STENOGRAPHIC TRANSCRIPT OF HEARINGS BEFORE THE SPECIAL SUBCOMMITTEE OF THE COMMITTEE ON EXPENDITURES IN THE EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS

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ppi9ved For Releas HEARINGS BEFORE THE Special Subcommittee :ef the COMMITTEE ON' "EXPENDITPRES IN THE EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS Volume~ F.Washii gtb ,I!, D. p1FtJN.QTIONS OF CENTRAL INTELLI FENCE A Approved for Release 200 p :et cones: 1'+ ruor-al 1120 `N or al 1121`;`. Natior a1 0927 , Naxior.a1 X1145 " Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 FUNCTIONS OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Subcommittee of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments House of Representatives Statement of Rear Admiral R. K. Hillenkoetter, Director of Central Intelligence, Central Intelligence Agency Approved For Release 2004/01/30: CIA-RDP86B00269R000900090i'; P a g e Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 FUNCTIONS OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1948 House of Representatives, Special Subcommittee of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Washington, D. C. The subcommittee met at 4 p.m., pursuant to notice, in room 1401 of the House Office Building, Hon. Clarence J. Brown, chairman of the subcommittee, presiding. Those present were: Representatives Brown (presiding), Hoffman (chairman of the Committee) and McCormack. Mr. Brown. The committee will be in order. This is a meeting of a special subcommittee of the House Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, of which I am Chairman and Congressman Hoffman and Congressman McCormack are the other members. This subcommittee is authorized to launch an investigation of the Central Intelli- gence Agency and learn whether the Secretary of State and other high officials were promptly warned that a revolution was impending in Colombia, and that their attendance at the Bogota conference might endanger their lives and bring embarrassment to the United States. Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 I think that I should point out at this time that the Central Intelligence Agency was created through the enactment of the Unification Bill, Public Law No. 253, at the first session of the 80th Congress, or about ten months ago, and that the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments handled that legislation. The Central Intelligence Agency was created for the exact purpose of keeping top American officials advised as to activities in foreign countries which might in any way affect or endanger the welfare of this nation. .The head of this Central Intelligence Agency is Admiral R. K. Hillenkoetter, and he will be the first witness. STATEMENT OF REAR ADMIRAL R. K. HILLENKOETTER, DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE, CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Admiral Hillenkoetter. Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I am appearing before you to explain our performance of duty regarding the outbreak in Bogota, Colombia, and, of course, to attempt to answer any other questions you may have about the CIA. Front time to time in the past two years, this Agency, and its predecessor group, have been the object of attack in the press. Some of these attacks have been in the nature of inspired fishing expeditions in the hope of drawing some public answer from us which might indicate the scope of our Approved For Release 2004/01/30: CIA-RDP86B00269R0(9 0, p0001-3 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 operations. To all press dispatches and magazine articles I have made it my invariable rule to answer "no comment." I have felt that the public prints are no place to discuss the operations of an intelligence organization if it is to achieve effectiveness and maturity. Public controversy inevitably tends to blow such cover of our personnel as has been pain- stakingly developed. I was, therefore, somewhat disturbed by certain unfounded charges made against us in the Wisconsin primary, and the subsequent charges made in the Nebraska Primary that we had failed in our mission in Latin America by not informing the State Department of impending outbreaks in Colombia. These charges, both verbal and in the press, have unanimously taken the position of stating that the Central Intelligence Agency did not inform the State Department of the possible outbreaks in Columbia -- that we allowed the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Commerce and other high. Government officials to endanger themselves and the lives of other members of our delegation because we had not informed them of possible troubles. No one, however, until your Committee was convened, has seemed to want to ask what to us appears to be the $64 question, namely, did the Central Intelligence Agency know of the situa- tion in Colombia and did they inform responsible officials of the State Department? Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 25X6 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Next 9 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 25X1 1-4 I concur on that general observation, that we expected cooperation but the Central Intelligence Agency has an unusual mission to perform and we recognized that, and we wanted to give the Central Intelligence Agency independence of action and put it in a status where it could employ dynamic action for the national security. Mr. Hoffman. I want to go one step further after agree- ing with all of that, and I want to call attention to Public Law 253 of the 80th Congress, the first session, page 4. Section 102, subdivision (d), and the subsections under (d), which impose in no uncertain terms a duty upon this Agency to turn this information which it collects over to the Security Council, which is created by Section 101. The mem- bers of that Security Council are the President of the United States and these various secretaries. This statute was passed subsequent to any other statute Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Mr. McCormack. Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 15 to which the Admiral referred in his testimony and his state- ment to us, and would by implication under a familiar rule of law repeal that previous statute, so that any directive Issued by any other agency of the government contrary to this is void and without effect. Mr. McCormack. I think we all agree in substance, any_ 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Approved For R 0 tm q: -RDP86BOO269R000900080001-3 p.proved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B0?2669R000900080001-3 1963 Approved For Rel&w4Wd/I Our proposals were then put before the United Nations. Unhappily, they were not seized upon with faith. Had they been, they would have provided safe, international control of the entire development of atomic energy all the way back to the mines where the ores of the fissionable elements were produced. The sword which now hangs over the heads of all men would have be- come a universal plowshare for peace. But Soviet negotiators employed every parlia- mentary tactic to block the adoption of the Baruch program and for reasons we could not then fathom. Later these reasons emerged. Diplomacy failed in 1946 in spite of the fact that we had offered to give up our atomic advantage, indeed, it was a monop- oly, if nations would only agree to a safe, inspected plan of international control of this great new force. As a matter of fact, the nations did agree except Russia and its satellites. Diplomacy, compelled to accept the defeat of the Baruch plan, has since ac- cepted many other rebuffs, without wavering in the hope that eventually reason would prevail. ... ' In the 15 years since the Baruch proposal, there have been a procession of diplomatic negotiations; negotiations for total atomic control, for atomic weapon disarmament, for general,_ disarmament, for the cessation of nuclear weapons. testing, and for the found- ing of an"international agency to deal with the peaceful atom.' The statesmen have been kept busy, `Their ,meetings on this subject have taken place, usually, in Geneva where they. have :become.:-almost institutionalized. Our_consulate:general' at Geneva is staffed about as completely as are some of our em- bassies. ?- There is entertaining back and forth between the delegations. There is pro- tocol, rotating, chairmanship, agendums, and proposals which; after a few months, no one apparently ever looks, at again. For in- stance, the recent Russian offer of three on- site inspectionshas.been described as "new" and a "breakthrough." It had been pro- posed and rejected as inadequate back in 1960.E Meanwhile, certain events have occurred that are irreversible. First. Our monopoly has'been lost: Gone forever is the opportu- nity to state; as "President Truman did with- in a week of Hiroshima, "The atom bomb is too dangerous to be loose in a lawless world. We=must" constitute ourselves trus- tees of this neW: force-to prevent its misuse and to turn it into the channels of service to mankind. It Is an awful responsibility which ' has -come to us." It was indeed,. We can no longer demand, as then we could, that other nations join us in shackling this terrible threat by, internationalizing its con- trol. We are no longer able to insist upon that aim for,., the salvation of humanity. Second: ;Our wartime ally in the East began a series of attempts to deceive us as to his intentions. Vyshinsky, the principal Soviet representative at the United Nations, said that the Soviet nuclear program, in contrast to our own, was solely concerned to remove mountains and after the -channels of rivers. The fact was that Russia had been engaged in developing atomic weapons clandestinely ..for ,'months before her first test. Fortu- .lately, we had. uncovered this deception by anec~~rof the Soviet Government were worth. Bfj though the Russians have not always succe ed In deceiving us, our capacity-for self-d tlon has been monumental. We were led into a moratorium on test- 'to. say,` on discontinuing. im- 'proveme pf .,Our nuclear, weapons. :We ceased o bests-for 3 years .in good: faith, A131k- %0N01~66U900080001-3 1883 ucd to '`p-_rod~ice test explosions under- lion except in a very few, known deposits. ground. When they had reached the point The greatest of these was in the Belgian where tests in !the atmosphere were essen- Congo and, but for it and the friendly reas- tial to their.-program, they violated the onableness of the Belgians, we could not moratorium--without even so much as a have achieved atomic superiority as early diplomatic blush-and staged the longest as we did. Furthermore, of the known rich test series including the largest explosions deposits, all but one were in the possession ever detonated. It took us more than 6 of the free world. The Eisenhower atoms- months to recover from that shock to our for-peace plan accordingly was a proposal credulity, even to resume our own tests. that we would match the rest of the world We continued negotiating in Geneva on in contributing uranium to a peaceful nuclear test suspension even after that and stockpile, that stockpile to be administered are about to begin a new round of talks. by the United Nations for the purpose of Presumably, we are again prepared carefully bringing the blessings of cheap electrical to consider the next round of Soviet assur- energy to the newly developing countries ances that this time they mean it, all based As in every other move we made, the Rus- upon mutual good faith. I sincerely hope sians and their satellites dragged their feet we will not be trapped into another mutual sb successfully that 3% years elapsed be- accord which will again prove to be unilat- tween the President's inspiring speech to eral. But that is not the way to bet. the General Assembly in December . 1953 You will recall the statement by President and the date in September 1957 when the Kennedy on October 22, that Soviet Foreign International Atomic Energy Agency at last Minister Gromyko had called on him at the was organized. In the meanwhile, as a 're- White House and had made statements to suit of worldwide which were false. Yet we still negoti- nium has been found to o b prospecting efforts, ura- him ate for an agreement on nuclear "weapon earlier bbe far ar less rare than test cessation to be based upon veracity. I once deplored had been belit failure The whole idea of suspending nuclear of a anding so that t theese to reach a point weapon tests is prejudicial to us. I might of understanding uranium m would d these large amounts b digress for a, moment to try and explain the United be us plwhere aced they the hands l& be this. Tests are conducted to see whether sforever r from use b by y men to kill ill other new inventions will work. These new ideas secure e are not only new weapons but new weapons men. Today, one ne might view that failure systems, that is, the weapon together with as an intervention of Providence. For now, with the United Nations employing planes, its carrier. We have to know whether they cannon, work together. As we have voluntarily , tanks, and bombs in the hands of foresworn aggression, we will be the defend- military contingents commanded by officers - ever who, not long ago launched an unauthorized err if, may God forbid, a nuclear war con comes. The 'weapons of the defender;must in Katanga, it well i t means their weapons of the aggressor. - They must be hands. Like many Americans, I am a supporter more numerous because many may not sur- of the basic concept of the United Nations,` vive a surprise attack. They must be more but I am grieved by the events - in the sophisticated and specialized for they can Congo-Katanga tragedy where our policy so- be launched only after the attacker's -weap- eloquently enunciated as being-"self-deter- ons are on the way and they, accordingly, urination, not coercion," is at such variance must be far more accurate for, initially,?we with our actions. It may'nat be.inexplica- must hope that our weapons will intercept ble but certainly it has not been explained and blunt the attack. The aggressor will ' ?the American people. ` be aiming at cities. By comparison, our I have come to the disillusioned conclu- targets will be pinpoints. They must be as lion that diplomacy, though well inten clean of fallout as possible for they :will be tioned, seems - incapable of exorcising the - detonated high above our own: territory. demonic threat of nuclear war. within,$ Thus, If we do not continually improve our hopeful time span. If diplomacy has failed, , weapons systems, our position as'defenders or should one say, has not succeeded, ought would place us at a marked, perhaps- d 'fatal. we not turn to science? It was science,t disadvantage even if a fool-proof test'mora- which 'led mankind into the nuclear~`age1` torium - could be arranged, for ';t,l*rer'?are science which fissioned the atom, which stockpiles of aggressor-type weapons`in"ex warned that our Nazi enemies mightmake istence. nuclear weapons before we did, And which There is, of course, a public demand for then initiated our weapon program. It was a suspension of nuclear weapon testing. science which successfully solved the great The demand was generated by .a campaign problem of separating uranium 235 from over several years and supported by -prop- uranium 238; it was science that made the aganda employing statements, some of which _ dread weapons; and it was science that con- were half-true or not true at all. These firmed the selection of the doomed cities lit dealt with the effects of fallout. The ef- Japan. With so much of responsibility and- . fects were pictured as: '(1) lethal and as (2) so much of competence, it seemed reasonable genetically horrible. This would be all too to look to science for the answer. true of the effect of fallout from a nuclear In furtherance of the atoms-for-peace war, but false as applied to the experienced plan and speaking at a meeting of your sis- fallout from nuclear tests at the rate they ter organization, the World Affairs Council have been conducted. Our weapon tests in Los Angeles in 1954, I proposed conven- are designed to maintain us in a posture ing a world congress of scientists to pro- which will discourage a nuclear war. If we mote peace through atomic energy The,fol- stop improving our military devices, our lowing year we had that congress in Switzer- chances of discouraging a nuclear war begin land. It was the largest scientific gathering to slide from that moment. ever to take. place. It was attended by many eace ms-for t ' p o s a President Eisenhower hundreds of scientists from all over the plan took this fact into account as well as world, and they came together for the first the absence of good faith. It did not postu- time since before World War II. It was an late that virtue. It was based upon condi- inspiring and useful meeting, so successful tions which would require no demonstra- that it was repeateA-i? mss While 5a s conditions was the fact to which :1 earlier Were published and millions of wor r, rare +_ ?_- c -referred, that in 1953_ uranium was::believed ...,.:k n - o n 14 e tr th g Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 1884 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE February 7 prgved For ~2eleasa 29R,4/P,1( g: ,~R I ggq 6gWo gOQ$iq 4A in that condition, a be fought w t ru y apocalyptic weapo e' 1 e Both conferences were staged with great some individual provided, in himself, an chain reaction can originate, transforming formality in the ornate palace of the old ambivalence of interest, accidental to the all of them. League of Nations. There were daily ses- overall design. And though the aim of the So it may be that in such a conference of sions for 2 weeks, and many scholarly papers conferences was the exchange of data and humanists, an idea born of an inspiration, were presented. Peace, however, was not on of ideas for future achievement which would which we cannot now even imagine, may the agenda. advance the whole world toward the goal of produce a, new phenomenon. And if such Only last June, some 700 people, most of the fullest use of the benign possibilities of a conference accomplished nothing, it would them professional scientists, came together the atom, there was lurkingy behind the at least be an attempt by rational human bein m e... e - __ to leave no available h - - - h gs u a r urc e de nes th art now at t ress p us looked with hope to what might evolve curbed, could cancel every peaceful prospect The event in any case, having done our -___ tm st i In the hand f n a - u o s o was described as a great disappointment. It there something that might yet be done to er wrote from ? n dearth discover whether somewhere in human in- RECENT CRITICISMS OF U.S. CUBAN Y _ _e e v w v Leaving aside for the moment the failure majority of all men and women in every a sure way The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. RYAN passionately land must desire , of direct steps to secure peace, there are some , ivho find hope in what is described as a to peace? of Michigan) . Under previous order.,o "thaw" in the attitude of the Soviets, ascrib- Dr. Paul Tillich, the venerable theologian, the House, the gentleman from 'New Jer k s.) 4 _, great show, of removing their rockets and having found the secret to unlock the fiery remar new forces bound by Divine Providence within IVIr. GALLAGHER. Mr. Speaker, ere testin th f b b C g ey w rom u bom ers a, multi-million-ton nuclear bombs in Siberia. the atom-so that life could develop-man there has been a great deal said- abou Obviously, the latter, although it passed al- and his will, initially, being the will to natind or not eminating.frOi`Cuba: - - --?-- ----- ---?- ----- T lator there are reliably reported to be 15,000 natural laws, something more than diplo- some means of equat- making a political issue out of Cuba; ah macy or than science hb ors, Soviet troops still there as good neig , although this report may be false. At any ing man's progress in the use of nature with those less interested in our Nation's secil- f rom larc.aupo may give Mao no bombs. But experience I? think there is. Beforeit is, too late, I iacrured mucutrou or should have that a dicta- would like to see one more conference among istration. It is about time that we looked ht t h as aug us ,, torship "can sharply. focus its scientific and "the nations, different from the Conferences to the future rather 'than , pointing ou the expenserof others' and, in this manner, which I spoke a moment ago, different from - Mr. Speaker, a recent talk-on the'oo - -- d t t f C -'------ en s statemen o Sep ember iJ~ 1.71 Communist deology occurs, I should not be is a conference in which men might -con- i their Rider what we will lose if an atomic war when he- recognized that rash talk w ---, he h,- te ti C ese s ng to at hand than has been predicted-perhaps of art and culture and civilization,, a con- who did not have the .responsibility and the great landmass controlled by China. It the years into which we are heading. -their heads." I cannot help but feel tha' hi ff if T - nk would be the e ect he `surprising if this were not so. What do You t would There is enough in open literature about our Government were to announce that we this statement is aS applicable today ,~q:. ~ ons to inform the -Chinese of proposed to convoke a great world congress it was then. ;~~W -- - atomic wea p , the early designs of bombs. Such primitive in the area of the humanities; that to it No one in this Congress can. look bac and who are highly competent. stature of Alberti Schweiter, U1 Paul iuucu, - of Father John LaFar of Louis Finkelstein, suit of this administration's ability In consequence, the threat of atomic war of Reinhold Niebuhgr , e and Theodore Hes- keep its head and its nerve, the ?IIni f b i ibl h f ti m ron ers o ay soon s e across t e a e v " number of nations whose ambition to achieve burgh, that they would come together to con- States has gained immeasureably . in prestige and status by becoming members of sider whether some plan might not be for- prestige and stature throughout the the "nuclear club" is persuading them to mulated for the peoples of the earth by world, to the detriment of the Commu- spend a large part of their resources on such which man's international morality could nist bloc. The Monroe Doctrine still re- weapons. be kept abreast of his discoveries in the mains the cornerstone of U.S.-.foreign As the danger grows, one is inclined to physical universe? - policy in the Western Hemisphere- =It to avert the coming of a gathering, by their backgrounds, their Showing signs of "hot heads "a 'eourse~we may taker u mechanical or human, forces will be un- deal with a situation which demands prag- The numbers game, being.pla leashed impossible to recall, nullify, or abort? matism, that, in any case, they will have few irresponsible individuals?Ak there were represent- -individuals, :which I have referred "' t:. This type of irres b i the fl-IA. of In rebuttal to this i wo ld s. bthit .''.,n ponstl novas from ever cot y y Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 1886 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - Approved For Release 2004/01/30: CIA-RDP86B00269R 0080001-3 " inferences from them. A sense of outrage" is proper for a "moral point of departure," but statistics are the appropriate factual point of departure, as in the writings of Marx and Engels on the agony of the 19th- century English working class-writings that are by no means lacking in a sense of moral outrage, either. These objections, however, do not affect Mr. Harrington's two main contentions: that mass poverty still exists In the United States, and that It is disappearing more slowly than is commonly thought. Two recent dry, graceless, and technical reports bear him out. One is that Commerce Department study, already mentioned. More important is "Pov- erty and Deprivation in the United States," a bulky pamphlet issued by the Conference on Economic Progress, in Washington, whose national committee includes Thurman Arnold, Leon H. Keyserling (said to be the principal author of the pamphlet), and Walter P. Reuther. In the last year we seem to have sud- denly awakened, rubbing our eyes like Rip van Winkle, to the fact that mass poverty persists, and that it is one of our two gravest social problems. The other is related: While only 11 percent of our population is nonwhite, 26 percent of our poor are. Two other current books confirm Mr. Harring- ton's thesis: "Wealth and Power in America" (Praeger), by Dr. Gabriel Kolko, a social historian who has recently been at Harvard and the University of Melbourne, Australia, and "Income and. Welfare in the United States" (McGraw-Hill), compiled by an im- posing battery of four soclo-economists headed by Dr. James N. Morgan, who rejoices In the title of program director of the Survey Research Center of the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan. Doctor Kolko's book resembles Mr. -Har- rington's in several ways: It is short, it- is based on earlier studies, and it is liberally inclined. It is less readable, because it is written in an academic jargon that is merely a vehicle for the clinching statistic. Al- though it is impossible to write seriously about poverty without a copious use of statistics-as this review Will demon= strate=lt is possible to bring thought and feeling to, bear, on such .raw material. Mr. Harrington does this more successfully than Doctor Kolko, whose prose is afflicted- not only with, academic blight but also with creeping ideology. Doctor Kolko leans so far to -the. socialist side that he.sometimes falls on his nose,. as when he clinches the in- equality of wealth in the United States with a statistic: "In 1959, 23 percent of those earning less than $1,000 [a year] owned a car, compared to 95 percent of those earning more than $10,000." - The real point is just the opposite, as any citizen of - Iran, Ghana, Yemen, or the U.S.S.R. would appreciate-not that the rich have cars but that almost a quarter of the extremely poor do. Similarly, although Dr. Kolko has two- chapters on poverty that con- firm Mr. Harrington's argument, his main point is a different and more vulnerable one: "The basic distribution of income and wealth inthe United States is essentially the same now as it was in 1039, or even 1910." This Is -a. half fact. The rich are almost as rich as ever and the poor are even poorer, in the percentage of ,the national income they re- ceive:-' Yet, as-.will become apparent later, there have been major changes in the dis= tribution of wealth, and there has been a general. improvement in living standards, so that the poor are much fewer today than they were in 1939. "Most low-income groups live ..substantially better today," Dr. Kolko Admits. "But -even- though their real wages "V6, piour,ted, their percentage of the na- tlonal I icpme has not changed." That in the last haIl century the 'rich have :kept'their .riehes`and:the poor their poverty'is indeed assuming enough general increase in wealth, that the relatively poor might by now have achieved a decent standard of living, no matter how inferior to that of the rich. As the books under consideration show, how- ever, this theoretical possibility has not been realized. Inequality of wealth is not necessarily a major social problem per se. Poverty is. The late French philosopher Charles Peguy re- marks, in his classic essay on poverty, "The duty of tearing the destitute from their destitution and the duty of distributing goods equitably are not of the same order. The first is an urgent duty, the second is a duty of convenience. When all men are pro- vided with the necessities what do we care about the distribution of luxury?" What indeed? Envv and emulation are the mo- tives--and not very good ones-for the equal- ization of wealth. The problem of poverty goes much deeper. "Income and Welfare in the United States" differs from the other works reviewed here in length (531 big pages) and in being the result of original research; 2,800 families were interviewed "in depth." I must confess that, aside from a few interesting bits of data, I got almost. nothing out of it. I as- sume the authors think poverty Is still an important social problem, else why would they have gone to all this labor, but I'm not at all sure what their general conclusions are; maybe there aren't supposed to be any, in the best tradition of American scholar- ship. Their book is one of those behemoths of collective research financed by a founda- tion (in this case, largely by--Ford) that daunt the stoutest hearted lay reader (in this case, me). Based on "a multistage area probability sample that gives equal chance of selection to all noninstitutional dwelling units in the coterminous United States [and that] was. clustered geographically at each stage and stratified with interlaced con- trols," it is a specimen of what Charles Lamb called biblia abiblia- things that have the outward appearance of books but are not books, since they cannot be read. Method- ologically, it employs something called- the "multivariate analysis," which is explained in appendix E. Typographically, appendix E looks like language, but it turns out to be strewn with boobytraps, all 'doubtless well known in the trade, like "dummy variables," "F ratios," "regression coefficients," "beta coefficients" (and "partial beta coefficients"), and two kinds of "standard deviations"- "of explanatory variable A" and "of the de- pendent variable." My experience with such works may be summarized as follows: (alpha) the coeffi- cient of comprehensibility decreases in direct ratio to the increase in length, or the longer the incomprehensibler, a notion that Is illus- trated here by the fact that Dr. Kolko's short work is more understandable than Dr. Mor- gain and others long one; (beta) the standard deviation from truism is inversely related to the magnitude of the 'generalization, or the bigger the statement the more obvious. (Beta) is Illustrated by the authors' five general proposals for action ("Implications for Public Policy"). The second of these is: "Fuller employment and the elimination of discrimination based on prejudice would con- tribute greatly to the independence of non-- white persons, women, teenagers, and 'some of the aged." That is, if Negroes and- the rest had jobs and were. not discriminated against, they would be better off-a point that doesn't need to be argued or, for that. matter, stated. The authors have achieved such a. mastery'of- truism ,that they some times achieve. the same Monumental effect even in nonmagnitudinous statements , a8: "table 28-i shpws that 'the proportion of parents who indicated ',that their children will attend prlvate'colleges-is approximately twice as large for 'those- with Incomes over February $3,000." Could be. What is "poverty"? It Is a historic,: relative concept, first of all. "There are n( definitions I in America) of what man e achieve, of what a human standard of -1: should be," Mr. Harrington writes. "Thc who suffer levels of life well below those tb are possible, even though they live bett than medieval knights or Asian peasants, a poor. - Poverty should be defined in ten of those who are denied the minimal levi of health, housing, food, and education tb our present stage of scientific knowledge sp cifies as necessary for life as it is now liv in the United ' States." His dividing It follows that proposed in recent studies" the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: $4,0 a year for a family of four and $2,000 for 1 individual living alone. ' (All kinds of i come are. Included, such as food grown ai consumed on farms.) This is the cutoff It generally drawn today. Mr. Harrington estimates that betwe 40 and 50 million Americans, or about fourth of the population, are now living poverty. Not Just below the level of cor fortable living, but real poverty, in the ol fashioned sense of the word, that they a hard put to it to get the mere necessitli beginning with enough to eat. This isdif cult to believe in the United States of 191 but one has to make the effort, and. it is nn being made. The extent of our poverty, h suddenly become visible. - The same thi7 has happened in England, where workin class gains as a result of the Labor Parti post-1945 welfare state blinded almost ever body to the continued existence of mass po erty. It was not until Prof. Richard M.,71 muss, of the, London School of Economic published a series of articles in the Statesman last fall, based-on his new boo "Income Distribution and Social -Chan (Allen & Unwin), that even the liberal ;pit lie in England became aware that the`prp. lem still persists on a scale that is statisi tally significant," as the economists 'put? . Statistics on poverty are even trickier th# most. For example, age and geography map a difference. There is a distinction, whit cannot be rendered arithmetically, betwei poverty and low income. A childless 'you' couple with $3,000 a year is not poor in ti way an elderly couple might be with ti same income. The young couple's statistid poverty may_be.a temporary inconvenfenc if the,husband is a graduate. student ort skilled worker, there are prospects -of oat affluence or at least comfort. But the o couple can look forward only to diminishir earnings and increasing medical - expense So also geographically: A family of four ifr small town with $4,000 a year may be.;bettf off than a like family In a city-lower ren no bus fares to got to work, fewer occasiox (or temptations) to spend-money. Even more so with a rural family. A though allowance is made for thb value c the vegetables they may raise to feed then selves, it is impossible to calculate how muc money they don't spend on clothes, say, c furniture, because they don't have, to, keg up with the Jone:es. Lurking in the crevici of a city, 11Ke piranha fish In a Bra: stream, are numerous tempting_oppor which can strip a budget to its '.bones, n' surprisingly short time. The'xubtlety Maxi complexity of poverty statistics maybe:dis covered by a look at Dr. Kolko's,statemen that in 1959 "23 percent of those earning lea than $1,000 owned a car." Dogs this,Includ college students, or are they included In thel families' statistics?. If the f>rst:is'true;thei Dr,,Kolko's figu;e.loses Wlln1, Air;tts.,mean ing If,.the,second.Is,.then ilt almost t< meaningful, since lt,:$ays thatH a fourth'Q those earning less than $2Qr&" ~eic pre:al> Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 1963 Approved For RBI 6~k**tQI1 i-LC i4FtMb F2b00900080001-3 1885 dling by our President of the October confrontation. It is inexcusable that some people would Jeopardize our Na- tion's interest in a desire to find a non- existent issue with which to belittle our great President. Some of our Republican friends are very unimpressed by Mr. McNamara, by Mr. McCone and President Kennedy, but they are very impressed by every state- ment ever made by Moise Tshombe. Is it too much to ask that they place at lease the same faith and confidence in their own government as they do in Mouse Tshombe in Katanga? I believe any Member of the U.S. Con- gress possessing such intelligence has not only a duty but a very grave obliga- tion to present such evidence instead of keeping it under a paper cloak and a pointless dagger. I am sure the chair- man of the Foreign Affairs Committee will give all the time necessary to anyone possessing such vital information. In the meantime I prefer to look to more informed authorities. . This business of everyone running around with a do-it-yourself CIA kit might be all right, but such psuedo su- per=spies certainly should not take prec- edence over the hard intelligence of pro- fessional experts. If such evidence really exists it should-be produced and properly; evaluated by, the proper au- thorities. - - - - Yesterday two of the most able men in our Government, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and CIA Director, John- A. McCone-who, by the way, served very effectively under the Eisen- hower _ ministration-effectively laid to rest the wild speculations concerning the continued . presence of offensive weapons in Cuba. Ably: assisted by John Hughes, special assistant to the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Secretary Mc- Namara conclusively. showed that, in his own words: There are no offensive' weapons systems in Cuba and I am satisfied of this beyond any reasonable doubt. I respectfully remind those armchair strategists who have not presented their intelligence, to the proper agencies that Robert S. McNamara is the man chosen by President Kennedy and confirmed by the Congress to administer the defense policies of this Nation. CIA Director, McCone, in testimony before the Senate Preparedness Sub- committee, stated that all rumors and reports of the continued presence of offensive weapons in Cuba have been meticulously checked. He asserted that so far these findings have been negative. Mr. McCone concluded his statement with a, reminder with .,which all respon- sible, Members of Congress will agree. He saic# The U.B. Government must be provided the most accurate, responsible, and. balanced evaluation of the Soviet military presence I# Cuba. Bignifieant information concerning conditions .1n: Cuba received by' citizens or Government officials should be transmitted to the';iateIIigence community_promptly.for evalua$Ion. iii our' oontinutng close scrutiny of t$1sve.Bi_ation.- r is y,, a . ~} I am confident that President Kennedy will take every necessary step to protect this country and its neighbors from any offensive threat to our security from Cuba. The President will not be pro- voked into hasty or ill-considered action, nor do I believe it is the desire of re- sponsible Members of Congress to so pro- voke the administration. The continued leadership and wisdom of President Kennedy and his cabinet will see the achievement. of our long-range goal-a free Cuba, restored to and welcomed into the American family of nations. POVERTY IN THE UNITED STATES The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. RYAN of Michigan). Under previous order of the House, the gentleman from. New Jersey [Mr. THoMPSoN] is recog- nized for 60 minutes. Mr. THOMPSON of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, a new book, entitled "The Other America: Poverty in the United States," published by Macmillan, makes the point that mass poverty still exists, in the United States, and that it is disappearing more slowly than is commonly thought. In this connection two recent reports are of especial interest. The first is by the Department of Commerce which showed that, while the average family income increased from $2,340 in 1929' to $7,020 in 1961, almost all of the substan- tial recent advances were made by fam- ilies with incomes over $7,500 and that the rate at which real poverty is being eliminated in this country has slowed down greatly since 1953. The second report titled "Poverty and Deprivation in the United States," was issued by the Conference on Economic Progress. Because I consider that the problem of mass poverty is of significant national interest, and believe it should be widely discussed in order that steps can be taken to come to grips with it, I include as part of my remarks an article by Dwight MacDonald which appeared In the January 19, 1963; issue of the New Yorker magazine : OUR INVISMI POOR (By Dwight Macdonald) In his significantly titled "The Affluent Society" (1958) Prof. J. K_ Galbraith states that poverty in this country is no longer "a massive affliction [but] more nearly an afterthought." Dr. Galbraith Is a humane critic of the American capitalist system, and he is generously indignant about the con- tinued existence of even this nonmassive and afterthoughtist poverty. But the in- teresting thing about his pronouncement. aside from the fact that it is inaccurate, is that it was generally accepted as obvious. For a long time now, almost everybody has assumed that, because of the New Deal's social legislation and-more important-the prosperity we have enjoyed since 1940. mass poverty no longer exists In this country. the discipline of modern economic life, ex- cessive procreation, alcohol, insufficient edu- cation." He reasons that such poverty must be due to .individual defects, since "nearly. everyone else has mastered his environment; this proves that It is not intractable." Without pressing the simlarity of this con- cept to the "social Darwinism" whose fal- lacies Dr. Galbraith easily disposes of else- where in his book, one may observe that most of these characteristics are as much the result of poverty as Its cause. Dr. Galbraith's error Is understandable, and common. Last April the newspapers reported some exhilarating statistics In a Department of Commerce study: The average family in- come increased from $2,340 in 1929 to $7,020 in 1961. (These ilgures are calculated in current dollars, as are all the others I shall cite.) But the papers did not report the fine type, so to speak, which showed that almost all the recent gain was made by fam- ilies with Incomes of over $7,500, and that the rate at which poverty Is being eliminated has slowed down alarmingly since 1953. Only the specialists and the statisticians read the fine type, which is why Illusions continue to exist about American poverty. Now Michael Harrington, an alumnus of the Catholic Worker and the Fund for the Republic who Is at present a contributing editor of Dissent and the chief editor of the Socialist Party biweekly, New America, has written "The Other America: Poverty in the United States" (Macmillan). In the ad- mirably short space of under 200 pages, he outlines the problem, describes in imagina- tive detail what it means to be poor in this country today, summarizes the findings of recent studies by economists and sociologists, and analyzes the reasons for the persistence of mass poverty in the midst of general pros- perity. It is an excellent book-and a most important one. My only serious criticism is that Mr. Har- rington has popularized the treatment a bit too much. Not in the writing, which is on a decent level, but In a certain vagueness. There are no index, no bibliography, no ref- erence footnotes. In our overspecialized cul- ture, books 'like this tend to fall into two categories: Popular (no scholarly "appara- tus") and academic (too much). I favor something intermediate--why should the academics have all the footnotes? The lack of references means that. the book is of limited use to future researchers and writers. A pity, since the author has brought to- gether a great range of material. I must also object that Mr. Harrington's treatment of statistics is more than a little Impressionistic. His appendix, which he calls a coming to grips with the professional material, doesn't live up to its billing. "If my Interpretation is bleak and grim," he writes, "and even If it overstates the case slightly, that is intentional. My moral point of departure is a sense of outrage. In such a discussion it is inevitable that one gets mixed up with dry, graceless, technical mat- ters. That should not conceal the crucial fact that these numbers represent people and that any tendency toward understatement Is an intellectual way of acquiescing in suf- fering." But a fact is a fact, and Mr. Har- rington confuses the issue when he writes that "these numbers represent people." They do-and one virtue of his book is that"he never forgets It-but in dealing with sta+ tistics, this truism must be firmly repressed dwindled to two hard-core categories. One than from the head, as. he seems to do is the. "insular. poverty"., of those, who live when he charges -those statisticians who In the rural South or in depressed areas like "understate" the numbers,of'tlfe poor with Weat;.Virginia..The other category. is "case having found "an intellectual way ofacqui-: poverty,"..which he says,is -"commonly.a,nd ' escing in suffering." This istmoral bullying properly related, to [such] charactertstica of. and it ;reminds me,-;.touter propprtlons Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 7 February 1962 fEi +.OFANNDU F'ORR: Mr. Houston SUBJECT: Taxability of Award for Article in Studies in Intelligence 1. Section 74 of the Internal Revenue Code states that with certain exceptions prizes and awards are includable in gross income. The exception made is where the prime or award is presented primarily in recognition of religious, charitable, scientific, educational, artistic, literary, or civic achievements. The exception pertains only if: (1) the recipient was selected without any action on his part to enter the contest or proceedings; and (2) the recipient is not required to render substantial future services as a condition to receiving the prize or award. 2. An example of an excludable prize or award would be the Pulitzer prize since it recognizes past achievement and constitutes a gift rather than taxable income (Rev. Rul. 54-110, 1954-1 CB Z8). On the other hand, an essay prize won by a participant in a contest is includable in gross income (U.S. v. ArshaYrx Arairikian, (CA-4) 52-1 USTC ?9366, 197 F. Zd 442). The prize is taxable even though the contest is sponsored by a nontaxable organization (F. V. Waugh, 9 1"CM 309, Dec. 17, 595 (AM)). 3. An award for an article in Studies in Intelligence is presented for a past contribution to the publication and'does not require the recipient actively to pursue the award or to perform substantial future services. 'T'herefore, the award would be exempt from income tax and considered a gift. OGC/JBU:cdk (7 Feb 62) Orig ;-~r- 1 - &Mlyj. C. . Y 1- Signer 1 .. Chrono. 1 -, Circ. STAT Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 2110 Approved For Release 2004/01/3o CIA-RD 0N 900269 b' 900080001-3 his family and many friends present at the One Washington newspaper has just re- services. ferred to the crime situation as a "tawdry "Sincerely, story." These are nothing more than just "HucII. SCOTT." nice words but at least they portend a bit (Telegram received from Edward H. Cush- of progress on the part of a few to speak man, as follows:) out and face up. The Reverend Frederick "Regret inability to attend McGranery Brown Harris, Senate Chaplain and promi- memorial service. Please convey our sincere nent Protestant minister, has just said, condolences to Regina. "Terrorism grips all sections of the most "EDWARD H. CUSHMAN." prominent city in the world." He said, "Cringing fear has invaded the streets * * * The SPEAKER. Without objection, no woman dare walk alone after dark * * * it is so ordered. _ the time has come to bear down." A high There was no objection. State Department official said he had "lived INCREASE OF CRIME IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL (Mr. WINSTEAD asked and was given permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and include a news- letter by the Honorable THOMAS G. ABER- NETHY, of Mississippi.) Mr. WINSTEAD. Mr. Speaker, much .has been said in recent weeks about law- lessness and crime in our Nation's Capi- tal. In this connection, I am inserting into the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD a news- letter by my very able friend and distinguished colleague, Congressman THOMAS G. ABERNETHY, Democrat, of Mississippi. I am sure you will find it most interesting and enlightening. In addition, I am including a brief sta- tistical report which appeared in the February 18, 1963, issue of U.S. News & World Report, entitled "Crime and Im- morality-Some Hard Facts About Washington, D.C." IN THE NEws (By Congressman ABERNETHY) Washington, 'your Capital, capital of the free world, city beautiful, and said to be the citadel of democracy, is now more often referred to as a jungle. Gripped in a reign of lawlessness, Washingtonians dare not fre- quent most sections after dark. Even be- hind barred windows and bolted doors a restful night is difficult. Among its 22,675 crimes last year-increase of almost 7;000 in 5 years-were the stabbing of a Congressman's secretary as she knelt alone and prayed in a Capitol Hill church. In the same neighborhood another secre- tary was mugged, thrown to earth, beaten and robbed; a Congresswoman escaped a hoodlum's attack but was robbed; and a marauder broke into and entered a former Congressman's home, abused his wife, left her with a broken arm and robbed. Two years ago one of my own page boys was attacked and robbed within 4 blocks of the Capitol. Offenses are high, convictions few and executions for murder or rape are negli- gible-only two in 10 years. Police are hindered by local court decisions which make it quite easy for criminals to beat the rap. This situation has been compounded by a recent order of the city Commissioners, denying police the right to hold a suspect for investigation which makes it much easier for the guilty to escape. Local papers at long last are reporting a lack of discipline in the public schools, a situation existent for years but which school administrators, city fathers, and local press have either denied or refused to admit. The big race riot of last fall, which caused them to emerge from stoic silence, broke out fol- lowing the city championship game when an all Negro football team lost to an all white team. Future championship' contests were promptly canceled, leaving the Nation's Capital, the exemplary city, to be the only city in America which cannot with safety risk the staging of a championship high school football game. in foreign cities" but none "as lawless as Washington. He said he would respond to a knock at night only after "looking through a crack." He plead for another 1,000 police- men. Good for him. Washington.is not only a leader in crime. From its 400 liquor store outlets and several thousand taverns and cocktail bars the city leads the Nation in per capita consumption of alcohol. On the Holy Sabbath many sec- tions bear evidence of a rowdy Saturday night-streets littered with trash, bottles and broken glass; jails filled with punks and drunks; and hospital waiting rooms filled with victims of the switchblade. Yes, all of this as the elite and would-be elite pa- rade through the National Gallery of Art for a cultural view of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. In the midst of this state of high crime, race riots and littered mess, whites are flee- ing to the environs of nearby Maryland and Virginia, fast restoring this city to a segre- gated status. The Department. of Justice has not yet resorted to a means of forcing these white folks to Stay put and live in this integrated mess. No civil rights suits have been filed, no citations for contempt, there is no military occupation, no heli- copters checking from above, no aerial map- ping, and not much law enforcement. They are as quiet as can be down in the Depart- ment of Justice. In fact, most of the higher- ups down there have fled to Virginia, too. There is, however, a move on foot to en- large the Police Department, to shore up its Canine Squad, to tighten antiloitering laws, curb gun totin', impose a curfew on juveniles, loosen court decisions which "hog- tie" the Police Department and some other curative steps. At long last there is some genuine recognition of-the lawless cesspool which exists in this Capital City. Of course, there are still many who refuse to face up, who contend the situation is only a social problem. And, they lay it all on the Con- gress for not having given the city more money. Oh yes, there are a few streets Which have not yet been enveloped into the jungle, but given time at the present pace it won't be long. One need not wear an armor of steel on visiting Washington; but if he ventures an after dark stroll this mode of dress is rec- ommended. [From U.S. News & World Report, Feb. 18, 1963] CRIME AND IMMORALITY-SOME HARD FACTS ABOUT WASHINGTON, D.C. CRIME: ON THE RISE Among the 16 U.S. cities with 500,000 to 1 million population, Washington last year ranked: First in aggravated assaults; second in robberies; fourth in murders; and sixth in housebreaking. In terms of the increase in crime-1961 over the 1858-60 average, the record shows this: United States as a whore up 14 percent, Washington, D.C., up 41 percent. Of all persons arrested in Washington for serious crimes last year, 84.6 percent were Negroes. In the total population of Washington, 54.8 percent are Negroes. February 14 BABIES: 1 OUT OF 5 ILLEGITIMATE Washington leads all other big cities in the rate of illegitimate births. The Wash- ington rate: 210 out of every 1,000 live births in 1961. Few other cities show a rate even half that high. Of 4,251 illegitimate children born in Washington in 1981, 3,893 were non- white, 358 white. Girls in Washington public schools, ages 12 to 15, gave birth to 265 illegitimate babies during the last school year-250 nonwhite, 15 white. The count, by ages of the moth- ers: 12-year-olds, 5 babies; 13-year-olds, 35 babies; 14-year-olds, 112 babies; 15-year- olds, 113 babies. VENEREAL DISEASE: A MAJOR PROBLEM Even among schoolchildren, 'venereal disease has become widespread in Washing- ton. In the age group 15 to 19, the venereal rate is 5,728 per 100,000 population. Na- tional average: 416 per 100,000 in this age group. -. AGRICULTURAL AID GRANTED TO CUBA (Mr. FASCELL asked and was given permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous material.) Mr. FASCELL. Mr. Speaker, the an- nouncement that the United Nations decided yesterday to grant agricultural aid to Cuba is an extremely unwelcome and discordant action. It puts the United Nations and the United States at odds over policy toward Cuba. - The U.S. official position is that it has been and is opposed to the granting of the funds for this particular project even though it was originally approved in May, 1961. 'I support fully the U.S. posi- tion. The United States must ctntinue to oppose this and similar projects and use its influence within the United Nations to achieve our objectives. The United States did not push for a vote on this issue with the Governing Council because obviously it did not have the votes to stop the allocation of funds based on earlier approval of the project. The U.S. position in opposition to the project is understandable. What is dif- ficult to understand, however, is the position of the other nations who favor the granting of the funds for this project to Cuba. The Communist Government of Cuba refused to cooperate with the United Nations in the recent crisis con- cerning the on-site inspection for the determination that all offensive missiles have been removed. In view of this fact, and since the unresolved issue of deter- mination can only be solved by on-site inspection, a big question mark on the threat to peace and security remains; the possibility of this threat is in direct conflict with the efforts of the United States and the United Nations and, ac- cordingly, while this condition persists, there does not seem to be much logic to the positions of the other. nations who seek to improve Cuban economic condi- tions by providing the funds on a 6- month test basis for a Cuban crop diversification program. I fully support the investigation of this and related issues which has been under- taken in the other body and announced- by Senator CRuxcn. This Is a matter, in which all of us-the Foreign Affairs- Committee which has jurisdiction and` Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 1963 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 2109 Approved For Release 2004/01/30: CIA-RDP86602699R0Of9~~~8,Ot~3 we have two dis- and was a man of unquestioned integrity "The date for the memorial to Judge c- t e e and not only great energy but very great Granery has not been fixed as yet. As you tinguished visitors from other districts, the to my home in Bermuda. As you left, and t he of distinguished New Jersey, who sits on my judge industry, e really n work He my visit will when he became a judge of this courrt from the had a great deal of work to do, and he turned will be presiding on the bench I am asking southern district of New York, Judge Wil- it out, so I can second everything that has you to explain to the family and the friends fred Feinberg, who served early in Judge Mc- been said. I didn't know him as well as of Jim why the judge, senior, in age, is not Granary's career on the bench as his law Judge Bolger or some of the others, but I present. It would be the last worldly tribute clerk, and I am as sure thapleagave when Be- knew him quite well in connection with our that I could extend to him. Granery just official position, and I did form a very, very "Jim filled a very unique place in my own, Feinberg was appointed to the bench as I high opinion of him and I certainly felt very life's history and expefience. The difference had when Judge Luongo was appointed, who badly when I heard of his recent death. of some 20 years in tenure was never a gap now honors the bench of this court. I have ask been d by Judge GLARY. Thank you; Judge Kirkpat- affnor a ection. to our mutual respect and are here today toeexp essl to M s11McGranery- rick. There is a circuit judge here who likewise "There will be many present in the court- and the family their sincere regret at the was one of the finest judges ever to sit on room who will go on record as to his quali- passing of a gentleman who was a colleague any court in the country. He was supposed flcations, attainments and performances in of ours for a number of years. to be up here with us but was delayed, and his numerous activities. You knew him be- The eastern district of Pennsylvania came I am going to ask whether Judge Ganey will fore I did and as a younger man; I knew into being by reason of the act of Congress r}ot say a few words. him after he had matured and was writing of September 24, 1789. The first judge was Judge GANEY. Chief Judge Clary and my his life's history by his deeds. Between the appointed on September 30, 1789, Francis former colleagues, I really had no knowledge two of us we span his career from the cfadle Hopkinsbn. The 19th in succession to Fran- that the chief was going to call on me, or to the grave. He and I had some of the cis Hopkinson was appointed-a judge on the in two mature ac- 7th of August. 1946, James P. McGranery. I should have sat down for a few moments strongest ties that can jo me of the very happy recol- tive spirits together in harmony and friend- d so and recorde lections I had of former Judge McGranery. ship. I like to think of the day he came He occupied a chamber next to mine, and on into our court family. We had both served many occasions we traded opinions, and we in the Congress, but at different times; we sometimes didn't agree, but with all our had adjoining chambers; we had many expe- differences of opinion with respect to some riences in the political world on opposite things, we agreed in most. We had a very, sides, it is true, but of the same general very happy association together. character and purpose; we had mutual I could go on and laud Jim McGranery, but friends and some not so friendly toward were I to do this I think it would dim the either of us. But I particularly enjoyed luster of those beautiful tributes that have his alert mind; his grasp on the realities been paid to him by those who have just of life; his freedom from bunk and hypoc- preceded me. However, I should be ungra- risy. He never mouthed virtue to slay it cious if not remiss if I did not extend to Mrs. on the altar of fake performance. In my McGranery, Regina Clark McGranery, and long career at the. bar and my close asso- her lovely children the generous sympathy ciation with judges as prosecutor and asso- and deepest regrets from the court of ap- ciates, I can truly say I never knew a judge' peals at his passing. to be more dedicated to securing justice, Thank you. although at times I felt that his zeal for Judge CLARY, Thank you very much, Judge justice, as he understood it, was . such as would have been moderated if circumstances We understand, of course, that the District Court of the United States in its earlier days and until the Judiciary Act of 1912 was con- cerned primarily with admiralty, criminal, and bankruptcy. We do know, however, that every one of the district court judges sat in the circuit and heard, in addition to those, all of the civil cases which were filed in the district. Judge McGranery, as has been said, has served this court and served it well. It has a long and honorable history, and he added luster to the history of this court. It was a pleasure for me and to all of us to have served with him. He was a fine gentleman of complete integrity, and I can echo every- thing that Judge Welsh has said in that beautiful tribute to him, that he hated hum- bug and hypocrisy. He left us on a challeng- ing assignment, and while many years ago, over 10 years ago, we ceased hearing his booming hello and his wonderful sense of One part of Juage m.curanery b u=~~==_==u r~"--~ have been in guished life has not been touched upon, and felt that that was one of the reasons why humor at our meetings, we that is his membership in the Caveat Club. he was willing to give up the judicial duties, contact from time to time, and we re- and the fun he had at the inner meetings for the battle in the area was not subject joiced in his success in his practice in Wash- of the Caveat Club. to the ethics and limitations imposed on a ington and we were delighted every Christ- It certainly is a real tribute to the memory judge. Perhaps my own nature and weak- mas to receive that wonderful card that Mr. of Judge McGranery that we have here today ness enables me to understand this charac- Gray spoke about showing his growing and the president judge of the Orphans Court of teristic in him. wonderful family. Philadelphia and vice chancellor of the "But now he has gone from our midst. Jim has gone, but his memory will live Caveat Club, Judge Charles Klein, the chair- But, Tom, the word 'gone' is a relative term. long in the annals of this court and every- man of the board, Walter Gibbons, Judge it is true, his physical presence is gone; no where that Jim served in public life. Winnet, Mr. Barton, Mr. Wobensmith, Jerry more shall we see his sprightly form or hear We are taught early that there are four Walker, Jim Mallie, and others. A lot of fun his cheery speech. That is due to his change reasons for existence and only four in this was had together and work was done to- from the mortal to the immortal. But the world: To know God, to love Him, and to gether at those meetings, and I thank all of real Jim, the Jim that we saw, heard and serve Him. That, Judge James P. Mc- you gentlemen for attending this memorial loved, is not the Jim that lies In Arlington. Granery did o- the utmost. The ultimate service to our late colleague. That shall molder away to dust. And it aim of life, we are taught, is to be happy Judge Wood has already expressed his deep is no fantasy of the imagination to say to with God forever In heaven. That he is now sorrow to Mrs. McGranery for his Inability you that on account of the lessons brought fulfilling that destiny is our fond hope and to be here, and Judge Body has also asked about by the sorrows of life, its heartbreaks prayer, and as we come to the close of this me to express his regrets that he can't be of the natural and the intense joys of the ceremony, on behalf of all the judges here with us today, Mrs. McGranery. Judge Grim, spiritual, that I feel that what left Jim assembled, Regina and children, I extend however, did drop me a note. Judge Grim when his spirit took its flight, Is the Jim I our deepest sympathy, and I know that you, was unable to be here, and he wrote as. shall see with my own spiritual eyes in a the children, and Jim will have our prayers. follows: very few years, and perhaps less. There is I direct that a transcript of this proceed- "Since I shall be unable to be present at neither time nor space in the realm of heart- ing be made, filed of record in the court, the court session this Friday in honor of beats and as I say goodby to Jim today, and copies furnished the family of the late Judge McGranery, I am taking this oppor- in a very short time I will say hello and judge McGranery. The original letters tunity to write to you about it. we will. not be strangers to each other and which I have here, one also from Senator "Please express to Mrs. McGranery and the i would not write this way to you, Tom, if ScoTT, who called to express his deep regret fine McGranery children my condolences for I thought you did not understand. My that he couldn't be here, I direct be at- their great loss and my regret at my in- heart goes out to Regina and the family tached o- the copy to be -furnished Mrs. ability to attend the special court session. and we remember them in our prayers. McGranery. "Judge McGranery was a very fine and May the darkness of the Christmas of 1962 The court will now stand adjourned. vigorous judge and a thorough gentleman. be but the prelude to the spiritual illumina- (Adjourned at 12:45 p.m.) His presence on this court brought honor to tion of 1983 and the future years for (The letter received from. Senator HUGH " Best wishes to you, _o-_?? to have served with him. "Sincerely, "Sincerely yours, "ALLAN." "GEORGE A. WELSH." Of the judges nearest to Judge McGranery, We have also been honored today by the one had adjoining chambers the other way presence of Mrs. McGranery, her three chil- from Judge Ganey's, and I refer to our be- dren, and Judge McGranery's family. loved colleague Judge Welsh. Judge Welsh I see here many of the lawyers who knew on his departure from Philadelphia handed him, f Wills of Masterson s I see is'h The Register er me this letter: ate business commitments in Washington will prevent me from attending the me- morial services for our longtime friend, James P. McGranery. "We all miss him greatly, and it is most fitting that his memory be observed in these proceeding. I extend my warm sympathy to Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 2112 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE February Y~ of technibaPpanI U.V pro Orion leape X004,/IO~le/SOEAKIA RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 who could impartially evaluate the var- ious programs as they come up for con- sideration. The overburdened appropri- ations committees would thus be better informed and would be in a better posi- tion to make recommendations for the elimination of wasteful practices and for the cutting back of those programs where such may be possible without en- dangering our national security and do- mestic welfare. In studying and evaluating all phases of the budget process, such a committee would be in a better position to consider the budget as a whole rather than in piecemeal fashion as is now the current practice. It could develop a fiscal pro- gram aimed at keeping expenditures within the bounds of anticipated rev- enues. Congress already has benefited from services provided by joint committees in the fields of atomic energy, taxation, economic policy, and so forth. Just as there is now a joint tax committee to study revenue questions under consider- ation, the creation of a similar joint committee to study the programs for which billions, of dollars must be appro- priated annually ,.would bring about greater efficiency and economies in this area and would render an invaluable service to our Nation's taxpayers. I am persuaded also that such a com- mittee will accomplish much in bring- ing about more harmonious working re- lationships between the appropriations committees of both Houses. Enactment of H.R. 1120 is now long overdue. I am convinced that its pas- sage will contribute much toward better management of our taxpayer's money. It will enable the Congress to find many areas where waste and extravagance can be eliminated and will return to this body a measure of the control over the national purse strings which it has lost. I, therefore, urge your early consider- ation and affirmative action on this bill. CORRECTION OF RECORD Mr. STRATTON. Mr. Speaker, the RECORD of February 7 contains several minor typographical errors in my re- marks which appear on pages 1874-1879. I ask unanimous consent that the per- manent RECORD may be corrected as fol- lows: Page 1877, column 3, line 49, for "mini- mum" read "medium". Page 1878, column 1, 22d line from the bot- tom, insert a period after the word "gravel" and capitalize the "o" in "of". Page 1878, column 1, 21st line from the bottom, delete the quotation marks and the period after "course", and insert a comma, and substitute a lower case "t" in "The". Page 1878, column 1, 15th line from the bottom, insert quotation marks after the word "it". Page 1878, column 2, line 8. for "subject" read "subsequent". Page 1878, column 2, line 12, at the end of the line, delete the question mark and insert a period. Page 1878, column 2, line-38, before "con- crete" insert "word". the request of the gentleman from New York? There was no objection. INVESTIGATION OF TV PROGRAMS (Mr. WHITTEN asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to re'vise and extend his re- marks.) Mr. WHITTEN. Mr. Speaker, I have received complaints from many citizens with regard to the "Today" show, which was presented on February 8 by the Na- tional Broadcasting Co. Although I did not see this television program myself, detailed descriptions have been for- warded to me. According to those who contacted me, this program was not merely in poor taste but reflected upon the character and integrity of the Governors of two States and a former Member of this body, now deceased, who saved the Un- American 'Activities Committee from oblivion and who rendered outstanding services not only in the development of our Nation but in pointing out the dangers which were building up, many of which have come to pass. Further, it is my information. this pro- gram ridiculed the Lord's Prayer and was an affront to the religious beliefs of God-fearing Americans. Certainly, the privilege of going into the homes of the American people through the medium of television is one which should carry. with it full responsi- bility for decency, which this program did not have. The right and privilege of television broadcasts should be ex- tended or permitted to continue only upon acceptance of responsibility to see that such programs are educational, wholesome, and not destructive. I have joined with others of my col- leagues in a request for a full investiga- tion and appropriate action by the Fed- eral Communications Commission at the earliest possible moment. PROTECTION OF LABOR UNION MEMBERS (Mr. MINSHALL asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his re- marks.) Mr. MINSHALL. Mr. Speaker, the growth of our national economy and the welfare of our citizens depend on the continued strength of American produc- tivity. During the past few years we have seen our economy weakened, our defense ef- fort hobbled, and our access to a free press denied, by repeated and lengthy strikes, many of them contrary to the wishes of a majority of the members of the striking union. The right of labor union members to arbitrate, and, if necessary, to strike, for better working conditions or benefits, is an essential and important part of Amer- ican freedom. I will always defend that basic right. of union members be strengthened They must be guaranteed a voice in de. termining ' whether or not to strike. It is time to Protect employers frolr needless production losses arising out of strikes called without majority vote bs union workers. It is time to minimize industrial strife interfering with the flow of commerce. It is time-past time-to guarantee every American labor union member the right to an impartial secret strike ballot. Toward that end I am today introduc- ing a bill to protect all labor union mem- bers as well as all other Americans, from economic penalties imposed by strikes called without the majority consent of the union workers involved. A majority vote by secret ballot is all that my bill provides. THE 45TH ANNIVERSARY OF LITHUANIA'S INDEPENDENCE (Mr. OSTERTAG asked and was given permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD, and to include ex- traneous matter.) Mr. OSTERTAG. Mr. Speaker, it is highly fitting and appropriate that to- day's opening prayer was given by a Lithuanian priest in observance of the 45th anniversary of Lithuania's inde- pendence this coming Saturday. When the Lithuanian nation declared its independence on February 16, 1918, the people of that little nation reached a goal they had been seeking for many years. For 120 years, from 1795 to 1915, they had been under Russian domina- tion; then during World War I, they finally gained freedom. But this free- dom lasted only to World War II, when the nation was overrun by the Red army and again fell under Russian domina- tion. The United States recognized inde- pendent Lithuania on July 27, 1922, and has never given any recognition to the incorporation of this brave nation into the Soviet Union. We continue to main-' tain diplomatic relations with the form- er independent Government which has a legation in Washington, D.C. Lithu- ania and all the Baltic States have had their sovereignty violated and their free- dom suppressed by the Soviet Union. The aggression and tyranny which the Baltic States have suffered is a sharp contrast to the freedom of the United States and the Western nations. On Saturday, the free world will ob- serve this anniversary of Lithuanian in- dependence, and Lithuanians all over the world will join in prayerful observance of this commemorative date. Though the Lithuanians have again been living under the bondage and tyranny of the Soviet Union for more than 20 years, they have never lost hope of freedom. This 45th anniversary of Lithuanian in- dependence should be honored by every American who holds sacred the ideals of liberty and independence. We of the free world remain steadfast in our dedi- cation to extend freedom to alithe en- Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CFA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 1963 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 2111 the Members of , eQe4/RaY%9enCA&-1R 8 9PeQMOAUQQO marily to the im- Approved House-win con- Release tinue to be vitally interested. it would months concerning the united Nations practicality of having such a large num- appear timely to have a complete re- venturing into policy areas where it does ber of persons from these four commit- assessment of the U.S. positions in the not belong. This is just such an in- tees serve on this committee. Since the specialized programs of the United stance. I feel that we should now seri- passage of this act attempts have been Nations. ously reappraise our financial role in made to amend it by providing for a This recent act by the Governing supporting U.N. policies which run Joint Committee on the Budget which Council of the 18-nation United Nations counter to our own solemn hemispheric would be composed of a limited number Special Fund is symbolical of the diff'i- commitments. of members from the appropriations culty of the U.S. position in the world of committees of the two Houses. The Sen- today. We cannot control the direction THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE ate has on a number of occasions given or the destiny'of all sovereign nations; its sanction to such proposals, but the while we exercise tremendous influence BUDGET House has withheld its support in every in the United Nations, and should do so, (Mr. RODINO asked and was given instance. we certainly by no means positively con- permission to extend his remarks at this The objective of my bill is to bring trol the direction and the decisions of point in the RECORD and to include ex- about an improvement in appropriations the United Nations. This control issue traneous material.) procedures which will produce real sav- is symbolical of the daily and continual Mr. RODINO: Mr. Speaker, at the be- ings and economies in Federal spending paradox- of the necessity to exist with ginning of this session of Congress I in- programs. other nations on one hand and win the troduced H.R. 1120, a bill to amend the The need for such economies is im- obvious struggle in which we are en- Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 perative in these days of rising Federal gaged on the other. to provide for more effective evaluation costs when deficits are mounting and our The difficulty will not be resolved, nor of the fiscal requirements of the execu- national debt has reached an unprece- the paradox removed, however, if the tive agencies of the Government of the dented height. The most recent budget United States, as some people suggest, United States. presented by President Kennedy for the were to withdraw into complete isola- Basically, this bill provides for the fiscal year 1964 calls for programs which tion or to withdraw from the United Na- creation of a Joint Committee on the will cost $98.8 billion-exceeding ex- tions. Walking out or walking away is Budget, to be composed of 16 members penditures made in any previous year, no way to win this struggle or any other. as follows: 9 members of the Committee even the peak years of World War II. So, while we do not like what has hap- on Appropriations of the House of Rep- By far the largest area of expenditure- pened and have every right to be an- resentatives and 7 members of the Com- $55.4 billion-of course, will go to main- gered, disgusted, and frustrated, we must mittee on Appropriations of the Senate. tain a strong national defense. Defense resolve not to let this cloud our judg- This joint committee would have au- needs, however, which are so urgent in ment as to what is best in the eventual thority to inform itself on all matters these days of world crises must be met, long-range interest for the United States relating to the annual budget of the and we cannot afford to risk our price- and the free world. agencies of the Federal. Government. Its less freedom for the sake of a balanced it could very well be that we should functions would 'include study and anal- budget. 'Similarly, there are many es- withdraw, or limit, or make conditional ysis of the details of individual program sential domestic programs which are ex- our participation in the special funds operations and of the actual administra- panding to meet growing needs of our or specialized agencies in the United tion of these programs to insure that citizens for housing, education and Nations. It may be that we should pro- current practice conforms with legisla-. health services. pose and undertake definite new policy tive authorization. The committee would The. necessity of finding ways and positions. There may be other alterna- make its findings available to the Appro- means of economizing is all the more tives. All our participation is on a con- priations Committees and other commit- urgent in view of the President's recent tinuing, flowing, moving, day-to-day tees of both Houses as well as to indi- proposals for tax reduction and revision basis, requiring constant reexamination vidual Members of Congress. Along with which are aimed at providing additional and reassessment. We must do this if this, it would recommend such changes stimulus to our sluggish economy. If our ultimate objective is worthy and is in existing laws which might be insti- such proposals are enacted into law they ever to be reached. tuted to bring about greater efficiency will cost the Government some $10 bil- Therefore, this particular issue and and economy in Government. Further- lion in revenues annually and will thus the general problem must always be more, it would report to the Appropria- widen the growing gap between revenues placed in the perspective and in the con- tions Committees its findings relative to and expenditures and will add to the text of the achievement of the U.S. total budget requirements which would burden of our national debt which today ultimate objective-the settlement of dis- meet our defense and civilian needs and stands at $304 billion. Enactment of my putes among nations without war, but yet be consistent with sound fiscal pol- bill will constitute an important step to- with honor; the victory of freedom over icy. It could also recommend that joint ward bringing spending more in line with - slavery in a peaceful world composed of hearings be held by the two Appropria- revenues and eliminating annually re- sovereign and independent 'countries, tions Committees without affecting the curring deficits. politically stable and economically viable. independence of committee deliberations The vastness and complexity of budg- and decision. etary operations make it impossible for This measure is not a new one. Re- the two appropriations committees ade- AGRICULTURAL AID TO CUBA peated unsuccessful attempts have been quately to study and scrutinize individ- (Mr. SELDEN (at the request of Mr. made during the past 12 years to secure ual programs. With a mere handful of FASCELL) was given permission to extend legislation setting up a Joint Committee employees as contrasted with the staff his remarks at this point in the RECORD on the Budget. Provision for the crea- of nearly 500 employed by the Bureau of and to include extraneous material.) tion of such a committee was embodied the Budget and thousands more of fiscal Mr. SELDEN. Mr. Speaker, United ir1 section 138 of the Legislative Reor-, and technical specialists employed by the Nations plans to provide economic prof- ganization Act of 1946. This act author- executive agencies, these two committees ect aid to the Castro regime constitute ized the Committee on Ways and Means are severely handicapped in analyzing flagrant contempt for the inter-Ameri- of the House, the Senate Committee on the thousands of programs for which can policy laid down at Punta del Este. Finance, and the Appropriations Com- - funds must be approved each year. They The United States and other nations mittees of both Houses "to meet jointly are forced to rely for the most part on of the Western Hemisphere are commit- at the beginning of each regular session reports and testimony presented by the ted, to a policy of economic sanction of Congress and after study and consul- executive agencies whose primary ob- against Castro. The United Nations, by tation, giving due consideration to the jective is commonly obtaining larger its proposed Food and Agriculture Or- budget recommendations of the Presi- , sums each year to promote their own ganization project, will undermine and dent, report to their respective Houses a particular programs. The creation of a nullify the policies of the Organization legislative budget for the ensuing fiscal Joint Committee on the Budget would of American States. year."- This provision has never been provide a permanent nonpolitical corps Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 25X6 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Next 14 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Wed r leas 00 C Fj~P 269 000900 01- ?r4e mot- Following the outbreaks and rioter at the time, of the Pain American Conference at Bogota, charges were made that this Government did not receive adequate Intel- ligence in connection with the situation generally in &olombia at that time . It w us alleged that intelligence had fat lad. to Inform the State Dipartent ax. high officials GovE _ ~< it concerning the possibilities of uprisin anti-American eentiint and s filar disturbances at Bogota early in April. Buse of theae lea, a alb-Gtr. House Ca .ttee on Exparidttures in the Executive mtts, cisting of Representative Clarence Bro% an sub-c r d.ttee Chaim, and : re tative Cla part- (t.,Ohio), (R.,, Mich.) and John McCormack (D., Mass.) as its members. conducted an investigation of these charges with th Director of Central Intelligence, Rear Ads. R. R. hillen- koetter as the main witness. `h. a sub-committee learned that, c c 2 January 19*8, m&W messages were transmitted by CIA to t of State in Washington situation in Colombia. 25X6 k 25X6 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 pxdjmg Eof Cl 60 1 25X6 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3 25X1 25X1 Subsequent thoughtful editorials wd articles in the preens have proved that the charges again t Central Intelligence were in tact grouxdless, and that tlie had been on the alert in Bogota and bad m ppli . Depar t with sufficient information for than t been on the alert amt azW possibility. Approved For Release 2004/01/30 : CIA-RDP86B00269R000900080001-3