Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1950 — Page 12
© A SURIPPS-HOWAKRD NEWSPAPER
le
‘ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W_MANZ
US Ewer Tuesday, Mar. 14, 1950
ished oy indi fimes Publish. Oped 100 PUSiare S003, Jotgeapat Singh, o32 Ullited Press: Scrippe-Howard Newspaper Alisnce. NEA Serv fice and Audit Buresu of Clrculations
: > datly ang 10¢ ror Bundny: Quiivered bY errivr okily ani. Sundar Ie . 25¢. Sunday . 100. Mati rates ding y Sunday, $10.00 a Jos, daily. $500 a year. Ay po | $500 ah otner-siates. U8 possessions; = dally $1.10 & month. Sunday. 10¢ A copy
r or 13 Rive J4oht and tha Peonis Will Pina Thee Owe Was
It's Only Money
nified representatives,
That also goes for the Pan-African- Sanitary Conference, the regional meeting of European statisticians, the International Seed Testing Association, the Far Eastern
international organizations.
» - » - » r NOW we're high on the sucker list of 47 “world”
groups.
Last year Uncle Sam sent delegates to 258 conferences involving 6000 meetings in dozens of world capitals
and smaller out-of-the-way places.
We're glad to observe that a Senate Subcommittee on Expenditures is cracking down on this international boondoggling, “The time has come,” says the committee, “when very careful consideration must be given to any’ increased participation by the United States in additional world organizations outside the United Nations and Inter-
- American systems.”
It’s only money, but it's the taxpayers’ money, and we doubt they want to keep on putting up $144 million a year to maintain Uncle Sam's reputation as a wealthy clubman
in world circles,
After Two Years
atomic security.”
The accusation was made in March, 1948, by Rep. J. Parnell Thomas, then chairman of the House Committee
on Un-American Activities.
Mr. Thomas ceased to be the committee's chairman in January, 1949, when the Democrats regained control of Congress. He resigned from Congress a year later, after being found guilty and sent to a federal prison on charges of padding his official pay roll and taking salary
~— backs from government-paid employees of his office. But Dr. Condon, although he still heads the Bureau of Standards and has access to atomic information, has Down each branch, and covering all never been given a public hearing by the Committee on UnAmerican Activities or any other official body.
MR. THOMAS, who continued to be chairman of the committee for 10 months after making the accusation, refused either to withdraw or to press it. And the Democrats who now control the committee “have offered Dr. Condon a hearing only on condition that he ask for it. He should not have to ask. It is the committee's duty. either to prove the Thomas accusation or to acknowledge
hat it was not supported by facts.
msc A1. JUSEICE, DOL merely. to. him, but tothe American PeOw rrr ple, the House Committee should give him a public hearing.
: ~ Happy Vacation, Mr. T.
“cheer at this season.
AY things are now, if there is an international conference on limnoloy the United States naturally has ~~ to get in it. (There was, and we did.) Or if the “central bureau for a map of the world on the millionth scale” holds a session, we've got to send dig-
rticipation in 23
est links in our
S THE Williamsburg sails South with destroyer escort “7 we pause in our work of thie moment to wish Presi. dent Truman and his companions a happy vacation. The President and his aides have worked hard, and the - rest should do. them. good, we. are -glad-they Can get-away «rms for awhile in the health-giving sea air and sunshine. If our sincere “bon voyage" lacks ,the oomph and robustness that might be expected, we trust Mr. Truman and his cronies will allow for the fact that we are quite oe PPOOCCUpied with our work of the. moment, which happens to be the making out of an income tax return.’ : It is an annual ordeal that always clouds our other‘wise sunny disposition. Something about the rules, regulations, instructions and complicated formulas of computation on the income tax form that tends to banish
i ® = = J dl is ~~ THIS unaccustomed mental exertion is not made easier hidden federal subsidy.
think.
citizenship. -
-
a
~ Economy Bloc’s
Progress Slim ~- Only One Spending Measure Defeated
WASHINGTON, Mar, 14—8o far, it appears that the so-called economy bloc in Congress is
armed only with a beanshooter,
week. : On the negative side:
The Senate batted down Sen. Scott Lucas’ efforts to do something -about potato price. though the government has poured nearly a half-billion dollars into the pockets of potato farmers since 1946 and, under the current program, is certain to get
supports this year—even
hooked for many more millions this year.
Increased Costs
BOTH houses voted to permit planting of more cotton; the House voted for more peanuts and the Senate for more wheat—even though it
©. These hands-across-the-sea leaf-raking projects cost . ferénce Committee. Sen. George Aiken (R. Vt.) our government $144 million in fiscal 1949, $26 million more than in the previous year. Ten years ago Congress was appropriating only $835,000 for U. S. pa
said that a compromise which tentatively has been reached might increase government farm
price support costs by $200 million.
Committees in both houses have approved bills to increase the Commodity Credit Corpora-
tion's drawing power on the Treasury from $4%
billion to $6% billion. The corporation is the
farm price-supporfing ‘agency.
Only 14 Senators answered “yes” to Sen. Paul Douglas’ move to save millions of dollars for the government by cutting annual leave for
government employees from 26 to 20 days, thus
decreasing the need for so many employees, °
Fifty-seven Senators voted “no.”
Pay Increases - THE House voted to give World War II vet-
erans who have entered the postal service since the end of the war credit for their time in the
military service. This will give some employees pay increases of as much as $500 a year. Estimated added cost—$§163 million over the next eight years. on The House first killed a $60-million-aid-to-Korea bill. But it later approved the measure after the administration sugar-coated it by promising to spend $10,500,000 of $100 ‘million In unused China aid funds to help the Chinese Nationalists on Formosa, The House is ready to consider an $80-mil-
lion-a-year-mine-subsidy bill. The Senate ap-WO-YEARS-have gone-by-since-Dr-Edward-U.-Condon,—Proved-the measure-jast-year ~~ === diréctor of the National Bureau of Standards, was accused publicly of being “one of the weak
More Mo ee nk
week on a bill to give executive agencies more money to spend between now and June 30: It increased the allowance for the Housing Expe-
—diter's-office from $2.6 million to $4 million. It
adopted an amendment by Sen. Spessard Hol land (D. Fla.) to increase the flood-control appropriation by $1 million.
THE "BIRD REST" TREES
White . . . ghost-like, by the light of day . . .
kick-- Whose long. bare arms, the wild winds sway, That Took so cold in the sun's clear light . . .
But what of this covering, so strange, at night? :
I seem to see, like fluffy, round ball . “in 8h-u-s-h what was that sound I heard? A twittering sound . . like... a sleeping bird? There's something strange, I've an eerie feeling That I'm not alone, is o'er me stealing. A louder sound, yes, louder, in tone— I hear more plainly . , . I'm not alone . , . Each tree has a covering, soft and warm-— ‘ All down the length of each one, bare arm. High and safe “from the earth-bound free” Our i friends” are safe in the Sycamore ree, :
~Mary R. White, 854 N. Shermafi Dr.
The one boon that she asked of life, That one boon was to her denied. Throughout the years she searched for love And found it not; but when she died The few who knew that she had gone = -Batd briefly, she was proud and cold. Then went ‘their usual blind ways, Unmindful of the lie they'd told.
' TIS SAID That we believe we are superior to all nations. Have we earned that reputation by fighting" for the right to prove that all people aré equal? ‘Could be, B. C.,, Indianapolis.
AIRMAIL PAY . ..8y James Daniel
Hidden Subsidies
WASHINGTON, Mar. 14—F Sullivan has been retained by 1
1o-diselose how much ai
THE Senate took - the following action Tast
_ ago. 1 was told
OU
—Myra Ahler, Indianapolis di
ormer Navy Secretary John I.
T airlines to fight passage of bill which would require the Civil Aeronautics Board to take ste
TIAL Pay the airlines are receiving as a
Far From the Madding Crowd =
Tr 15 TONES HOW the eSORGHHY SUVOCAtEs TT have been making sounds like Gideon's army. ~~ But their only victim to be found among all Ee hubbub is one small bill—a measure which ~~ would have given about $4 million a year to ~ the states to demonstrate the value of public libraries. This was defeated in the House last
was known that the bulk of the produce from i Phyto-Sanjtary Conference and the International Scientific thes extra acres would nave 15 Sebought by. —~ >> mittee on anosomiasis The bill 1s now before a House-Senate Con-.
SPEND
Gs
AMERICAN HERITAGE . . . By Marquis Childs U. S. Losing Some Freedoms?
-
WASHINGTON, Mar. 14—In England, in some of the older mines, they still use pit ponies
tothe shaft where the cars carried up to the surface: i —— Those ponles stay down below for months or ‘even years, leading a subterranean life that is apparently not too unhealthy. Visiting one of these older mines some years
taken up for a bit of sun and grass, they resist
. strenuously this radical innovation, Then, after
they've had a few hours of m and a little sunlight, -it takes a half doz®n men to subdue each rebel and get it down into the mine again. That's just about the way I'm feeling at this
moment. I sat on the Florida shore for a few
days in the brilliant sun. I did practically nothI can ‘feel the murk of Washington closing in around me and I'm kicking and fighting as we descend the mine shaft. I know that in time
I'll be perfectly accustomed again to the dim. light of this other world. It will probably come
to seem the normal thing once more.
Gloom Appears Deeper
_ MAYBE it's because I've had a brief time in . another kind of light that the encircling gloom
appears_to be deeper in hue than even in the
. immediate past. It hangs like a solid substance
over this quarrelsome capital. As though to escape it, the President has gone off to Florida and I hope he gets all possible benefit from his brief excursion out of the
mine shaft and into the sun. But he has one . “handicap, it seems to me, and that is that to a
considerable. degree. .he carries his own atmesphere about with him. ’ One of the remarkable things about the Truman administration is how few new people have come into it.. The circle of cronies has remained the same. If anything, it has grown smaller, with bolder men like Clark Clifford dropping
The old familiars travel with the President.
They are the atmosphere, and an ever-narrow- '
ing one. In that atmosphere it is increasingly
point, . . Except for the inadequate and stale speech on Washington's birthday, the President has maintained a determined silence through the controversy on the hydrogen bomb and the
mounting war scare that appears to be giving most people a new case of the shakes.
SIDE GLANCES
that when the pit ponies are
1
Soviet Russia has in the meantime been conducting a powerful peace offensive, - We can be 2, -to-haul-the-cars-from-the mining-pit where-the sure-how-littie reality there is in that offensive
: : n experi--are——and yet, for millions—upon millions who feel WANTED: Treacherous young men 3 on i ot .-enced in espionage to serve in.United States.
merican- assignments now
dread and insecurity in the face of a new threat, : 2 itwill have persuasive power. It may persuade -Pleasant-working-condi ¢
the doubting that Russia's protestations on the
subject of peace are real and honest,
Destroying Freedoms
BUT an even deeper shadow, in my opinion,
hangs over the. intentions of those who seem
bent on destroying our freedoms here at home.
Whether that is their goal or not, this is likely
to be the end ‘result. If enough pieces are chipped away little by little, we shall discover © one day that the base itself has been destroyed.
Rep. Howard Smith of Virginia succeeded in
authority of a gestapo and destroy a large area
of academic freedom and the right of free
inquiry.
Sen. Karl Mundt of South Dakota is pressing
hard for the Mundt-Nixon bill; which would put a strait-jacket around an undetermined segment of political freedom.
These men and others like them seem to
distrust freedom. They seem to distrust the
democratic . process itself. They behave as
though they were motivated by panic fear, ~ I'm sure that they believe righteously that
they are saving the nation from terrible dan-
gers. But whether they know it or not, the end
they are driving toward is a stockade in which just about all the American people would finally
be confined. : -
Among left-wing _intellectuals, particularly. “those who fifrfed with communism, it is fashion-
able to say that all is over and America - is already a police state. This is, of course, just as silly as the cries from the panic-stricken who believe that anyone slightly to the left of Louis XIV is a dangerous Communist. .
WHILE" they've been chipped away some- .
what, we still have our freedoms. But I feel very deeply that if we go -on taking them so
ficult to intrude. A.new idea or.a new. views....lightly.for.granted and-permitting-the-ehipping:
process to continue, we shall not have them for long. ‘ The great heritage out of the American past can be destroyed by frightened and mistrustful men of small and warped minds, In my opinion, it must be the conscious responsibility of every
American. citizen. today.-{o. defend. those rights.
NNAIX NN
~ involved. Many 2
~~ Hoosier Forum
“I do not agree with a word that you say, but |
will defend to the death your right to say i" ‘Never Trust a Marxist =
By E. F. Maddox, india ind. and sufficierit: reason to ignore the A tion of H. W.Daacke of Beech etterment
. Grove for the betterment of Indianapolis is the
~ American capitalistic business enterprises, as well as all of our political and economic prin. .- ciples and methods. The Marxists just can’t find "anything good in our American way. Now let me give my opinion on a few things to improve
OE clear the Socialists and Communists
out of the Democratic and Republican
“tions.” The more Socialists or Communists in
the two old parties the more political corruption, graft and party division we will have and the more. tax money will be, : -and the higher taxes will be raised. We need a Red
litical judge. The Socialists and Communists - E sworn enemies of our capitalistic system and
intend to wreck it. o Second, we need for all good patriotic Democrats and Republicans to stop fighting each other and stand together in a finish fight with Soelalism. let both Democrats and Republicans put nothing" but- patriotic Americans on guard
in public office.’ LE
‘Tax Evaders’ By C. D, C., Terre Haute, Ind. i Mrs. Walter Haggerty tells us in an inter
" esting article how doctors, farmers, red caps,
v s, lawyers and thousands of others Yale i fncome taxes and then she says, “The only persons that pay their just share of taxes are the 60 million honest, hard working Americans that punch the clock. “Far be it from me to deny: there are tax evaders in this country but maybe Mrs, Haggerty would be good enough to explain to us why the New Deal government found it neces sary to pass a law, which is probably uncon-
. stitutional for the employers to withhold the
tax on the wages of these 60 million honest,
"hard working Americans, if- they have any
monopoly on honesty, when it comes to paying
~ their taxes.
The facts are an internal revenue tax collector told me it was impossible to collect the taxes from this group when they were working at different jobs in various places during the war. That was of course before the withholding tax law was passed but it is quite possible that some. of these 60 million honest Americans still make a few dollars on the side which they
forget to turn in.
‘Apply to Joe Stalin’
By C. A. Breece, New Augusta, Ind.
= Tis-ig-the way-a: Moscow-ad-would-read: aw
- . S
open. Choose your locale. State Department
protection and return transportation guaranteed. —Apply:-—-Joe-Stalin;,- Kremlin.
‘What Others Say—
HORRIBLE as it may sound, we must bs prepared to lose 10 million to 15 million people in the first day of the superblitz.—Nuclear
physicist Dr. Ralph E. Lapp. tacking onto the national science foundation bit ~~ an amendment which would give the FBI the
ep
masquerading in the Pentagon under the holy name of unification.—Capt. John Crommelin Jr., USN. > HR THE Kremlin can and is pursuing its course with efficiency and with signs of increasing boldness, using whatever means seem appropriate to it in a given situation.—Secretary ol State Dean Acheson. S : IF you pull yourself together at the waist it's bound to go somewhere else.—~Mae West, explaining her “pefsonality.’ Bb dB IT is quite obvious that present legal weapons available against the multi-billion-dol-lar crime syndicates are hopelessly obsolete.
_Sen. Alexander Wiley (R:) of Wisconsin, on. _.{ 7
nationwide gambling activities. D3 ow oe THE task of Americans-today is fundamen tally the same as it was in Washington's time. We, too, must make democracy work and we
must defend it against its enemies.—President
oe ot WE have been forced to believe, by every action of the Soviet representatives, that they
are under instructions to ‘give an outward ap-" §
stdnces actually to co-operate. Atomic expert Fredrick Osborn, on international atomic cons trols. ce @ GAMBLING today is the nest egg of the criminal underworld which operates throughout
«<= this-country~<¥FBI- Director J. Edgar Hoover.
By Galbraith WORLD ORGANIZATIONS . .-. By Roger Stuart
| 1} + More Bills to Pay
5% . WASHINGTON, Mar. 14—Uncle Sam is a confirmed joiner.
And the taxpayer is paying more and more bills for his Uncle's participation “in an-assortment of ~ international organizations. The United States currently is spending more than $144 -ilion. A. year-to. take. part .in-47-international a
UNDEMOCRATIC and alien policies are
3
“not Sarna
we had managed then to arrange a holiday aboard a government yacht and on the sun-kissed sands of a U. - naval station. As it was, we went elswhere and spent our own money, and now it is not even deductible. But enough of vain regrets. A happy vacation to Mr. Truman, to Gen. Vaughan, to Charlie Ross, to John Steelman, to Bob Landry, to all those other fine fellows of the White House. Take it easy, men. Enjoy it while it lasts.
And, to coin still another phrase, it may be later than you
Useful Citizenship . E ONE of the worthwhile citizenship programs here is that ~~ of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls which is observing its 40th anniversary this week. - : It has grown in four decades to an organization that is guiding the character building of more than 3000 young girls. These future leaders have aided many civic projects and entertained hospital patients and inmates of institutions
rsonality development for better or It 1u. the past year, Then
~. as part of their pe ~The theme for the Camp Fire birthday week observance, “Discovery Unlimited — An “Adventure in Creative Living," is part of the organization's program for stimulattizenship projects such as this 6ne can go a long wa iting v leadership for .
law firm, Sullivan, Bernard
and Shea. = Mr. - Sullivan's "Clients “do “not include’ the big
‘four. —- American, Eastern, TWA and United. FT, = The former Navy Secretary insists he is“ not working
<A. the apprehension back in our.mind that our bank balance. Mr. Sullivans. fee-ot:830.000-witt be pad to His Wikkingion =" may prove insufficient to cover that final figure aly. Will -Write-at-the-bottom-of the form: i = We cannot help brooding’ just a little over the thought that our checking account would now ‘be healthier if we . hadn't spent that money on our own vacation a few months ago. Our: mid-March anguish would be less acute i
. mitteé held hearings at which _ the smaller airlines protested
that an- attempt was: being made to hold them to the same
cost - figures as older estab-
against eventual disclosure of... lished
airlines’ subsidies. His pur--
pose, he says, is to encourage a study to determine whether
such disclosure is feasible and .
how it can be done “equitably and without jeopardy” to the airlines.
” n ~ MR. SULLIVAN'S entry into the ranks of registered lobbyists is the latest development in the attack on hidden airline subsidies. The fight began when the Hoover Commission _ recoinmended thst aviation subsidies be divorced from earned payments to airlines for carrying the" mails. ~~
At present the Civil Aero-
nautics Board. handles both subsidies and airmail pay as a lump sum. * Critics have charged that essentially - what happens is
this: The board asks each air.
line how much money it made
the board awards a mall payment large enough to put the company in the black.
iL ~ - . EE ALTHOUGH indorsed Db
the Post Office Department, - - which objected to having its revenues spent to subsidize -
aviation, the Hoover «go sion’s MRA in eg chance of adoption
ritories,
- = » : THEN President Truman in his budget message came out for separation and chilled the airlines by suggesting that or-
- dinary business incentives -
speedily be- restored ‘to their industry, “to the extent possible.” : pee
Commerce Secretary Sawyer _
Supported separation and the Civil Aeronautics Board, under his jurisdiction, changed fits 1949 position that separation was - impossible. without a $361,000 appropriation to conduct a survey. Now the board thinks ‘it could do the job for
*® - » FOUR industry factions are in the fight: ONE: The overseas airlines, who ask to be exempted from subsidy “separation on the ground their activities are of secret military significance. TWO: The big four of do-
"mestic carriers who hope their
low ton-mile mail rate will be-
come a yardstick of mail-car-. -
rying costs. sk "THREE: Mr.'Sullivarfs clients, who probably will find it dificult to justify what the
~* FOUR: The all-frelght air
% i ae ? AEE Re
A
@.
Swe
i
cd VERE $9 commmmimisvor mc amen Mo,
es
Say} Couldn't | put vegetable damage on my incomes tax?"
_ lines who lack a mail contract
and therefore aren't eligible for subsidies. They hope that if mail carriers are required to allocate costs to mail, passengers, freight and express, the result will disclose the mail
carriers ‘are fighting the
treight lines by using other in-
‘come, DSILE | SUEY. - held freight rates unnat: vernment is now giving EL gy en them if the big four's rates be- - come a yardstick. :
ow,
= TW ee
MR. SULLIVAN'S clients 3 3 isklude trunk and feeder ices, Way
Noel -
\ 2 BORN
So far he is representing All
American Aviation, Inc., Bonanza Airlines, Inc., Braniff Airways, Inc., Capital Airlines, Chicago and ‘Southern Airlines, Colonial Airlines, Delta “Air Lines, Empiré Air Lines, -- Mid-Continent Airlines, North. east Airlines, Northwest Airlines, Piedmont Airlines, Pio-’
PRAK. 10, groups, counting the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund,
Fee TheSUbCOMITITtes SAYS that = =f United States contribytions to _ | various international groups 1
to which we have pledged nearly $8 WIon eee
The increase in number of organizations we belong to has been tremendous. In 1939, for example, Congress appro-
priated $835,590 for this coun-
In 1949, it appropriated 175 times as much for participation in 47 organizations.
2 =» = WE MAY soon join" at least three more major ones—the International Trade Organization, the Inter-Governmental
Maritime Consultative Organization, and the World Meteorological Organization.
Before thggwar, the United -
States customarily maintained permanent delegations or sent special missions to fewer than 75 internation confeyences each year. Now we're fepresented at approximately 260 confer--ences involving about 6000 individual meetings in one year.
Foreign Affairs used to rest
almost -exclusively with the State Department. Now, as the Hoover Commission learned, at lease 46 of the.59 major departments and agencies in the
government's éxecutive branch
have been drawn into foreign affairs to some extent. = » -
A SENATE subcommittes Says this has resuited in “Inter- -
departmental jealousies and
Iivalries,” which, in turn; have -- g a lack of co-ordina-
range from $50 a year for the
‘Central Bureau of the Inter-—
national Map of the World on
~the-Mittontl Scale 16 $70 mil=
lion annually for the International Refugee Organization (IRO). Uncle Sam pays approximately 47 per cent of the total cost of all the groups. For instance. this country pays $22,210,257 a year for member-
- ship in the United Nations and
its dozen specialized agencies. That's 35 per cent of the total bill. : = 2 5
IT COSTS us $25,491,000 a year, or 72 per cent of the entire cost, for the International Children’s Emergency Fund. We're paying $8 million annually for Palestine Refugee Relief. That's more than half
—of the program’s ‘cost. We pay more than 65 per ,
cent of the cost of 10 interAmerican rworganizations, in
‘which we maintain member-
ship.. Our. bill for this amounts -to nearly $2 million a year.
THE subcommittee is trying
to get the White House to es: “tablish guiding principles de-
fining the responsibilities of
the various agencies. It also =~
hopes to get the President to
establish ah over-all interde-
partmental board or committee with various s
sections devoted organi 30 Jas cular Sela of aeipity: 3 Tos now in eu nce. 2 ;
NEW
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‘ball Coach
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NIT gives us The baro
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Training C
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Yankees, 7 to
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ran for Ted, run. when Al gingle throug ‘The Yanke Joe Dimaggic a blistered he
BURBANK pitching was conversation Browns’ camp
—saw-Tom-Fer
and Lou Kret 0 victory over Sox yesterday
PHOENIX, York Giants dians continu spring series | Giants leading The Giants day when Wh enth-inning si Hoffman,
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BRADENT( Outfielder Er: his way into t als’ pitching p his impressive Boston Brave: Dusak hurle nings as the
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