The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 January 1966 — Page 9

V

t Th« Dally Bannar, OraancatHa, Indiana Thursday, January €, 1944

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WASHINGTON w

MARCH OF EVB4TS

MAY MT $110 MUON

^ASBDfORW-lt« e aarydn far Om

to ftfLonot are pertictilarly tfataifeiBa to Pwltont Johnaaa, who is not wnlndtol «f the toeevaUe. cennmnt he generated during Us first year in the White HftUae hgr aeeentiag oeoaomy in govern*

Johnson and Ms toy fiscal a Mas am applying heavy preeaara on fedaaal agencies to hold their nan-war money requests to an absnlnts wihihnum. This is toe budget-making season in Washiagton and too moans of bureaucrats can be heard throughout toe city as they receive word of the extent to which their ra»

Sven aob they may Me hade on those days as being eomperattvely mild. Cneigreee can he egqteeted to ^>ply a heavier than neual axs to toe already trimmed appropriations request* anos they f«t to Chvttd BBL o e o o • CETTUfO OUT OF DEBT—fbnr years ftem near, the date OC Virginia wffl ha completely ant oC debt-probsbly the only ateto'tn toe Unian tost can soaks tost claim. However, as un> neual as this i* tot way ft got Into debt and has remained there anta thie tone, is even stcengv. tt aB stenuned from the fact that Tkgtein choaa the Mng dda to tha CM1 War. MnTaTdtotorMZ£u£i to new about |i

ont of debt tu 1865. on ybftoto Isduded ns then a part e e e e • JOT BTOqdTf- At toe height at tba itoto to toe Watte sec- , ana war cry lupt rising above It was; •Dura. Baby. Bum.to

n Foreign News Commentary

(By Lyle Wlleoa) •y United Pres* International Paul McKallp of the Tucson, Arts. Daily Citixen invites his fellow newsmen coast-to-coast to observe carefully today’s proceedings in Judge E. R. Thurman’s Maricopa County Superior Court. All good citisens also have a stake in what Judge Thurman does next. The judge is setting himself up as a censor on the publication of events taking place in open court. If judges can get away with that they ean get away with anything. Judge Thurman got himself into this trouble last Dec. 7 during a habeas corpus hearing relating to one Donald Chambers, who was charged with murder. A jury was being selected at the time to try Chambers. One newspaper reporter was present. Thurman told the reporter he wanted nothing published about the hearing which would prejudice jurors then being selected. Evidence presented during the hearing Including an offering from the prosecutng attorney purporting to show that Chambers’ finger print had boon found at the murder scene. Newspapers printed the story of the hearing and told of toe fingerprint evidence. Defense A tty. Shepard Weinstein sought from Judge Thurman an order requiring the reporters and editors of the offending papers to show cause why they should not be cited for contempt. Judge Thurman signed the order on Dec. 23 and made it returnable today. Meantime, the habeas corpus proceedings failed. Chambers changed his plea from innocent to guilty shortly after his trial began. On Dee. 21 Chambers was sentenced to life Imprisonment. Editors of the Phoenix Oasette and Arizona Republic said that accounts of the habeas corpus hearing were published because the public has a right to know—and newspapers have a right to publish—what happens in open court. The dispute betwera fi

newspaper with Judge Thurman lies outside the controversy now current with respect to newspaper reporting on criminal trials. Just published by MacMilli&n is ’The Press in the Jury Box,” which raises such questions as this: “Did Bruno Hauptmann kill the landberg baby or did the press make us think so ?” The dust cover describes this book as “an angry, documented, provocative, examination of the daily assaults on justice when the press takes on the accused —the colorful news-paper stories that appear in the wake of sensational crime establishing an ineradicable bias in the minds of the jurors." Perhaps the book is a bit hystericaL The point to be remembered about toe current proceedings in Judge Thurman’s court is that too question is whether a judge may forbid factual publication of what transpires in open court. Thera were no colorful stories in this instance. There was no assault on justice. Newsmen will expect Judge Thurman to decide that he has no right to censor factual reporting of what takes place in his court room. If he decides otoerwiee, newsmen will hope that the editors win take his honor to toe Supreme court by too fastest possible route and knock his head against the marble columns. AH good citisens should be hoping today that Thurman will have toe good sense not to become censor.

YNrtnimgiisiMtij jmM ky to.... US. Army Corps

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