Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1952 — Page 21
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Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola - el
WHEN YOU'RE bustin’
%. .
met with so much approval, verbal and written
your sus penders with
- . 4 bat i. x Lay
= 2 Here's a “Thank You’
~~. And an Irish Curtsy
And from Shelbyville Way, ‘this: “Dear Ed
ns hrought special laughter or tears I was
gonna write a letter’, but I'm not a fan-letter
'§ pride that a certain announcement a week og Dozens. of times when ‘one of your col-
gad, you have to say more. As sure as taxes, I was certain Rosemary
¢ O'Brien was the girl I wanted to “ake by the
hand and walk the winding path of life. And once the decision is approved by the most important member of the partnérship, you want to spread out. The reaction at home was immediate and unanimous—pro
Elsewhere, we've increased the sale of stamps and the circulatien in many right arms. . Mr. and Mrs. Everett Fry, 1342 W. 31st St, sent a card and penned this thought with which I agree heartily: “We are so glad you have found someone as nice as your Rosemary. Sometimes you sounded like you needed a girl like her very much. Best wishes to both of you. oS 6 &
GENE OKON, R. R. 1, Box 119, Westfield:
‘Wrote this right after I read the good news about your Rosemary O'Brien—Iloads of good luck and sincerest congratulations.
“Me? I'm merely one of your best fans. And no one was more surprised and pleased to hear the announcement that Sovola has renounced bachelorhood. But I read your pieces about the blessedness of bachelordom with tongue in cheek -figuring ‘that eventually some nice gal would come along and cause ‘the magnetic Pole’ to changé his tune. So, again, best wishes and if at all possible, I'll try be get one of the front row pews at the Cathedral on July 12th. ” Mr. Okon, you're éertainly welcome. to witness the ceremony but remember the wedding will take place in the chapel of SS. Peter and Paul Cathed ral. This is going to be an economy-sized wedding. A clever touch was added by Albert D. Jasper 3416 N. Kenwood Ave. Mr. Jasper sent a per sonal check—‘“Pay to the order of Ed Sovola and Rosemary O'Brien, 100.100—One hundred! congratulations and 100 years of happiness.” If we have 100 years of happiness together Rosemary and I won't ask for an extension Mr. Jasper. Rub your magic lamp and make the world and all that is in it behave.
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Mar. 27—We heard from a very untrustworthy source which hasn't been right in years that Marie Wilson recently ordered some French champagne in a Hollywood restaurant. “Now make sure that's French,” sternly commanded Marie, “because if it isn’t I won't be able to tell the difference.”
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ANNE JEFFREYS, John Raitt and ' Bert Wheeler are all great—in our opinion—in “Three Wishes for Janie” which we consider a dandy show. » Lovable little Bert Wheeler is Irish and so is practically everybody else. When they're adopting a child, somebody asks, “Is he Irish?” “I forgot to ask,” says Bert. “I keep forgettin’ there's people that ain't.”
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ERROL FLYNN, at his trial in Nassau against Duncan McMartin for punching him, testified: “Outside of the times he hit me, his friendship made no impression on nee.”
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JAMES A. FARLEY has settled it once and for all. I saw him in El Morocco and asked him, “Well, are you a Kefauver man or a Russell man?” His answer was unequivocal. “I'm a Farley man,” he said. %
YOU THINK TV sportscasters make mistakes? The late Ring Lardner, many years ago, watched a. baseball gamle which Graham McNamee was broadcasting. Lardner later was asked how he liked the game. According to Katherine 8. Lobach’'s fine new book of sports reminiscences, which she calls “The Referee’s Wife Takes Time Out,” Lardner smiled broadly and answered: *'I liked em both.”
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NEW YORK CITY'S getting wilder and woo! lier. The other day Loew's Orpheum checked 200 guns of its customers (water pistols of small boys who were frisked before they entered),
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Mar® 27—We of the scolding trade find it reasonably rough to gouge the glands into a daily spate of anger, mock or
otherwise, and occasionally a little pollyanna creeps through the shrill cries and the steady thud of the gavel. I had something fairly nic in mind for today, since it is the old exception which cripples the cliche. A bloke I know named Euan Lloyd, a Londoner, has just come back from his first tour of this country, He has not, it seems, run to the first available correspondent with the usual plaints of the Britisher abroad. He has not condemned America’s steam heat as too stuffy, nor beefed because we eat too much and waste too much of what we eat,
5 *. *. DO oe oe
four instead of the formal English-eye-\ of artless madhouse. He has condemned nobo so far, for being too rich and too proud of
HE visited
pleasant,
HAS Hollywood, and
He has made no cracks about Texas, and h laid off our politics, regarding them as our o business. There have been no pointed remarks abo our corruption and our gangsters and he has n blanket-condemned either our press or our a cents. He says that everywhere he has foun: people rather astoundingly kind, gracious, con siderate, generous and polite. He hasn't eve: drawn any invidious comparisons between Ame; iran and British-women. All in all, he thinks we're "a fairly decent set of coves, even by his staunchly English «tandards, and is pleased to make our ac quaintance.
. . oN oe oo .
amazing for these times, wher in the visiting “view we being a race of cross
THIS 1S most everybody knows that take a poor perspective vulgarians,' hairy barbarians, gullet-stuffers dollar-worshipers, Hollywood Idolators and steam-heat stifled colonists who spend all our time figuring out ways to enslave the world because we got bucks and/the world ain't got bucks, podner. I am.grateful to Mr. Lioyd for the first charitable estimate of this wild and woolly land that I have heard from visiting lips for quite a spell,’and am pleased to discover that not all of us are bandits, cowboys, gangsters and sex slayers, who chew gum ceaselessly. It is even nice to know that all Yanks do not preface every remark with “W hy, say, Bo; yew are all-fired wrong about that dod-rotted dag nabbed gazabo . ..” which seems to be the ‘say most visiting Britons translate American slang. Lo a z
’ » oe a Dy
THERE also is a friend in tos vn from Cairo
‘ who has brightened the day a bit, since ke has
“writer; when your book was published I thought
“bless the guy, hope he sells a million’, but I was ‘busy: whefl you went home for Christmas last year I squawled and wished for my Mom, and was going to tell you. | . .
“This can't go unnoted. May I be among th first total strangers who, either privately or otherwise, will be wishing you and Rosemary the best in happiness and success in your special story which begins July 12. Very sincerely, Avonelle Lewis, Society Editor, Shelbyville News.”
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FM GOING to type the next note with my toes. It made me light-headed and it's difficult to remain seated. “Dear Mr. now a New
Sovola: I'm a former Kentuckian, Yorker on a three-day stay in Indianapolis. Yesterday 1 read your dissertation on ‘art’ and clipped it for future reference. Today I read your engagement announcement, which I think is a most noble and classic tribute to your betrothed and it proves your good character as, to me, your ‘art’ proved your insight and humor, hence is a tribute to you, too. I felt compelled to drop you this note because vou seem so-human and folksy . . . may our good God give you and Rosemary his perpetual blessing. Ferdinand D Stoll, Brooklyn, N. Y." Mr. Stoll, T'll—oo0ps Rosemary and T will be rooting for the Dodgers to win the pennant and then the series this summer. > ’ ’
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“GETTING MARRIED? Congratulations from all the Carrolls—that's as rafter-raising as an Irish-Polish wedding. Be careful, we're ‘beginning to collect confetti and rice.” All the Carrolls, 258 N. Main St., Frankfort.”
“Dear Ed: You will find that two can live as ohrenply as one—though not as well. To every nan there comes a time when singleness is not blessed. My best wishés in your new adventure, (‘ordially, Walker Stone, 1013 13th St, N. W., Washington, D. C.”’ He's editor of Scripps-How-rd Newspaper Alliance,
Thanks Boss.
To the many ‘fans,’ “readers,” and ‘just a reader,” Mrs. D. N. F.,, “An ‘Inside’ Fan,” I'll lower my head slightly and say “Thank you,”
while Rosemary executes an Irish curtsy.
Gags and Gali On Earl's Beat
BEFORE HE WROTE for comedians Milton Berle and Jackie Gleason, gagman Coleman Jacoby wrote for a lesser comic who complained to him: “You haven’t captured my style.” “Tf IT ever did capture [it,” said Jacoby, heat the hell out of it.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Gen. Ike will be on the reviewing stand at the VFW Loyalty Day Parade here Apr. 26, some VFWSs are boasting. . . . Milton Berle will earn around $25,000 a week—for himself —in the '52-'53 contract he's expected to sign with Texaco. . .. garet Truman was so good on the J. Durante show that some of the Truman-haters had to say, “You know, she’s all right.” Dagmar celebrated her re- . turn to TV with a party. She and husband - Danny Dayton gave it in their Central Park South “panthouse.” . .. Alleen Stanley Jr. makes her screen debut in “About Face.”
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FRANK COSTELLO, insisting he's innocent in that New Jersey gambling case, says it's all about a $40 check Mrs. C. gave a ticket broker four years ago. The check, says Costello, was cashed in the gambling house by one of the recipients along the line, not by him. Dick Reynolds, the tobacco heir, visiting England to inspect his new $180,000 yacht (which will require 60 men a year to build) said: “I wanted to help British industry.” -The yacht, an auxiliary ketch, will be launched in June. FARL'S PEARLS: Lloyd Nolan feels columnists write so much about marital splitups— “They write friction.” “WELL,” said Bob Hawk, to a woman with flowers in her hair, “I know who wears the plants in your family.” ... That's Earl, brother.
“I'd
Miss Stanley
Sweetness and Light. That's Robert Today
amply demonstrated that we mav have mad some impact abroad aside from dollar diplomac; and ingrained hatred. Among us at the moment is Mr. Hassan Bahi El Din El Samra, who work for the TWA people in the Cairo office. During the recent riots in Cairo, Mr. Hassa! Played a one-man re-enaction of Horatio at the Bridge, in order to protect American property from his own countrymen. They fired nearly everything in the Shepheard’'s Hotel area except the=airline offices, and they committed no violence against this chunk of American propert: only because Mr. Hassan repeatedly risked lif ind limb to stand off the mob. He even burnt off most of his clothes whi cuing American equipment and vital file go: building that was flaming "all around, iunks of the roof dropping in on his own othe: e-untouched offices,
. ‘. ». ole » o % XJ .
I DOUBT very much if many of us woul painful dismemberment by attempting to di t a full-scale fanatic riot if our own peopl ddenly descended on Rockefeller Center and : were employed by some foreign firm. Yet it's just what Mr. Hassan did, and it makes e believe that maybe we all aren't such awfu ople in our business relationships abroad me would have us think. Which accounts for the sweetness-and-light cpartment today. Cheers, Mr. Lloyd and Mr. 1 Samra. Nice to have you both among ns athens, because even a very few of vou cai {0 us mor: good than the whole European re iwery plan.
Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith :
Q—What can I use for a flower bed on thes uth side of our garage? I tried zinnias last year but they got leggv and did not have nice flowers in late summer. Chrysanthemums have too short i season of bloom. I want something pretty that will be presentable all summer. Carrollton Ave A—Make it’ a marigold bed. They'll love that outh exposure, You could plant it to different Read Marguerite Smith's Gorden Column in The Sunday Times
kinds of marigolds ify you want. Tall African kinds in the back row. The shorter knee-high French marigolds of different sorts in the second row. With an edging of some low-growing type such as butterball. Incidentally, The Times is offering garden column readers each ‘a free. packet of marigold seeds: So why not plant a Times marigold garden? Just send stamped selfaddressed envelope with your request. You will receive a packet of mixed seed that's ordinariiv’ sold for 15¢. They're easy to raise. Plant them in any sunny spot where ground i= reasonably good and you will have color outdoors and flowers to
cut for bouquets all summer long.
Mar- .
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rar s ERE ERREEEOE SERRE REN ar aR eR Rena I ERIapSae
(Fourth of a Series)
By
ALLAN KELLER
Times Speci) Writer
CENSORSHIP'S
government is doing.
evil head crops up in strange places, trying to frustrate the public's
right to know what its
Not long ago the Missouri Senate was debating a
bill dealing with. library budg ets. In the balcony sat a de mure young woman who occas sionally jotted down notes ina book. She was well behaved and quiet, saying nothing bothering no one
and
(See Editorial, Page 22) Suddenly the Democratic leader, Sen. Richard J. Chamier, ordered a sergeant-at-arms to seize the woman's notes or'eject her from the gallery if she
wouldn't surrender them
a a ” A STORM of angry protest broke in the Senate. The Senator was insistent. He said he was acting under an old rule giving the body control over stenographers, that this rule had been adopted to “protect” the Senate against note-taking by unauthorized persons who “might want to put the heat on” Senate members. It should be pointed out that the bill being debated was an inoccuous one, dealing with a requirement for county librarians to be professionally trained, It was neither secret, nor dangerous nor otherwise beyond the pale of the public. Sen. Chamier contended that “the Senators should know who is taking notes behind our backs.” An opposition legislator called this nonsense.
n a - “IT IS fundamental,” the opponent said, ‘that any citizen may enter the gallery and write what he or she wishes without being molested. Are we to post "a guard at every door? Are we going to search every lady's purse to see if she has paper and pencil? This strikes at the very fundamentals of constitutional government.” It sounds like something from behind the Iron Curtain, but it happened here in Jefferson City, Mo. The willingness of many small-fry .go nment employees to invoke the gag rule is
everywhere on the Increase. The Border Parror at San Ysidro Cal, seized the permits of two Mexican reporters who had every legal right to enter this country, Why was this done?
~ ~ IT WAS Aone because the leader of a group of California farmers didn't like the way
stories were being written concerning mistreatment of Mexican field workers, The Border Patrol had no more right than a Philadelphia cop would have to prévent a New York reporter from working because he didn’t like the way the newsman wrote about the YankeesAthletics ball game. An American newspaper went to bat for the Mexican newsmen because it saw the menace of unlicensed censorship and the visiting reporters went on about their work. The scene shifts to a quiet little city in the bluegrass region of Kentucky. Miss MArta Comer, publisher of the Maysville daily, wrote a story about a civil suit filed against a former city official. Charles Clift, court clerk of Mason County and a friend of the former official, announced forthwith that his records would be closed to reporters.
” ~ ~ MISS COMER countered with a front-page story of the censorship and James 8. Pope, fighting chairman of the committee on freedom. of information of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, bombarded the Governor and Attorney General with telegrams protesting the gag. Quickly Asistant Atoorney General John B. Browning ruled that newspapermen have “a well-recognized right” to inspect court records. Some persons say this is a fight between the government and the press. It is nothing of
QUEEN JULIANA—
There'll
Be No
= " By LEONARD RUPPERT Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Mar. 27—A smiling, matronly woman who embodies the solid virtues of the Dutch; as well as being their reigning queen, will renew American acquaint-
anceships during April.
She is Juliana Louise Emma Marie Wilhelmina, descendant of the royal house of OrangeNassau, known as Queen Juliana of The Netherlands since her beloved mother, Queen Wilhelmina, abdicated in 1948.
People who see her in Washington, New York, Philadelphia Tennessee, Georgia and Michi gan will find it difficult to re gard her as a queen because she is unassuming and neighborly Many Hollanders still think of her as “Juliaantje,’” the little girl who skated on the canal and rode a pony.
Today at 43 she is devoted to her family, German-born Prince Bernhard and her four daugh ters. The Prince, whom she met and fell in love with during the 1936 Olympic Games in Ger many, will be at her side du: Z the American tour. s " u THERE will be none of ti wank of monarchy in the tou: Juliana. It would not be in keeping with the character o juliana or her husband. «However, the three days o eceptions in Washington whicl will begin the visit and the visit to Dutch centers in Michigan which will end it, will reflect the friendly relations betwee: The Netherlands and a countr: widely colonized with its cour
trymen, In between, the queen will /isit Philadelphia, spend a
week-end with Mrs. Franklin D Roosevelt at Hyde Park, have a three-day round of festivities in New York (including a Broad way show), spend another week-end resting at Sea Island "'(Ga., and tour the Ford plant at P.iver Rouge, Mich,
RISE TO POWER—
A feature of the Michigan visit will be a call upon the city of Holland, America’s tulip capital. After Michigan, the royal couple will head for the West (‘oast, making a coast-to-coast grand tour. Throughout the entire trip, there will be ample opportunity for the down-to-earth queen to make friends. Friendship iz a quality she has in good measure, a quality that has endeared her to her subjects. It stems, largely, . from her unregal upbringing. Her father, Prince Henry, once told her tutor: “Don't be any more ‘indulgent with her than is necesqary.” » n n AT THE University of Leiden he attended as a regular stu dent. She was a member of the Women’s Student Club, and her song -— submitted anon mously--won the prize as tf club's “Song of the Year.” Juliana bestows the sa: ideas on her own children, A! though 14-year-old Princess Be atrix is destined to some da succeed her mother on the throne, she and her Irene, 13, Margriet, 9, and Marijke, 5, are far from-.par nered in They are not tutored pr vately, but attend a progressive :chool in the neighborhood of thelr home. And their habit: differ little from those of their ~hoolmates. They even take their own lunch.
sister
ov » 4 AS QUEEN of The Nether lands, Jullana has only limited powers, All political decisions are made by responsible min ster <
"The Indianapolis
us A THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1952 Tel
PAGE 21
wo
Tell
¢
Half-Pint Autocrats U. S. Citizens
Little as Possible
\ >» “No A
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f) yy
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NN Eee
Re
MONKEY BUSINESS—While his son is over in Korea fight-
ing for freedom there are those who are trying to take it away
from-him.
the kind. It is a battle-royal, getting hotter every week, between government and the public, which pays the bills and ought to know what's going on.
” ~ ~ THE ODOR of scandal and graft assaults the nostrils
whenever government tries to hide {ts actions. No matter what the reason may have been, it is impossible not to wonder what went on when the Cleveland Public Library Board, after meeting in the open for years, suddenly decided on closed sessions, - . At one of these star chamber proceedings it voted an award for an unprecedented five-year
>
Swank In Royal
bookbinding contract. It may have been--like Caesar's wife ~-above reproach, but one thing is clear. It was a denial of the public's right to know what was going on with its money. One of the most flagrant examples of suppression was tried by the Mayor and members of" the council in Elkton, Md.—the Gretna Green of the East. In this town are two small weekly newspapers, which had covered the meetings for years.
- . " NOT LONG ago the Mayor and the council members de-
cided they didn’t like what the papers revealed, and the doors of the council chamber were
ROYAL VISITOR—Queen Juliana of The Netherlands and her husband, Prince Bernhard, in a recent official portrait.
The crown and its wearer, as in Great Britain, symbolize the nity of the nation in much the same way as does the American flag. And the resulting impact of royal actions is extenive, Perhaps the most historic task Juliana has performed was that of presiding over the meet-
ing, on Dec. 27, 1949, at which the 300-year-old sovereignty of The Netherlands over its Asian empire was transferred to the independent’ Republic of Indonesia
~ » » IN RECENT she has keeniv felt the plight of the world's millions of refugees.
VeArs year
closed. Don't forget: This was Elkton, Md., U, 8. A, not NijniNovgorod or Irkutsk. "It was dictatorship. in the raw -- penny-package size, per haps, but a flagrant example of suppression, a negation of the basic fundamentals of demoe~ racy. Mr. Pope moved in on the situation again, and the powerful Baltimore Sun thundered at the puny politburo in the sticks. Reluctantly the meetings were opened to the public. Psychologists will have to dig deep to find out how things like this can happen in a land whose sons are dying day after day to preserve the rights of free peoples. These men in uniform must wonder if their sacrifices are worthwhile when they read in the hometown papers that half-pint autocrats, feeding at the public trough, are telling free citizens what and how much they can know about their own government,
» - ” GEOGRAPHY has no bear~ ing on the growing cancer of Suppression. It flourishes erever people are slow to strike in their own defense. There was an outcropping of the disease in the small city ‘of Pawtucket, R. I, but the Providence Journal and Bulletin, acting in behalf of the people's rights, fought it for four years --and won in the highest court in the land. Citizens of the city wanted
to look at tax abatement rec-
ords to see who was getting reductions or forgiveness im taxes. The authorities said they were secret records. A low court upheld the city's officials,
» ” » THE PAPER appealed to a higher court, spent thousands of dollars and years of effort. The Supreme Court of the United States upheld it in rule ing that the records were public property, for all to see. In » lot of lands across the sea people have lost all their liberties because they didn't fight against isolated attempts at censorship and restriction in the beginning. You can't wait to apply the brakes on a runaway train.
"NEXT: The Military—and Farewell to Freedom.
Tour
Working to ease their sufferings, she has been in correspondence on the subject with President Truman, When she arrives by plane in Washington, D. C., on Apt. 2, Juliana. will be setting foot on U. 8, shores for the first time as a queen. But it will not be her first visit. As Crown Princess—when she was a ware time exile in Canada—she was welcomed here several times.
Juliana Third
Reigning Queen To Visit U. S.
WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 ~—Juliana of The Netherlands will be the third reigning queen to pay an official visit to the United States in 36 years. . And she'll be the first to be a guest in the newly remodeled White House—as well as the first to spend three nights there, since official White House visits usually are limited to one night. Queen Marie of Rumania was the first reigning queen to make a royal tour here. That was in October, 1928.
THE only other one, up te now, was Juliana's mother, Queen Wilhelmina, who made an official trip to the U.S. in August, 1942. Queen Wilhelmina also made numerous unofficial visits while she was fn Canada during the war. State Department records, which go back only to 1908, list three other queens whose husbands were reigning kings when they visited here—Albert and Elizabeth of Belgium -in 1919, Prajaphipok and Barni of Siam in 1931, and George and Elizabeth of England in 1931, And, of course, another Elize abeth of England visited Amere ica last year. She was a prine cess then, but she's reigning queen now,
Can Gen. Batista Give Cuba An Honest Government?
‘By WADE JONES Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Mar. 27 -There is a fair chance that Fulgenc 0 Batista, who -once again -has nade a revolutionary bid for power in Cuba, might give the strife-ridden island the honest; effective government it has lacked so long. That's the opinion of Spruille jraden, U. 8. ambassador to Cuba in World War II, and later our ambassador to Argentina, While no one wants to see arize to power through force of arms in a neighboring country, “Batista has the intellect and the capacity -to give the Cuban
people they deserve, Mr. Braden. “He has wealth. and all the glory any man could hope for He has experience, and so it may be he will try to establish a really good government as the thing he would like’ to be remembered for in years to come.” ;
But there are 8erious obstacles to be overcome and one of them, Braden says, is the threat of
the ‘good
if he
governmenit will,”
bean area and ILatin America.
“As a strong man Batista could really suppress the Com-
to.
says
munists, despite the fact that
n 1942 he had the first Com-
munist cabinet officer in -this hemisphere, and in 1943 he established diplomatic rela-
with the USSR as the United States had done 10 years before,” Mr. Braden says. This he did of his own volition and not as many other j.atin-American countries did subsequently at the instance and . upon the insistence of
tions
communism whiche~ Washington.” hangs over much Gf the Carib- .
Batista first came to power in 1923 during the bloody revolution which he'led as an army
sergeant, ‘He Tuled as Dayna.
the-scenes strong man and later as president. His candidate lost in 1944 when Ramon (Grau San Martin became president i Batista went to Florida, only 90 miles from Cuba, and lived there in exile until 1948 when he was elected to the Cuban Senate and returned home. His early life was that of poverty. He gotsa harsh taste of it as a child when he used to walk outside a foreign club to
- ‘hear the orchestra play for the
dances. He was chased away, and people close to him say he never forgot it, “Batista Is a wealthy man
of great experience in governe ment,” Mr. Braden says. “With the courage and intelligence ha possesses he could, if he would, do a magnificent job for his country in cleansing it of the corruption «which has been the bane of Cuban public life. “A sign of Batista's desire to do good would be the type of men he appoints to office. “About the best move he could make in this direction would be the appointment of Carlos Saladrigas to a top job. He was prime minister when Batista was president, and - is one of the ablest statesman in this hemisphere.”
’
