Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 23 November 1960 — Page 19
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1960
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Jap Election Good News For America
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor As expected, but not witlwut a twist of irony, the Japanese people have voted to retain their close ties with the United States. Irony, because all four at Japan’s major political parties made foreign policy the chief issue of the campaign. This policy has as its keystone the United StatesJapan mutual security treaty. And it was this pact which led to last spring’s violent demonstrations which in turn led to '"’r.. -. lation of President Eisenb a v‘» visit -to Japan. Now the Japanese people endorsed the pact and retu led Premier Hayato Ikeda’s Libc- MDemocratic party to power v .. an even greater majority than before. Good News for U.S. It is good news for the Unitt .. v States, for without Japan its who' I* system of Pacific defenses wou. • J have to be revised. There also were notes of warn 1 ing. for the opposition Socialist gained 23 seats with a campaign 1 which relied heavily on slogans and demanded neutrality and clos- ! er ties with Red China. The Communists rudning a full * slate of parliamentary candidate ? went from one seat to three. ' The neutrality res “ has increased in direct pro *o the 1 intensity of the a tween the United ’••*« ,o- : viet Russia. It is a ng ‘ emotional withdrawal fru the knowledge that intercontinental, ' nuclear tipped missiles can reach ' any place or any people on earth. Tribute to Japanese Therefore, it is a tribute to the ' Japanese people, on the doorstep ' of Red China and Soviet Siberia, that they can reject it so overwhelmingly. There are, of course, other is- J sues that may have weighed just 1 as heavily with the Japanese people. There were local and regional issues, and conservative rural voters leaned naturally to Ikeda's j Liberal-Democrats. Further aiding Ikeda’s forces ’ was Japan’s current prosperity, and the promise of the LiberalDemocrats to double Japan’s in- ' come in 10 years. Presumably this promise would be achieved through expansion of Japanese foreign trade throughout Asia, and particularly with Red China. The Japanese expect the new U.S. Kennedy administration may
take a more flexible view toward Red China, and Ikeda himself is on record as saying Japan should trade with Red China “if it is profitable for us.” New Congress Not Likely To Approach 1933 By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD—The 100 u about which some of Presi--elect John F. Kennedy’s rr.vTT enthusiastic supporters are tsuk. g refer to the special session o* C. ngress called by Franklin D. p '>- velt upon his inauguration in 1933. That session began on March 9, ended June 16. TTiere had not been anything like it before. To expect the new Kennedy Congress which meets next January to match or even closely to approach the record of FDR’s curtain raiser is pure nonsense. It is good that this is so. FDR’s special session accomplished a great many things and did it incredibly fast. But the methods employed were not always wholesome. And some of the end results came to nothing, finally, because they were found to be counter to the Constitution. Moreover, some of the remedies enacted failed to cure the diseases attacked. notably the appropriation of great sums to stimulate employment by making work to-ab-sorb the unemployed. A Notable Failure This device was a notable failure. Unemployment remained high until the U.S. economy got a shot in the arm when private industry became a major part of what FDR termed the Arsenal of Democracy. Circumstances often demanded speed of FDR’s special session as on that first day. The banks were closed, you may remember, and it was up to Congress to enact legislation pronto to permit the solvent banks to open up. Congress did just that in a single day. in a matter of a few hours in fact. This was not a wholesome legislative process. However, although responsibility for that lay with the circumstances and not with any individual or any political party. The bank bill was important legislation of the highest priority, complex and packing an impact on just about every man, woman and child in the United States. Congress enacted that legislation without a glimmer of understanding of what the bill contained. There was not physically present in the House chamber a copy of the bill when it was passed by the House. Senate Democratic Leader Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas appeared on the Senate floor a few minutes before the special session began with one copy of the bill, still damp from the presses of the Government Printing Office. Reporter Got Copy The late William K. Hutchinson
- l + l J m ; t T STARS : jjfr m ; , THBIR £ BYBB | THIS f Christmas A dainty ring for that little girl...a faahhmable atone ring for a lovely lady...a handsome ring for that special man., ’ 37 " I 35 “ BOWER JEWELRY STORE
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
of the also late International News Service plucked that copy from Robinson’s excited grasp unbeknownst to the senator. That stolen copy was hurried to the Senate press gallery where it was ripped into three pieces, one each to the United Press, International News Service and Associated Press. Francis Little Joe Stephenson of the AP and I had made a deal with Hutchinson that each would seek a copy of the bank bill and the man who found it would whack it up with the others so the text could go to anxiously awaiting newspaper readers. , The Senators passed the bill that day equally as ignorant as the representatives of what it contained. Readers of late afternoon newspapers surely knew more of the bill’s contents that day than did the legislators who had enacted it. That is the way it was in that FDR special session. Sort of hel-ter-skelter. It is reasonable to hope that the new president and the new Congress will do better this time.
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F t • - V y I . ! \ / l■■ ■?..' .ir. Ve., 4 MOST VALUABLE —Ron Hansen, Baltimore Orioles shortstop, has been named American League Rookie of the Year. Hansen, 22, got 22 of 24 first Dlace votes.
Both Amendments Carried With Ease I INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Fewer than one of every four voters bothered to express their sentiments, but two proposed amendments to the Indiana Contitution were adopted by overwhelming margins in a referendum during the Nqv. 8 election. . An official tabulation of the vote in the secretary of state’s office showed both amendments carried, one by an 8-1 margin and the other by 3-1. Voters approved 458,374 to 59,674 an amendment requiring all circuit court judges to be qualified attorneys. They approved by a vote of 338.877 to 109.489 an amendment revising the method of titling bills jn the legislature. Only L. per cent of the voters cast ballots on the judge amendment. Only 20 per cent voted on the title amendment.
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