneas despite Its proliferating numbers. The point has been made repeatedly that no recom- mendation was made to Washington by Tay- lor unless It was approved by all mission heads. Taylor made it a practice to defer to the judgment of General Westmoreland and his staff on military matters. A source close to Taylor observed recently that in addition to his confidence In Westmoreland, whom he recommended for a second star 10 years ago and whose fourth star he pinned on last August, Taylor had enough problems on his hands without wanting to dabble in military waters again. OLIN D. JOHNSTON MEMORIAL FUND Mr. MONRONEY. Mr. President, I am honored to advise the Senate that the friends of our late colleague, Olin D. Johnston, have initiated the estab- lishment of an endowed professorship of political science and memorial student scholarship fund in his honor at the Uni- versity of South Carolina. I can think of no more fitting tribute. If there was anything more dear to Olin Johnston's heart than the welfare of the Federal employee, it was the edu- cation of the American people. In the truest American tradition, Olin, Johnston pulled himself up by his bootstraps. Born in the cotton mill town of Honea Path, S.C., he worked in the mills from the age of 10 until he was grown. At certain times in his young life, he held down two full-time jobs and also at- tended school. His efforts were re- warded. He earned his bachelor's de- gree at Wofford College, and later a master's degree and a law degree from the University of South Carolina. Throughout his public career he helped young people in their efforts to earn a college education. There are literally hundreds of men and women today who owe their opportunity for education to Olin Johnston. They will not forget him. Through the fine efforts of his many friends; particularly Federal em- ployees who knew and loved him, the es- tablishment of endowed chair and a stu- dent scholarship fund at the University of South Carolina will serve as a living tribute to his life and career. I ask unanimous consent to insert in the RECORD at this point a statement re- garding the establishment of the Olin D. Johnston Memorial Fund, and letters to Mrs. Olin D. Johnston from the Presi- dent and Vice President of the United States, the Postmaster General, John A. Gronouski, and the Chairman of the U.S. Civil Service Commission, John W. Macy, Jr. There being no objection, the state- ment and letters were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: COLUMBIA, S.C.-President Lyndon B. Johnson writes that memorials to the late Senator Olin D. Johnston which are being established at the University of South Caro- lina will be "a fitting tribute to the late Sen- ator and a monument to his public career." in a letter to Mrs. Johnston, the President also wrote: "Olin Johnston's death was a great loss to the United States.. He was a man with deep feeling, for people and a man who worked tirelessly to. help others. "He was a great believer in the value of education, and I am pleased to learn that a fund has been established to honor his memory. "It is my understanding that this fund will provide for endowment of the Olin D. John- ston professorship in political science, an appropriate memorial, and for scholarships In his name at the University of South Caro- lina where he earned two degrees." Mrs. Johnston has given the large and valuable collection of the late Senator's papers, representing 40 years of public serv- ice, to the University of South Carolina. The Olin D. Johnston Memorial Fund es- tablished by the University of South Carolina Educational Foundation is receiving wide support. C. Wallace Martin, executive direc- tor of the foundation, said the fund has "the full endorsement" of national and State leaders including the Senator's former col- leagues in Washington, many of whom have paid tribute to his memory on the floor of the Senate and the House of Representatives. Gifts are expected to come from through- out the United States because Senator John- ston's efforts in behalf of postal employees, Federal workers generally and other groups are well known and greatly appreciated. The individuals he helped and befriended are countless. The postal supervisors of the Carolinas re- cently endorsed the Olin D. Johnston Me- morial Fund as an appropriate tribute to the late Senator. Every 1 of the 15 postal employees of West- minster in Oconee County, S.C., have con- tributed to the fund, Postmaster Martin D. Watkins noted in forwarding contributions to the University of South Carolina Educa- tional Foundation. They became the first group to participate 100 percent in the sup- port of the fund. A permanent record of contributions will be maintained, although donors may be anonymous if the wish. Gifts to the fund are tax deductible. Checks should be made payable to the fund and sent to Olin D. Johnston Memorial Fund, University of South Carolina Educational Foundation, Columbia, S.C. THE OLIN D. JOHNSTON MEMORIAL FUND Preamble: The late Olin D. Johnston earned the eternal gratitude of the people of his native State and of postal and other Federal workers for his constant and coura- geous efforts in their behalf. In South Caro- lina he served in the legislature and was twice elected Governor. As U.S. Senator, Olin Johnston served on important committees most diligently and capably, and supported legislation worthy of merit. He walked with Presidents and other men of dis- tinction; yet he never lost the common touch. In recognition of his life of service, friends of the Senator have established the Olin D. Johnston Memorial Fund through the University of South Carolina Educa- tional Foundation. Purpose: To receive funds to endow the Olin D. Johnston Professorship in Political Science and to provide for an appropriate memorial at the University of South Caro- lina where he earned two degrees. All funds received over and above the amount neces- sary for these purposes will be set aside to ,provide scholarships in his name for deserv- ing students from low-income families who might otherwise be unable to continue their education. Sources: Funds are to be solicited from friends of the late Senator Johnston in South Carolina and throughout the Nation. Publicity: The University of South Caro- lina Educational Foundation will prepare publicity releases for the press, radio, and television. Cooperating organizations are asked to include information concerning the memorial fund in newsletters and other in- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 July 12, 1*9 AR WO proved For RecII~122RM NA~II~~.((~ll.55 L ffrfi7.BO M B~p JV 0 300180003-7 Roosa (who joins him on the advisory corn mittee) effectively deflated Reginald Maud- ling's scheme for reform. Dillon and Roosa at that time thought that the need for some new form of reserves was far, far in the future. it is only to their credit that they _ have changed their minds. Recently, in a commencement address in Middlebury, Vt., Dillon bluntly warned that the free world "is rapidly approaching a financial crossroads." Failure to strengthen the international monetary system, he added, could result in a "worldwide recession * * *. A strengthened international monetary sys- tem must be installed before it is needed, and not after the crash." These are strong words. They reflect a position that many economists and academi- clans have taken for a long time. Even more important, Dillon's evaluation indicates that the United States will have a specific plan to put forward to its trading partners later in the year. For all of the new clout that Dillon brings to Fowler's Treasury, however, success isn't assured. The big obstacle in the way is a stubborn man named DeGaulle. The French attitude seems to be that there is no shortage of international liquidity- just a shortage of British reserves. The French are frankly tired of helping the Brit- ish to "live above their means." Other con- tinentalpowers like the Germans and Dutch are fat and content at the moment, and show no interest at all in monetary reform. Well-informed International Monetary Fund sources think that the problem won't move off dead center until the French, the Germans, and the Dutch themselves feel a financial pinch. But everybody on this side of the Atlantic is delighted that Dillon will be at work generating and pushing ideas. HIGH PRESSURE LOBBY BOYS. MOVE IN FOR DIRKSEN AMEND- MENT Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, Doris Fleeson, in a characteristically trenchant and persuasive column, has discussed the effect of the so-called Dirk- sen apportionment amendment as a god- send to State lobbyists who are fighting for special interests and against the pub- lic interest. She points out that the famed, top proved lobbying firm of Whitaker & Baxter has been retained to fight for the Dirksen amendment on a national basis. She shows how adverse the passage of the amendment could be to the public interest. I ask unanimous consent that the col- umn be printed at this point in the RECORD, There being no objection, the column was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: A LIFELINE FOR STATE LOBBYISTS (By Doris Fleeson) Senator EVERETT DIRKSEN, Republican, of Illinois, 'ever the exponent of free enter- prise, is trying to preserve the greatest over- the-counter market in America. This in- formal institution deals in the buying and selling of legislative favors in the 50 States. Its brokers are the lobbyists for every va- riety of interest and the customers whom they shower with all manner of kind at- tentions, including the financial, are the State legislators. It has no rules, obeys no ethical code and its motto is: "All the traffic will bear:" Very occassionally when the more greedy overdo the act and scandal breaks out, pub- lic opinion steps in. After the cyclone passes, few legislatures enact the strong No. 125-15 laws needed to regulate such conflicts of in- terest in the future. All these comfortable arrangements, a commonplace in State politics, are now threatened by the Supreme Court's one-man, one-vote reapportionment order. It was ap- parent from the start, though strangely ne- glected in the comment, that the Court's de- cision would create a whole new climate for the lobbying operations which plague every capital. This immense dividend, like one-man, one- vote, would be a casualty of the Dirksen constitutional amendment that proposes that one house of the State legislatures should be apportioned according to factors other than population. The amendment is a life- line to the entrenched State lobbyists, an open invitation to use their great skills in a vast national effort to save their sanctuar- ies. Civil rights advocates were slow to recog- nize that the fruits of President Johnson's historic voting rights bill could be snatched from them by the Dirksen amendment. It is true that a callous appeal has been made to Southerners on that ground, but impor- tant and well-financed lobbying has not come from the South. Californians set up a committee early this year to make contact in all the States and assist Congress. It then hired the celebrated firm of Whitaker & Baxter, which, in 5 years of high-priced labor for the American Medi- cal Association (1948-53), added "socialized medicine" to the language and probably staved off medicare until 1965. The committee bears the dignified title of Citizens Committee for Balanced Legislative Representation. Adviser Whitaker has yet to evolve another masterpiece in slogans but has a "coordinator" here to help the Dirksen forces. His own cautious forecast: "I think the amendment can succeed." The heaviest pressures come from the State legislatures themselves. They are com- fortable in their troughs. They are the most out-of-date governmental machinery in the Nation and the Court's reapportionment de- cision was the direct result of their obdurate refusal to modernize themselves. The executive branch, State and National, has been constantly reorganized and its tech- niques altered to meet new conditions. The courts, State and Federal, have undergone various forms of reorganization and reform. Congress reorganized itself in 1946 and the House leader of that effort, Senator MIKE MONRONEY, Democrat, of Oklahoma, is start- ing a new drive to correct its demonstrated deficiencies. But the horse and buggy approach still prevails in many State legislatures and their internal weaknesses continue to lead to stronger federalization. Many experts in State affairs openly question their capacity to handle jet and space age problems. Their irresponsibility is largely due to mi- nority control and this the Dirksen amend- ment would helietuate. ~-t BOMB hF9uih/PAY LATER Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may be per- mitted to proceed for the next 5 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. CHURCH. The pressure is on in Washington to further expand the war in southeast Asia. "Bomb Hanoi." "Bomb Haiphong" the air hawks cry. Plaster North Vietnam from the skies, they say, and in the same breath criticize the sending of more American ground troops into South Vietnam, where the guerrilla war is being fought. The air hawks' prescription makes little sense, 15859 but it is cleverly designed to feed an un- derlying public demand for a quick, cheap victory in Vietnam. The truth is that no such easy solution exists. The war in the south will never be won by a bigger bombing of the north. As Dean Rusk has correctly pointed out: The basic problem, the central problem, is in South Vietnam. No miracle in the north can suddenly transform or eliminate the problem in South Vietnam. Accelerating the war northward through the air, however, could greatly aggrevate the problem we face on the ground in South Vietnam. Indiscrimi- nate bombing of the population centers at North Vietnam would almost cer- tainly force Hanoi to launch some form of massive retaliation. Since we command the air, Hanoi's counterattack would have to come on the ground. The Saigon Government is up against the ropes now, desperately hanging on against the jabbing attacks of Vietcong irregulars. If the disciplined armies of Ho Chi Minh were to invade the south, Saigon's survival would hinge entirely upon an immediate and unlimited Ameri- can intervention on the ground. It is not unlikely that a half million American troops would then be required to occupy and hold South Vietnam, while the re- mainder of Indochina would soon be overrun by Communist armies. Even in open terrain, like that in Korea, bombing alone never stopped an army on the march. What chance would our planes have against vast numbers of trained troops advancing beneath jungle cover? Obviously, bigger bombing of North Vietnam will not extricate us from the jungle fighting in the South, but it Gould easily lead to an immense inten- sification of the ground war, and a pre- cipitous rise in American troop casual- ties to the tens of thousands. If this happens, the stage will be set for our Korean war experience to be re- peated. Vietnam will soon be dubbed "Mr. Johnson's war," and, as the taste of it turns sour in the mouths of the people, there may come again a Republi- can candidate for President who will promise, as Eisenhower did in Korea, to bring an end to the attrition by accept- ing the stalemate and arranging a truce. By then, as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch recently observed: The United States could destroy the North Vietnamese economy from the air, but to what end? It would only make it easier for China to pick the Vietnamese plum. So, when Representatives FORD and LAIRD, the Republican leaders in the House of Representatives, call for ex- panded bombing of North Vietnam, even while they position themselves to wash their hands of a spreading land war in southeast Asia, I hope that President Johnson continues to ignore them. He will be better advised to listen to the wise words of GEORGE AIKEN, the Repub- lican dean of the Senate, who recently warned : I, too, have been somewhat disturbed over reported statements of certain Republican leaders in recent days and weeks which might be interpreted as urging the Presi- dent to broaden and intensify the war in Asia. * * * I hope that my own party, the Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7 15860 Approved Feb%e gSI8NAf/RECORD DPg7 E B0 E6R0003001800Quly 12, 1965 Republican Party, will not acquire the title of "war party" * " *. I hope the President will have the courage not to be needled into precipitating a great war. I agree with GEORGE AlxEN, a man who steadfastly refuses to seek any partisan advantage from the war in Vietnam. Those who urge an expansion of aerial attacks on the north are actually inviting an expansion of the ground fighting in the south. The only country which will benefit from a widening war in south- east Asia is Communist China, not the United States, or South Vietnam. The struggle against the Vietcong in- surrection within South Vietnam itself may be long and frustrating, but it is preferable to a major American war on the Asian mainland. The clamor of the air hawks should be ignored. Mr. CLARK. Mr. President, will the Senator from Idaho yield? Mr. CHURCH. I am happy to yield to the Senator from Pennsylvania. Mr. CLARK. I am delighted that the Senator from Idaho made the statement. he has just made. I find myself in com- plete accord with his point of view. I should like to ask him one question for clarification. Do I correctly understand that the North Vietnamese have a well trained regular army of about 300,000, which has been committed only in very small part In the fighting in South Viet- nam so far? Mr. CHURCH. The Senator is cor- rect. There is indication that some units may have been covertly infiltrated into South Vietnam, but the great bulk of the North Vietnamese Army has not been committed to the war in South Vietnam. Mr. CLARK. It must be clear that If that trained North Vietnamese Army were committed to the war, they would overrun the country, unless substantial additional American divisions were promptly dispatched. Is that correct? Mr. CHURCH. Yes; in that event, it might well require the remainder of the standing American Army to prevent South Vietnam from being overrun. Mr. CLARK. While we have no knowledge, of course, whether that North Vietnam army will be committed, It must be clear that the very intensive bombing of North Vietnam, including the destruction of North Vietnamese indus- try, could likely result in South Vietnam being destroyed from the North. Mr. CHURCH. I agree completely. If our bombing is extended into the great population centers of North Vietnam, Hanoi will be strongly tempted to re- taliate. Since Ho Chi Minh cannot re- taliate by air, his only recourse will be to order his army to invade the South. When that happens, the United States will, be involved in a full-scale ground war in Vietnam. The President should be commended for the restraint he has shown in resist- ing the pressures from the air hawks. I applaud him for his efforts to avoid a widening war. Mr. M1T,T?R1. Mr. President, when I came to the Chamber this morning, I had not expected to speak on the sub- ject which has just been under discus- sion. In the first place, no one that I know of expects a quick, cheap victory in South Vietnam. Second, no one that I know of is advocating indiscriminate bombing of civilians. In the third place, bombing alone will not eliminate the threat of war. I believe everyone agrees to that. What our action is designed to do, what President Johnson's actions are designed to do, what Representative FORD'S and Representative LAIRD'S actions are de- signed to do, is to stop the supplying of North Vietnamese troops in South Viet- nam. Perhaps to the Senator from Idaho [Mr. CHURCH] that does not make sense. He is entitled to his opinion. However, I believe it makes a great deal of sense and fits in with the President's policy. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC CONFERENCE Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, on Jan- uary 28, I cosponsored a resolution (S. Con. Res. 14) with Senators JAVIrs of New York and JORDAN of Idaho request- ing that the President call for an In- ternational Economic Conference. It was felt then, as now, that such a world conference should: First. Review the long-term adequacy of international credit. Second. Recommend needed changes in existing financial institutions. Third. Consider increased sharing of economic aid for development and mili- tary assistance; and Fourth. Consider other pressing inter- national economic problems placed be- fore it by a preparatory committee for such conference. We were concerned over developments which could affect the stability of the dollar, as well as the international bal- ance-of -payments problem. We knew that the United States had to take the initiative to strengthen in- ternational monetary and credit instru- ments. I, for one, have become greatly dis- turbed in the ensuing months over the silence of the State Department and the Treasury Department to this call of ours for an International conference. In fact, there have been reports that both the State Department and Treas- ury Department opposed such an eco- nomic conference, on the grounds that it would not be fruitful. According to these reports, it was felt by administration spokesmen that the work should be continued through exist- ing bodies, such as the International Monetary Fund. Also held was the feel- ing that such a conference now would en- tail a serious risk of failure, which would have a widespread adverse effect. It was also believed in some high ad- ministration quarters that there was no general consensus of the need for such a conference. Thus it was with a great deal of pleas- ure to see that over the wtekend the administration has had a change of heart. According to press reports of Sunday, July 11, the Secretary of the Treasury, Henry H. Fowler, at President John- son's direction, has proposed just such aconference as we called for last Janu- ary 28. But one question lingers in my mind: If the administration had been opposed to the idea following our suggestion of January 28, what has occurred to change this opposition into an insist- ence now that it should be held? Could it be that the administration is finally awakening to the realization that such action is and has been overdue? Could the international monetary sit- uation be worse than it would lead us to believe, despite the rosy statements which seem always to precede a sudden change of plans? But whatever the reasons-and they will come out in the wash eventually-I must commend the administration for finally deciding that action is necessary to call such an international economic conference. I ask unanimous consent that an arti- cle, entitled "United States Asks World Monetary Parley," from the Sunday Star of July 11, be played in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: UNrrED STATES ASKS WORLD MONETARY PARLEY (By Lee M. Cohn) The United States proposed last night the convening of an international monetary con- ference to reform the world's financial sys- tem. Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler issued the call, at President Johnson's direction, in a speech prepared for the Virginia State Bar Association in Hot Springs. The proposed conference would rank in importance with the historic Bretton Woods meeting of 1944, which led to establishment of the International Monetary Fund and laid out the post-World War II monetary system. As sketched by Fowler, the purpose of the conference would be creation of a system to expand international liquidity-the sup- ply of monetary reserves and credit available to finance the growth of world commerce. Shortages of liquidity may develop as the United States eliminates its balance-of-pay- ments deficits. These deficits through most of the postwar period have supplied the rest of the world with a huge flow of dollars to feed the growth of reserves. Fowler did not say when the conference might be held, but other officials indicated 1966 as the target. "'It must be preceded by careful prepara- tion and international consultation," Fowler said, adding: "To meet and not succeed would be worse than not meeting at all. Before any con- ference takes place, there should be a reas- onable certainty of measurable progress through prior agreement on basic points." But he emphasized that the United States does not want to dally, because "not to act when the time is ripe can be as unwise as to act too soon or to hastily." He suggested establishment of a prepara- tory committee by the International Mone- tary Fund at its meeting here in September. Fowler said he will discuss monetary re- form ideas with other finance ministers in bilateral meetings here and abroad, both be- fore and after the International Monetary Fund session. He presumably discussed the call for a conference with Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, James Callaghan, at their meet- ing here late last month, and obtained his endorsement. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180003-7