THE NUCLEAR TEST BAN TREATY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000700380002-5
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 8, 2004
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 13, 1963
Content Type: 
OPEN
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000700380002-5.pdf226.12 KB
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S I l 4,17'.6 1963, "CONGRESSIONAL K1 WKDD curious services l MW rN79 w World` ah a na. 13e' 157.350. aasgaltlp l4, x the 7.'1'easilr7Ab;,jttl we ere loslnit `the' Department of ;Health. EducatioU,. and Dies, .f3tu ~ppM {The man who headed the Welfeje to determine, Who`; authorized House odlimitte on-bin-American ActivitIea there 111 of Coln date to get . 1"t ton Evening pear at this There beings was ordered to as follows: objection, the editorial printed In the RzcoRD, IFrom the Washtnokiton (D.C.) Evening Star, approved"thls taonsell6e. W interesting ,ill uty:-oolleaBues to the Department of H th, Education, and Welfare. and which has do with educa- tional Instruction. One section, believe It o ot, Is concerned with an "Official Obslwa 'a Manual." Any males interested are to they will need as prerequisites " 20/30 vlsto or corrected as required." Additional Bugg ted material Includes giaeses or binoculars. other sec- tion. concerned with social lea. states that there Is only one continent r than Africa and this is Asia. Then an the question: "Sa, the enormous chun of rock that is Africa Is (a) the largest co Went; (b) the second largest continent." If Johnny can come up with the t answer to this one, he Is, we gather, e free. Not so the taxpayer. He will hav make up the difference between the cost producing these massive volumes and receipts derived by the Government Print. Ing Office from selling them at $3.50 a copy. Fortunately. It isn't likely that this boon. doggle will head to the best seller list. "MARTIN DIES' . STORY" Mr. THURMOND. Mr., President. "Why did you silt by silence when.you knew the truth?" These are.the words of a great American In telling the world Story.- Twrote the book. his patriot was mall smeared, and persecuted 'because he dared to expose a conspiracy that today is threatening to bury us. If we had heeded his advice the world would be much nearer to the illusory peace we seek today at the expense of our security. The danger Martin Dies w}reed about has been amplified a hundred times over. I recommend that every American read this dynamic exposure. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that a review of the "Martin Dies' Story" by William R, Ruggles as printed In the Dallas Morn- ing News. be printed In the RscoRD at this point, There being no objection, the review was ordered to be printed In the RECORD, as follows: A ljooac rot Corraaavsrrvsa: "Msarnr Ores, STOIT" (Reviewed by William R. Ruggles) "We lost World War rl. It was not the brave men who offered and gave their lives who boat It for us. It was the polltlciaf.s. eo` introduces his 'grim account of whet' am ounts'to betrayal of the Nation by dtvett`ie , 1 ctorat, Political ambition; 1 eCkl+~aness Af. methods misgulded, ignorance stimulated to i falsehood and calumny: official stupidity and lax security: unwillingness to admit costlT fault; a small group of dedicated OommilaUt agents infiltrated into olaotal position. This is a terrifying story, a striking warn- ing from to devoted American and Texan up= whose head and political fortunes have bears opened the visit of wrath of the Ignorant, the dupe, the traitor, and the well meaning fool. Here is the record of what the Dies 00th mittee did, what it tried to do and what it was prevented from doing. Recorded are the antecedents leading to the formation;Of the committee with Dies at its head in'108g and the events of the next 8 years when it functioned through the most extraord! storm of criticism. vituperation, and off blocking maneuver In our political h In a remarkable foreword. Dies, now points out that he is writing- the record not merely to inform posterity but to saw It. "If our children do not learn of these ta.- credible blunders, they are doomed to repeat them. I must speak out, lest I be asked on Judgment Day. 'Why did you sin by silence when you knew the truth?'" Here he does speak out, and bow. The Dies committee directed investigation on no single enemy target but on all. The Roosevelt ad- ministration tried to keep It off the Com.- muntsts, but It went after Reds as well as the Nazis. In logical result, it proved in the face of disbelieving omclal opposition the existence here of the Communist conspiracy. Critics of the Dies committee then ignor(d. as they do now, the careful documentation of its facts. In the heart of this book. Martin Dies asks how many of those critics ow what they were talking about. The :ord is all there. The report of the bear- p has been preserved In 10,887 pages in an later volumes on the executive session. ere is retold the tragic story of Dar. Wil- A. Wirt. Remember the Oary, lad, ed who, after a Washington dinner, that New Deal leftists planned do- n ee ly "to overthrow the established fgctai ord He was pilloried and harried to an early d th. On floor of pongreas,.a Representative charged during world War S .Wirt':bad been ,1 for pro-German activities. a ocip? plate un th. New York's O'Connor, who headed th committee that assailed Wirt, 6 years expressed his own regret for his part, in ing a frank public apology. Here is the site-known fact that the cotri- mlttee rated before Pearl Harbor a report that eluded a map of Japan's strategic plan f. tie conquest of the Hawat? tan Islands an the Par East. The agate Department pr lied publication. The re- port was viewed Arrity and Navy but still Pearl Harbor o0c ed. Itere'are derails t the Investigations of Communist 'lntlltr on of American labor against the investigators. Here are the stories of Earl Browder and Sam Carp, of the exposure of front after front for the Reds. Here Is the tragic story of gullible and/cc vindictive Americans. of~ the president's wife questioning the ccex- mlttee's action. And of the Truman adm- istration praising to oonratton a charge against Parnell Thomas. a later chairman of the eotnmltteq tpf a very.questionable prac- tice but, one, t?: rNdah other congressmen who WYe'cold;s estimate of ebb tluti ' lxirAN8F ` fir, b Best the, The , PRES D I'' ' clerk will call the roll., The Crises Cie k 3) to ~E roll ur ';; "r}r Mr Presidettt,'r ask unanimo s t "that the,"order spare ro wql The out objection, l't is so ordered. . THE NUCLEAR TEST BAN TREATY'" . The Senate, as in Committee of the Whole, resumed the consideration of Executive M (88th Cong.. 1st sass.), the treaty banning nuclear weapon tests In the atmosphere, in outer space. ad Mr. JACKSON obtained the floor, Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr..President, will the Senator from Washington allow me to proceed for one-half minute? Mr. JACKSON. Certainly. ask unanimous colisent to have inserted in the Racoon at :this point that excerpt from the transcript of President Ken- nedy's news conference on yesterday having to do with the question of aittd- Ing the treaty. In this particular excerpt the queue asked by the reporter Is answeredprqr olsely and in -some detail. by the Fred- dent, ' The answer. reafffins the con tl- tutional right. that the senate has, and has had since the founding of this Rq- conference emphasizes what every one of the 100 Senators.. here knows. and that Is that if there is an amendment to'suay treaty, that amendment will be reformd to the Senate for its adlrfao,and conRnt and approval on the basis ,of a votQ CC two-thirds of the Senators present and voting. The PRESIDENT pro tempera.- Is There being no objection, the ekoapt- was ordered to be printed in the RSOOSDI. as follows: 'ti ' Question. "Mr. President. some opponeAt f . ,of the test ban "treaty have expressed 'tits fear that once the treaty has be" rails :tied It Might then be possible later by I O- utlve action to amend the treaty p 40,40 further limit the freedom of action of the United States. What Is your teuitiofl to Answer. "No; I can give a tategomw, ifs- surance that the treaty. as you know, mot be amended without the agreement. Of the three basic signatories. The treaty Cannot be changed in any way by the three basic signatories, and the other, without the cn- DNN /S -- 6 ; ! .1 O 1.1 N a'kwSord; small Ia fait."~SMt'';'MV* td" w 5 llp I amid 3'saasaaa ''y'eti! A Am _- mars? If blot, Approved For Release 2004/12/15 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000700380002-5