Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1952 — Page 7
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WEDNESDAY, MAR. 12, 1052 — = —— : nn on lke: Beats Taft in N. H., Chiefs Delay Congressmen Studying How They Can Divvy Up Your Income
> - Priorities By United Prey g this sort of du- They are interested in deciding eral tax legislation. The commite Ketauver Trims Truman
WASHINGTON, Mar. 12—Dear which part of it should be left for tee Is headed by Rep. Robert L,
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12, 1952
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well-.aware, they pay a federal about elimina income tax as well as a state. in- Plication.
Taxpayer: x ax But, don't jump to the conclu- 4 hie Doughton (ND. N. C.). For 1X Plant | There's a meeting gding on here Some a Jee Baroline as sion that somebody is planning tne Yates tad Hak, SRY DA Yor The states were represented 4 BE in” w é Ve ea and State gasoline tax, a fled- eh ~ » ax _ the federa ov ) Xx. ‘uc " Gov. Adlal FE Continued From Page One thelr side. Tactics which had Which you probably have some to reduce your taxex by elim such notables as G .
academic. interest. It has to do eral admissions tax and ‘a state inating duplication. The closed-door meeting was Stevenson of Illinois, Gov. Alfred with overlapping and duplication admissions tax, ad infinitum. That's not the idea at all. The called by top-ranking members ot E. Driscoll of New Jersey, and The In state and’ federal taxes. The meeting’ here today was only question under discussion is the House Ways and Means Com- Gov. Walter J. Kohler Jr., of Wise As most taxpayers are only too called to see what can be done how to divide up your income.mittee, which originates allefed- consin.
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i tied ; son for Mr. Taft in Ohio—a hardchine politicians. These politic- OP By United Press jans were with the President lock, iriVIng. hammering personal cam: \cHINGTON. Mar. 12 stock and barrel--from his ad- P2180 of speeches and handshak-' = ° tration they receiver hove ing—certainly’ worked less. well J0int Chiefs of Staff have balked and patronage favors, to him they "re: 81 Aan urgent Yequest, trom the owed gratitude. ..The Senator couldn't have Atomic Energy Commission for.
All But Ignore Him Worked . harder — he ploughed “super-priorities” on materials for
through mountains of snow for ; S ) p When Mr. Kefauver came into votes. . Mr. Taft got the crowds, He S11%0.0001000 Home Dany iy
| New Hampshire, .they all but all right—but Gen. Ike got the today | ignored Him. They said he didn't votes. °C Chai _have a ghost of a chance, yet, led The Eisenhower campaign bene- Deal by National Committeeman km- fited tremendously by having the Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson more mett J. Kelley, they ran a clumsy, top Republican leaders of the than a month ago. He warned | witless campaign. State. Including Gov. Adams, t0.upa¢ construction of the new !
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They wound up with 22 del- direct it. ! : | : J s . : plant, which will produce both Hegate candidates for 12 delegate Familiar Names bomb ahd A-Domb explosives.
places, which meant the Truman Most of the Eisenhower dele- would be delayed “as much as
delegate vote was bound to be : . ny ai a " x rereplit all over the place. They gates were men whose names SiX months” without” an ov
didn't even get a state campaign Ave been before this state's 1ding priority, on building, ma-
: terials, chairman until 10 days before voters successfully many times Authoritative sources said Mr.
election. For people who were Again Gov. Adams, ex-Gov. Rob- Wilson and Defense Production |. supposed to be professional poli- ary , Blood, Rep. Norris Cotton, Administrator Manly Fleisch ticians. it ‘was ludicrous. ex-Rep. Foster Stearns, ex- mann turned the request over to ji Mr. Kefauver, meanwhile, Was National GOP ' Committeeman the Joint Chiefs of Staff for conshowing he meant business. He Robert Burroughs, ‘Speaker Lane sideration. | 9 didn't have organization, so he pwinnell of the New Hampshire ;
went from town to town almost gouge of Representatievs. Head- Hold Up Action ; :
alone. a sound truck preceding master William Saltonstall of While the Joint Chiefs have him to shout up a’crowd. Some- ppj)ips-Exeter Academy among not turned thumbs down definitely times there were 20 people on them, on. the: AEC plea, informants hand, sometimes 100—but the rhe campaign for Ike took a said, they .are holding up action little crowds added up and yester- |5t of kidding because of its on it, on the grounds they are day they voted for the man in circus aspects which many be- still trying to determine whether the coonskin cap. lieved New Hampshire would it would disrupt other arms proresent—but if there was a re- duction programs.
Hard Currenc : y sentment it was superficial. The conflict first came to light
The Eisenhower victory came in part because New Hampshire Republican voters bought the dea that only he—and not Bob Taft—can knock over the Democrats next November. #That was the greatest single argument the Eisenhower people had and they played it to the hilt. The chief argument against Gen. lke was that his views weren't clear on major issues— Mr. Taft himself pinpointed a dozen issues to make this point. Whatever the merit, New Hamp-
Eisenhower campaign meetings When the House Appropriations were about as much vaudeville as Committee made public yesterday they were politics as a band of testimony which Mr. Dean gave Broadway entertainers toured| at a closed-door hearing Feb. 6. the state night after night. | Mr. Dean told the lawmakers The Taft campaign was run he had asked Mr. Wilson for a by experienced, professional poli- ‘‘Super-priority” which would take, ticlans at odds with the ruling Precedence over the demands of GOP hierarchy, but it did not all other defense agencies, includhave the zealous, door-to-door ing the armed forces. i work of amateurs which bene- He indicated that he wanted. fited the Eisenhower campaign. the priority to cover about $150 million worth of scarce materials, Sold on Ike such as copper, nickel, generating |
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These people were sold on Gen, €quipment,. structural steel and | Ike as a fresh personality, as the Steel tubing. | movement is expected to spurt man who could win for the Re- ane Ake chairman emphasized | rapidly on the basis of the re- bublicans in November—and they ha ge | ai Foe ifren in n-| turns from this little state. went all ‘over New Hampshire leriering With the oullets Ist E97 Ike's backers have been sell- and sold -that belief. fo Kotva, He au any “conte 3 ing the notion of his invincibility It was a campaign in which WOR "he SEMec Toreas ONCE BEE at the polls and now they've got democracy got a pretty fair run 80 €<im2 Of any par as the hard currency of the New for its money. There were the ok d out" b tiati Hampshire election as evidence, usual exaggerations, some dema- ‘WOTXe¢ ou Y hegoliation. | County and state Republican!goguery, anger and bad temper leaders around the country who here and there. Ho rl) home Pan have been holding back waiting] But it was a campaign also in| estate section of The Sunda for proof may be ready to jump. [which an unknown St. Louis at-| Times. To what extent Sen. Taft canitorney, William Schneider, whose _ > : recover from his defeat here if name had been entered in the Re-| he wins in primaries in Wiscon-/publican preference vote, was able, sin, Illinois and other states re-|to get just as full a hearing at mains to seen. {meetings as Harold Stassen or The result here may well have representatives of the Taft and a drag on efforts of his leaders Eisenhower forces. to nail down delegates in states| It was a campaign in which the where they're chosen by conven-/inherent fairness of an American tion rather than in primaries. The audience showed itself in quick leaders in those states want toresentment to an unfair attack
win in November, too. {leaders of the wholly unauthorized
Joy and Elation : ent. Sen. Taft had said he would ECATIHUF MOVENERL.
settle for four of the 14 Republican delegates. His managers OPEN THURSD here talked of six. The Eisenhower people, fearful Sen. Taft would run close or even win the preferential poll, had tried to play down its importance! —but when it was all over today, with Gen. Eisenhower in an overwhelming lead, there was only joy and elation among Ike's friends. | Four years ago Harold Stas-| sen slugged toe-to-toe with Gov. Tom Dewey in this state and won! a couple delegates. This time, despite intensive campaigning, he! ended in utter failure. : Gen. Douglas MacArthur's popularity showed in a sizable writein vote of about 3000 despite his repeated efforts to have his name completely out of the New Hamp-| shire voting. The General was able to get! the withdrawal of a first slate of delegates filed in his behalf but he could do nothing with an unauthorized group which insisted on staying in the race. On the Democratic side. there was a scattering of popular preference votes for James A, Farley, Adlai Stevenson and one or two others. But it was Mr. Kefauver who stole the show. |
Question Wisdom The GOP result threw into question Sen. Taft's whole cam-| paign strategy and particularly; the wisdom of his direct challenge te Gen. Eisenhower to say where he stood on specific issues. Mr. Taft denied he intended this as an attack on the General, but there is evidence in the vote
shire didn’t take it too seriously. Nationally, the Eisenhower
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