The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 13, 1953, Page 5

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Tron Curtain Policies Nete—Last month three granted visas by ; off for a two-week Union. They Moscow and Kiev. jaw, es related) , 22-year-old) the University ... Ear To) The Ground By JIM COBB in the construction of the school jopened Jast month | We four he students proud of} their university. Onc, Sergei So. chin, a philosophy major with a blond rag mop of hair, asked ex. citedly in the elevator: | “How fast do your elevators run? Ours run...” He knew exactly, to! the second. I couldn't tel! him how Views On Nat'l UN. Begins Work | Primary System On Proposals To | WASHINGTON — senator REVISE Charter George Sar a sean By A. 1, GOLDBERG Public opinion which he said in’) tien NATIONS, N. Y. he. eas wed Seve ode oe (the. 8) delarationsia(theiUnited a national political system which ; offers the appearances of “Rigging, Nations began pointing Monday borderline bribery, political black-\for debate on proposals to revise mail, and vote-trading.” lu. N. Charter. South Carolina's! The Florida senator is author of'Goy, James F. Byrnes was set as. fast Michigan elevators run. a pending resolution before the) principal U. S. spokesman on the; By WILLIAM F, ARBOGAST : WASHINGTON if — U. S. dele-' gates to the Interparliametary Un- jon mustered strength today against a proposal they said would morally commit the United States! to giving financial aid to every! nation in the wortd. | They were ready, if necessary,| to engage in a floor fight to modi-| fy language of a resclution up for! & vote by the unicn. | But Rep. Keating (R-NY), one of the U. S. delegates to the 32-| nation conference being held in the! House chamber, said he hoped the |language would be toned down be- In Moscow State’s Library, We £44244444444444444444444644444446444. Congress for a national primary —$—_—— fore the resolution came to a vote. They | geoisie’ Saw many Rus- slum homes, hidden mas- is. I Inoxed into lighted 8 oD peop'e living four or one dreary room. the New Moscow State a gleaming, imperious ith atop Lenin Hills, It looked it. Most of its 7,000 students, nd, were toere on scholar- ome got preference by put- tvo years of voluntary labor ANDARD OW for car performance that’s really iS.» try a fill of Crown Extra, \ a — — _ |Dorothy Vredenburg and Mrs. Dor- i Par-'round gasoline performance! WeRowNn Exrra is refined in jwith us, the average Russian gets -\ed in broad strokes of poverty, mission candidates put in an ap- We ran across this little poem the ed the reading rooms well postion with American and British Folks ing to attend the ample and let the fellows say just scientific journals «nd bulletins BPW sponsored “Town Meeting” what they want to? from the U. S. Departments of Thursday evening had better take Can’t Quit Agriculture and Commerce. a lunch — it appears that they are Periodically, the writer makes Judging by their conversations going to be there for a dong time. an aeeath nliduit cateoxtne atl Let's use a little arithmetic. a picture of the United States paint-| Assuming that all 17 city com-jis always an unsuccessful attempt. ach is allotted 10 other'day. It made me feel better.| bankruptcy and oppression for the pearance and Tobaces ia «dirtyiweed hx tke it! worker and farmer and of great minutes to speak — it will require) cco } wealth and power for the “bour- a total of 170 minutes for them to eons no normal need. I like and capitalists. make their pitches. | a During a stormy argument in| Just for the sake of discussion iemakes you thin, it makes you! @ Ukrainian schooiroom, we tried — we'll allow two minutes for the; ean, | ‘to make some sturdy collective introduction of each speaker in- itstakes your hair right off your farmers understand how American cluding applause. Moderator Jack) bean. . farmers had prospered in recent Clarke will probably use 10 minutes) It's the worst darn stuff I've ever! years, I saw them smile. They in outlining the rules. ° | seen. I like it. didn’t believe us. Add that all up and you'll see ae “They know how poor the peas- that it will require a total of 3 1 ants are in the Unitea Strtes” ex- hours and 34 minutes for the can-||WEQHIE cop e plained a Kiev journalist who ac- didate to say their pleces. ied us. “They've reau aii, pit e poor speaker who is on system and abolishment of the Major East-West dispute Electoral College to “return to the} Byrnes returned from a weekend People the authority to nominate trip home to renew consideration and elect their Presidents.” of an allied subject—admission of His most recent views on the new members—in the Special Po- subject were addressed to Dr. Paul litical Committee this afternoon (3| David, of the Brookings Institute,\p. m, EST), The delegation was which has just announced endow-|looking for that question tc be fin-| ment of a new study of political ished by midweek, with Byrnes conventions as a means of clean- then moving to the Assembly's ing up nominating and election\Legal Committee to handle the practices in this nation. Smathers|charter revision item. offered Dr. David his cooperation! ‘The big question on revising the in the study, pointing out that he charter, whether to hold a special has been working for election re-'conference on the topic will not forms since entering Congress in'be decided until the 1955 Assembly. 1947. He said in his letter: | But to be prepared for that, The “While during the six years no Netherlands, Argentina and Egypt jlegislation has been enacted as a'all have suggested that this year’s result, I do feel that the education Assembly start preparatory work of the people of the United States,'to get all the documents in order. and their representatives in Con-|and to find out whether most coun- | gress, has been proceeding at a'tries incline toward favoring a con- | not unsatisfactory pace. I am con-'ference. | beck.” I retorted that that was a de- my argument wasn’t translated. Still, in these arguments, there about it in that fine book, ‘The the t Grapes of Wrath,’ by John Stein-'there won't be any audience left jpression-era picture of some farm- ranged the affair has stated that ers migrating from dust bowls. But the candida d of such a marathon — in the hall The BPW committee who ar- wers to 16 que A glance at the questionaire that Gave Liberally By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON ( — Leaders in fident that reforms in our methods of electing our national leaders are inevitable and that in a few years we will have substantial revisions To Demos, GOP: to those which I have pro- posed. this particular field than that of “I know of no greater need in’ The Soviet bloc already has loud. | iy denounced even this preliminary | move, Attacked for its heavy use of the veto in keeping out non-Com-! munist membership applicants, the Russians have charged that| \charter revision is only a plot to| jweaken Soviet were times when we Americans aes nare: Ne hnericats was mailed to the speakers and the nation’s business and social seemed to ‘0 The Ci circles were among the major fi- some of those present. We could Lapeer ane C Tol Mean nancial “angels” of the Republi-| tell when we were beginning toyion. a jean and Democratic parties in 1982 ubiquitous party-liners “ese 5 . jan le [ert eeain tiie gublect beetederse Spleo al oe fase The Rockefellers, the Mellons, Once we were teliing a crowd |? Yen sor any heater “\the Pews and the duPonts contrib- of absorbed Kiev students how a ae Lig ~ ae where? E el No, (uted handsomely to the Republican university scholarship pulled me ae west ah aca mitid an g, |National Committee, while the cof- through Michigan and how a friend ng Smoupts iW nSS aie vee ” "fers of the Democratic National was studying at the University of there are a Jot more like it. |Committee got hefty boosts from Colorado on the GI Bill, Hence, that will allow’ each the Dukes, the Vredenburghs, the But when we began to explain SPeaker something less than 20 Fields and the Sonneboms. what the GI Bill 1s, a clacking Seconds to discuss each question. Names of individuals contribu- voice behind me switched the con-| It seems to us that the speaker'ting funds to the two political par- versation, Why, he wanted to know, Should be allowed to cay his ties must be filed with the clerk was Paul Robeson not permitted Stand on the issues. If he isagainst of the House six times during an |to come to the Sovie: Union to pick something, he should be allowed tojelection year and four times in off- up his Stalin Peace Prize? explain why. He might be on the years, Federal law prohibits any | In such discussions, the Iron Cur- right track jindividual from donating more |tain was not exactly rigid, It was| Some of the candidates may play than $5,000 to a national political jmore like a self-seuling tire, clos- it cute and answer all the ques- party, but puts no limitation on ing off its own leaks before any tions in about 30 seconds and then'how many members of the same jreal damage was done. use the remainder of the time to family may give the maximum. | say what they have on their mind.| Neither does it require publica- Why not follow the Jaycee's ex tion of the names of donors to Political groups which are not na- tional, such as state committees, The Rockefellers, for example, gave $17,000 to the GOP National Committee in 1952. Contributions is $3,000 each were made by Lau- | ‘The Citizen: A Family Newspaper STANDARD Oil rance Rockefeller, David Rocke- lfeller, Winthrop Rockefeller and |John D. Rockefeiler III, all of New |York, while John D, Rockefeller jJr., and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller Jr. gave $2,500 each. The duPonts of Delaware made |four separate donations totaling $4,500 to the Republican cause. The Mellons of Pittsburgh went ‘over the $8,000 mark with four don- ‘ations to the GOP. Pews of Philadelphia tossed $12,000 into the GOP treasury and the Lilly family of Indianapolis contributed $8,000 to the Republi- cans, Twe contributions totaling $5,000 were made to,the Democratic Na- tional Committee by Angier Biddle Duke of New York. From the Sonneboms of New |York the Democrats received $15,- 000 in separate donations. Separate contributions of $2,500 jeach were made in the name of othy Vredenburg, while a $5,000 donation was attributed to Peter 'Vredenburg III. The ,Vredenburgs the are from Birmingham. ocith for Southern motorists and pid by a Southern company, Its Mrs. Perle S. Mesta, who was minister to Luxembourg under the veto power in the’ eliminating from the American Security cil. Scene the suspicion of “rigging,” borderline bribery, political black- mail and vote trading such as ap-! Pears at the present time to mark’ the political conventions and the. election system setup. The essence of the security of our democratic system is the pride and confidence People, and I do not think that anyone claim that the Am-, erican people are proud of our pre- sent system and the way in which we manage it nor do they have confidence in the system's results, “I note that you hope to arrive at some findings by the end of 1954 and that your studies are “looking Foster Dulles told the Assembly in| a speech Sept. 17 that the United States not only favors the prepara- jtory moves, but will have a num-| ber of changes to suggest in the charter drawn up in 1945, The charter itself authorizes a review of its provisions in 1955, eventually to the idea of the na- jtional primary.” I share with you, |the hope and expectation that this may one day come into being and ‘optimistically anticipate that some favorable action will be taken in jtime for our 1956 elections. As tentatively drafted by a con- ference committee, the resolution | Says all nations have “a moral| duty to assist those that are leas| developed.” The U. S. delegates, headed by Sen. Ferguson (R-Mich), take the Position that since the United States is recognized as the most Tuesday, October 13, 1953 TH highly developed nation is world, the resolution would mer- ally bind it to help any other na- tion needing development. It could have only moral effect, since resolutions adepted by the conference are merely guides action by the legislatures of member nations. The estimated 350 delega: members or former mem in bearish s. In debate » egates said they believed country’s taxpayers have about cided it’s time to cut down foreign assistance programs, the programs of giving and financial aid oped areas should the interest of U. S. delegates a: 5 cial burden should distributed. U, S. railroads receive one billion dollars in revenue @ year for carrying bituminous eeel. 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STANDARD GiL COMPANY |Democrats, gave that party $2,000, Marshall Field and Mrs. Mar jshall Field of New York and Chi- jcago aided the Democratic cause by $3,000 each, Minister Resigns COLOMBO, Ceylon ua — Prime |Minister Dudley Senanayake re- jsigned Monday. His retirement! jWas attributed to acute stomach trouble aggravated by political! opposition. Governor General Lord Soulbury named Senanayake’s cousin, trans- port Minister Sir John Kotelawela, to succeed him. Senanayake has been ill for some time. Criticism of his government mounted with riots last August jagainst spreading inflation and Tising food prices. Troops were jcalled out and at least nine per. sons were killed. The government also lost U. S. financial support jwhen it agreed to sell Commu-| nist China rubber in exchange for| rice. ! Porcupines often destre Bs (feeding on the inner bark, B, the tree by girdling it. 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