27252 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969
SENATE-Friday, September 26, 1969 The Senate met at 12 o'clock noon
and was called to order by the President pro tempore.
The Chaplain, the Reverend Edward L. R. Elson, D.D., offered the following prayer:
Almighty God, whose kingdom is everlasting and whose power is infinite, in whose will is the destiny of nations, look upon this good land which Thou hast given us, and so rule the hearts of Thy servants, the President of the United States, all members of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, and all in the diplomatic and military services, that they, knowing whose servants they are, may above all things seek Thy honor and glory; and grant that the people, mindful of the burdens of office and the problems to be resolved, may give them their confidence and sustaining prayers. Grant them grace fearlessly to contend against evil, to make no peace with oppression or injustice. Grant that they may reverently use our freedom for the strengthening of this Nation, the establishment of peace between the nations, and betterment of all mankind.
In Thy holy name. Amen.
THE JOURNAL Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the reading of the Journal of the proceedings of Thursday, September 25, 1969, be dispensed with.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.
MESSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT Messages in writing from the Presia
dent of the United States submitting nominations were communicated to the Senate by Mr. Leonard, one of his secretaries.
EXECUTIVE MESSAGES REFERRED As in executive session, the President
pro tempore laid before the Senate messages from the President of the United States submitting sundry nominations, which were ref erred to the appropriate committees.
<For nominations this day received, see the. end of Senate proceedings.)
MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE A message from the House of Repre
sentatives, by Mr. Bartlett, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House had agreed to the amendments of the Senate to the bill <H.R. 4152) to authorize appropriations for certain maritime programs of the Department of Commerce.
The message also announced that the House had passed a bill <H.R. 12884) t;o amend title 13, United States Code, to assure confidentiality of information furnished in response to questionnaires, inquiries, and other requests of the Bureau
of the Census, and for other purposes, in which it requested the concurrence of the Senate.
HOUSE BILL REFERRED The bill (H.R. 12884) to amend title
13, United States Code, to assure confidentiality of information furnished in response to questionnaires, inquiries, and other requests of the Bureau of the Census, and for other purposes, was read twice · by its title and referred to the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service.
LIMITATION ON STATEMENTS DURING TRANSACTION OF ROUTINE MORNING BUSINESS Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that statements in relation to the transaction of routine morning business be limited to 3 minutes.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.
ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that, at the conclusion of the morning business, the Senate proceed to the unfinished business.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The unanimous-consent request is that at the conclusion of the morning business, the business coming over from the previous day be laid down. Without objection, it is so ordered.
EXECUTIVE SESSION Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the Senate go into executive session to consider the nominations on the Executive Calendar beginning with the General Accounting Office.
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to the consideration of executive business.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The nominations on the Executive Calendar will be stated, beginning with the General Accounting Office.
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
The bill clerk read the nomination of Robert F. Keller, of Maryland, to be Assistant Comptroller General of the United States.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nomination is considered and confirmed.
RENEGOTIATION BOARD
The bill clerk read the nomination of Daniel Eldred Rinehart, of Maryland, to be a member of the Renegotiation Board.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nomination is considered and confirmed.
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
The bill clerk read the nomination of Eugene A. Gulledge, of North Carolina, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nomination is considered and confirmed.
U.S. AIR FORCE The bill clerk proceeded to read sun
dry nominations in the U.S. Air Force. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the nominations be considered en bloc.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nominations are considered and confirmed en bloc.
U.S. ARMY The bill clerk proceeded to read sun
dry nominations in the U.S. Army, Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the nominations be considered en bloc.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nominations are considered and confirmed en bloc.
U.S. NAVY The bill clerk proceeded to read sun
dry nominations in the U.S. Navy. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the nominations be considered en bloc.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nominations are considered and confirmed en bloc.
U.S. MARINE CORPS The bill clerk proceeded to read sundry
nominations in the U.S. Marine Corps. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the nominations be considered en bloc.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nominations are considered and confirmed en bloc.
NOMINATIONS PLACED ON THE SECRETARY'S DESK-AIR FORCE, ARMY, NAVY, AND MARINE CORPS
The bill clerk proceeded to read sundry nominations in the Air Force, the Army, the NavY, and the Marine Corps which had been placed on the Secretary's desk.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, the nominations are considered and confirmed en bloc.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask . unanimous consent that the President
be immediately notified of the confirmation of these nominations.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.
September 26, 1969
LEGISLATIVE SESSION
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27253
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I move that the Senate resume the consideration of legislative business.
The motion was agreed to, and the Senate resumed the consideration of legislative business.
TAX REFORM ACT OF 1969-AMENDMENT
AMENDMENT NO. 210
Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, I am today submitting an amendment, intended to be proposed by me, to the bill <H.R. 13270) to reform the income tax laws, which would remove from that bill all attempts, directly or indirectly, to impose a Federal tax on interest paid by State and local governments on their obligations.
The House bill provides--First. Tax-exempt State and local gov
ernment bond interest would be included in the limit on tax preferences, which means that such income would, under certain circumstances, be subjected to direct Federal tax.
Second. Personal Federal income tax deductions would be required to be allocated between taxable income and nontaxable income-including exempt State and local government bond interest. Deductlons allocable to all nontaxable income would be disallowed.
Third. In an attempt to remedy the devastating economic impact of these provisions, the bill grants to States and localities the option of subjecting the interest on their obligations to Federal tax, in which case the higher interest cost would be offset by the Federal Government paying a percentage of the total interest cost of the issue as a subsidy. ·
In testimony before the Finance Committee, the Treasury Department
First, opposed inclusion of the exempt bond interest in the limit on tax preferences;
Second, supported the allocation of personal deductions between taxable and tax exempt income-including exempt bond interest; and
Third, opposed the Federal subsidy. I am unalterably opposed to any at
tempt by the Federal Government to tax, directly or indirectly, interest on State and local obligations, and I am confident that some of my Senate colleagues share this view. The dual sovereignty of State and local governments on the one hand and the Federal Government on the other has been one of the cornerstones of our system of government. The immunity of State and local governments and their agencies from Federal taxation is vital to the preservation of this dual sovereignty. This system would be severely challenged if the Federal Government destroyed the preferential character of State and local debts or exercised control of local policymaking by the selective taxation of certain categories of municipal bonds.
In opposing the House attempt to include tax-exempt interest in the limit on tax preferences, the Treasury Department quite properly gave recognition to the serious constitutional question in-
volved. The only attempt by the Federal Government to tax interest paid by States and their subdivisions was declared unconstitutional nearly 7 4 years ago by the Supreme Cow·t in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 157 U.S. 429 <1895). If, despite prior judicial consideration of this question, Congress insists on imposing a direct tax on this interest, there is no question in my mind that the bond market will be thrown into a state of absolute chaos for the long period of time which would elapse while the constitutional question can again be litigated and finally decided.
The House ilill attempts to remedy the devastating economic impact which taxation of interest would have on the States by proposing a Federal subsidy to off set the higher interest cost. I am opposed to the use of a subsidy in this area. I agree with the Treasury Department on this point. No Congress by its actions can bind future Congresses. New administrations and new Congresses could well conclude that any number of other programs deserve priority at the expense of the Federal subsidy now being proposed. State and local governments, which are currently struggling desperately to fund needed capital projects, should not be subjected to this risk.
Even if one could accept the principle of a Federal subsidy, it is reasonable to ask whether such a subsidy would actually off set all of the higher interest cost. I have grave doubts as to whether such higher interest costs can be accurately determined for each locality affected. For example, the requirement for allocating-and therefore disallowing-a part of a taxpayer's personal deductions to exempt bond interest will require an individual with mixed taxable and tax exempt income to pay more taxes. An investor in municipal bonds will therefore presumably require a higher bond yield to off set his increased taxes.
The House bill provides maximum percentage limits on the. amounts payable as subsidy by the Federal Government. Thus, even if the added interest cost could be accurately calculated, these limitations may effectively deny full and adequate compensation to the States. In this case the States would be required to make up any deficit.
I should also remind my colleagues that under the laws and constitutions of a great many States a ceiling is placed on the amount of interest the State and its subdivisions can pay with respect to their obligations. We are all well aware of how difficult and time consuming it is for a State to amend its laws and constitution. The delays in capital projects which would arise are totally unacceptable, particularly at this time when our urban areas are struggling for survival.
Finally, any attempt by Congress to tax interest on State and municipal bonds, either directly through the limit on tax preferences or indirectly through the allocation of deductions, will have an adverse psychological impact on their marketability. The increased interest rates will require that they compete with Federal Government obligations and corporate securities, the interest on which
generally is taxable. Even at the same rates of interest, State and municipal bonds will be hard pressed to compete because of the smaller sizes of the issues and, sometimes, credit ratings.
In Arkansas the uncertainty arising from H.R. 13270 has already practically paralyzed all financing of public improvements for cities, counties, school, and improvement districts. Many essential projects have been either postponed or canceled. At least 20 Arkansas school districts have bond issues aggregating some $12.7 million ready for the market. All of these issues have been approved by the Arkansas State Department of Education-most of them since March of 1969. Many of these issues have been offered for sale, but there have been no bidders. Other offerings have been delayed because of the present chaotic market condition. The school district of North Little Rock, Ark., has been forced to obtain bank loans to meet existing contractual obligations on school buildings under construction. Just last March, the citizens of the school district of Little Rock, Ark., approved a $2 % million bond issue. The bonds have not been marketed because the prevailing interest rates are above the statutory ceiling in Arkansas. Also financial institutions are hesitant to purchase bonds because of the uncertainty arising from this proposed Federal tax legislation.
The city of Little Rock Airport improvements, the city of Little Rock Parking Authority, St. Francis County, city of Bald Knob, Forrest City improvement district, and Booneville improvement district have deferred bond offerings. Drew County. Ark., has attempted to sell a $900,000 bond issue to construct a county hospital. To date, there have been no bidders on this offering. A Federal grant, which has already been approved, amounting to $937 ,000 in matching funds hangs in the balance contingent on the outcome of the bonds being marketed. I am sure comparable conditions prevail in other States.
Postponement of essential improvements, such as are here involved, often results in increased costs to local school and governmental authorities. I am advised that because of market conditions, one school district in Arkansas decided to wait a year to market a sizable bond issue. After postponement, the cost of improvements had increased 34 percent. A similar situation will most likely confront thos·e local school and governmental authorities who have been prevented from marketing bond issues this year.
Of course, there are many other instances in my State that I could cite where bond issues have been approved and the issuers are awaiting favorable conditions to market the bonds. However, the ones I have referred to are illustrative of the catastrophic situation which local and State officials face in obtaining financing for public improvements.
If the present tax exempt interest on obligations of State and local governments is removed, this means that, hereafter, States, municipalities, and school districts will have to pay a much higher interest rate on their securities. This will
27254 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 compel a substantial increase in local taxation-especially a large increase in property and sales taxes-to meet this rising interest cost. It is obvious that this burden will be borne mostly by the lowand middle-income taxpayer.
In fact, I believe that the retroactive provisions of the House bill, as they relate to the tax exempt interest on State, school, and municipal bonds, are unconstitutional. Their enactment would constitute a breach of governmental integrity.
I therefore urge the Committee on Finance and all Members of the Senate to remove this most objectionable provision from the House bill and not to embark on a legislative course that is fraught with such harmful economic consequences.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amendment will be received, printed, and appropriately ref erred.
The amendment <No. 210) was referred to the Committee on Finance.
ORDER OF BUSINESS
Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may proceed for 10 minutes.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The senior Senator from Ohio is recognized for 10 minutes.
WILL "JOHNSON'S WAR" BECOME "NIXON'S WAR"?
Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, could it be that President Nixon is ignorant of the fact that for thousands of years there was never a North Vietnam or a South Vietnam. Vietnam over the centuries was never divided into a North Vietnam and a South Vietnam. Historically, the Vietnamese have always been one people. As such they repelled aggression from the Mongols or Chinese many, many times over hundreds of years.
Together they were united seeking national liberation when the French, aided by our then Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, sought to reestablish their lush Indonesian empire. The dream of the French colonial oppressor, aided and abetted by the Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, ended on May 7, 1954, when the Vietminh, as the forces fighting for national liberation of Vietnam were then called, overran Dienbienphu, capturing 12,000 survivors of the French Foreign Legion. Following that, later in 1954, the French Republic withdrew 240,-000 soldiers from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
Following this the Geneva accords of 1954 were agreed to by John Foster Dulles but not signed by our representatives. This definitely stated:
The military demarcation line at the 17th parallel ls provisional and should not in any way be considered a.s constituting a political or territorial boundary.
Is it possible that President Nixon is also ignorant of the fact that we Americans had Diem, our puppet President of the Saigon regime, call off the pledged elections to be held throughout all of Vietnam in 195~? President Eisenhower in his memoirs stated the election, pro-
vided for in the Geneva accords, was called off for the reason that Ho Chi Minh, regarded as the George Washington of Vietnam, would have received 80 percent of the votes of the Vietnamese people both north and south of the 17th parallel.
While I was in Vietnam on a faotfinding mission as a member of the Armed Services Committee of the Senate, General Westmoreland stated to me that the bulk of the Vietcong fighting us Americans in Vietnam were born and reared in South Vietnam. Furthermore, Lt. Gen. Richard Stilwell, who at one time was General Westmoreland's chief deputy commanding officer, informed me that 80 percent of the Vietcong fighting us in the Mekong Delta were born and reared in that area. The Mekong Delta is entirely in South Vietnam. In fact, it is south and west of Saigon. When I stated, "Then that means we are involved in a civil war in South Vietnam," he said, "It could be termed a civil insurrection." The Mekong Delta area has at all times from 1963 to the present time been a stronghold of the National Liberation Front, or Vietcong.
In his recent speech at the United Nations President Ni.xon said:
What the United States wants for south Vietnam ls not the important thing. What north Vietnam wants for south Vietnam is not the important thing. What is important ls what the people of south Vietnam want for south Vietnam. To secure this right and to secure this principle is our one limited and fundamental objective.
However, at the same time this administration continues to support and strengthen the Thieu-Ky militarist regime in Saigon, the largest single obstacle to peace. Yet President Nixon knows, or should know, that General Thieu and Ky could not remain in power in Saigon for a week except for the support of our Armed Forces. President Thieu and Vice President Ky have at most the support of but 20 percent of the people of South Vietnam. President Nixon has kept in key Positions Ambassador Bunker, Ambassador Lodge, and others who have been and are now subservient to Thieu and Ky.
It is obvious that there will never be peace in South Vietnam until and unless a coalition government is established in Saigon composed of all elements of South Vietnamese political life, including representatives of the National Liberation Front, instead of a. regime which has barred neutralists, so-called, many Buddhists, and representatives of the National Liberation Front from voting or participating in goveniment.
The administration has not faced up to the fact that the only way this war will be brought to an end is for both sides to compromise on a political solution-a compromise that must include a coalition government in Saigon and free elections. It is equally clear that Thieu and Ky are not going to preside over their own removal from power, so any negotiations in which they have a hand are doomed from the outset. There can be no escape from this hard truth. Furthermore, we Americans should demand that Thieu and Ky either place on trial or
release the thousands of political prisoners now imprisoned in jails in Saigon and elsewhere.
How can anyone know what the South Vietnamese people want until free elections are held? President Nixon can never hope to achieve his objectives if he continues to support the militarists now ruling in Saigon.
Many civilian and military officials of the Saigon regime are well aware that once there is peace they will be ousted as provincial leaders and generals, within a few days and forced to flee and rendezvous with their unlisted bank accounts in Hong Kong and Switzerland.
Vice President Ky has even gone so far as to threaten to use military force if necessary to oppose political concessions to his fell ow countrymen. He recently addressed a group of South Vietnamese Air Force officers as follows:
The future of our country is in your hands--yours and mine. We cannot afford to leave our destiny in the hands of dirty politicians. I tell you we will replace them, we will replace them in leading this country to victory .... No country including the United States, can determine our future for us.
Of course, he hopes to lead his regime to victory on the blood of young Americans who have been sent to fight and die in a small country 10,000 miles distant from our shores and of no strategic or economic imPortance whatever to our national defense. More than 47 ,000 young Americans have already been killed in oombat, more than 250,000 others wounded and additional thousands afflicted with malaria fever, bubonic plague and other jungle diseases to maintain Thieu and Ky and their ilk in power. Those are priceless lives of young Americans sent overseas to fight in a civil war in Vietnam.
The desire of those Saigon militarist leaders to remain in power is totally inconsistent with President Nixon's statement that "what is important is what the people of South Vietnam want." These incompatible policies hold out the prospect not of peace but of a prolonged military occupaltion which will continue indefinitely to drain American treasure and lives.
The faot is that while professing a desire for peace, the administmion has failed to cTeate the Political conditions in Vietnam under whioh peace is possible. This raises the question as to whether this administration really seeks to end this war despite President Nixon's repeated statements to the contrary.
During the presidential campaign Richard Nixon said:
I have a secret plan to end the Vietnam war.
He really assured the American people that if they elected him President he would bring the boys home. He has been in office more than 8 months and Americans are still waiting for him to unveil his plan. It seems still to be his secret. However, there is a limit to the patience of our fellow citizens and they will not be satisfied with words and gestures of peace as a substitute for the deeds they were promised.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27255 Reducing the troop level in Vietnam
from 535,000 men to 475,000 or to a permanent garrison of 350,000 or 400,000 men is not what Americans had in mind when they elected Richard Nixon to end the war. Is it the policy of this administration to seek an end to this immoral, unpopular, undeclared war or merely to reduce the casualties and the troop commitment to what it supposes to be politically tolerable levels?
Until the President begins to make a real effort to solve the central task of forming a coalition government in Saigon, he cannot begin to make good the pledge on which he was elected.
Invariably throughout the past 3 months, every Pentagon report of casualties shows more Americans killed and wounded than ARVN forces. It is saddening to report that during the 2 weeks from September 6 to September 20, 1969, inclusive, 2,735 Americans were killed and wounded in combat in Vietnam. During that same period 2,685 of the too-friendly-to-fight friendly forces of South Vietnam-ARVN-were killed and wounded. Also during this last 2-week period approximately 75 Americans were killed in what Pentagon terms "accidents and incidents." In World War II most of these casualties were termed combat deaths.
At that time, in World War II, there was no Pentagon credibility gap such as we have now. That is an unfortunate thing. It is also unfortunate that our intervention in the civil war in South Vietnam has really turned it into an American war.
IDAHO'S CHAMPION CRIME FIGHTER
Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, my colleague from Idaho (Mr. JORDAN) last week attracted nationwide attention as a result of his decisive action in fending off a would-be robber in his apartment building near the Capitol.
All of us applaud Senator JORDAN for his swift action and, at the same time, are thankful that the only injuries suffered were minor-mainly bruised knuckles. [Laughter.]
Among the news coverage which followed the incident was an editorial which appeared in the September 19 edition of the Idaho Statesman, our State's largest daily newspaper.
As thP- Statesman summed up the event:
We hope Senator Jordan won't be compelled to defend his title, even though there isn't much question about who would win.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have editorial printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
SENATOR WINS CRIME FIGHTER ACCOLADF.S
Sen. Len. B. Jordan of Idaho has earned recognition as one of the nation's outstanding crime fighters.
His decision over a would-be robber in an apartment building melee attracted national attention to the senator. Among those who congratulated him Thursday was President Nixon.
Not everyone would have had the courage or the presence of mind to act as decisively and swiftly as Jorda.Ill. His assailant may have thought he had easy pickings with an older man.
Thousands of Idaho people who know and admire the senator will be pleased that he won the fight, and that he wasn't seriously hurt.
The fact that a senator can be accosted inside his own apartment building adjacent to the Capitol ls a sobering commentary on crime.
We hope Senator Jordan won't be compelled to defend his ti tie, even though there isn't much question about who would win.
EXECUTIVE COMMUNICATIONS, ETC.
The PRESIDENT pro tempore laid before the Senate the following letters, which were ref erred as indicated: PROPOSED AMENDMENT OF THE FISH AND WILD
LIFE ACT OF 1956 A letter from the Acting Secretary of the
Interior, transmitting a draft of proposed legislation to amend section 4 of the Fish and Wildlife Act of 1956, as amended, to extend the term during which the Secretary of the Interior can make fisheries loans under the Act (with an accompanying paper); to the Committee on Commerce. PROPOSED AMENDMENT OF THE INTERSTATE
COMMERCE ACT
A letter from the Chairman, Interstate Commerce Commission, transmitting a draft of proposed legislation to amend part I of the Interstate Commerce Act by the addition of a new section 13b so as to set forth the duty of railroads operating intercity passenger trains to provide and furnish reasonably adequate service and to authorize the Commission to establish and enforce standards of reasonably adequate service and for other purposes (with an accompanying paper); to the Committee on Commerce~
PROPOSED LEGISLATION AMENDING S. 2869 A letter from the Deputy Attorney General
of the United States, transmitting a draft of proposed legislation amending S. 2869, to provide a new code of juvenile procedure for the District of Columbia (with accompanying papers); to the Committee on the District of Columbia.
REPORTS OF THE COMPTROLLER GENERAL
A letter from the Comptroller General of the United States, transmitting, pursuant to law, a report on a review of variations in cost and performance among community action program service activities, Office of Economic Opportunity, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, dated September 26, 1969 (with an accompanying report); to the Committee on Government Operations.
A letter from the Comptroller General of the United States, transmitting, pursuant to law, a report on the effectiveness and administration of the community action program under title II of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, Detroit, Mich., Office of Economic Opportunity, dated September 25, 1969 (with an accompanying report); to the Committee on Government Operations.
RECOMMENDATION No. 132, INTERNATIONAL
LABOR ORGANIZATION
A letter from the Assistant Secretary for Congressional Relations, Department of State, transmitting, for the information of the Senate, the text of ILO Recommendation No. 132, concerning the improvement of conditions of life and work of tenants, sharecroppers and similar categories of agricultural workers (with accompanying papers); to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.
PETITIONS AND MEMORIALS Petitions, etc., were laid before the
Senate, or presented, and referred as indicated:
By the PRESIDENT pro tempore: A resolution adopted by the village of
Arlington Heights, Ill., remonstrating against any proposed amendment of the Internal Revenue Code relating to the abolition of the existing tax exemption for interest on municipal bonds; to the Committee on Finance.
A commentary, submitted by the city of Waterbury, Conn., remonstrating against proposed amendment of the Internal Revenue Code relating to the abolition of the existing tax exemption for interest on municipal bonds; to the Committee on Finance.
A resolution adopted by the Northwest Municipal Conference, representing several Illinois municipalities, opposing any amendment to the Internal Revenue Code which would result in the abolition of the existing tax exemption for interest on municipal bonds and other securities and obligations of municipalities; to the Committee on Finance.
RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY MIDWEST ASSOCIATION OF STATE DEPARTMENTS OF AGRICULTURE REGARDING RELATIONSHIP OF VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE AND THE FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I send
to the desk a resolution passed at a recent convention of the Midwest Association of State Departments of Agriculture expressing the concern of that association over the relationship of vocational agriculture and the Future Farmers of America within the Office of Education of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. I ask that this resolution be appropriately ref erred.
The PRESIDING OFFICER <Mr. ALLEN in the chair). The resolution will be received and appropriately referred.
The resolution was referred to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.
AUTHORIZATION FOR PRINTING REPORT OF UNITED STATESCANADA INTERPARLIAMENTARY CONFERENCE AS A SENATE DOCUMENT (S. DOC. NO. 91-35)
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, on behalf of the Senator from Idaho <Mr. CHURCH) , I submit the report of the Senate delegation to the 12th meeting of the United States-Canada Interparliamentary group, of which Senator CHURCH was chairman, held in Ottawa, Canada, in June of this year. The report is under 50 pages and, at the request of Mr. CHURCH, I ask unanimous consent that it be printed as a Senate document.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
BILLS INTRODUCED Bills were introduced, read the first
time and, by unanimous consent, the second time, and referred as follows:
By Mr.DODD: S. 2966. A bill for the relief of Hai Young
Han; to the Committee on the Judiciary.
27256 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969
By Mr. HARRIS: s. 2967. A bill to authorize the Secretary of
the Interior to lease certain deposits of minerals in the bed of the Red River in Oklahoma; to the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs.
ADDITIONAL COSPONSORS OF BILLS s. 1032
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the name of the Senator from Maryland (Mr. TYDINGS) be added as a cosponsor of S. 1032, to amend the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964, and for other purposes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
s. 1958
Mr. HARRIS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the name of the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. RANDOLPH) be added as a cosponsor of S. 1958, to provide an equitable system for fixing and adjusting the rates of compensation of wage board employees.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
s. 2548
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, at the request of the Senator from Georgia (Mr. TALMADGE), I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the name of the Senator from South Dakota <Mr. McGOVERN) be added as a cosponsor of S. 2548 to amend the National School Lunch Act and the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 to strengthen and improve the food service programs provided for child en under such acts.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
s. 2548
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the name of the Senator from Montana (Mr. METCALF) be added as a cosponsor of S. 2548, to amend the National School Lunch Act and the Child Nutrition Act of 1966, to strengthen and improve the food service programs provided for children under such acts.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
s. 2658
Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the name of the Senator from Oklahoma (Mr. BELLMON) be added as a cosponsor of S. 2658, to provide pensions for veterans of World War I.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is .so ordered.
s. 2890
Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing, the names of the Senator from Kentucky (Mr. COOPER) and the Senator from Oregon <Mr. HATFIELD) , be added as cosponsors of S. 2890, to amend title 38 of the United States Code to permit certain active duty for training to be counted on active duty for purposes of entitlement to educational benefits under chapter 34 of such title.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
SENATE RESOLUTION 266-RESOLUTION SUBMITTED AUTHORIZING ADDITIONAL EXPENDITURES BY THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON SMALL BUSINESS Mr. BIBLE (for himself and Mr.
JAVITS) submitted the following resolution CS. Res. 266) ; which was referred to the Committee on Rules and Administration:
S. RES. 266 Resolved, That the Select Committee on
Small Business is hereby authorized to expend from the contingent fund of the Senate $10,000, in addition to the amount, and for the same purposes and during the same period, specified in Senate Resolution 57, Ninety-first Congress, agreed to February 17, 1969.
TAX REFORM ACT OF 1969-AMENDMENTS
AMENDMENT NO. 210
Mr. McCLELLAN submitted amendments, intended to be proposed by him, to the bill (H.R. 13270) to reform the income tax laws, which were referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
(The remarks of Mr. McCLELLAN when he submitted the amendment appear earlier in the RECORD under the appropriate heading.)
IMPROVEMENT OF HEALTH AND SAFETY CONDITIONS OF PERSONS WORKING IN THE COAL MINING INDUSTRY-AMENDMENT
AMENDMENT NO. 211
Mr. RANDOLPH (for himself and Mr. BYRD of West Virginia) submitted an amendment, intended to be proposed by them, jointly, to the bill (S. 2917) to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States, which was ordered to lie on the table and to be printed.
AMENDMENT NO. 212
Mr. RANDOLPH (for himself, Mr. BYRD of West Virginia, Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey, Mr. JAVITS, and Mr. YARBOROUGH) submitted an amendment, intended to be proposed by them, jointly, to Senate bill 2917, supra, which was ordered to lie on the table and to be printed.
NOTICE OF HEARINGS ON FEDERAL COURT JURISDICTION OVER AGENOES COMPETING TO REGULATE PUBLIC UTILITIES Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, as
chairman of the Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Improvements in Judicial Machinery, I wish to announce hearings to amend the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act to grant district courts of the United States jurisdiction to resolve controversy with respect to jurisdiction to regulate a public utility and to provide for venue in such cases.
The hearings will be held at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, October 29, 1969, in the Dis-
trict of Columbia Committee hearing room 6226, New Senate Office Building.
Any person who wishes to testify or submit a statement for inclusion in the RECORD should communicate as soon as possible with the Subcommittee on Improvements in Judicial Machinery, room 6306, New Senate Office Building.
NOTICE CONCERNING NOMINATION BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, the following nomination has been ref erred to and is now pending before the Committee on the Judiciary:
Ollie L. Canion, of Louisiana, to be U.S. marshal for the eastern district of Louisiana for the term of 4 years, vice Victor L. Wogan, Jr., retired.
On behalf of the Committee on the Judiciary, notice is hereby given to all persons interested in this nomination to file with the committee, in writing, on or before Friday, October 3, 1969, any representations or objections they may wish to present concerning the above nomination, with a further statement whether it is their intention to appear at any hearing which may be scheduled.
SENATOR SCOT!' SUPPORTS SOCIAL SECURITY INCREASES
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, I agree wholeheartedly with President Nixon that this Nation must not "break faith" with those Americans who have every right to expect the social security system to protect them and their families from the brunt of continuing inflation. This has not been the case in the past. As the cost of living has increased substantially, social security benefits have remained relatively stable, and certainly inadequate to bear the brunt of inflation.
I am delighted that the President has requested immediate legislative action which would guarantee that this impact of inflation will not ha.ppen in the future. I supported the President's proposal for automatic cost of living benefit increases, and as the people of Pennsylvania know, I have made the same suggestion myself earlier this year.
I firmly believe this is one of the high -est priority measures which Congress must face this session. For my part, I will press for Senate action this year in every way I can.
Whether the increase should be 10 or 15 percent or somewhere in between is a question, of course, which must be determined by Congress. I have stated before that to be adequate it may have to be 15 percent. However, there is danger when we move beyond what the cost of living increase has been.
I know that I could not suggest a percentage figure for an increase that would not immediately be doubled by a whole pack of irresponsible Democrats. I would like to keep the increase within the area of fiscal responsibility. However, I can assure my constituents and my colleagues in the Senate and President Nixon that I will press for Senate action this year.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27257 RISE IN DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CRIME MAKES VICTIM COMPENSATION AN URGENT MATTER Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, I
recently introduced S. 2936, a bill to create a Victim Compensation Commission in the District of Columbia. This body would be empowered to hear petitions from victims of crime for compensation for the harm done them. I have long felt that it is as necessary for the Government to compensate victims of crime as it is for the Government to capture and punish criminals.
Recently, the Federal Bureau of Investigation released some rather disturbing data which showed a 22 percent increase in crime for the first 6 months of 1969 in the District of Columbia over the same period of last year. I feel that this statistic makes the passage of my bill an urgent necessity.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that an article entitled "Crime in Nation Up 9 Percent; 22 Percent District of Columbia Rise Indicated," published in the Washington Star of Tuesday, September 23, 1969, be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: CRIME I N NATION UP 9 PERCENT; 22 PERCENT
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA RISE INDICATED
Crime in the United States increased 9 percent in the first six months of 1969, according to an FBI Uniform Crime Report released today.
Although the FBI report does not list percentage chan ges for localities, figures listed for t h e District in seven crime categories indicate an overall increase of 22 percent for the first half of 1969, compared with the equivalent period of 1968. The increase in t he listed crimes for the District was from 22,013 to 26,830.
The national crime figures for the first six months of 1969 also showed that violent crimes as a group-robbery, rape, aggravated assault and murder-increased 13 percent over the similar period last year.
Cities of more than 250,000 population and rural areas showed overall increases of 8 percent. Suburban areas reported an 11 percent jump.
STREET CRIMES INCREASE
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover pointed to the upward spiral in robbery and other street crimes. Armed robberies represented 61 percent of all robbery offenses, and increased 20 percent.
Street thefts rose 11 percent during the first half of this year, and assaults with firearms were up 11 percent.
In Washington, according to the FBI figures, homicides in the first half of 1969 totaled 125 compared with 88 in the first six months of 1968; forcible rape was up to 150, from 100; robberies from 1,489 to 1,725, and burglaries increased from 8,829 to 10,107. Auto theft was the only listed offense that showed a decrease---4,878 in the first half of 1968, down to 4,673 in the first half of this year.
ARLINGTON REDUCES CRIME
Arlington and Alexandria are the only other area jurisdictions for which offenses are listed among communities of more than 100,000 population.
Arlington showed these comparisons: 4 cases of murder or non-negligent manslaughters in the first half of 1968, decreasing to 2; 24 rapes in 1968, with 10 in the first half of 1969; 872 burglaries in 1968, and 668 for 1969's comparable period, and 70 robberies
in 1968 compared with 48 in the first six months of this year.
For Alexandria: 3 murders or non-negligent manslaughters in the first half of 1968 compared with 4 for the first half of 1969; 10 forcible rapes compared to 15 for the first half of this year; burglaries up from 561 to 563; robberies down from 134 to 99, and auto thefts up from 255 to 302.
"WRONG DECISION" ON THE SST
Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, on Wednesday, September 24, the Washington Evening Star published an editorial on President Nixon's decision to go ahead with U.S. development of a supersonic transport plane. The editorial is entitled "Wrong Decision."
Mr. President, what is the justification for the SST? Certainly not the cost; the Federal Government's contribution will run at least as high as $1.2 billion, and there is virtually no hope that this investment will ever be recovered out of revenues. The SST's benefits? These are tenuous at best, since flights will have to be limited to transoceanic travel until the sonic boom problems are ironed out. And there is virtually no hope of eliminating this problem in the foreseeable future.
Improving the Nation's balance of payments is occasionally cited as a justification for the SST. But this argument cuts the other way. As long as the SST's flights are confined to intercontinental travel-and they almost certainly will be-the SST will have one primary function: carrying Americans abroad where they can spend their dollars on foreignmade goods. Just how this is expected to help our balance-of-payments situation is a mystery to me.
Nor is there any military justification for the SST. The Department of Defense has been completely candid in acknowledging that the military will have no use for the SST-particularly now that the Pentagon has the go-ahead to develop the advanced manned strategic aircraft, or AMSA. The SST must stand or fall on expected benefits from civilian use.
Mr. President, I submit that there is actually only one justification for the U.S. decision to develop an SST: national prestige and competition. I should think that the United States has already demonstrated its technological superiority by winning the race to land a man on the moon. It should be obvious to any reasonable man that the United States cannot hope to be first in everything; it should be enough that in achieving an escape from the earth's gravity, and in reaching another celestial body, it was the United States that had the capability, and developed the technological know-how, to succeed in this effort. This was an achievement that some have said was the greatest since the Creation. Mr. President, how many times must we prove ourselves?
The Evening Star also makes another telling point: that by entering the SST race at this late date, the United States cannot be first. Both the Russians and the Anglo-French alliance have already tested their supersonic models and expect to have them in service by 1973. This is a race that we cannot win. Moreover, I
cannot see why this is a race that we should want to win.
I ask unanimous consent that the Star editorial be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
WRONG DECISION
The reasoning behind the administration's decision to proceed with the development of the supersonic transport plane appears to run something like this: Other n a tions are building the m achines, therefore the United States must do the same or lose face .
The logic of the compulsion to follow the other lemmings as they m arch over the cliff escapes us.
The SST will provide the dubious advantage of carrying passengers to Europe in approximately three hours, instead of the present seven hours. While a h andful of particularly eager jet-setters m ay be intrigued by that prospect, many travelers would prefer to retain the option of a few hours sleep en route.
The argument of n ational prestige is also open to question. The ·unit ed States cannot be first. The Russians and the British-French combine have already flown SSTs and expect to have them in service by 1973-some five years before the U.S. gets into the act. And there is con siderable doubt how much prestige will a ccrue to the nations whose planes leave a trail of supersonic destruction and disruption wherever they go.
For the privilege of coming in third in t he race for a bigger an d better sonic boom, the American taxpayer will shell out-according to today's estimate--$994,000,000. By the time these estimat es complete their inevitable upward revision s, a reasonable guess is t hat the federal government's part of the t a b will be closer to $2 billion.
Just offhand, we can think of a dozen better ways to spend tha t kind of money than on a financially dubious investment in luxury travel.
The matter now goes t o Congress for approval, as the saying goes. Better still, there is a good chance that the legislat ors will disapprove, electing to forgo the opportunity to join the thoughtless pa rade. Perhaps, just this once, Congress will be willing to let someone else make the costly mistakes and give the United States a chance to profit by them. Perhaps the Hill will decline to sign the blank check the White House ha.s handed it.
CLASS ACTIONS-MUSCLE FOR CONSUMERS
Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, on April 25, 1969, I introduced S. 1980, the Class Action Jurisdiction Act. This act is designed to provide consumers with an effective means, the class action, for fighting the commercial fraud and overreaching practices that of ten victimize them.
On July 28 and 29, the Subcommittee on Improvements in Judicial Machinery, of which I am chairman, held hearings to consider the merits of S. 1980. The subcommittee heard testimony from an impressive group of witnesses, each of whom endorsed the "class action" as the most effective remedy for consumer frauds, and each of whom called for increased access to the Federal courts and the broad modern class action rule provided by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The hearings held in July served to illuminate the problems that the legislation was designed to meet and also to
27258 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
produce important suggestions for its improvement. All of the suggestions are being carefully reviewed by the subcommittee in its efforts to perfect the provisions of S. 1980. I intend to work for the enactment by the 9lst Congress of the Class Action Jurisdiction Act in order to provide the consumer with the meaningful remedy that has been denied him too long.
After the hearings of July 28 and 29, the National Consumer Law Center, under the guidance of its deputy director, Prof. Paul G. Garrity, prepared a summary of the testimony heard by the subcommittee. I believe that Members of Congress will find the testimony helpful and interesting. I ask unanimous consent that an extract from the summary be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the extract was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows: SENATE HEARINGS HELD ON S. 1980: THE
CLASS ACTION JURISDICTION ACT On July 28 and 29, 1969, testimony on S.
1980, the Class Action Jurisdiction Act, was heard before the Senate Subcommittee on Improvements in Judicial Machinery, chaired by Senator Joseph D. Tydings.
• In his opening statement, Senator Tydings
spoke in detail of the class action procedure which s. 1980 creates by providing a judicial forum in which consumer rights can be effectively protected. Recognizing that consumers increasingly suffer common abuses, Senator Tydings noted that this remedy will economically and effectively provide a long needed method of redress which may serve to deter as well as to recompense for fraudulent conduct.
The witnesses on July 28 included Congressman Bob Eckhardt, author of the House version of S. 1980 (H. 11656); Mrs. Virginia H. Knauer; Special Assistant to the President for Consumer Affairs, who proposed an alternative to S. 1980; Ralph Nader, who pointed out how merchants calculfl,te with precision how much they may cheat their customers and still be certain of not being taken in court; Professor Richard F. Dole, Jr., who assisted in drafting S. 1980 and who testified as to its merit suggesting amendments to cure some of its ambiguities; and Mrs. Erma Angevine, Executive Director of the Consumer Federation of America, who attacked as a "red herring" the argument that S. 1980 would cause unworkable congestion in the Federal Courts.
On July 29, Mrs. Bess Myerson Grant, Commissioner of New York City's Department of Consumer Affairs testified that S. 1980 is one of the most powerful instruments of economic justice that the Senate has ever considered. Other witnesses on that day were Mr. Maynard J. Toll, President of the National Legal Aid and Defender Association, who testified as to specific abuses and the immediate need for a class action remedy; Professor Paul G. Garrity, Deputy Director of the National Consumer Law Center, who pointed ourt; the inadequacies Of present remedies and speculated as to the future upon enactment of S. 1980; Mr. Ted Pankowski, Conservation Associate for the Izaak Walton Leaoaue, who represented conservationists' interests in the class action remedy; and Mr. James G. Greilsheimer, Member of the Committee on Legislation of the Federal Bar Council, who endorsed the bill's goals and assured the Sub-committee concerning S. 1980's constitutionali.ty.
Congressman Bob Eckhardt of Texas, the first witness, noted that no vehicle for jus-
tice, equity, and fair play exists for the consumer. Referring to such current procedural methods employed to balance conflicting economic interests as collective bargaining, commission controls, and the technique of using yardsticks such as provided under the TV A and REA, Representative Eckhardt pointed out that the Congress possesses jurisdiction to create for the consumer a procedure such as S. 1980. He recommended that this procedure must be self-induced and selfpropelling and not one that depends upon the "good motivations and energetic administration of a commission" for its impetus.
* • • • Referring to Congressional action, Eck
hardt observed that legislation has too often been piecemeal and he stated: "We see a specific wrong and introduce a specific piece of legislation to remedy it. The underlying problem is not confronted. We object to the operation of a specific department or agency so we attempt to abolish it or transfer its functions to a new agency or department. But often we don't stop to think about why the function has not been performed." Good legislation, he summarized, must foresee the existence of competing interests and otherwise self-motivated forces, and it must supply the machinery, readily available, to accomplish the public purpose.
Representative Eckhardt then turned his attention to the mi:lchanics of S. 1980 which he feels effectively provides a process which would utilize existing institutions to stop commercial fraud and overreaching practices. Lawyers have an interest in making the act work and consumers have an effective remedy. More importantly, the very existence of such sanctions would in all likelihood motivate business to deal fairly under full disclosure.
Congressman Eckhardt envisioned that this legislation will be a model in the consumer field establishing a self-sustaining process requiring no government subsidy to pay for reform and no bureaucracy to administer its provisions. Eckhardt concluded that this procedure must be instituted. Most consumer abuses are wrongs which involve small amounts of money, many under $200. Quoting from a Comment in 114 U. Pa. L. Rev. 395 at 409, Congressman Eckhardt related that "[i]n many instances fraudulent operations carefully avoid cheating individuals out of large sums of money because they realize that 'no one bilked out of fifty dollars is going to pay a lawyer to get his money back'."
• Mrs. Virginia Knauer was next to testify
and she initially stated: "The problem of the consumer having an effective remedy for deception and fraud practiced upon him is an acute one and one of nationwide significance. Far too often the average consumer who believes that he has been swindled finds that he has no adequate means of redress and that caveat emptor is still apparently the law of the land, not because the law affords him no protection, but because he cannot adequately or practically enforce that law. A right without an effective remedy is a very unsatisfactory right indeed."
Mrs. Knauer has determined that a majority of States have established an office whose main function is consumer affairs. However, she was quick to point out that with their limited resources and the ev-er increasing proliferation of goods and services, these state agencies are increasingly overburdened and therefore unable to act as effectively as one might desire. What is needed is a procedure allowing the consumer "a convenient, expeditious, and effective remedy for fraud and deception." This procedure must be sufficiently attractive to the private bar in order to enlist its support. The private bar was seen by Mrs. Knauer as a sleeping giant in the consumer protection field, which, when prop-
erly motivated, can do more than any governmental ag~ncy to aid consumers.
Ralph Nader of Washington, D.C. followed Mrs. Knauer. * • * Nader urged · that S. 1980 proposes to "fill part of a legal gap of immense proportions between the power of perpetrators to exploit successfully and the imotence of victims to defend themselves within the legal system." Noting that during the past five years Congressional and Agency hearings had produced many volumes of documented materials showing the increasing degree to which consumers are "harmed and relieved unjustly of their income," he concluded that despite the "very fundamental human values" involved, the law remains "largely symbolic or inadequately enforced." "Any rule of law, to be effective,'' Mr. Nader continued, "must provide opportunities for sanctions and remedies."
The most cursory view of recent consumer legislation reveals that both sanction and remedy are in a woeful state of statutory anemia. . . . A Post Office official once described in Federal Trade Commission as a toothless feline that gummed its defendants into submission. That is a charitable description. The FTC as an instrument of sanction is almost nil, shorn as Lt is of injunctive and criminal sanctions and deprived of the prodding of private citizen remedies. As is well known, state consumer protection agencies are in an even weaker state of inaction." Nader felt that across the board governmental regulatory procedures in consumer areas have failed because both of the absence of private citizen pressure and the presence of special interest groups "which control or block agency action." He, as usual, castigated the legal system by pointing out that courts have furthered this lack of remedy in their own archaic way and that the law schools rarely discuss the failure of the judiciary to resolve these problems. He stated that "the exquisite congruence of sanction and relief that is implicit in the consumer class action has few parallels anywhere in the legal system."
Mr. Nader concluded by observing that at least 90 % of the illegal consumer abuses are never judged to be such by our legal system. "The arm of the law, either in reality or in anticipation of reality, never reaches these abuses . . ." S. 1980 facilitates appropriate consumer remedies and if this bill becames law, the consumer will be able not only to deter further abuse, but also to require vendors to return what they have unjustly received. He summarized that S. 1980 is not a culmination of efforts aimed at eliminating consumer abuses; it is rather a beginning and will remain a beginning unless the pathway toward consumer justice is developed further.
Professor Richard F. Dole Jr., of the University of Iowa Law School, was next to testify and he stated that, in his opinion, S. 1980 is one of the most important consumer bills pending in Congress. He then interpreted the proposed statute as one which does not create liability, but is a jurisdictional statute which clearly aipplles Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 to federal and state law which gives consumers legal rights. * • *
According to Professor Dole, S. 1980 will promote justice in the following ways: If a federal consumer protection law establishes individual consumer legal rights without specifically providing for class actions, S. 1980 would provide such a procedural right. Also, s. 1980 proviaes an effective process for redress of the violation of state law which creates consumer legal rights.
• After presenting a list of complaints which
consumers have, Mrs. Erma Angevine, who followed Professor Dole's presentation, stated that courts can offer consumers the most effective redress of their grievances. Unfor-
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27259
tunately, she felt, courts have been slow to recognize the rights of consumers and have done little to accommodate their lengthy, cumbersome, expensive procedures to the ordinary consumer complaint.
Along with the procedural and economic shortcomings the traditional lawsuit is not an altogether effective remedy. One consumer may recover his damages while the defendant continues to abuse hundreds of others. The class action suit becomes a very sensible and effective remedy. She stated that a class action procedure "makes enforcement of small claims economically feasible, and-of much greater social and economic significance-it may enjoin continuaition af 1llegal and fraudulent pra,ctices."
Confronting the argument that S. 1980 would increase litigation and "flood the Federal Courts and swamp their already overcrowded dockets" Mrs. Angevine felt that S. 1980 would actually decrease the number of cases brought each year. Instead of a dozen cases against a merchant, one case would adjudicate the rights of the parties and halt future violations of the law. She concluded that, "If, however, we are wrong and S. 1980 increases litigation, let's face the issue squarely. Are persons to be denied their day in court to redress their rights as consumers in the most effective manner because we cannot, with all our resources, find a way to unclog our court calendars? If we must choose, we prefer the delays, inconveniences, and irri ta ti on of an overworked court system to having laws on the books that go unenforced while businessmen, with impunity, defraud, cheat, and mislead the public in violation of those laws." • • • "This brand of hypocrisy will disappear from the law of ... every state and city in the naitlon, when your Federal Class Action Act passes the Senate and the House of the United Staites. Let us hope and work to have that day come soon."
Maynard J. Toll, assisted by Washington counsel Benny Kass, followed Mrs. Grant's testimony by observing "It ls strikingly apparent that changes in both substantive and procedural laws must be made in order that poor people may really become beneficiaries of that ideal of 'fair play' which lies at the heart of our constitutional guaranty of due process of law. One such procedural change most urgently needed is that which is now before you." S. 1980 he added, provides a process for class actions which ls essential to an effective program of consumer protection. Mr. Toll documented examples of consumer abuses where class action litigation would be the most appropriate and effective procedural remedy such vs where elderly citizens being persuaded to contract for extensive dancing lessons only find the instructions not to be as represented; semiliterate individuals being pressured to purchase sets of books for self-education and such books being entirely inappropriate for their needs; and freezers "full of food" being "sold" or "rented" and the seller refusing to be bound by the salesman's representations as to the amounts and quality of the food.
Mr. Toll noted, as did Mrs. Angevine, that every new legislative proposal to broaden the scope of procedural remedies is attacked with the boilerplate argument that the court's dockets will be flooded. He also suggested that in all probability S. 1980 would reduce over a period of time, the number of cases filed and that very simply the "overcrowding" argument avoids the merits of this legislative measure.
Professor Paul G. Garrity began his testimony by pointing out that, during fiscal year 1968, Legal Services Attorneys handled approximately 475,000 legal matters. Eighteen per cent (almost 85,000) of this staggering caseload 1nrolved consumers' legal problems and these problems pervade all aspects of the
merchant-consumer relationship. The Federal Trade Commission as well as the various state agencies for consumer protection, he noted have been patently ineffective in dealing with these abuses. Passage of S. 1980 will ane·viate to a great degree the hard felt need for an effective consumer remedy. Judicial conservatism and inadequate statutes will give way to an effective private remedy. Anachronistic theories and outmoded forms will give way to the substantive problem, and an effective judicial forum will become avaiilable to meet the growing oppression and frustration endured by this country's consumers.
The class action mechanism, as a viable remedy for groups of exploited consumers, he concluded, is absolutely essential. The advantages of the class action procedure, i.e., economic, educational, and procedural are unparalleled by any existing remedy. After several months of research and evaluatiol'..i of the existing legal remedies, Profesror Garrity stated that the National Consumer Law Center has concluded that S. 1980 is the only effective answer to many consumer problems.
Mr. Ted Pankowski, the next to the last witness, stated that the Izaak Walton League of America had been concerned for the past 48 years with the preservation, restoration, and wise use of America's natural resources to serve the needs of man and pointed out that its interest in the Class Action Jurisdiction Act is predicated on two principles. First, citizens and citizens organizations are increasingly bringing class actions when environmental abuses are at issue. Second, it is becoming increasingly clear that environmental issues are directly related to individual and group consumer practices. He exemplified this by noting that oystermen, as consumers of a basis natural resource, may have no redress for claims relating to injury to their livelihood esulting fom pollution. Also what of the housewives whose laundry is continually ruined by industrial s~oke. In Washington, D.C., the public must spend almost $250 million annually to offset the damage caused by air pollution (approximately $100 per person per year).
* * * • * Jaimes G. Greilsheimer was the fl.nail wit
ness and he observed that ex:ilsting federal leglsl,ation together with proposed consumer protection legislation now pending in Congress clearly demonstraites an articulated and active federal polli.cy regulating the field of oonsumer protection. The effectiveness of this policy has previously been severely hampered by the absence af effective judicial remedies for enforcement.
s. 1980 seeks to afford an effective remedy through reoognition that aggregation af small individual losses is an extremely potent consumer weapon to deter fraud and other Ulega.l oonduot. Federal action is warranted due to the restrictive attitude of most staites, and the immediate need for uniform remedies for consumers throughout the country.
In addition to providing the consumer with a much needed remedy, legitimate businesses will also benefit. The legitimate busin~man also suffers from the consequences of consumer abuses. Abuses may cause legislation to be initiated aimed at correcting the problem but unduly hampering the honest mendicant. This proposed legislation would affect only those businesses employing abusive practices. As the opportunity for private relief is furnished, the need for additional governmental controls over the private sector in regard to consumer protection is .reduced.
DODD URGES WHITE HOUSE SUPPORT TO SAVE AMMUNITION CONTROLS
Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I am deeply dismayed and gravely concerned over the fact that H.R. 12829, the Interest Equal-
lzation Tax Extension Act, which is on the Senate Calendar, has attached to it an amendment which would repeal the ammunition registration requirements of the Gun Control Act of 1968.
It is disturbing that legislation of this consequence could be reported to the Senate as a "Christmas tree" attachment to another bill. I am especially disturbed because not a single day of hearings was held on this amendment, a measure which would repeal what is potentially one of the most useful anticrime tools which Congress has given to law enforcement officials.
Because of the great importance of this matter, I have written a letter to the President asking for his support in the effort to prevent the dismantling of the Gun Control Act of 1968.
I ask unanimous consent that the text of my letter to the President be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
SEPTEMBER 24, 1968. Hon. RICHARD M. NIXON,
President of the United States, Washington, D.C.
DEAR l\b. PRESIDENT: I am writing this letter on a matter of great importance. As you know, I have long shared your view that this country can no longer tolerate the spiralling crime rate that has gone on unabated for many years. It was especially gratifying to me, therefore, that after extensive hearings which began in 1963, Congress finally enacted into law the Gun Control Act of 1968. This law, for the first time, provided meaningful Federal controls over the interstate traffic in firearms and ammunition.
During the consideration of this Act, there was a great deal of debate over the inclusion of controls over the commerce in ammunition. The Congress voted, and wisely so, to require th.at Federally licensed dealers keep records on the sale of all ammunition. This amounts to a simple recording of the name, age and address of ammunition purchasers. It is the only way we could guarantee that licensed dealers would not "knowingly" sell ammunit!.on to teenagers, convicted felons and similar persons who, under the Act, would be prevented from purchasing weapons. There was ample testimony and Floor debate which proved that these provisions were absolutely necessary to reduce armed crimes, to aid in law enforcement efforts to apprehend criminals, and to prevent unfettered sales of ammunition which could easily be used in such weapons as homemade "zipguns.''
Much to my dismay, I now find that certain members of Congress are attempting to repeal this very important crime control measure by attaching a repeal amendment to the totally unrelated Interest Equalization Tax Act, H.R. 12829. By falsely representing the present law as "back door gun registration," and flatly stating that the ammunition they want freed from controls is not used in crimes, they have convinced many of their colleagues to support the measure.
The facts, of course, are exactly the opposite, as a review of the Senate hearings and the Floor debate on this measure will reveal. The types of ammunition which some seek to delete from the Gun Oontrol Act were used in the monstrous assassinations of recent years, including President John Kennedy, Senator Robert Kennedy, the Reverend Martin Luther King, and Medgar Evers. The most criminally abused ammunition, the .22 caliber rimfl.re bullet, accounted for 37 percent of the homicides committed in this country last year. This means that in 1968, three thousand three hundred Americans were
27260 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 murdered by these bullets. According to the testimony before Congress of every police officer, the .22 caliber pistol is the weapon most often used in armed robberies.
The proponents of this anti-crime control measure claim that by requiring a person to identify himself when he purchases ammunition, we have "severely inconvenieced" millions of sportsmen who hunt with .22 caliber weapons. This, of course, is an unsupportable argument. I would point out that the recent report of the Violence Commission on "Firearms and Violence in American Life" states that .22 caliber handguns are rarely used for hunting, that .22 caliber rifles have limited utility as hunting weapons, and that the most common use of .22 caliber ammunition in America is "plinking at tin cans and bottles."
On the other hand, this same report points out that the firearms policies of extremists groups throughout the country consider the .22 caliber pistol and rifle and the shotgun to be the "most desirable" weapons for insurrection, anarchy and political murder.
In view of our critical crime problem and the disastrous role played by firearms in American violence, I know you are concerned over this matter. Any attempt to reduce the capability of law enforcement agencies to cope with criminals while increasing the capability of any lunatic, juvenile dellnquent, felon or "zip-gun" owner to once again purchase these deadly items with no questions asked must be prevented.
I plan to do everything I can to prevent this dismantling of a major crime control bill, and I ask your support to help in this effort.
With kindest personal regards, I am Sincererly yours.
THOMAS J. DODD,
Chairman, Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency.
PUBLIC HEARINGS-TAX REFORM ACT OF 1969-SUMMARY OF TESTIMONY
Mr. LONG. Mr. President, today the Committee on Finance received testimony with respect to that portion of the House tax reform bill which modifies the present depreciation and recapture rules and substantially reduces the opportunity to avoid tax through the use of accelerated depreciation.
So that Senators might follow the progress of these ta.x reform hearings, I ask unanimous consent that a summary of the testimony be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the summary was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: REAL ESTATE DEPRECIATION AND RECAPTURE
WALLACE R. WOODBURY, CHAmMAN, SUBCOM-
MITTEE ON T•XATION, REALTORS' WASHINGTON
COMMITTEE, AND VICE PRESIDENT, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REAL ESTATE BOARDS
Introduction
Believes that several provisions of the House bill will have an adverse effect on everyone connected with real estate, whether as property owner, investor, builder, broker, tenant, or just as resident or worker in an urban community.
Position on tax reform Endorses concept of minimum tax provided
that all sources (including without exception (1) the excluded half of long-term capital gains, (2) tax-exempt State and local bond interest, (3) percentage depletion in excess of cost depletion of property, (4) excess of fair-market value over basis of property contributed to charity, (5) intangible drilling expenses, and (6) excess of acceler-
ated depreciation over straight-line depreciation with appropriate adjustments to basis) of so-called tax preferences be included in order not to impair real estate's already precarious competitive role in the private investment market. Maintains, however, that if any of these "preferences" are excluded, the provision applicable to real estate should not be Included.
Douglas Commission on Urban Problems States that the report of the National
Commission on Urban Problems points out that-" ( 1) existing tax provisions have been •institutionalized' into a complex set of economic relationships that involve a large volume of investment as well a.s the provision of rental housing for aibout one-third of all American families; and (2) • • • any 'loophole' closing efforts if applied only or more strenuously to this than to other competitive investment fields would probably curtail the flow of resources and managerial efforts into this 'area • • • ".
Depreciation Maintains that limiting existing buildings
to the straight-line method has already had a serious restricting effect on the resale market and the 150 percent depreciation method now available for existing buildings should be restored. Argues that the present acceleration methoos (200 percent double declining balance and sum of year's digits) should be available to nonresidential new construction because elimination of such methods will result in reduced yields to investors who will seek out other high yield and less· risky sources than real estate investment.
Recapture
States that the proposal in the House bill to recapture as ordinary income all depreciation in excess of straight-line, without limitation as to time, is a measure which does not differentiate between a long-term investor and a short-term holder of real estate. Suggests that the committee might consider a provision that for the first 5 years all depreciation in excess of straightline be recaptured a.s ordinary income, then reduce the percentage of gain taxed as ordinary income 1 percent per month. Argues that an investor who has held property for more than 13 years is entitled to full capital gains.
Limit on tax preference Urges that the LTP provision be aban
doned altogether unless all sources of socalled preferential income are included. States that the House bill eliminated the oil iJ?.dustry and the Treasury has proposed the elimination of tax-exempt interest on local and State bonds and the appreciated value of assets donated to charity. Maintains that this treatment leaves real estate and certain farming operations as the only targets for LTI'.
Limitation on d eduction of investment interests (p. 19 of committee print)
Supports Treasury's recommendation that this provision be eliminated from the House bill.
Installment sales Maintains that the provision in the House
bill concerning installment sales reporting would discourage the development of unimproved property because builders must wait development and adequate outside financing before they can pay fully for the land and incur tax liability. States that the House bill greatly overreaches the problem at which it is aimed and the provision should be deleted until language can be formulated which would not interfere with legitimate and necessary methods of financing real estate transactions.
Hobby losses states that the general language in this
provision would deter the holding of property in deteriorating neighborhoods because lack of current profit and create a presump-
tion that the venture is not profit motivated and all deductions would be disallowed. Argues that this provision would aggravate the abandoned buildings problem of urban areas because it would have the effect of further increasing the cost of holding property in blighted areas.
Allocation of deductions Contends that interest, taxes, and casualty
losses for real estate are business deductions and should not be subject to allocation and that interest and taxes on unimproved real estate held for development should be considered business deductions and not subject to this allocaition provision. LOUIS R. BARBA, FIRST VICE PRESIDENT, NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF HOME BUILDERS
Real estate depreciation Favors continuation of 200-percent accel
erated depreciation for all real estate. Maintains that the retention of 200-percent for new rental housing will be almost completely negated by: (1) the increased recapture; (2) the elimination of accelerated depreciation for a second owner; and (3) by inclusion of accelerated depreciation in the limited tax preferences and the allocation of deductions.
Contends that the bill would practically destroy the resale market for depreciable real estate. States that owners of "locked in" rental housing could not afford to sell their property at any point prior to the end of iJts useful life because any sale prior would result in recapture as ordinary income of the entire amount of excess of accelerated depreciation over straight-line.
Supports the concept of a minimum tax but believes the LTP and allocation of deductions proposals would further significantly diminish accelerated depreciation for rental housing.
Argues that an investor in rental housing would be required to recognize ordinary income twice on the same dollar of accelerated depreciation: first under LTP in the year when excess depreciation is claimed and a second time upon disposition of the property under the recapture rule.
Urges rejection of the Treasury proposal to expand LTP to include as a "tax preference" the amount of excess interest, taxes, and rent over receipts from unimproved real property during construction.
Supports proposal to provide special depreciation benefits for rehabilitation of lowcost rental housing, but opposes inclusion in the deprecia.tion recapture.
Installment sales
Suggests that the proposed limitation under section 412 of the bill on installment sales be amended to exempt a sale which involves unimproved real property where the taxpayer establishes that the property is bought and will be used for the construction of single family or multifamily housing.
Noneexempt organizations
Objects to section 121 of the bill to limit the deductions incurred by a membership organization in furnishing services to members or from transactions with members.
Incentives for housing Considers the housing industry to need
additional incentives to increase available mortgage funds. Proposes ( 1) allowance of an investment account for doolers in real estate; (2) exclusion from gross income of first $750 of interest income on deposits in thrift institutions; (3) preferred tax treatment for interest income from single family residential mortgages; and (4) condition oontinued tax exemption of income earned by pension funds on investment of a percentage of assets in residential mortgages. CARL M. HALVORSON, PRESIDENT, THE ASSOCI-
ATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS OF AMERICA
Real estate depreciation States that existing depreciation and re
capture rules should be retained for all real
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27261
estate. Indicates that the provision in the House bill that would deny all accelerated depreciation to used property and restrict depreciatiion of new nonresidential property to the 150 percent declining balance method ignores the fact that the greatest economic wastage of real propert y occurs in the early years of ownership, and t hat existing accelerated depreciation is necessary to allow recovery of th1s capital shrinkage.
Believes that the House bill misses the abuses at which it is supposedly aimed. Points out that new residential construction is exempted from the proposed changes in accelerated depreciation (for sound reasons apart from tax policy), even though it is such real estate that is most open to the rapid turnover which is the key to any tax abuse. States that the restrictions on accelerated depreciation in the House bill would apply only to industrial and commercial structures where the opportunities for abuse are negligible, which will greatly decrease the ability of American business t o meet foreign competition.
Believes that the existing recapture rules provide a rational and fair inhibition upon the tax abuse by measuring the recapture of depreciation into ordinary income by the length of the taxpayer's holding period. States that the provision in t he House bill which would convert all depreciation above straight line to ordinary income upon the sale of real estate penalizes a bona fide long term investor who has not abused the tax laws, and seriously restricts the amount of capital that will be placed int o construction of modern facilities .
Capital recovery Believes that there is a need for reform of
capital recovery rules, especially against the background of the proposed repeal of the investment credit. Points out that the cost of machinery is a major factor in the construction industry, and the 5-year life applied to most of the construct ion equipment ignores the extraordinary abusive working conditions and rate of technological change which makes the equipment substantially useless after a year or two of use.
States that reform should recognize three principles: first, average lives must be based upon the optimum practice for each industry; second, depreciation rules must recognize that some taxpayers have a particular need for rapid replacement; and, third changes in the depreciable lives must not be viewed as revenue gathering or contracyclical devices.
Makes four proposals for depreciation reform. States that two of the proposals, elimination of the reserve ratio test and the amendment of section 167 to eliminate the need to establish salvage value, would simplify tax accounting and eliminate the numerous controversies on audit. States that the third proposal is to codify the guideline depreciable lives, but believes that Congress should recognize that the guidelines are unnecessarily restrictive in their treatment of the construction industry and that 3 years rather than 5 years would be a more realistic average life for construction equipment. Points out that the fourth proposal, to eliminate a $10,000 ceiling upon the additional first year depreciable allowance with a possible reduction in rate, would help compensate for the loss of cash flow that will follow repeal from the investment credit.
Interest on State and local bonds
States that the interest on the obligations of State and local governments should remain tax exempt. Points out t hat a significant portion of the business of members of their association consists of public construction, and by disrupting the financial manner for State and local securities, the local gov-ernment will be unable to supply necessary facili t ies and services.
Depletion rate for sand and gravel Opposes the reduction of the existing 5-
percent depletion rate for sand and gravel. Believes that the proposed reduction can only increase the cost of construction to contractors, who are the primary consumers of sand and gravel.
Foreign tax credit Opposes the provision in the bill which
would effect the country-by-country limitation on the foreign tax credit. Believes that this provision in the House bill would impair the U.S. position in foreign commerce and would frustrate a prime function of the foreign tax credit. LEON H. KEYSERLING, FORMER CHAmMAN,
COUNCIL OF ECONOMIC ADVISERS, IN PART
REPRESENTING REALTY COMMITTEE ON TAXA
TION AND IN PART AS INDEPENDENT ECONO-
MIST General
Considers the House bill to contain many essential and desirable provisions but needs improvement. Cautions, however, against paying too little attention to ultimate general economic and financial effects of the proposal.
Feels that the tax cuts of 1962-65 surrendered too much Federal revenues needed for priority spending; misallocated resources between investment and consumption so as to impair economic equilibrium and work against econoinic growth, production, and employment; and aggravated inflation and the balance of payments.
Argues that the House bill makes a highly improper distribution of tax relief, and it does not go far enough in redressing the imbalance between investment and consumption. States that the bill discriminates against housing and supportive nonresidential construction investment. Investment and consumption allocations in
the bill Indicates that, excluding the tax reform
provisions, the House bill does not appreciably affect net investment allocations as affected by tax policy, but that the Treasury proposal increases it by $1.1 billion. Considers this to be too much toward investment while investment in many areas is too expansive, and not enough toward private and public consumption. Favors using additional revenues from tightening further on investment in housing and public spending on social needs.
Equity considerations in the bill Contends that, even with the reforms, the
distribution of the tax cuts is highly inequitable. Argues that taxpayers with incomes over $20,000 do not pay a sufficiently higher proportion of their income in taxes of all types (Federal, State, and local). Suggests not reducing the tax rates of those with incomes of over $50,000. Provisions of bill relating to housing and
construction Maintains that urban renewal also needs
adequate nonresidential construction as well as housing, and that the provisions adversely affecting nonresidential construction will also affect housing.
States that there is an alarming long-term decline in housing and nonresidential construction investment in relation to present and future needs.
Considers the tax incentives for real estate to be too little, not excessive. States that the real estate industry's profitability is much lower than others. Notes that the rising interest rates have had the greatest adverse impact on housing.
Asserts that the following provisions of the bill would be damaging to both housing and nonresidential construction: elimination of 150 percent accelerated depreciation for used buildings, the recapture provisions, the treatment of "excess" depreciation under
LTP and allocation of deductions, the limitation on interest deductions, and the additional "preference" items proposed by the Treasury. States that the reduction of accelerated depreciation for new nonhousing real estate from 200 to 150 percent is also undesirable.
Contends that the problem with the provisions relating to housing and nonresidential real estate is that "the baby is being thrown out with the bath."
Suggests that an appropriate method to ca;tch those who are "getting away with something" is to limit total allowable deductions so as to perinit none to pay no tax, but not to reduce tax incentives in an industry that is vitally needed. ROBERT H. PEASE, VICE PRESIDENT, MORTGAGE
BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
Accelerated depreciation of real estate States that the combined impact of the
House proposals and Trea~ury's recommendations will strike a devestating blow at the construction industry by making less mortgage money available, and by making equity investment in real estate unattractive.
States that less equity money will be available for real estate projects because the House bill contains a number of provisions which would reduce the ability to obtain a competitive profit. Also, that less mortgage money will be available because the bill is inflationary, the incentives to thrift institutions to invest in mortgages will be reduced, and because no tax is levied on the Federal Land Banks.
In addition, believes the House bill provisions limiting interest deductions, and broadening the definition of investment income to include certain forms of rental income, represent a deterrent to investment in real estate and would be particularly harmful to those forms of real estate, such as shopping centers, customarily occupied on a net lease arrangement. HARRY NEWMAN, JR., PRESIDENT, INTERNA
TIONAL COUNCIL OF SHOPPING CENTERS
House proposals affecting real estate Expresses support for the basic aims of the
House bill, but believes it contains provisions having grave implications for those engaged in the development of shopping centers.
States that the House provisions will accelerate the existing trend toward economic consideration of shopping center ownership in the bands of a relatively few large fina.ncial institutio:::is and big corporations. Believes it will seriously curt-ail the construction of small shopping centers, which would eliininate a sizable number of the almost 14 million new low-skill jobs which the shopping center industry would otherwise create by 1980.
States that virtually every shopping owner who is actively operating a center will be subject to the House provision limiting interest deductions because practically every shopping center in the country and its leases qualify as "net leases."
Recommends that the present real estate tax inducements remain in effect, but that an equitable minimum tax law be enacted.
PHI·LIP N. BROWNSTEIN, ON BEHALF OF THE COUNCIL OF HOUSING PRODUCERS
Accelerated depreciation and recapture States that the Council was gratified that
the House bill recognized the need for continuing accelerated depreciation for new residential construction and the encouragement given to rehabilitation by permitting the amortization of these expenditures over a 60-month period.
Indicates particular concern with the proposed elimination of accelerated depreciation on existing residential property and the treatment of recaptured equity as ordinary income to the extent that accelerated depreciation has been taken on the new residential
27262 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENA TE September 26, 1969 property during the period of initial ownership.
States also concern with the depreciation formula for commercial property since residential and commercial developi:nen t often go hand-in-hand. Points out that adequate commercial facilities are essential if residential construction ls to proceed in areas being newly developed.
Points out that the major supplier of mortgage credit for housing are the thrift institutions and that this should be considered when the committee reviews the tax structure of these institutions. JOSEPH F. SEXTON, CHAIRMAN, FEDERAL LEGIS
LATIVE COMMITl'EE, NATIONAL APARTMENT
ASSOCIATION
Real estate depreciation deductions and recapture
Recommends retention of the 150 percent declining balance method of depreciation on used apartments. Contends that the straightline method ls unrealistic in the light of the long useful lives the Treasury has insisted upon. Argues that denial of the 150 percent method wm seriously limit the resale market, thereby discouraging the development of new apartment buildings.
Objects to the recapture of all gain as ordinary income to the extent of the depreciation taken in excess of straight-line. Argues that no attempt is made to differentiate between the short-term holder and the longterm investor. Recommends that during the first five years the depreciation in excess of straight-line be taxed as ordinary income but thereafter the percentage so taxed be reduced 1 percent per month.
States that while our economy grew at a rate in excess of 5 percent in the last 8 years and capital investment grew at a rate of almost 10 percent, housing starts grew at a rate of only one-half of 1 percent. Contends that if we do not stimulate housing, the shortages will be further compounded, and rents will rise, causing extreme dislocation to our economy and increasing the need for subsidized housing. Argues that we should increase the supply of housing through tax incentives, if necessary, rather than reduce it by eliminating existing incentives.
Limit on tax prefer ences States that although the limit on tax pref
erences was originally devised to prevent high income persons from escaping taxation, it has been watered down so that its prime target is real estate--the one area in our economy which can stand the least the cutback which would inevitably result from the provisions of the bill. CARTER L. BURGESS, NATIONAL CORPORATION FOR
HOUSING PARTNERSHIPS
Tax treatment of real estate States that private investment in the de
velopment of low- and moderate-income housing currently depends upon aid provided through both the existing Federal income tax treatment of real estate and the Federal housing subsidy programs. Indicates that the changes in present law contained in the House bill will eliminate much of the incentive for equity investment in low- and moderate-income housing and substantially reduce entrepreneurial interest in this housing.
Points out that although the House bill recognizes a distinction between new housing and other real estate development, It jeopardizes the efforts of Congress to promote the private development of publicly assisted housing and the sale of such housing to lowand moderate-income tenants and tenant oriented organizations. Indicates that this comes at a time when the Nation faces its greatest housing shortage since the immediate postwar years and when the demand for housing by lower income families is particularly acute.
Inclusion of accelerated depreciation in the Zimit on tax preference
States that the Corporation does not oppose inclusion of accelerated depreciation in the proposed limitation on tax preferences.
Recapture rules Opposes the provision in the House bill re
quiring the recapture of depreciation over straight-line, unless a substitute measure is adopted permitting investors to sell low- and moderate-income housing to organizations of tenants on a basis that would allow them to recover their investments after taxes.
Recommendations of alternative recapture provision
Suggests that the House bill be amended to provide that upon the sale of a publicly assisted low- or moderate-income housing project to or for the benefit of persons of low- and moderate-income housing, the seller would recognize gain for Federal income tax purposes only to the extent that the amount realized on such sale exceeds the cost as determined under section 1012 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Hobby losses Believes that the provision in the House
bill might be interpreted to deny to individual investors tl}.e right to use tax losses from housing investments to shelter income from other sources. Suggests that clarifying language be added to make the section inapplicable to investment in low- and moderate-income housing.
Limitation on interest deduction Believes that their projects will meet the
criteria. contained in the House bill on the limitation on interest deductions, but suggests that the language be clarified to indicate that such projects would not be considered investment property and that interest on mortgage indebtedness incurred would not be subject to the proposed limitation. BREWSTER IVES, MEMBER , BOARD OF DIRECTORS,
TENANT-OWNED APARTMENT ASSOCIATION INC.
Allocation of deductions Opposes allocation of deductions provision
of the bill. Points out that most of the allocable deductions are not related to the production of income, and contends that the source of payment has no bearing on whether they should be allowed. Argues that the proposal will cause serious financial reverses to cooperative apartment home ownership and will stimulate further departures to suburbia.
Limitation on interest deduction States that it should be made clear in the
committee report that the limitation on interest deduction does not apply to interest attributable to the ownership of a cooperative apartment, or to the deduction under section 216(a) (2) of the code. Argues that such interest is similar to interest on home mortgages, which ls specifically described in the House committee report as interest to which the limitation does not apply. WILLIAM H. DOUGHTY, PRESIDENT, NATIONAL AS
SOCIATION OF REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT
FUNDS
Effect of accelerated depreciation of real estate on earnings and profits
Explains that under the House bill a corporation which uses rapid depreciation methods may deduct only straight-line depreciation in computing earnings and profl.ts--with the result that shareholders may be taxed on distributions in excess of those presently taxed. Explains further that the Revenue Code defines "corporation" to include a real estate investment trust, even though such a trust is not taxed on its real estate investment trust income if it distributes 90 percent or more of that income to its shareholders.
Believes the application of the earnings and profits proposal to real estate investment trusts would frustrate the legislative intent expressed when the special provisions for taxing shareholders of such trusts were enacted in 1960.
Suggests that if the purposes expressed for the enactment of the real estate investment trust provisions are to be preserved and continued, then the proposed rule for the determination of a corporation's earnings and profits available for dividend purposes should not apply to the shareholders of such trusts.
CHALLENGE TO Mll.,ITARY SPENDING
Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, an editorial published in today's New York Times contains a balanced and truthful statement concerning the fight many of us made against excessive military spending.
The editorial points out that we have made an important beginning. It notes that the original requests for military authorizations have been reduced in the Senate to $20 billion. It notes that we have subjected the military and its civilian suppliers to unaccustomed scrutiny and have made them squirm. It states that we have laid the groundwork for more extensive reviews not only of the cost but of the rationale of arms systems.
But it also notes that during the recent debate many Senators reverted to their past p.osition and were willing to approve almost anything with a defense label. It rightfully points out that we still have a long way to go before defense costs are brought into reasonable balance and correctly notes that:
The planes and ships that are being retired (by Pentagon order) are mostly marginal and obsolete.
I commend the editorial to the Senate and the country and ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
CHALLENGING THE PENTAGON
The Pentagon has announced plans to cut the Air Force and Marine Corps by 70,000 men by next June and to inactivate 22 naval vessels and 209 aircraft as part of Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird's effort to reduce military spending by $3 billion in the current fiscal year. Last week the Senate passed a $20-billion military procurement authorization bill that was slightly more than $2 billion below the original request.
These are encouraging signs of a new re-1 uctance in the White House and on Capitol Hill to give the Pentagon all it asks. But these modest checks on military spending do not add up to a really significant shift in national priorities.
Even when Mr. Laird's target of 3.25 million men under arms is reached, the United States will still have more men in its armed forces than China and only slightly less than the Soviet Union al though the manpower requirements of both Communist countries should be greater because of their long, disputed border. The planes and ships that are being retired are mostly marginal and obsolete.
As for the procurement cuts, these were principally achieved in the Armed Services Committee under the solicitous eye of Chairman John Stennis of Mississippi and other long-time supporters of the Pentagon. In floor debate, Chairman Stennis and his
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27263 friends successfully beat back attempts to curb such dubious and costly projects as the antiballistic missile, a new nuclear carrier (total cost $1.2 'Qillion with escorts!), the C-5A transport plane and a new manned strategic bomber. In spite of shocking disclosures of Pentagon waste and serious doubts raised about the utility of some of the proposed new weapons systems, tnost Senators reverted to their old habit of pig-in-apoke approval of anything with a security label.
Meanwhile, the House Armed Services Committee hru:; reported a procurement bill of $21 billion, including almost $1 billion more for building new naval vessels than the Administration had requested. The bill is expected to pass the House with little debate next week.
Congressional challengers of unlimited defense spending have made an important beginning. They have subjected the miU.tary and its civilian suppliers to unaccustomed scrutiny and have made them squirm. They have laid the groundwork for more extensive reviews not only of the cost but of the rationale of arms systems. But they still have a long way to go before defense costs are brought into reasonable balance with other Federal activities, many of which are equally important to the nation's long-run security.
ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT
Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, the JuneJuly issue of Word, a magazine published by the National Council of Catholic Women, contains a most thoughtful and lucid article on "Arms Control and Disarmament." The author is the Reverend R. C. Spillane, S.J., director of the Center for Peace Research at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebr.
Father Spillane points out that the need is greater than ever for "individual concern and support for intelligent efforts toward arms control and disarmament." He suggests that this has become an economic as well as a moral imperative.
Father Spillane does not propose unilateral disarmament, as some suggest. He concludes that:
Disarmament with security is the only policy rational men-American or Russiancan follow.
He emphasizes the words "with security."
He insists-and I agree--that the individual citizen has a duty to educate himself on the subject of disarmament, so that armed with the facts he will be better able to aid in solving the problem and be better equipped to add to a meaningful discussion on the subject.
I ask unanimous consent that the article be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT
(By R. C. Spillane) The United States (and perhaps the Soviet
Union) can aichieve one goal fillrough a concentrated national effort over the span of one decade while the far more important goal of international harmony remains beyond man's reach.
In 1961 President Kennedy pledged an American moon-landing by the end of the decade. The same year saw the establishment of a new government agency to explore diplomatic and technological means
by which this nation, through its chief executive, could make substantial progress in the "new/old frontier" of a world without war. The Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) since 1961 has negotiated international agreements whdch, while in no way as spectacular as a moon landing, may prove to have more lasting benefits to all men: the control and eventual elimination of nuclear weapons. If the international community can create machinery to avoid nuclear warfare, other threats to hum.an survival in the form of chemical or biologican weapons can likewise be controlled or removed.
But the United States and, indeed, the Soviet Union as well, is committed to more than nuclear arms control and disarmament. It is the official policy of both superpowers to work toward general and complete disarmament. Unrealistic though this may sound in a cold-war atmosphere bristling with present inventories of nuclear weapons and delivery systems capable of destroying all mankind AND with both governments feverishly at work to augment this capability, disarmament with security is the only policy rational men-American or Russiancan follow.
It is equally apparent to the policy-maker and the "aver.age" citizen alike that the reverse of disarmament, the arms race, has become unacceptably expensive both in terms of its cost and in what could be done with these resources to develop the potential of man in society, national or global. No one needs to be reminded of the expanding U.S. defense budget. This year the defense budget is over $80-billion. In 1961 and 1962 the defense budget w.as in the $40-billlon range. Part of the increase can be blamed on inflation, more of it represents the agonizing burden of Vietnam; but too much is directly attributable to the head-to-head competition between the United States and the Soviet Union for superiority (not sufficiency) in strategic nuclear capability.
Who pays for these presently operational and proposed multi-billion-dollar programs which, if actually used, would destroy human society a.s we now know it? The federal income tax-individual and corporate-provides funds to pay for roughly half the entire national budget. It is a remarkable coincidence to cUscover that, in the past few years, the defense budget is almost matched by the income tax. This year the federal government expects to collect a little over $50-billion by taxes on individual incomes, another $30-blllion from taxes on corporate income.
On the personal or individual level no one needs to be convinced of the high cost of government, federal, state or local; and he can see easily that higher defense spending will take greater bites out of his income dollar. That is why individual concern and support for intelligent efforts toward arms control and disarmament becomes an economic as well as a moral imperative.
International efforts for arms control and/or disarmament have become almost commonplace in this century, and the incidence of failure needs no elaboration. But with the new weaponry developed since World War II, humanity can now destroy itself in a matter of hours. It's another ball game. This is the reason for the almost continual conferences among nations of the world to prevent global catastrophe by nuclear weapons. If the world community can agree upon acceptable safeguards to prevent nuclear war, mankind through its governments may survive long enough to continue the age-old search for security against conventional warfare.
Nuclear arms control has been the overriding concern of the nations that constitute the Eighteen Nation Disarmament Committee (ENDC) which has met regularly in Geneva since its creation in 1961. Of the five nuclear powers, Red China has refused to join and France withdrew from official par-
ticipation when General de Gaulle decided that such participation might compromise his nation's program to acquire an independent nuclear capability. Despite the lack of cooperation by France and China, ENDO has given the world significant hopes for the control of nuclear arms and ultimate cutbacks in present armaments. Starting with the Partial Test-Ban Treaty in 1963, ENDO has worked out international agreement to guard against tbe use and deployment of nuclear weapons in space and has more recently concluded the Non-Proliferation Treaty which was ratified by the U.S. Senate earlier this year. ENDC is currently discussing treaty drafts to bar the emplacement of weapons of mass destruction on the ocean-floor, and next on the agenda is an agreement to limit the size of underground nuclear tests.
The most important thing any citizen can do on the subject of disarmament is to educate himself. One must find out what the problems are, who-individuals and organizations, public and private-are working in the area, and what they have said or are doing. Only then can one, individually or collectively, hope to influence the makers of government policy.
Organizations such as the National Council of Catholic Women with other divisions of the U.S. Catholic Conference, particularly those of United Nations Affairs and World Justice and Peace, issue publications or other releases on the subject of disarmament. Membership in local chapters of the Foreign Policy Association and especially of the United Nations Association of the U.S.A. offers unequalled opportunities for information and action. Specialized reports in the field of disarmament can be obtained at minimal cost from the Disarmament Issues Committee of the United Nations Association of the U.S.A. (345 East 46th St., New York, N.Y. 10017). The best single document on government activity in this field is the annual "Report of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency." The current 8th Annual Report of A.CD.A., Publication 51, can be purchased from the U.S. Government Printing Office for 40 cents.
More important than knowledge, perhaps, is the spirit that motivates human thought and action. An understanding of human frailties, permeated with an habitual respect and affection based on the principle of the brotherhood of man, is essential to even the smallest steps toward a world of justice and peace.
WILL THE 1970 CENSUS INV ADE OUR PRIVACY?
Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, the Sunday, September 21, issue of Family Weekly magazine, contains an article written by me entitled "Will the 1970 Census Invade Our Privacy?"
In reply to the title question, the administration spokesman on this matter, Mr. A. Ross Eckler, says "No." It is a natural reply from one in his position. His Bureau of va~t computers operates on a very narrow definition of personal privacy as involving only a problem of confidentiality.
My reply to the question as spelled out in this article is an emphatic "Yes.'' I say this because I believe that in this era of computers which make it so much easier to conduct surveys, to extract and coerce information of all kinds from citizens, the problem of privacy involved in this matter is essentially one of first amendment freedoms. It involves the right not to be coerced to speak against our will about our personal and family affairs, our thoughts and attitudes, or our community activities.
In addition to these first amendment
27264 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Septeniber 26, 1969
problems, it has become clear that decennial census forms, the many other statutory census surveys, the thousands of statistical surveys run by other Federal agencies, all raise serious constitutional issues. There is, for instance, the principle that the law should apply equally to all persons in like circumstances. Why should some citizens be subject to criminal and civil penalties and not others? Why should some be selected for harassment and coercion to supply information about themselves and not others?
There is, furthermore, a constitutional question of the legality of the actions of administrative otticials who, in their own unfettered discretion, create a new penalty every time they sanction a new survey questionnaire or add a new question to an old form.
Finally, there is the basic constitutional principle that the people have a right to know when reply to a form is voluntary and when it is not. They have a right to know why the information on a survey form is needed and precisely what will be done with it. They have a right to honest answers to their honest questions.
In return, I believe the American people will provide honest answers to the Government's honest questions ..
I especially wanted to bring this article to the attention of the Senate because of the amount of mail it seems to be stimulating. Just this morning, for instance, I received favorable letters of support from Wilmington, N.C.; Orofino, Idaho; Hollywood, Calif.; Ridgewood, N .J.; Bonita Springs, Fla.; Sacramento, Calif; Champaign, Ill.; and Elizabethton, Tenn.
I ask unanimous consent that the article and letter which I received from a woman in Champaign, Ill., be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the items were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
WII.J.. THE 1970 CENSUS INVADE OUR PRIVACY? YES
(By Senator SAM J. ERVIN, JR.) Do you feel strongly that your personal
and financial affairs are nobody else's business? That the First Amendment protects not only your right to speak but also to keep silent about yourself? That a man's home is guaranteed him by the Constitution? That he should not be coerced into disclosing what goes on inside unless he chooses to?
Do Governmental threats of fines and jail sentences for declining to answer questions about such intimate matters strike you as being devious?
If so, you are squarely in the American tradit:on-and also out of step with the creeping erosion of these basic freedolllS underlying our 1970 Census. It underlies, as well, hundreds of "mini-censuses" that our Census Bureau conducts for itself and scores of Government agencies between the big decennial head counts authorized by the Cons ti tu ti on.
These statistical surveys are usually unknown yet cover a very diversified range of social and economic categories. No or incorrect responses can carry fines up to $500 and a 60-day jail sentence. These threats are made openly or hinted at, but all are highly questionable constitutionally.
Lately, however, thousands of disturbed and angry citizens from all walks of life have been protesting to Senators and Congressmen. They want guidance and remedial ac-
tion to bring this dangerous, indiscriminate trend under control.
A mini·ster wrote me recently, saying, "I am deeply concerned, not because of the census or because there are more than 120 questions but over the requirement that one must answer all questions such as 'Do you have a flush toilet?' or be subject to fine or imprisonment. This is th.e tactic of a police state! I am tempted to make a test case of this invasion of privacy by refusing to answer some of the questions. I am not sure, though, if my congregation would want their pas.tor to be a convict!"
A doctor who sells his house is fine-combed for data about his financial affairs totally unrelated to the real-estate disposal. For instance, "How many passenger automobiles are owned or regularly used by members of your household?" A disabled veteran becomes anxious about the possible loss of his disability benefits if he does not complete a Government questionnaire which is accompanied by an authoritative-looking letter that 1is subtly threatening.
When people fail to knuckle under immediately, they receive stern follow-up letters, a reminder by certified mail, then phone calls.
True, our Government's search for information is frequently in a good cause because of the increasingly complex problems of government. And such a task does demand statistical information of considerable accuracy, if only for the original Census purposes of apportioning Congress and the staite legislatures, and of distributing Federal funds.
With the 1970 Census, we will deploy 150,000 census takers and 62 million forms to insure as thorough a canvass as possible of America's households. A new mail-out/pmilback technique will carry the questionnaires to about 60 percent of our homes, and one in five of those homes will receive the "long form" with its 67 subjects and 120 questions.
The cost of this effort 1s not excessive, about $1 a head or, for our estimated 206 million people, more than $200 million. But as Congressman Jack.Son E. Betts of the House Subcommittee on Census and Stati.s.tics has pointed out, "should a significant number of people remain uncounted because they do not have the eighth-grade education to read the complex form, objeot to some of the overly personal questions, or resist the harassment of penalties, the co'st of the 1970 Census will skyrocket."
Congressman Betts, who is supported by more than 100 of his colleagues in an effort to obtain census reforms that include repeal of the penalty provisions, points to the 5.6 million people who were missed in the 1960 Census. "If the mail returns from the mO!:lt recent pretest city, Trenton, N.J., form a national trend," he warns, "the number of those not counted will be s.taggering. In Trenton, only 65 percent returned their forms. If projected nationwide, this would mean that more than 70 million might not be counted in the first tabulation."
We can afford perhaps even less the steady breakdown of privacy which the computerization of personal data by Government agencies entails. The Census Bureau claims that it ha~ a flawless record for confiden.tiality, one outstanding example of which was its refusal to permit Government access to its records to facilitate the round-up of Japanese-Amro-icans ait the start of World War II. But the agencies to wh.l.ch it makes its daita tapes available seldom ma'.lntain the same strict rules.
Moreover, regulations now require that the computer systems of all Government agencies interface. So while we have managed to delay the establishment of a National Data Bank, with built-in privacy safeguards, we already have one fully operating through this Federal-agency computer network.
There is a need to distinguish between
confidentiality and privacy. The former is the protection afforded people 1) when it is desirable for them to be free to communicate between each other (as in a husband-wife relation); or 2) to accomplish some good, one should be able to make a statement without fear of it being divulged by the one to whom it is made (as physician and patient or attorney and client). Under this principle of confidentiality, the Census Bureau, when it acquires information for a demonstrated public need, is under a legal obligation not to reveal the information to others.
Within the realm of privacy, however, are those personal matters that one should not be compelled to disclose to anyone against his will.
Too often, the Government compels citizens to disclose personal data for statistical purposes without sufficient proof of need. And there usually is no assurance of confidentiality.
In this decade about to close, we have witnessed a mushroom growth of data-collecting programs, side by side with sophisticated surveillance techniques, and a rapidly spreading trend toward computerization of Government files about the individual. In the process, things have moved much too fast.
Now is the time for Congress to impose controls and standards. In the Senate, I have proposed a bill to delete the penalties for not answering personal questions in the decennial and other censuses unless the answers are needed for standard constitutional purposes. This bill also would protect a person's right to ignore an unwarranted, privacyinvading, Government statistical questionnaire unless it meets certain standards set by Congress. For example, the recipient of a voluntary form must be informed that his response is voluntary, the specific need for the information, and to what use it will be put.
I am convinced that Americans are a lawablding people and that they will respond to a legitimate and reasonable Governmental request for statistical assistance. Free men in a free society need not be threatened.
SEPTEMBER 22, 1969. DEAR SENATOR ERVIN: In our Sunday paper
of yesterday, an article titled "Will the 1970 Census Invade Our Privacy?", to which your picture and name was attached, I wish to compliment you on your stand, and also hope the wishes of the taxpayers will be considered to halt this inva.sion.
Did you know that it has begun in Wisconsin? I know of a small town under 700 population where one person living alone has been visited four times and been asked penetrating questions and was told by the lady census taker she would be back four more times in spring of 1970.
This is called harassment-is it not? Sincerely yours,
CONGRATULATIONS TO MR. JAMES JACKSON
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I would like to congratulate Mr. James Jackson, president of the trtbal council of the Quinault Indians in the State of Washington. Mr. Jackson has been selected to receive the Indian Achievement Award which is awarded annually to an outstanding Indian leader. The importance of the award is signified by the fact that both the past and present Commissioners of Indian Affairs have received the award in previous years.
Mr. Jackson has demonstrated by his dynamic leadership that Indian self-determination is far more than a hollow promise or a glib phrase of Government
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENA TE 27265 officials. Among his many accomplishments are a new tribal fish hatchery, a mutual self-help housing program, a public health clinic, and one of the most unique and promising public school programs for Indian children in the United States. '
The Indian Education Subcommittee which I chair, visited the Tahola school on the Quinault Reservation in the spring of 1968, and listened to testimony from one of its Indian school board members in our hearings at Portland. This school has an all-Indian school board, substantial community involvement, and an innovative curriculum which respects cultural differences and strengthens Indian identity. I congratulate Mr. Jackson on his award and the development of one of the finest public school programs for Indian children in the United States.
SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 111-A SENSIBLE PLAN FOR MEETING AN EMERGENCY
Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, we have been shocked and saddened by the many lives that were lost and the immense property damage done by Hurricane Camille and the recent Virginia floods. These two major natural disasters dramatically emphasize the importance of Federal emergency loans, such as those made by the Farmers Home Administration, to ranchers and farmers who are victims of these tragedies.
In disasters such as Hurricane Camille and the Virginia floods, local banks and credit institutions are not equipped to cope with the large demands for financial help. Without emergency loans from the Farmers Home Administration, many farmers and ranchers would be unable to replant their crops, replace their livestock, and rebuild their homes. They would be left in an impossible financial situation with no place to turn for help.
At present the emergency loan program of the Federal Home Administration is in serious difficulty. The emergency credit revolving fund from which the Federal Home Administration makes emergency loans to disaster-stricken farmers and ranchers is exhausted. As of March 20, 1969, there were approved loan applications totaling $17 million which could not be made because of a lack of funds. Since the emergency credit revolving fund does not receive an annual appropriation, it is imperative that Congress take immediate action so that this necessary loan program can continue.
The distinguished Senator from South Dakota <Mr. McGOVERN) has introduced Senate Joint Resolution 111 which would provide funds to continue the Farm Home Administration's emergency loan program. This joint resolution would authorize the Commodity Credit Corporation to make temporary advances to the emergency credit revolving fund up to $25 million. These advances would be repaid with interest out of subsequent appropriations. This is a sound and sensible method of meeting this emergency and I am proud to lend my support to this joint resolution.
I urge Senators to support Senate Joint Resolution 111.
VIETNAM Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an open letter to Congress from the bereaved father of a marine who died of a disease contracted in Vietnam.
The letter speaks for itself. I add only my strong personal belief that we, the Congress, can and should take all possible action to require the executive to end the unnecessary and immoral war in Vietnam without further delay. The author of this letter, Mr. Frank H. Mentz, of Sheridan, Ark., has appealed both to our conscience and to our sense of constitutional responsibility. What is our answer?
There being no objection, the open letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as fallows: AN OPEN LE'ITER TO THE CONGRESS OF THE
UNITED STATES
We wish to express our sincere thanks to the Congress of the United States for their continuing inactiVity in l'egard to their Constitutional responsibilit ies regarding the Vietnam war.
Because of your inactivity towards stopping our participation in this useless and senseless war, we have lost OUT only son, and only child, to a Vietnam contracted disease.
In fact, because I am an only son of an only son, the sensel&S death of our son will eliminate our family name for all time.
Yes, we know we are not the only ones who have lost a loved one in this nonsensical war-and that makes it even more senseless.
How, Gentlemen, can you justify the loss of over 45,000 young American boys' lives in th.at hell-on-earth for wh.at we have gotten in return, or ever hope to get in return? In fact, Gentlemen, how can you possibly sleep at night when you know that you have been able all along to stop this useless slaughter, if by no other means, than to stop the fiow of money to the Armed Forces.
If I understa nd our Constitution correctly, no President of the United States h.as the right to commit anywhere near the numcber of troops being used in Vietnam combat, on foreign soil, without first obtaining the full sanction of the U.S. Congress. Yet you he.ve stood by and let three successive Presidents do just exactly that.
And, Gentlemen, flor every week you continue to sit on your hands, .another 200-300 or more American boys die over there-and for what.
If this were a wax where our National Security WM at stake, I, and I'm sure most of the other p.arents, wives, and children, who have lost a loved one, would a.ccept the inevitable possibility that such a thing could and must happen to some of us.
But to lose one to a war that has no more connection to our national security than this one ha.s--only an imbecile would believe that it was necessary. In fa.ct, it's nothing short of criminal on your part tha.t you sit idly by and let this national disgr.ace continue.
I know that in all probability, if this letter is ever read to you, it will continue to fall on deaf ears---as all pleas to date have-because I am just another of those poor saps of a good American citizen who continue to believe in this country. But for the memory of my son, I had to try to save some other boy like him. It won't bring my son back, but I can now better live with myself because I tried.
I wonder just how many of you have los t a son to the Vietnam fiasco? Maybe, God forbid, if enough of you did, you would do what your oath of ofilce expects of you.
In God's name, Gentlemen, bring oux boys home-not in 1970 or 1971-but now.
FRANK H. MENTZ.
ARTICLE Ill Cc) OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION DOES NOT ABRIDGE FREE SPEECH
Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, article III of the Genocide Convention lists the following acts as punishable under the convention: the crime of genocide itself, conspiracy to commit genocide, attempt to commit genocide, complicity in genocide, and direct and public incitement to commit genocide.
Objections have been raised to article III Cc) 's prohibition against "direct and public incitement to commit genocide." The objection is that by making such conduct criminal the Senate might run afoul of the first amendment of the Constitution. That amendment guarantees that the rights of free speech and freedom of the press must not be abridged.
Mr. President, the Supreme Court has consistently r ecognized that even rights as sacred as free speech and freedom of the press are not completely unlimited. Public safety and public order cannot be endangered in the name of free speech. Shouting "fire" in a public theater, for example, obviously cannot be condonedSchenck against United States. Similarly, the Supreme Court has held that speech cannot be tolerated if it represents a direct and immediate danger that the U.S. Government will be overthrown-Dennis against United States.
These cases have come to be recognized as the "clear and present danger" ; namely, that the right of free speech shall not be abridged unless or until the speech amounts to a clear and present danger to society. Quite clearly, a direct and public incitement to commit genocide Would represent a "clear and present danger" to society, and therefore falls outside the ambit of the first amendment.
Mr. President, there is no valid objection to article IIHc) of the Genocide Convention, or to any other article of the convention. I urge the Senate to act now to ratify the Genocide Convention.
IN MEMORIAM: NICOLA PETKOV, "THE BRAVEST DEMOCRAT OF ALL"
Mr. DODD. Mr. President, September 23 marked the 22d anniversary of the executton of Nicola Petkov, leader of the democratic forces in Bulgaria, by the Bulgarian Communist regime.
I think it is appropriate that we in the Senate should mark this anniversary by retelling the story of Petkov's heroic life and tragic death, and I therefore ask unanimous consent to insert into the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks an article captioned "Bra vest Democrat of All," which appeared in the Saturday Evening Post for December 1947. The article was written by Dr. Georgi M. Dimitrov, Petkov's chief colleague in the fight against the Communist takeover of Bulgaria, who today heads the Bulgarian National Committee, the Supreme liberation body in exile.
The number of martyrs to Communist tyranny must by now be numbered in the many millions. The great majority of these were little people who did not seek martyrdom, who barely understood what
27266 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
was happening to their country, but who paid with thei:r lives because they resisted some aspect of the total tyranny of communism.
However, there have been many of tens of thousands of conscious martyrs who did understand the forces they were up against and who knew only too well the terrible personal danger of opposing them. Of all those who knowingly chose martyrdom in preference to surrender, there was no more heroic or tragic figure than Nicola Petkov.
I would recommend the story of Nicola Petkov's martyrdom in particular to those who tell us that the North Vietnamese Communists are basically nationalists and to those who urge that we impose a coalition government on our South Vietnamese allies.
As Dr. Dimitrov pointed out in his article:
No man believed more sincerely in the possibility of collaborating with the Soviets than did Nicola Petkov. No man paid more dearly for this belief. No man conducted himself with greater courage when once he discovered his error, nor confr..<ilnted his executors with greater dignity.
The article tells the story of the traitorous invasion of Bulgaria by the Red army in September of 1944. On September 1, the pro-Axis government of Bagrianov was overthrown. On September 6, the new government of Prime Minister Mora viev decided to declare war on Germany, in support of the Allies. But 2 days later, on September 8, the Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria and the Red army poured over its frontiers.
The article also tells the story of the "salami" tactics which the Communists employed to weaken and finally destroy and illegalize all those parties and organizations that opposed them.
They began with blandishments, and with talk of coalition government. On January 21, 1945, for example, Communist Vice Premier Dobre Tarpeshev gushed:
If I were a woman, I can think of no one I would rather marry than Nicola Petkov.
But soon the blandishments gave way to demands; the demands gave way to threats; and finally, the threats were superseded by the most inhuman kind of political terror.
The article contains the text of a letter written by Petar Koev, one of Nicola Petkov's chief lieutenants, before he finally confessed to the Communist police. This letter is a remarkable document to which I want, in particular, to call attention:
They reduce you to a state of utter moral and physical prostration-
Said Koev's Ietter-1n which you become indlfl'erent to your fate and to life itself, so that you desire some solution-any solution-so long a.s it will put an end to the intolerable suffering.
Koev described how he was kept in solitary confinement for 21 days on a diet of bread and water before being interrogated; how he was then interrogated for 5 days without interruption, for 24 hours a day, standing handcuffed in the middle of the room; how he was trussed and beaten on the soles of his feet for hours on end; and how these
crude physical tortures were supplemented with refined psychological tortures, such as allusions to the safety of his family a!ld children.
I would call attention, too, to the account of the heroic election campaign conducted by the Bulgarian democratic opposition. With the Red army still in control of the country and with the Communist-controlled police breaking up their meetings, the opposition attacked the Communists and the Soviet interventionists as recklessly as though they enjoyed the protection of the American Constitution.
Elected to parliament despite the terror, Petkov and his following conducted themselves with a heroism that almost defies belief. Repeatedly they were assaulted and beaten up by the pro-Communist majority in parliament. But always they came back to their seats with their heads unbowed. Always they resumed the challenge. Always they remained defiant.
When Communist leader Georgi Dimitrov shouted that the future belonged to the Communists, Petkov interven~d:
The future belongs not to you, Mr. Dimitrov, but to the people. You are not a god, Mr. Dimitrov, though you may deceive yourself on this score by taking into your party only those who accept you as their god. . . . Your program is one word: Dictatorship! Our program is also one word: Liberty!
I recommend the article which I am inserting into the RECORD as a classic description of how the Communists move from coalition government to totalitarian dictatorship.
I salute the memory of Nicola Petkov, who has justly been described as "the bravest democrat of all." His memory will, I am certain, remain forever enshrined in the annals of freedom.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to include the article in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Saturday Evening Post, Dec. 6,
1947] BRAVEST DEMOCRAT OF ALL
(By Dr. Georgi Dimitrov, as told to David Martin)
NoTE.-A coincidence in names: Dr. Georgi Dimitrov, leader of the Bulgarian Agrarian Party until Soviet pressure compelled him to resign his post in favor of Nicola Petkov, is an almost legendary figure in Balkan politics. He has the unique distinction of having been arrested by both the fascists and the communists, and having been condemned to death in abstentia by both the fascists and the communist regimes. By a strange historical coincidence, Dr. Dimitrov, whom the Communist International regards as its archenemy, bears the same name as his polar opposite, Georgi Dimitrov, premier of Bulgaria and one-time Secretary of the Communist International.
-THE EDITORS.
Nicola Petkov is dead. Bulgaria has lost a truly great patriot, the democratic world has lost a leader who was a moral giant. The three visiting American congressmen who, a week after his death, placed a wreath on his unmarked grave in a Sofia cemetery, did not exaggerate when they described him as "one of the greatest democrats of all time." I think he was the bravest democrat of all.
No man believed more sincerely in the possiblllty of collaborating with the Soviets than did Nicola Petkov. No man paid more dearly
for this belief. No man conducted himself with greater courage when once he discovered his error, nor confronted his executors with greater dignity.
His is a tragedy pregnant with significance for a democratic world that is still contemplating, Hamlet-like, the prose and cons of the very problem on which Petkov met his doom.
Petkov was deprived of his parliamentary immunity on June fifth of this year and immediately arrested. Shortly afterward he was brought to trial on a fantastic list of charges-that he had acted as an agent of foreign powers, that he had participated in a military conspiracy to overthrow the Bulgarian government, that he had urged the peasants to sabotage the regime by destroying their crops. On August sixteenth he was convicted and sentenced to death.
On August eighteenth the State Departme~t addr~ed a note to the Soviet deputy act ing chairman of the Allied Control Commission, urging that the commission review the case of Petkov. The note spoke of "a gross miscarriage of justice" and indicated that the State Department considered the trial of Pet.kov a violation of the Yalta Agreement, which ostensibly guaranteed the rights of the opposition.
The Soviet replied that intervention on behalf of Petkov would be a violation of Bulgaria's national sovereignty. In the early morning of September twenty-third, Petkov was hanged in Sofia prison. To the last, he stubbornly refused to appeal for clemency, because he held that he had been unjustly convicted.
In striking at Petkov, the dark powers that rule Bulgaria were aiming not so much at Petkov the man a.sat the United States and western democracy. "If we execute Petkov," rea.soned Premier Georgi Dimitrov and the communist hatchetmen, "this will demonstrate to the entire opposition how powerless the great democracies are to defend them, and how senselessly futile their opposition to communism has therefore become. And now that the democracies have made their empty protests on his behalf, our little demonstration will be doubled, reinforced."
Ever since January, 1945, when, under communist pressure, I handed over the secretaryship of our party to Petkov. I have been in direct or indirect touch with either Petkov or mutual colleagues. Before that, I had known him intimately since 1931. I think that I am in a better position than any other man to tell the story of Nicola Petkov and of his disastrous efforts to collaborate with the communists.
Petkov died in the tradition of his familyhe came of a family which seems to have been uniquely destined for martyrdom. His father, Dimitar Petkov, lost an arm in the war against the Turks and was decorated by Czar Alexander II of Russia for his bravery. But when he realized that the Russians planned to convert Bulgaria into a province of their own, he turned against them and led an agitation that resulted in the expulsion of Alexander's generals from the country. Several years afterward a grateful people elected him Premier. A stanch upholder of the constitution, he soon came into confilct with the autocratic King Ferdinand I. In 1907, Dimitar Petkov wa.s shot down on Boulevard Alexander II in Sofia by agents of the monarchy.
Petkov's brother, Petko D. Petkov, assumed the leadership of the Agrarian Party after the assassination of the great Alexander Stambulisky on June 14, 1923. Undeterred by threats, Petko Petkov from his seat in parliament mercilessly excoriated the increasingly fascist nature of the regime of Professor Tsankov and continued to fight for Alexander Stambulisky's ideal of Balkan and European federation. On June 14, 1924, one year to the day after the assassination of Stambulisky, he was shot down by assassins
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27267
directly in front of the palace. When the day of his funeral arrived, Sofia was inundated by a sea. of peasants who flowed to the capital from all over Bulgaria to pay homage to their leader. And now the communist reaction has taken the life of the last male member of the Petkov family.
I ftrst met Nicola Petkov in Paris in 1930. The opposition in Bulgaria was preparing to make a bid for power, and we were anxious to have him join us. Petkov at that time was leading the life of. a young aristocrat and had no profound interest in politics. But he was strongly influenced by the memory of his father and his brother, and shortly after the triumph of the opposition in the elections of June, 1931, he assumed the editorship of our party organ.
My first impression of Petkov was not altogether favorable. Though his shoulders were broad and his body seemed strong, he had suffered from various maladies in consequence CYf which he walked with an awkwardly limp slouch and his hands frequently trembled. His manner was so diffident that his circle of friends was restricted. When he spoke, he invariably looked down to avoid the eyes of his company. This young aristocrat obviously lacked the common touch that his brother Petko had possessed, and it also seemed to me that he lacked the will power and courage of his brother. In this estimate, as events have proved, I was completely mistaken. The limp posture, the trembling hands, the downcast eyes, concealed a spirit as courageous and uncompromising as Petko Petkov at his greatest.
The period of· legality lasted for only three yea.rs after Petkov's return. In May, 1934, the reaction staged a coup d'etat and installed a dictatorship under the premiership of Kimion Georgiev, who today holds the post of Foreign Minister in the communist government of Bulgaria. In 1938, however, the government again agreed to hold elections, and Petkov was elected deputy. In parliament he conducted himself with boldness, with the result that he was soon expelled by the reactionary majority.
Then came the war. After the defeat of Poland and France, the German pressure on the Balkans grew immeasurably stronger. Aware that this might involve us in the confl.ict, I approached the leaders of all the democratic and anti-German parties to suggest joint action against such a.n eventuality. On February 21, 1941, we forwarded to King Boris a memorandum S'igned by the leaders of ten parties, in which we urged a termination of the government's pro-German policy and adherence to strict neutrality. At four o'clock next morning, I was arrested by the police. When the inspector in charge turned his back to argue with my wif'e, I escaped out of the kitchen door and over the garden wall.
Anticipating my arrest, I had taken Petkov with me to our final meeting and had introduced him to our leaders. The understanding was that if anything happened to me, he would take over in my stead. I myself, after a period in hiding, escaped from the country via Yugoslavia. When German forces entered Bulgaria on March l, 1941, Petkov was sent to a concentration camp. He was released some three months later.
Although a tyro in underground activity, Petkov now took to it with the skill of a veteran. My one difference with him was that he collaborated somewhat too closely with the communists. He was sympathetic to Russia and he was impressed by the audacity of the Bulgarian communists. He helped them liberally not merely with his personal funds but even with the funds of the Agrarian Party.
The original united front against the government's pro-German policy had consisted of ten parties ranging from the Communist Party on the left to the conservative demo-
CXV--1718-Part 20
era.tic parties on the right. Now Petkov was engineered into abandoning this coalition in favor of· the Fatherland Front, which included only three major parties--the Agrarians, the Communists and the Socialists-and two minor groupings. Although the program adopted by the Fatherland Front was all that a democrat could have asked, it was obvious from the beginning that the communists would exert far more influence than they could have exerted in a broader coalition.
Petkov was interned again in January, 1944, but released in time to play a leading role in the coup d'etat of September 8, 1944. During August, the government of Premier Bagrianov had entered into negotiations for an armistice with Britain and America. Flor some reason never explained, the British and Americans hedged and made conditions-as though the proximity of the Red Army to the Bulgarian frontier meant nothing at all. On September sixth the government of Moraviev, which had superseded that of Bagrianov on September first, decided to declare war on Germany. The proclamation was not published because certain crypto-communists close to the Minister of War urged postponement until September eighth. On September eighth the Soviet Union, in an act as Machiavellian as its pact with Hitler, declared war on Bulgaria. The Red Army poured over the frontier. That same day the Fatherland Front, with the support of the Military League, staged a coup and arrested the government-which had already declared war on Germany! But the Red Army continued its advance until it stood on Bulgaria's southern frontier, menacing Turkey.
I returned to Sofia on September twentythird. The moment I crossed the frontier, I was met by a delegation of party members. They said the situation was rapidly building up to catastrophe. Communist-controlled police and the communist-organized milltia had already instituted a reign of terror. Hundreds had been arrested, scores had been shot. They implored me to do something.
The narrowness of the Fatherland Front and the timing of its coup had worked in favor of the communists. After the coup, a provisional government had been set up in which the communists had reserved for themselves the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Justice, as well as effective control of the Ministry of War. To their partners of the Fatherland Front they tossed posts of lesser importance; Petkov himself was given a ministry without portfolio.
Petkov was beginning to realize the importance of the concessions which, out of sheer political nai'.vete, he had made to the communists. His first words to me when we met were, "Thank God you've come back! I'm afraid we've made an awful mess 9f things!"
He explained that, at the time the government had been formed, the communists, with Russian backing, had posed the matter in such a way that the alternatives seemed to be either a coalition on the terms of the communists or else a government of the Communist Party. "Frankly," he said, "I didn't realize how much I was conceding, otherwise I should have refused."
On October 12, 1944, Petkov left for Moscow as a member of an armistice delegation representing all parties in the Fatherland Front. The armistice was signed on October twenty-eighth. When I met Petkov on his return from Moscow, there was the look of a hunted man in his eyes. "I must speak to you in private," he said in a furtive whisper.
A few hours later we met in his apartment. Petkov, his hands trembling more than usual, began speaking-for the first time in our long friendship he looked directly into my eyes as he spoke. "The Russians want to split our party. Central Europe belongs to the Soviet sphere, they said, and our party could only hope to survive if it purged itself of Doctor Dimitrov and the other anti-Soviet
elements. They urged me to assume the leadership to carry out such a program. I tried to tell them that you were a friend of the Russian people, .but it wasn't of any use. George Dimitrov especially is dead set against you."
"It isn't just a matter of splitting our party," I replied. "The communists want to destroy our party because they see in the peasant movement the chief obstacle to their dictatorship."
Toward nine o'clock the other ministers of the Agrarian Party came to the apartment. Petkov reported to us on certain personal observations he had made in Russia. The thing that appalled him more than anything else was the fantastic luxury in which the proletarian bureaucrats basked whilst their people were starving. The Bulgarian delegation had been invited to dinner by Georgi Dimitrov, one-time leader of the Bulgarian Communist Party, now a Russian citizen for more than twenty years. The dinner was Oriental in its extravagance. There was course after course after course-caviar, and roast duck and other viands, and rare delicacies that Petkov had seen nowhere since before the war, and vodka served in glasses of pure crystal.
In December, 1944-six weeks after his return from Moscow-the communists informed Petkov that I would have to resign as general secretary of the party, or else. Realizing there was no alternative at this stage, I handed over my office to Petkov, whom the communists made clear they favored. For his part, he still believed he could effect a reconciliation with them. So, Dr. Georgi Dimitrov, the anti-Soviet fanatic, had been removed, and Nicola Petkov, lifelong friend of the Soviets, had taken my place. In a speech on January 21, 1945-the day of my resignation-Communist Vice .. Premier Dobre Tarpeshev gushed, "If I were a woman, I can think of no one I would rather marry than Nicola Petkov!"
But it was not long before the communists came forward with new demands. They asked Petkov to dismiss the entire central committee and replace them with men they designated. Petkov, whose resistance was still in the process of. hardening, compromised to the extent of accepting a few communist stoogies in subordinate positions and in the youth organization. Further than this he refused to go. For more than three months the communists plied their pressures, waiting for Petkov to weaken. Instead, his attitude grew more stubborn. Finally, realizing that their plan to capture the party through Petkov had failed, they decided on a frontal attack. . Through our own agents in communist
headquarters we learned that they were preparing to arrest me and several score of our party leaders. I was to make a "confession," and then disappear in the manner of Bela Kovacs. The others were to be brought to trial, and through my own "confession" and their "confessions" the Agrarian Party was to be so compromised that they would have a legal pretext for outlawing it.
On April twenty-third, while convalescing from a serious attack of pneumonia, I was formally placed under house arrest. Before the police disconnected my telephone, my wife put through a call to Petkov. Ignoring the danger to himself, he immediately ca.me to see me. Trembling with anger, he called the Minister of the Interior, demanding the reason for my arrest. The minister answered coldly that I had been arrested "in the interest of national security."
"In the interest of the national security," replied Petkov, "you are arresting the man who has done more to promote the national security than any other living Bulgarian. Someday you will regret your action."
The Petkov I saw at this last meeting was a completely changed man from the Petkov
- _ J
27268 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 of eight months previously. Gone were his illusions about co-operating with the communists. The man with the diffident manner and the downcast eyes had become a lion. He looked both friend and foe squarely in the eyes, and when he spoke to his foes, he literally roared.
On May eighth, the communists convoked a special convention of the "Agrarian Party" attended by several hundred picked stool pigeons. The convention voted in a "new executive." The Ministry of the Interior ruled that our party headquarters, our newspaper, our treasury and all our possessions were the rightful property of this newly elected executive of "the Bulgarian Agrarian Union."
Petkov alone of the old executive was invited to join the new executive. He refused point-blank. Instead, he set up party headquarters in his own home and began to plan a campaign of resistance in open defiance of the secret police.
On May twenty-fourth, I slid down a drain pipe, walked out of the alley dressed i• overalls, walked past the communist military guards surrounding the house, and took refuge in the American Embassy. My escape threw a monkey wrench into the preparations the communists were making for their sham trial. Without my confession, the performance would have impressed no one. The trial was called off.
In July the government announced that elections would take place within one month and that there would be only one ticket, the list of the Fatherland Front. Petkov immediately sent a strong letter to the Allied Control Commission, demanding that it guarantee the right of the opposition to its own electoral ticket in accordance with the terms of the Yalta Agreement, and urging that the elections be supervised by an international commission. In early August, without any prior notification to Petkov, the government announced that Petkov had "resigned" his ministry. In protest, all the remaining ministers of the Agrarian Party, the Socialist Party and the Independent Intellectual Party, resigned from the government.
At this point the British and American governments intervened. Apparently yielding to their pressure, the Bulgarian Government agreed to postpone the elections, and to permit opposition candidates. Petkov was permitted officially to re-establish party headquarters and to publish his own newspaper.
But the improvement did not last very long. In violation of their August agreement, the government announced that the elections would be held on November eighteent h. Though the three opposition parties decided to boycott the elections, the campaign was so bitterly fought that the Peasant Party alone had more than a score of its followers killed. The opposition, in a statement signed by Petkov for the Agrarians, Lulchev for the Socialists, and Professor Stoyanov for the Independent Intellectuals, declared that the majority of the people had not voted and that the government had therefore lost the election. They demanded an investigation. The communists replied that the Fatherland Front had got more than 75 per cent of the eligible vote Their collaborators of the Zveno Group, however, put out the slightly more modest figure of 65 per cent. The discrepancy made the people laugh.
At the Moscow Conference of December, 1945, the Russians made one of their many meaningless compromises. They agreed to advise the Bulgarian Government of the desirability of including in the government, during the interim period, two representatives of the opposition. I t was no less a person than Deputy Foreign Minister Vishinsky who went to Bulgaria to implement this arrangement. Vishinsky summoned Petkov and two other opposition leaders and said to
them-as bluntly as this, "It is the order of Generalissimo Stalin that two members of your combined opposition enter the government immediately and unconditionally."
"I do not take orders from any foreign power," replied Petkov coldly. " I take orders only from my people and my party." Lulchev and Stoyanov backed him up. The conversations with Vishinsky ended.
The communists were worried by Petkov's recalcitrance because they knew that he accurately reflected the temper of the people. After Vishinsky's departure, the government again approached him. This time, to the amazement of all, they accepted almost all of Petkov's conditions, including separate electoral lists and an Agrarian Minister of Justice. The agreement was concluded in the afternoon on March 28, 1946. Thait same evening, the Soviet minister to Bulgaria, Kirsonov, delivered an ultimatum protesting the agreement. The following morning a government was constituted minus the opposition-and it was announced that there would be elections to a Constituent Assembly on October twenty-seventh.
Petkov now began a campaign which, for sheer heroism, is unsurpassed in the annals of any opposition. With the Red Army still in the country, and with the communistcontrolled police breaking up their meetings, the opposition attacked the government and the communists and Soviet intervention as recklessly as though they enjoyed the protection of the American Constitution. Petkov's paper, during the pre-electoral period especially, was an inspiration to read. "What our people must show,'' said the Banner for October twelfth, "is de l'audace, et encore de l'audaoe, et toujours de l'audace!" The following day, under the caption WHERE ARE THE AGRARIAN DEPUTIES? it charged that the Agrarian Party had not been permitted to put up candidates in 25 per cent of the constituencies and that of the candidates for the other constituencies, almost fifty were under arrest. "Freedom does not come on a silver platter," wrote Petkov on October fifteenth. "Freedom is something for which you must fight."
To the communists' protestations that they had no intention of taking the peasants' property, Petkov replied with the most devastating slogan of the electoral campaign: "As the wolf cannot watch over your flocks, as the fox cannot befriend your hens, so the communists cannot protect private property. Electors! Vote without any fear against the communist constitution, against the communist dictatorship I"
On October twentieth, the opposition finally was granted permission to hold an open meeting in Sofia-without loud-speakers or lights. Despite all the restrictions, more than 200,000 angry peasants swarmed into Sofia and joined the city workers and middle class in the most impressive demonstration of the entire electoral campaign. "Down with the dictatorship!" they roared. "Down with red Fascism! We want Petkovl"
The success of the meeting resulted in an intensification of the terror. In the three days before the elections, twenty-four members of the Agrarian Party were killed. The communist leader, Georgi Dimitrov, who had been a resident of Russia for thirteen years and who had returned to Bulgaria only two days before the election-it is not clear whether he resigned his Soviet citizenshipthundered against Petkov in his first declaration, "We have to remind the leader of the opposition of the fate of Drazha Mihailovich !"
When the election results were announced, the opposition was crectited with 101 deputies against 364 for the Fatherland Front. The Agrarian member sent a protest to the Elect!on commission in which he gave details of the terror against the opposition. "What has taken place,'' he said, "was not an election, but a war between the police and the peo-
ple. . . . The elections were without any question fraudulent."
When the Constituent Assembly convened on November eighth, the opposition opened the session by shouting, "Long live liberty! Down with the dictatorship!" In the sessions that followed, the figure of Nicola Petkov, hurling castigation and defiance at the communist majority, completely dominated the assembly. Georgi Dimitrov, who, as a proletarian revolutionary, had towered over his Nazi prosecutors at Leipzig, now, as a totalitarian bureaucrat, shrank to the stature of a pygmy. Without either moral or rational ground to stand on, he could do nothing but reply to Petkov with abuse-"anti-Soviet dog" was one choice term--0r with crude threats.
When Georgi Dimitrov shouted that the future belonged to tha communists, Petkov intervened, "The future belongs not to you, Mr. Dimitrov, but to the people. You are not a god, Mr. Dimitrov, though you may deceive yourself on this score by taking in to your party only those who accept you as their god .... Your program is one word: Dictatorship! Our program is also one word: Liberty!"
On January 30, 1947, Dimitrov made his first direct threat to Petkov. After roaring that "Koev must be hanged!" (Petar Koev wais one of Petkov's chief aides) he went on to say that the government possessed documents involving the leader of the opposition. The following is a condensation of the exchange that took place.
PETKov: Are you a satrap, that you issue such summary condemnations? After all, you are not a god-you are not even a qualified judge. As for the documents of which you speak, I challenge you to produce them.
DIMITROV: Very soon you will receive your documents. When you do, not one of you will remain in this assembly. There is no place in this assembly for foreign agents.
PETKov: You speak of foreign agents .... For twenty years, you, Mr. Dimitrov, were a citizen of a foreign country. You became a Bulgarian citizen only two days before the election. You have no right even to speak as a Bulgarian.
The battle grew in intensity. On April third, one of the opposition deputies got up and made the accusation that under Article 4 of the armistice, the Communist Party was a fascist organization and should accordingly be dissolved. The communists, outnumbering the opposition almost four to one, rushed across the floor and engaged them tn a terribly unequal battle in which many of the opposition were injured. The opposition left the chamber en masse, by way of protest.
The next day they were back in their places to renew the struggle. An Agrarian woman deputy charged that the Communist Party was squandering public funds by making all of their members eligible for the special allotments voted to active partisans. Again the communist majority charged the opposition. Again the opposition left the chamber with their heads bloody. Again they came back the following day.
And so it went, until the final arrest of Petkov and the dissolution of his party.
The bulk of the evidence against Petkov consisted of confessions purportedly made by his "fellow conspirators." The most important of these was the "confession" of Pe tar Koev. the Petkov aide who had been arrested in mid-January, 1947. Koev had been arrested once before, in August, 1946. While he was in prison he had been elected to parliament and, ln consequence of parliamentary immunity, he had been released. On his release he sent a letter to his leader, Petkov, which Petkov had the courage to read to the assembly.
"They reduce you to a state of utter moral and physical prostration," said Koev's letter, "in which you become indifferent to your fate
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27269 and to life itself, so that you desire some solution-any solution--so long as it will put an end to the intolerable suffertng. . . . Contrary to normal jurtdical procedure, you are condemned first, and it is only afterwards that they begin to search for accusations and proofs. These are obtained by means of three types of torture: physiological torture--hunger, lack of sleep, thirst; physical torturesbeatings and being compelled to stand upright for days and nights on end; psychological tortures-insinuations that your family has been incarcerated, etc.
" ... I remained for twenty-one days in solitary confinement without being interrogated. During this tJim.e they subjected me to the hunger treatment---a bit of bread and water each day .... The obvious purpose of this treatment is to produce physical attrition and a corresponding weakening of your will. At eight a.m. one Saturday they took me up to the fourth floor to be interrogated. The interrogation went on for five days without interruption, twenty-four hours a day. The interrogator was changed every three hours, while I was compelled to remain standing, handcuffed, without sleep, unable to support myself either against the table or against the wall, wU;hout food and-what was cruelest of all during those suffocatingly hot August days and nights-without water. Every three hours the same questions were repeated until I became unconscious .... My bare feet swelled to unimaginable proportions. The interrogators showed not the faintest pity .... On the fifth day they threw me into an empty cell, where I slept like a dead m.an for more than twelve hours."
On the four succeeding nights Koev was trussed and beaten on the soles of his feet for three or more hours on end, with interludes during which he was questioned by Inspector Zeyev.
"During the balance of my detention," concluded the letter, "I wa~ asked no questions, but I remained the object of a campaign of moral pressure and psychological terror. They applied refined tortures of such a kind-allusions to the fate of my family, the safety of my children, etc.-that I would honestly have preferred physical tortures."
When Koev was deprived of his parliamentary immunity on the occa~ion of his second arrest, he made this final declaration before leaving the parliament, "I am innocent. I know, however, that through me you are attempting to strtke at the general secretary of our party, Nicola Petkov. My final words are that only the declarations which I made before you now correspond to the truth, and that, if it should happen later that, after a period of 'instruction,' I should make some 'confessions,' they will have been extorted from me by means of violence."
Koev made his "confessions" and was sentenced to twelve years. He will never emerge alive. Petk.Ov, though he defended himself heroically and admitted nothing, was sentenced to death.
I salute the memory of one of the great spirtts of our time. To Nicola Petkov there can be no other monument than the liberation of his people from communist tyranny.
TAX-EXEMPT STATUS OF STATE AND LOCAL BONDS
Mr. BAKER. Mr. President, on September 23 I had the opportunity to testify before the Senate Finance Committee on the tax exempt status of State and local securities. I ask unanimous consent that the text of my remarks be printed in full at this point in the
RECORD. There being no objection, the state
ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
STATEMENT OF SENATOR HOWARD H. BAKER
Mr. Chairman, the Tax Reform Act of 1969 contains three sections which, if enacted, may adversely affect the ab111ty of state and local governments to meet their capital requirements. The first would impose a limitation on certain tax preferences, including among such preferences interest on state and local securtties. The second would require that individuals allocate their deductions between taxable and tax-exempt income, including interest on municipal bonds. The third would permit state and local governments to issue at their option taxable bonds, a portion of the interest on which would be paid by the federal government. In my judgment, these three provisions should be deleted from the Housepassed bill.
As I have stated on numerous occasioB.S, I believe that the immunity of state and local governments in the exercise of their legitimate functions from federal taxation is necessary for the preservation of our constitutionally delineated dual sovereignty form of government. I further believe that if the Congress undertakes to encroach upon the tax exemption of state and local s~curt ties, it inevitably has the power to control state and local financing and without self-control of its own financing, no government can continue as an independent and autonomous body.
The Tax Reform Act is designed to provide a more equitable distribution of our tax burden. I support this legitimate objective. However, in attempting to insure a more even-handed distribution of the cost of supporting our government, we must consider not only the fair distrtbution of the federal income tax burden but also the fair distribtuion of the total tax burden-federal, state and local.
It is apparent that the limit on tax preferences and the allocation of deductions provisions will, if adopted as passed by the House, result in an increase in municipal interest rates to levels close to those of corporate bonds of similar credit quality. In fact, since the House Ways and Means Committee opened hearings on this question, investment yields on new issues of local government AA-rated bonds have risen 70 base points or from about 5.50 percent to 6.20 percent. If the tax exemption is breached, investors would have little confidence that the advantages to them of holding tax-exempt securtties would not be whittled away further, and they would, of course, demand higher interest rates to compensate them for the higher risk in purchasing these securities. As the cost of borrowing increases, state and local taxes, primarily property and sales taxes, will also increase, and the burden of these taxes falls disproportionately on those in the low and middle income groups. Therefore, if the objective is to provide a more equitable distribution of the total tax burden, as I believe it is and should be, then the Congress should not revoke or alter this tax exemption in such a way as to increase the cost of borrowing to state and local governments.
It would be particularly unfortunate to increase the cost of borrowing at this time when the current operating revenue needs of state and local governments are such that proposals for federal revenue sharing are being seriously advocated and widely supported. I believe that the provisions presently in the bill adversely affecting municipal financing are inconsistent with the concept of revenue sharing and the objectives it is designed to achieve. Underlying my strong support for both retention of this tax exemption and the enactment of revenue sharing is the basic conviction that strong and financially viable state and local governments are essential both to a healthy federalism and to the best possible performance of governmental services.
I would like to make one additional point. A considerable amount of the sentiment for tax reform stems from the testimony given by former Secretary of the Treasury Joseph Barr concerning 154 individuals who in the year 1967 had adjusted gross incomes in excess of $200,000 yet paid no federal income taxes. Unfortunately, the impression was allowed to form that this was accomplished to a large measure through municipal bond ownership, even though the data submitted by former Secretary Barr did not include interest on state and local securities among the tax reducing fadors utilized by the 154 individuals. Interest on state and local securities is not included within gross income and consequently does not appear at all on the income tax return. For this reason it is most difficult to determine the degree of tax avoidance by individuals holding state and local bonds.
A possible solution to this lack of data might be to require individuals and corporations to disclose on their income tax returns the amount of interest received from taxexempt securities. If this information were to indicate substantial {;.buse of this exemption, then I would support a reasonable legislative solution designed to alleviate the problem without adversely affecting the ability of state and local governments to meet their capital requirements.
DEATHS OF ALABAMA SERVICEMEN IN VIETNAM
Mr. ALLEN. Mr. President, the Department of Defense has informed me that through July 16, 1969, a total of 908 Alabama soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines have died in Vietnam as a result of the conflict in that tragic corner of the world.
It is sad to reflect on this tragic loss of young manhood, Mr. President. Worcls of sympathy pale into insignificance beside the tears of those families throughout the Nation whose sons and husbands and fathers have paid their ultimate allegiance to our country. I humbly join my fellow Alabamians in saluting these brave and heroic men.
Mr. President, I feel duty bound to ask a small gesture of tribute to those who have put country above self in givmg man's greatest sacrifice for his fell ow man-his life.
I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD the names and hometowns of these 908 Alabamians.
There being no objection, the list was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: LIST OF CASUALTIES BY U.S. MILITARY PERSON
NEL FROM THE STATE OF ALABAMA IN CONNECTION WITH THE CONFLICT IN VIETNAM BY HOMETOWN OF RECORD, FEBRUARY
24, 1969 ARMY
Abston, Jaimes Estus, Jr., Cottondale. Acton, Marion Franklin, Huntsville. Adams, Walter Lee, Mcintosh. Addison O Neal, West Ensley. Andrews, Coley L .. Mobile. Ard, Henry, Robertsdale. Arrington, Samuel W., Jr., Montgomery. Ball, Jimmy Rex, Rogersville. Bason, William Alfred II, Huntsville. Battle, Harold James, Birmingham. Bearden, Lee V., Stanton. Bearden, Richard Dewayne, Gadsden. Beaton, Robert Louis, Mobile. Bell, David Tomie, Phoenix City. Bennett, Melvin Leslie, Cordova. Binion, Thomas, Reform. Black, Larry Paul, Cordova.
27270 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 Bradley, Rubin Fletcher, Jackson. Bright, Billie Wayne, Gaylesville. Broadhead, Jack Phillip, Mccalla. Brown, Colburn, Birmingham. Brown, Paul O Neal, Florence. Bullard, Kenny Wayne, Fairfield. Burch, Kenneth Edward Ray, Samson. Butts, Lonnie R., Oneonta. Byrd, Guy Albert, Enterprise. Cameron, Bobby Waits, Hayden. Canada, George Jr., Montgomery. Carmichael, Alfred Jr., Prichard. Oa.rson, Charles N., Jr., Ensley. Carter, Harry Gibson, Montgomery. Carter, Nathaniel Earl III, Mobile. Cauley, Aubrey, River Falls. Chambers, Oscar Edward, Moundv1lle. Clark, Francis Everette, Mobile. Clark, Robert Lee, Birmingham. Clemmons, Jack Elliott, Atmore. Cleveland, Albert Franklin, Alexander City. Coats, Douglas, Red Bay. Cochran, Aaron Washington, Birmingham. Colston, Louis, Jr., Bessemer. Cook, Marlin Curtis, Vernon. Cooper, Herman Lee, Town Creek. Cotney, Elmer Eugene, Lineville. Cousette, Joseph, Aliceville. Cox, Charles Edward, Lexington. Crain, Robert Victor, Tuscaloosa. Crenshaw, William Anderson, Mobile. Crofford, Clinton E., Russellville. Crowell, Samuel Gerald, Prattville. Culver, Alfonzie, Elba.. Daniel, Elijah, Jr., Bessemer. Daniels, Walter Eugene, Mobile. Darby, Jimmy Earl, Opp. Davenport, James Donald, Pell City. Davenport, James Huey, Wedowee. Davis, Charles William, Tallassee. Davis, Wlllie Louis, Luverne. Dedman, Leslie Paul, Birmingham. Dickens, David Rudolph, Mobile. Dillard, Thomas Manuel, Sheffield. Dixon, Leo Chester, Phenix City. Doran, Thomas E., Montgomery. Dorfman, William David, Birmingham. Duncan, Thomas David, Attilla. Eid.son, Samuel Arlen, North Birmingham. Elenburg, James Walter, Sumiton. Elmore, Claude Eugene, Anniston. Elrod, Jimmy Charles, Pinson. Estes, Donald Carthel, Auburn. Evans, Andrew C., Sylacauga. Evans, James Larry, Florence. Evans, Johnnie Lee, Birmingham. Finch, Lamond, Wilkerson, Birmingham. Ford. Charles Walker, Dothan. Fox, Carl Jam.es, Minter. Freeman, Garry Don, Fort Payne. Gamble, Jam.es Henry, Bessemer. Gardner, Fred Michael, Mobile. Gardner, Roy Edward, Brookside. Gardner, William Hugh, Jr., Montgomery. Garrison, Carl Franklin, Clanton. Garth, Raymond, Tanner. Gaston, Ross Allen, Fairfield. Gautney, Earl, Coffee Springs. Glover, Freddie Bee, Gadsten. Gordon, Thomas Leslie, Sylacauga. Gray, Dela.cey, Elba. Grove, Richard Craig, Birmingham. Gunn, Terry Sidney, Mobile. Gunter, Melvin Wister, Vincent. Gurley, Thomas, Somerville. Ham.mac, Joseph Earl, Brewton. Hamner, John Albert, Northpost. Hargrove, James Mabron, Limestone. Harper, Richard Earl, Birmingham. Harris, Nathaniel, Besseme. Harrison, Cleophls, Prichard. Hatfield, Billy T., Eufaula.. Ha.yes, Johnny Vance, Birmingham. Heath, Charles Edward, Talladega. Hegler, Mose, Jr., Magazine Point. HeFVas, Aaron Kamala., Mobile. Heyer, Edward E., Prichard. Higgins, Jerry Wayne, Cordova. H111, Eddie Lee, Jr., Mobile. Hood, Charles Earnest, Opelika. Howard, James J., Birmingham. Hudgens, John Wayne, Oxford.
Hudson, Johnny, Birmingham. Hurd, Lawrence Adams, Margaret. Ingram, Charles Bernard, Jr., Phenix City. Johnson, Harry J., Tarrant City. Johnson, Jerome, Birmingham. Johnson, Joe Edward, Tuscumbia. Johnson, Sanford Steven, Tuskegee Insti-
tute. Johnson, Thomas Allen, Athens. Jones, John Henry, Enterprise. Kelly, James Mathew, Atmore. Kendrick, James Calvin, Robertsdale. King, Felix Deloach, Jr., Florence. Kinney, Randle, Dothan. Kistler, Russell Wilford, Dothan. Knight, Mack Arthur, Lowndes. Knight, Ralph Max, Attilla. Lagrand, Robert Henry, Bessemer. Leatherwood, James, Mobile. Lee, George Blue, Bay Minette. Leonard, Matthew, Birmingham. Likely, James Thomas, Georgiana. Little, John Edgar, Holt. Lockett, Cleo, Birmingham. Long, Charles Edward, Clanton. Lott, Junior Edward, Athens. Love, J. C., Black. Lueallen, Edgar Bowie, Jacksonville. Madden, James Floyd, Brewton. Malec, Paul William, Summerdale. Maness, James Emory, Talladega Springs. Marsh, Bobby Joe, Oneonta. Marvin, Joseph, Prattville. Matthews, Robert L., Huntsville. McBride, Herman Alvin, Jacksonville. Mccaig, Robert Lee, Florence. Mccary, Charles Wayman, Leighton. McDuffie, Larry Ray, Phenix City. McHaney, Carl Jamerson, Uniontown. McLemore, Taylor Henry, Boligee. McManus, Charles Verne, Woodland. McMurray, Johnnie Ray, Dixia.na. Menefee, Gene Allen, Birmingham. Michael, Don Leslie, Lexington. Mickens, Eddie James, Parrish. Milam, Lewis Edward, Gadsden. Miller, Claude Paul, Saraland. Mills, Robbie Ray, Phoenix City. Minor, Randy Mickel, Clanton. Mitchell, Eugene Emmett, Scottsboro. Mooney, James, Selma. Moore, Joseph M., Elba. Moore, Robert Louis, Montgomery. Morrison, Billy Joe, Heflin. Mosier, Robert Keal, Grady. Murphree, Ira Jerome, Birmingham. Nailen, James Patrick, Talladega.. Nicholas, Tommy L., Decatur. Nichols, Larry J., Blue Mountain. Oakes, Christopher Columbus, Bessemer. Odom, John Thomas, Alexander City. Oneal, Victor Hubert, Birmingham. Otis, Sherman Eldridge, Mobile. Parker, Udon, Phenix City. Patty, Dudley Randolph, Montgomery. Penland, Marvin Kenny, Piedmont. Perry, George Edward, Birmingham. Perry, Robert Lewis, Union Springs. Phillips, Howard Edward, Scottsboro. Phillips, Orman Dorr, Bremen. Phillips, W1lliam Russell, Enterprise. Pierce, Edward Davis, Homewood. Pool, Harold Laverol, Town Creek. Rand, Earlie, Prichard. Reed, Willie, Prichard. Rhodes, Ray Anthony, Moulton. Robinson, Willie James, Seale. Rogers, Clayton George, Jr., Bridgeporc. Russell, Floyd H., Jr., Birmingham. Scarbrough, Ennis Ralph, Birmingham. Scott, Jimmie L., Montgomery. Scott, Patterson, Jr., Prichard. Seawright, William J., Jr., Montgomery. Shedd, Alton, Joppa. Sheffield, Anthony D., Huntsvme. Simmons, Obie Clyde, Brewton. Smith, Charles Warren, Mobile. Smith, Jack A., Bay Minette. Smith, James Buford, Phil Campbell. Smith, James David, Altoona.. Smith, Jeffrey W., Hillsboro.
Smith, Jim L., Birmingham. Smith, Laughton, Talladega. Smith, W1lliam. Cary, Bessemer. Spencer, Cordell, Bessemer. Stamey, Jimmy Edward, Sara.land. Stephens, James Rowe, Enterprise. Stone, Roger Allen, Parish. Storey, Charles William, B1rmingha.m. Stoves, Merritt, ill, North Birmingham. Studdard, Finis Roney, Steele. Suggs, James David, Eufaula. Taylor, Elmer Jack, Atmore. Tuylor, Jimmie B., Northport. Thackerson, Walter Anthony, Te.lladega.. Thomas, Roy Edward, Lafayette. Townes, Morton Elmer, Jr., Mobile. Traylor, Wayne McKennely, Heflin. Troupe, Berm.an Lee, Tanner. Turner, Anderson, Bessemer. Turner, George Allen, Mulga. Turner, Louis G., Mount Vernon. Upner, Edward Oharles, Anniston. Uptain, Davis, Fayette. Vinson, Henry Mitchell, Birmingham. Walker, Charlie Lewis, Munford. Wallace, Frankie Lee, Cherokee. Wallace, Gary Frank, Killen. Ware, Mack Arthur, Bessemer. Ware, Matthew, Bessemer. Watts, Roy Delano, Lanett. Waxton, Wilbert Eugene, Grand Bay. Wells, Benja.min G., Madison. Wllliams, Gene William, Birmingham. Williams, Jimmy Laverne, Wetumpka. Williams, Johhny, Jr., Montgomery. Williams, Larry Douglas, Birmingham.. Williams, Tommie Lee, Birmingham. Wilson, Gerald W., Empire. Winston, James Glennon, St. Elmo. Woods, Abra.ham, Marion. Wright, James Earl, Arab. Zeigler, Eugene, Montgomery.
AIR FORCE
Brooks, James Foster, Kellyton. Coughlin, Arthur Raymond, Mobile. Cunningham, Oa.rey Allen, Collinsville. Fields, James Lewis, Mobile. Holbrook, Horace Alvie, Jacksonville. Middlebrooks, Robert Neal, Ariton. Mitchell, Andrew C., III, Mobile. Moon, Jery Rudolph, Lanett. Rainwater, James Alvin, Jr., Billingsley. Wilkinson, Joseph E., III, Selma.
MARINE OORPS
Alexander, Bobby Ray, Decatur. Allen, Robert Warren, Birmingham. Arnold, Harold, Prtchard. Barnard, Lewis Cecil, Gadsden. Bexley, Robert Edward, Mobile. Brock, James Walter, ill, Cullman. Brown, James Homer, Birmingham. Brown, James Phillip, Harvest. Bryant, Roger Jerrel, Florence. Buckley, Robert Earl, Theodore. Canidate, James Ellis, Montgomery. Cantrell, Lewis Edward, Centre. Carver, Jerry Leon, Bridgeport. Chaffin, Allan Ray, Anniston. Chambers, Paul Richard, Scottsboro. Clanton, Oharles Benjamin, Mobile. Olark, J.C., Jr., Fairfield. Colley, Michael Ira, Birmingham. Collier, Willie Lester, Birmingham. Cupp, Ernest Bryan, Hanceville. Dailey, Francis Edwin, Birmingham. Davies, Timothy Scott, Mobile. Day, Charles Tyrone, Montgomery. Denney, Jimmie Bryson, Gadsden. Dennis, James Walter, Jr., Montgomery. Dixon, Lee Artice, Saraland. Dixon. Leland Francis, Whistler. Duffy, Patrick Ed.ward, Mobile. Giles, Leona.rd Earl, Summerdale. Gonzalez, Larry Eugene, Atmore. Hadley, Verlon, Bay Minette. Hall, Lavle Jim.my, Huntsville. Hardy, Warren, Jr., Montgomery. Hr.sty, William Donald, Birmini:ham. Hendrix, Paul George, Hartselle. Himes, Michael Bruce, Birmingham.
September .26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27271 Hollaway, Philip Stephen, Birmingham. Hose, John Wallace, Jr., Decatur. Howard, Clarence William, Birmingham. Hudson, Jimmy Dale, Tallassee. Huft', James Edmond, Huntsville. Hunt, William Dickson, Birmingham. Jackson, Thomas Clayton, Autaugaville. Jen.kins, Frank Paul, Jr., Anniston. Johnson, Jimmy Earl, Cullman. Johnson, Richard S., Jr., Tuscumbia. Kelley, William Robert, Citronelle. Kiger, James Anthony, Huntsville. Lafferty, David Nelson, Grand Bay. Leslie, Roger La.mar, Birmingham. Lilley, Joseph Emmett, Mobile. Little, Henry Leon, Tuscaloosa. Lockhart, Clarence, Seale. Lowery, Dalton Buster, Brewton. Lyle, Larry Vann, Birmingham. Mangrum, George Thomas, Rogersville. Mann, Carl William, Birmingham. McCall, Clifford, Birmingham. McCamble, Robert Lee, Mobile. McGeev.er, Thomas Joseph, Mobile. McGinty, Calvin A., Jr., Tallahassee. McVay, John Earl, Decatur. Mitchell, Joseph Robert, Jr., Alexander
City. Mosley, Rayford, Jr., Stapleton. Murff, Eugene, Montgomery. Murry, Eugene, Montgomery. Newcomb, James Dwight, Mobile. Payne, Lawrence Edward, Tuscaloosa. Peoples, Eddie Donald, Phenix City. Perry, James Earl, Huntsville. Pope, Charles Dean, Anniston. Presnall, Carl Hamby, Bay Minette. Price, Marlin Ladon, Mulga. Randall, James Arthur, Somerville. Rich, Ronald Dudley, Decatur. Robinson, Herman Ray, Birmingham. Robinson, John Leo, Prichard. Runnels, Glyn Linal, Jr., Birmingham. Rushing, Michael Gean, Tuscaloosa. Salter, Charles Lowell, Birmingham. Sanders, Glenn Edward, Attalla. Scarborough, Arthur Benjamin, Mobiie. Shaw, William Marshall, Jr., Talladega. Smith, Clifton Bradley, Midland. Smith, Malcolm Carlis, Montgomery. Smith, Rickey Gene, Gadsen. Smith, Roy, Birmingham. Spivey, Harley Edwin, Samson. Stephenson, Waymond Nelson, Anniston. Tisdale, Henry Carlos, Tuscaloosa. Toyer, Lee Arthur, Birmingham. Vinson, Walter Wayne, Birmingham. Wadsworth, Harry Marshall, Millbrook. Waldrep, Jimmy Ray, Logan. Watkins, Harold Eugene, Birmingham. White, Robert Wayne, Grant. Wood, David Mitchell, Gordon. Youngblood, Jimmy Dean, Birmingham.
NAVY
Boston, Donald Earl, Sheffield. King, Doyle Gaylon, Vinemont. Sims, Michael Eugene, Mobile. Weimorts, Robert Franklin, Eight Mile.
ARMY
Adams, Spencer, Mobile. Alexander, David J., Jr., Anniston. Allen, William Terry, Enterprise. Allums, Frederick Larry, Empire. Ausborn, Donald Eugene, Huntsville. Avery, Ronnie G., Hamilton. Baker, Jerry Scruggs, Altoona. Baker, Melvin, Gadsden. Baker, Raymond Delma-r, Birmingham. Bell, Jerome, Foster. Bellomy, Willard Gordon, Woodville. Benjamin, Richard, Atmore. Bennett, Jacob, Phenix City. Bird, Lonie, Semmes. Blalock, James Terrell, Salem. Blankenship, Larry J., Midfield. Booker, Thomas Arthur, Bessemer. Boyd, Ananias, Shorter. Brewster, Ollis, Wellington. Brock, Edward Lee, Florence. Brown, Bobby James, Bessemer.
Brown, Hugh Bernard III, Talladega. Burt, James Howard, Ft. Payne. Busby, Monte Rex, Birmingham. Cannion, William, Hayneville. Cannon, Larry George, Oneonta. Carpenter, Thomas, Jr., Tuscaloosa. Carter, Hamp, Jr., Bessemer. Cash, Benny Dale, Ashville. Causey, Ben Elmore, Jr., Choctaw. Chambers, Robert D., Camp IDll. Childers, Virgil Eugene, Sumiton. Christian, Lytell B., Enterprise. Clark, Doris Wayne, Tuscumbia. Coleman, George, Birmingham. Compton, Johnnie Ray, Sylacauga. Cook, Larry Davidson, Wetumpka. Cooper, William Morris, Georgiana. Cuttrell, Wlllie James, Wetumpka. Crews, Thomas Franklin, Marion. Davis, Cecil Leroy, Birmingham. Davis, Michael Edward, Gadsden. Dorough, Jerry Eugene, Springville. DuBose, Fred Clinton III, Birmingham. Eatman, Earnest, Jr., Birmingham. Elliott, Ernest Lee, Dothan. Erwin, Earl, Jr., Mobile. Evans, Jerry Thomas, Birmingham. Ferguson, William Edwin, Gadsden. Fowler, Robert Allen, Geneva. Frye, Bobby Sam, Hamilton. Gardner, Robert Eugene, Sylacauga. Garner, Jackie Wayne, Gadsden. Garner, Willie Frank, Town Creek. Giddens, Horace Gilbert, Jr., Andalusia.. Giles, W1llie, Jr., Montgomery. Glenn, Richard J., Florence. Godwin, Johnnie Reese, Jr., Montgomery. Goree, Carlton Travis, Mobile. Guy, Benny Ross, Tuscaloosa. Hamilton, Ulys Ford, Spruce Pine. Hamm, Donald Curtis, Mobile. Hamner, Charles, Birmingham. Handley, Howard Brown, Sheffield. Harrell, Ronnie, Bessemer. Harris, Edward Leon, North Birmingham. Harris, Gary Bluitt, Hartselle. Harris, Jerry Lee, Mobile. Head, Marvin, Jr., Columbiana. Heard, Robert Louis, Jackson Gap. Hill, Jerry Dwain, Lexington. Hilley, Robert Lee, Attalla. Hillman, Joseph, ill, Piedmont. Hilyer, Broadus Dale, Opelika. Hodges, James Dale, Florence. Hollis, James Augustus, Birmingham. Holmes, Earnest Paul, Jr., Talladega. Howell, Preston Lee, Sheffield. Hughes, Macklin Otis, Pisgah. Hughey, Edward Wendell, Sprott. Huie, Robert Andrew, Oneonta. Hurst, Roosevelt, Jr., Saraland. Jackson, Crawford, Jr., Mobile. James, Gerald, Mobile. Jenkins, William Clarence, Gadsden. Johnson, Armstead, Castleberry. Johnson, Curtis, Montgomery. Johnson, Obbie, Birmingham. Jones, Jack Marion, Childersburg. Jones, Joe Louis, Phenix City. Kelley, Larry Dean, Fultondale. Kennedy, James, Seale. King, Robert Henry, Tuscumbia. Lais, Robert Wallace, Birmingham. Larry, John Davis, Jr., Birmingham. Lawrence, Garry Frank, Woodstock. Lay, Willie Ray, Fairhope. Ledbetter, David Wayne, Piedmont. Lee, Charlie Frank, Elba. Leonard, Sidney Lamar, Gadsden. Lewter, Stanley Reed, Huntsville. Lisenby, Donald Eugene, Ozark. Little, Wallace Sylvester, Riverview. Lockridge, Jack Ray, Piedmont. Lundy, Lonnie Eugene, Detroit. Manning, William Terry, Mobile. Martin, Hubert William, Oakman. Martin, Rufus Michael, Birmingham. Marzenell, Edward, Jr., Birmingham. Mason, Earnest Lee, Jr., Emelle. McCain, Michael Clinton, Birmingham. McDonald, David Letcher, Jasper.
McGee, Robert Lewis, Jr., Russellville. McKelvey, James Daniel, Florence. McMurtrey, William Newton, Killen. Miles, Elijah, Jr., Phenix City. Minor, Matthew, Jr., Tuscaloosa. Molton, Kenneth Wayne, Birmingham. Moncrief, James Ray, Cordova. Moncus, Bennie Ray, Ft. Payne. Montgomery, Donald Lee, Cloverdale. Moore, Leonard David, Bessemer. Moser, Merrill Andrew, Baldwin. Mundy, Robert Hal, Anniston. Murray, Darnell Patrick, Anniston. Naramore, David A., Jr., Jasper. Neely, Dan Lee, Birmingham. Norris, Van Allen, Union Springs. Ogletree, Young David, Salem. Oliver, Henry McCarthy, Montgomery. Owens, David Ray, Athens. Owens, Dewey Ray, Andalusia. Page, Roy Donald, Eva. Palmer, William Herschell, Abbevme. Parr, Ronald Eugene, Birmingham. Perkins, Wardell, Gordo. Peters, Wilbert, Mobile. Pierce, Jimmy Ray, Prichard. Pike, Edward Morris, Hanceville. Poole, Thomas Dewitt, West Blocton. Presley, Melton Howard, Childersburg. Pressley, Cornelius, Birmingham. Prince, Garry Garnett, Birmingham. Puckett, Jean Wayne, Piedmont. Purcell, Larry Joe, Empire. Rawlins, James Patrick, Montgomery. Richard, Jerry Gordon, Anniston. Richards, Robert, Birmingham. Richardson, Donald William, Semmes. Rodgers, Bobby Ray, Hollywood. Ross, Luther Julian, Jr., Birmingham. Salter, Robert Wayne, Parrish. Samples, Larry, Jr., Henager. Sawyer, Paul Lewis, Jr., New Brockton. Schmale, William Otto, Cullman. Sewell, Johnnie Bruce, Hartselle. Sewell, Lorenzo, Sayreton. Simpkins, Wilmer Franklin, Fairfax. Sisk, Harry Dunoan, Huntsville. Smiley, George Robert, Montgomery. Smith, Joe Wilkins, Prattville. Speaks, Mac Wayne, Alexander City. Stabler, John Leslie, Summerdale. Standridge, Paul Richard, Anniston. Stanley, Joe Harry, Altoona. Stewart, Charlie Aces, Jr., Birmingham. Stewart, Sam William, Huntsville. Story, J.C., Bessemer. Stovall, Charles Allen, Gadsden. Sullivan, Arnold Hosea, Northport. Swain, Lee Wesley, Jr., Alpine. Taylor, Clifton Thomas, Mobile. Terry, Arie, Decatur. Thomas, Jimmy Ray, Brewton. Thomas, Tennyson Aaron, Bessemer. Townsend, Roosevelt, Mathews. Turner, David Lee, Lacey Springs. Underwood, Daniel Ledare, Pisgah. Voyles, Floyd, Somerville. Walker, Clifford C., Sheffield. Ward, Carl Gene, Salem. Washington, William F., Jr., Birmingham. Wells, Billy, Northport. Whan, Vorin Edwin, Jr., Irondale. White, James David, Prichard. White, John Oliver, Saraland. White, Leamuel Artis, Silverh111. Wiginton, Garry Ray, Sheffield. Williams, Donald Winslow, Sipsey. Wllliams, Melvin Joe, Birmingham. Williams, Paul Edward, Huntsville.
· Wilson, Fred, Birmingham. Woods, James Arlie, Jasper. Wooley, Donald, Siluria. Woolsey, Hilton Edward, Mobile. Worrell, Hurston Edward, Pittsview. Young, William Frank, Oxford.
AIR FORCE
Lawrence, Gregory Paul, Phenix City. Moore, Dallas Henry, Headland. Yeend, Richard C., Jr., Mobile.
27272 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 MARINE CORPS
Angerman, Donald Edward, Birmingham. Avery, John Mark, Cottondale. Ayers, Lesley Steven, Huntsville. Ballew, Arthur Clay, Gadsden. Beck, John Theron, Gordo. Calhoun, Franchot Tone, Annist.on. Chastant, Rodney Rene, Mobile. Clark, Larry Gene, Huntsville. Craft, James David, Anniston. Cruitt, Michael Douglas, Cullman. Da lhouse, John Dudley, Montgomery. Davis , Curry Barry, Roanoke. Downs, Vernon Lerdy, Jr., Huntsville. Edwards, Joseph William, Mobile. Faulks, Willie James, Montgomery. Ford, Olifford Eugene, Jr., Jacksonville. Ford, Glenn Edward, G adsden. Gaines, Allan Joseph, Tuscaloosa. Gaines, Wordell, Tuscaloosa. Gentry, Oscar, Jr ., Birmingham. Hammonds, James Robert, Evergreen. Harris, Frank Cay, Mobile. Holland, James Larry, Boaz. Hollimon, Billy Michael, Mount Hope. Hubbard, Robert Walker, Auburn. Jackson, Billy Lee, Saraland. Johns, Carey Lee, Oneonta. Johns, Michael Wayne, Andalusia. Johnson, Lile Lamar, Jr., Mobile. Jones, Jimmie Lee, Cordova . Jones, John Henry, Jr., Phenix City. Joshua, James Edward Jr. , Gadsden. King, Argestlar, Jr., Birmingham. Kuhse, Michael Darrell , Huntsville. Leland, Leroy, Jr., Theodore. Littlefield, Robert Henry, Birmingham. Lloyd, Rodney Dale, Birmingham. Lloyd, Ronald Edward, Mobile. Long, Michael David, Oneonta. Lovelady, Ronald David, Cullman. Lowe, Louis Oardell, Tuscaloosa. Magnusson, Fred Wayne, Ardmore. Marshall, James Conrad, Monroeville. McCarty, Billy Joe, Wilmer. McCorkel, James Edward, Whistler. McGee, Danny Albert, Florence. McLester, Sherman Douglas, Anniston. Meads, Herbert Lynn, Huntsville. Merritt, Allen Twiggs IV, Atmore. Miller, Ormond Mitchell, Gadsden. Mitchell, Homer, Jr., Montgomery. Monroe, Wilber Dean, Langdale. Moore, Roy Lee, Madison. Mullins, Arthur Brent, Mobile. Nelson, Roger Tilton, Gadsden. Norsworthy, Jimmy Layne, Brantley. Pate, William Lawrence, Robertsdale. Pearson, Carl Oscar, Jr. , Silverhill. Pendergrass, Vernon Frankl, Birmingham. Randall, Simon, Birmingham. Raynor, James Daniel, Empire. Reynolds, John Henry, Bessemer. Rice, Robert Ivan, Huntsvllle. Ritch, John Gwin, Parrish. Rogers, William T . IV, Montgomery. Salter, Dwayne Lamont, Evergreen. Scott, James Frank, Mobile. Scott, Johnny Major, Jr ., Mobile. Scroggins, Douglas Sidney, Wing. Senn, Thomas Larry, Lanett. Shaw, James Douglas, Birmingham. Smith, Arthur C., Glen Allen. Smith, Hurley Alvin, Dothan. Smith, Ronnie Wayne, Huntsville. Smith, Samuel Thomas, Jr. , Huntsville. Sterns, Randolph Joel, Tuscaloosa. Taylor, Robert Hildreth, Birmingham. Thrift, Fred Lewis, Mobile. Tulbert, Reginald Gay, Wagarville. Turner, William Oliver, Phenix City. Walbridge, George Wilcox, Huntsville. Waldrop, Raymond Clarence, Allbertville. Ward, Wayne Levoyer, Mobile. Wesley, Marvin, Jr., Guin. Westbrook, Dennis Franklin, Prichard. Wilder, Steve Clifton, Birmingham. Winston, William Curtis, Roanoke. Winter, John Wesley, Brewton. Wyrosdic, William Everett , Mobile. Yerian, Jeffery Allen, Dothan.
NAVY
Allen, Granville Joel, Jr., Birmingham. Collier, Jerry Lamayne, Boaz. Dennis, William Earl, Birmingham. Morris, William I . ill, Mobile. Pettis, Thomas Edwin, Mobile.
ARMY
Barber, Chadwick McFall, Florence. Barksdale, Wllliam Howard, Fyfie. Barnett, Donald Eugene, Anniston. Belt, Arthur Lavine, Prichard. Bishop, James Arthur, Gallion. Bishop, Woodrow Wilson, Jr., Northport. Boles, Fletcher W., II, Tuscaloosa. Boyer, Larry Eugene, Birmingham. Bradberry, Arthur Milton, Gadsden. Brooks, William Lee, Montgomery. Brown, Walter Evans, Jr., Bessemer. Bryan, Franklin Delano, Lynn. Caldwell, Henry, Jr., Birmingham. Cardwell, Henry Waters, Bessemer. Chapman, Willie James, Jackson. Clark, Bobby Dean, Bexar. Clark, Richard, Tallassee. Cline, Donald Leo, Huntsville. Collins, Jerome Liston, Magnolia Springs. Combs, John Beechly, Mobile. Creaghead, Clarence, Bessemer. Crady, Ronald Isaac, Enterprise. Crowe, Ronald Gary, Prattville. Crump, Jack Vann, Sulligent. Daniel, Robert G ., Bridgeport. De Priest, John Thomas, Mobile. Dilbeck, Lonnie Adken, Fairhope. Dixon, Louis Krimmit, Mobile. Dobynes, Joseph James, Marion. Duke, Billy Wayne, Albertville. Dunn, Ralph Gerald, Andalusia. Enfinger, Kenneth Earl, Ozark. Fields, James Ronald, Millport. Fields, William Michael, Evergreen. Ford, Edward, Birmingham. Forrester, Joel Wayne, Florence. Franklin, James Anthony, Prichard. Freeman, Jimmy Grant, Talladega. Frowner, Edward, Manila. Gohagin, James Rayford, Atmore. Golden, George Kenneth, Eva. Goodwin, Paul Venon, Anniston. Gordon, Ernest Lee, Birmingham. Graham, Roger Lee, Aliceville. Grayson, Ronnie Paul, Ensley. Gregory, William Robert, Dothan. Gulley, Percy Lee, Jr. , Plateau. Harris, Benjamin, Hillsboro. Hocutt, Larry Keith, Mobile. Hughes, Errol Arthur, Oxford. Hullett, Nathan Earl , Birmingham. Isaac, James Edward, Jr., Daleville. J ackson, George Emmett, Sulligent. Jones, Albert Junior, Rogersville. Jones, Louis Henderson, Foley. June, Jeremiah, Birmingham. Kelly, Donald Lynn, Hartford. Kenney, Joseph Hayden, Opelika. Looney, Milford, Jr., Ragland. Lyle, John Bruce, Athens. McAdams, Edgar Gregory, Daphne. Motley, John Larry, Jr. , Birmingham. Nathan, Ralph Eugene, Uniontown. Oliver, Roger Lee, Sylacauga. Over ton, William Hilliard, Decatur. Owens, Thomas Earl , Wetumpka. Patterson, Samuel Lee, Hueytown. Pence, James Thomas, Birmingham. Penn, RooEevelt Franklin, Fulton. Peoples, Paul JoEeph, Mount Vernon. Pettis, Billy Wayne, Castleberry. Polk, Kenneth Erbie, Pleasant Grove. Presley, Andrew Lee, Jr., Mobile. Ratcliff, Jackie Lee, Birmingham. Smit h, William Hoyt, Heflin. Steele, Townser, Jr. , Selma. Stephens, Gerald Wayne, Fort Payne. Stoffregen, Roy Dixon, Munford. Sturma, Charles Frank, Silver Hill. Sutton, James Kenneth, Andalusia. Taylor, Clarence, Greenville. Taylor, De Wayne, Birmingham. Thomas, Howard Ray, Jr., Oxford.
Thomas, Larry Benjamin, Atmore. Truelove, James Melvin, Sulligent. Waddle, Sammie Wayne, Bremen. Walker, Charles Clarence, Eufaula. Wallace, Willie Lewis, Madison.
Wiggins, David, Roger, Monroeville. Willis, Larry Wayne, Russellville. Woodall, Charles Minor, Town Creek.
AIR FORCE
Evans, Douglas McArthur, Ramer. MARINE CORPS
Bice, Jimmie Ray, Birmingham. Busby, sam William, St. Stephens. Calender, Marshall Lee, Rockford. Copeland, Samuel Champion, Birmingham. Davis, Emmett Lee, Vincent. Drysdale, Charles Douglas, Birmingham. Franklin, Ira Melton, Jr., Birmingham. Gill, Robert Earl, Mobile. Holmes, Leonard Hugh, Talladega. Keefe, Floyd Milton, Montgomery. Lane, Gerald Bruce, Hartselle. Lovett, Terry Wayne, Clanton. Mallory, David Allen, Huntsville. Martin, Charles Edward, East Gadsden. Northington, William Clyde, Prattville. Palmieri, David Harold, Hudson. Patrick, Danny Leon, Mobile. Patterson, Booker T., Jr., Jacksonville. Phillips, James Lester, Cropwell. Sargent, George Thomas, Jr. , Auburn. Smith, Clinton Daniel, Yellow Pine. Stamps, Johnny Green, Gadsden. Talsma, Raymond Earl , Prichard. Traylor, Fred Edward, Hefiin. Watkins, Joel Keith, Troy. Williams, Robert Cleven, Greensboro.
NAVY
Boone, William Edward IV, Tuskegee. Dees, Edgar Allen, Jr., Mobile. Greene, James Etheridge, Jr., Auburn. Hamner, Theodore S. , III, Tuscaloosa. Hunt, Larry Frank, Gadsden. Sellers, Melvin Louis, Phenix City.
ARMY
Evans, Rodney Joseph, Florala. Hall, Bryon Royce, Henagar. Parker, Johnny Kendrick, Bay Minette. Peterson, Julius Lee, Birmingham. Raspberry, Lawrence, Fairfield. Terry, Bill Henry, Jr., Birmingham.
MARINE CORPS
Beasley, George Hutchinson, Montgomery. Suttle, William Earl, Prattville.
NAVY
Keene, Glen Cameron, Jr. , Fairhope. ARMY
Abrams, Tmothy C., Jr. , Tuscaloosa. Allen, William Terry, Enterprise. Blackmon, Dennis Glenn, Elberta. Brown, Carl, Northport. Cary, Willie B., Brighton. Childers, Phillip Don, Florence. Coker, Samuel Earl, Florence. Cotton, Thomas Wayne, Brilliant. Evans, Thomas C., Bessemer. Freeman, David Harold, Gadsden. Fulghum, Jackie, Junior, Hanceville. Gentle, Clyde Glenn, Woodville. Gilder, Lewis C., Mount Meigs. Gilmore, Ronald, Dozier. Glover, Robert Branch, Cullman. Goawin, William Riley, Birmingham. Hammer, Billy Gene, Enterprise. Hicks, Woodie Lee, Cordova. Hill, William B., Jr., Birmingham. Hitt, Roy Marvin, Jr., Bessemer. Hollowell , William Byard, Birmingham. Howard, Theodore, Prichard. Johnson, Freddie Lee, Selma. Kirby, Rance A .. Wedowee. K irksey, Robert L., Mobile. Latta, Charles R., Gadsden. Leatherwood, William Elber, Carrollton. Legg, John Duane, Chickasaw. Mccutchen, George, Scottsboro. McNabb, Jerry Wayne, Gadsden.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27273 Meacham, Jack Bennie, Mobile. Mlller , Frank Leonard, III, Montgomery. Mot on, Eddie Lee, Jr., Talladega. Nelson, Darrol Oren, Calhoun. Pace, Danny Wayne, Tuscumbia. Piper, EdW'al"d Roger, Thorsby. Poole, Conrad Earl, Oneonta. Robertson, Benjamin F., Jr., Tuscaloosa. Skinner, James Allen, Montgomery. Smith, Mose, Jr., Cuba. Sutton, Travis Robert, Andalusia. Thompson, Farley Dee, Sheffield. Tiller, Robert, Birmingham. Turner, Claude Tyler, Wilmer. Williams, Sherman Elliot, Birmingham. Williams, Thaddeus Edward, Mobile. Woodard, Harry Donald, Saraland. Young, Claude, Birmingham.
Am FORCE
Bunch, Claude Marvin, Helena. Hansen, Lowell C., Dothan. Holden, Alfred Jefferson, Jacksonville. Mosley, Edward, Fairhope. Smith, Norris Ray, Birmingham. Welborn, Melvin D. Neal, Phil Campbell.
MARINE CORPS
Andrews, Clifton Bishop, Fulton. Bailey, John Howard, Docena. Bentley, Cobbie James, Birmingham. Dillworth, Earl, Jr., Sheffield. Dunaway, Gordon Herbert, Alexander City. Foreman, Auburn Wood, Jr., Attalla. Greer, Larry Wayne, Altoona. Guyer, Ronald Lynn, Tuscaloosa. Hall, Jefferson Davis, Hartford. Johnson, William Horace, Jr., Bessemer. Langley, Francis Lee, Waverly. Morgan, Jesse Frank, Camden. Phillips, Leonard, Hueytown. Shafer, Glenn Wesley, Odenville.
NAVY
Blakely, Josslyn F ., Jr., Montevallo. Jones, James Gradey, Birmingham.
ARMY
Beard, Alexander, Mobile. Brown, Carl Lee, Selma. Cahela, Gerald Alan, Bessemer. Chandler, Leonard Oneal, Glanton. Clanton, Louis Lamar, Collinsville. Crockett, James Larry, Scottsboro. Davis, Albert, Prattville. Ervin, Clifford Leon, Heflin. Floyd, John Douglas, Montgomery. Heard, James Robert, Jr., St. Clair. Hodges, Bennie E., Vernon. Hurst, William Joseph, Cropwell. Jacobs, Perry Owen, Sylacauga. Kizziah, Jerry Wayne, North Birmingham. McMillian, Solomon Leon, Alexandria. Milligan, Johnson Marcus, East Brewton. Nix, Edward Lewis, Alpine. Pendley, William Grant, Carbon Hill. Peoples, Howard Gregory, Fayette. Purser, Charles Edward, Tuscaloosa. Thompson, Benjamin A., Jr., Saraland. Westbrook, Roy Thomas, Whistler. Williams, Donald Lee, Huntsville. Wilson, Dale Keith, Tallassee. Wilson, Willie Gene, Talladega. Winchester, Larry Alden, Mobile.
AIR FORCE
Fox, Amos Olover, Birmingham. Phillips, Elbert Austin, Huntsville.
MARINE CORPS
Baker, Ernest Austin, Jr., Opelika. Horsley, Larry Frank, Birmingham. Maxwell, William Elbert, Tuscaloosa. Smith, Henry Beall, Jr., Andalusia. Smith, Samuel David, Cordova. Thomas, Wilton Herman, Birmingham. White, Raymond, Slocomb. Woods, Jerry Otis, Huntsville.
NAVY
Burnett, Donald Frederick, Montgomery.
ARMY
Allums, Allen Wayne, Enterprise. Barge, Frederick Douglas, Selma.
Bouyer, James Earl, Prattville. Chandler, Larry Delynn, Huntsville. Herring, David Bounds, Mobile. Lovell, James Richard, Anniston. Nelson, Charles, Birmingham. Robinson, Charlie, Jr., Mountain Creek. Sims, Thomas James, Montgomery. Stephens, Larry Eugene, Walker. White, Ted Arnold, Dickinson.
MARINE CORPS
Blackston, Donald Lamar, Whistler. Corwin, John James, II, Crawfordsville. Pyle, Timothy Howard, Mobile. Rush, Theodore Marshall, Birmingham. Shelton, Charles Howard, Huntsville. Vix, Stephen August, Jr., Mobile. Willis, Raymond Conl uis, Gadsden.
ARMY
Nall, John Truman, Birmingham. NAVY
Taylor, Charles Stockton, Huntsville.
SPACE VERSUS DOMESTIC PRIORITIES
Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, I am pleased to insert into the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD a letter I received recently from Mr. G. A. McPhillips, 108 Ponderosa Lane, Titusville, Fla. Mr. McPhillips, I feel, did an outstanding job of presenting some of the pros and cons of expenditures in space versus domestic priorities.
There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows: A quarter of a million dollar camera sits
uselessly in the dust of the moon, left there by the Apollo 11 astronauts. More accurately, it should be described as a camera which represents a quarter million dollar investment in technical skill and labor. It was abandoned to its lunar resting place in order to achieve less weight and additional precious space ab-Oard the returning spacecraft. The critical liftoff from the moon's surface demanded not an ounce of superfluous weight.
What the critics of this seemingly extravagant waste of equipment fail to take into consideration is that the value of the camera's component parts is the smallest portion of that quarter million dollars. The largest percentage of its cost stayed right here on earth in the form of paychecks of those who were employed in its production. Not included in this price is the invaluable knowledge gained in how to build a better camera.
So, too, the whole space program is viewed by these same critics through a narrowly focused lens. "Why spend billions on space," they ask, "when we have so many unsolved problems right here at home?" The American citizen is entitled to have a fair answer to these questions, especially when he has his own problems of increasing taxes and the rising cost of living with which to contend. True, he was captivated and awed by the lustre of the unmatched adventure of the Moon Landing, but now that the excitement has died he may ask hiinself, "Why do it at all? What will it gain?"
Many articles have been written and opinions offered regarding this question of new directions and priorities for our space program. Yet, to my knowledge, none have offered a concise summary which would justify continued strong national motivation. Since I work for an aerospace company my state-ments may be regarded as biased, and perhaps they are, but biased or not, I believe they will at least partially answer those questions of "Why?" and "What?"
First, why does ma.n undertake such an adventure as the conquest of space? Curiosity about the unknown; quest for more
knowledge; desire for achievement; expansion of his domain; desire for recognition; and enlargement of his creativity are some of the reasons. To varying degrees these motives exist in all of man's undertakings. But I should like to point out that it is significant that these same desires and motives have been used to justify wars. Man has now found a way to channel his great technological energy into a project that does not lead to human suffering. Indeed, it has already harvested benefits for mankind and will continue to do so in an ever increasing scale.
Sixty years ago man flew for the first time. What was the general opinion of the worth of that achievement at that time? Man is embarking on another adventure now just as he did then. Only the scale of the undertaking is different. Instead of involving just a handful of people, all mankind is involved. Isn't this a nobler endeavor in support of the cause of peace than the questionable methods now being employed by some disoriented members of society?
Second, I t hink tha t when we put our space expenditures in their proper relationship to all of our other economic efforts, we will see that continued participation and effort is fully justified. Here are a few statistics which may help to enlighten those who may doubt the need for continued space effort.
The gross national product of the United Stat es is some 900 billion dollars. Our space effort amounts to one-half of one percent of this figure. Our annual budget for Health, Education and Welfare amounts to fiftyeight billion dollars. Yet, there are those who would discontinue the space expenditures and transfer this money and effort to the relief of urban problems, or the creation of more jobs. This doesn't make sense. In the first place, the space program has created may thousands of jobs. Spinoffs consisting of new products, materials and processes have created many more jobs not related to space efforts. The addition of 4 billion dollars from the space program to the 58 billion already assigned to Health, Education and Welfare isn't going to significantly change or improve those efforts.
The important thing to bear in mind is that the money spent on the space effort hasn't all been sent out into space with the rockets. The only loss sustained is in a few tons of metal and gases. The giant portion of the space industry's expenditures has been kept right here, providing thousands of jobs and producing tangible benefits.
Some say that we should now apply our space technology concepts to solving the problems of the ghettos and general urban blight, and that these problems should be given priority over space endeavors. May I point out that the space program has never enjoyed what could be termed a national priority. A national goal , yes, but not a priority. Two percent of the nation's yearly budget doesn't constitute a very high priority. Not when we can compare it to the annual expenditures in consumption of cosmetics or tobacco.
We have the resources and the ability to enrich the growth of mankind. To allow these efforts to be subordinated by the arguments discussed above would be like telling those who sought to follow in the footsteps of Columbus, that the unknown returns for the expense of the effort weren't worth the trip.
FEDERAL REVENUE SHARING Mr. BAKER. Mr. President, on Sep
tember 25, Mr. Murray L. Weidenbaum, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, and Mr. Richard P. Nathan, Assistant Director of the Bureau of the Budget, testified before the Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Rela-
27274 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969
tions of the Government Operations Committee on the concept of Federal revenue sharing.
I ask unanimous consent that these two very excellent statements be printed in full at this point in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the statements were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: STATEMENT BY THE HONORABLE MURRAY L.
WEIDENBAUM, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY FOR ECONOMIC POLICY, ON S. 2483, SEPTEMBER 25, 1969 Mr. Chairman and Members of the Sub
com.mlittee: I welcome this opportunity to appear before your Subcommittee to present the Administration's views on S. 2483. We are particularly interested in the substance of this bill since it relates directly to a major item in the President's domestic programthe effort to establish a healthy balance in our federal system of government. It is clear from Section 2 (a) of the b111 that its general purposes conform with ours: to provide both the encouragement and the resources for state and local governments to exercise leadership in solving their own problems.
As you know, Mr. Chairman, there are basically two kinds of arguments to be made in support of a program which transfers both financial resources and decision-making responsibility from the cent ral government to the state and local governments. One set of arguments centers around considerations of administrative efficiency, institutional responsiveness, and local determination. These factors support the contention that too often the decision-making authority and institutional apparatus are removed from the source of many public problems. The other set of arguments centers around considerations of fiscal capacity, taxing systems, and public resource allocation. These factors support the contention that a basic imbalance exists between the normal budgetary positions of the Federal and local governments.
In his message to the Congress on revenue sharing, the President devoted considerable attention to these arguments-emphasizing that a. definite need existed to redefine the roles of the various levels of government. A copy of the President's message and supporting documents are appended to this statement. I would like to concentrate today on some of the economic arguments for general intergovernmental assistance and revenue sharing.
As a student of public finance I am impressed by the broad agreement among analysts of all political persuasions that a strong financial case exists for general Federal aid to state and looal governments. They all note that Federal tax collections are more responsive to economic growth than state and local revenue collections. At the saime time, expenditure requirements of state and local governments tend to rise more rapidly than economic and population growth or the peacetime requirements of existing Federal programs. The end result of these divergent trends is the troublesome "fiscal mismatch" which so many students of the intergovernmental financial situation have discussed.
This basic economic argument for fin'8.D.cial assistance is persuasive and widely held. The point that does engender discussion concerns the form that this Federal assistance should take.
More specifically, we see the question as being: "Given the near-term budgetary outlook, how oa.n we most effectively provide general assistance to state a.nd local governments with the limited federal funds available?" Among the alternative forms of possible additional assistance-revenue sha.rlng, tax credits, additional categorical grants, federal assumption of local functions-we have come down strongly in favor C1f revenue sharing. It is the one form of assistance
which meets the financial plight of state and local governments directly. Revenue sharing involves no increase in Federal requirements or administrative burdens. Unlike tax credits, revenue sharing avoids the pressures of interstate competition. And revenue sharing permits discretionary resource allocation by those elected officials in a position to evaluate local needs.
With this commitment to revenue sharing as the preferred method of general assistance to local governments, the remaining requirement is to design a. revenue-sharing proposal which satisfies some basic criteria of acceptabillty. We have enunciated some broad principles which guided our thinking in preparing the Administration proposal:
Simplicity: no new Federal bureau or agency should be created; the funds should be distributed on the basis of available objective statistics.
Dependability: state and local governments should be able to count on the funds in their own fiscal planning.
Fairness: funds should go to every general purpose governmental unit, regardless of size or geographic location.
Discretion: state and local governments should be free to use the funds wherever they determine the need exists; no federal earmarking of functional expenditure requirements should be included.
Neutrality: distribution should be as equivalent within states as possible, with no attempt to punish or reward certain forms or sizes of general government, or certain systems of taxation.
Within this f'ramework we have proposed a revenue-sharing program for consideration by the Congress. It is against the background of our proposal that I wish to comment on the various provisions in s. 2483. Let me say at the outset that many similarities exist between the two b111s. This is primarily because S . 2483 was among the several intet"governmental assistance proposals which we carefully reviewed in forming our own position. (Other proposals which we drew upon include S. 1634, introduced by Senator Baker on March 24, 1969.) We drew on several innovative approaches in your bill, Mr. Chairman, during this process, including local government sharing and dis·tributlon on the basis of revenues raised. However, there are some aspects of S . 2483 which we find incompatible with both budgetary realities and our philosophy of the purposes behind general assistance to state and local governments.
One overall matter of concern to us runs not to the substance but to the cost of the provisions. The estimates of the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations staff show Federal budgetary outlays of $5.4 billion in the fiscal year 1970, $7.1 billion in the fiscal year 1971, and $10.1 billion in the fiscal year 1972. This is simply too large a budgetary undertaking in view of stabilization policy requirements and available revenues. For these same reasons, our revenue-sharing proposal provides for a transitional phasing-in of the program before the f'ull $5 billion funding is achieved.
TITLE I
Turning to the specifics of S. 2483, Title I proposes a program for sharing federal revenues with states and their political subdivisions. There are several important differences between this proposal and the Ad-ministration proposal which warrant careful examination.
First, a fundamental dtiference between the two plans exists in the ba.sis for determining the size of the annual revenue sharing appropriation. We have proposed that a stated percentage of personal taxable income-the base on which Federal indiVidual income taxes are levied-be allocated for revenue sharing. S. 2483 proposes that a stated percentage of personal taxable income
and a. much higher percentage of state personal income tax collections be allocated for revenue sharing.
There are two problems with the allocation approach proposed in S. 2483. First, the proportionately heaVier weighting assigned to state persona.I income tax collections means that revenue sharing is not directly assoc!· ated with Federal revenues. The projections prepared by ACIR show state personal income tax collections rising at a much faster rate than the Federal personal income tax base. We believe it is important to ma.intaan a direct link between the Federal tax system and the determination of the revenuesharing appropriation.
A related difficulty with this procedure for determining the amount of revenue sharing funds is that the proposal ceases to serve solely as a program for general assistance to states and localities. It assumes a significant role in shaping state decisions on trudng systems, since a. strong incentive is established in favor of state personal income taxes. However persuasive the case may be for this form of state tax system, we do no+, believe that a proposal for transferring both funds and decision-making responsibility to loca.1 governments should include a Federally prescribed incentive which may strongly influence local decisions as to the precise form of taxation that they should rely upon.
The second major difference between the S. 2483 and the Administration revenue sharing proposals is in the formula recommended for the state-by-state distribution of the funds. Both proposals call for a distribution based on each state's share of national population, adjusted for the state's revenue effort. They differ in the way revenue effort is defined and expressed.
We propose that revenue effort be simply expressed as the ratio of total general revenues from their own sources collected by a state and all its local government units during a given fiscal year to the total persona.I income of that state. Both C1f these measures conform to standard Census Bureau definitions and are consistent among the states. A simple adjustment for revenue effort would proVide a state whose effort is ten percent above the national average with a ten percent bonus above its basic per capita portion of revenue sharing.
S. 2483 proposes to adjust the basic per capita distribution by not only the latest revenue effort factor, but also the trend in revenue effort as represented by the ratio of the latest factor to that for the preceding year. Furthermore, the numerator in the revenue effort factor is defined as the sum of all state and local taxes plus net profits from the operation of state-owned liquor stores.
There are two obvious differences in the revenue effort adjustments. One is the inclusion in S. 2483 of the trend in revenue effort. We believe the latest revenue effort factor adequately expresses the effort concept. The additional adjustment for a two-year trend is both complicating and unnecessary, and would produce results whereby states with identical current efforts would receive different adjustments. The other is the definition of revenue to include liquor store profits and to exclude current charges and miscellaneous general revenues. This is not a definition which conforms to standard Cen· sus Bureau usage; it is not consistent among states; and it unnecessarily provides disincentives for local government usage of serv-ice charges. It is important that the revenue effort adjustment be only an incentive to improve overall effort, and not one to influence numerous revenue composition decisions. Therefore, the definition of revenue should be that broad one employed by the Census Bureau--general revenues from own sources.
The third a.nd perhaps most basic difference between the two revenue sharing plans exists in the provisions for distributing funds within a state. Both proposals call for a
September 26, 1969 . CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27275
mandatory "pass through" of funds by the state government to lits local governments. And both proposals provide for allocation on the basis of revenues raised by the local government. But there are three important differences remaining between the two distribution proposals.
First, the Administration program provides that the local share be distributed to all · cities, counties, and townships, regardless of size. S. 2483 provides for direct revenne sharing with only those cities and counties having a population of 50,000 or more. This would mean that 45.4 percent of all city residents, 27.5 percent of all county residents and 100 percent of all township residents would be residing in governmental units ineligible to directly receive revenue sharing funds under S. 2483. We believe that all local governments are faced with fiscal pressures and that all deserve specific inclusion in a general assistance program.
Second, the Administration proposal provides for distribution of funds to each local government in proportion to its share of total local general revenues raised. Title I of S. 2483 provides for dstribution of funds to each eligible local government in proportion to its share of total state and local taxes imposed, with a larger share going to all cities and counties of 100,000 population or more. I would again point out the important differences between the terms "general revenues" and "taxes," and suggest that "general revenues" is the preferable concept.
But a more important issue is whether the larger cities and counties should automatically receive proportionately more revenue sharing funds than the smaller governments. We have taken the position that for this program of general financial assistance there should be no such -ctistinction made. It is true that some of our larger cities do have heavier concentrations of "high-cost" citizens, and disproportionate expenditure requirements due to concentration and congestion. It is very difficult, however, to incorporate these various differences into a simple revenue-sharing plan designed to assist in relieving the general fiscal imbalance between levels of government. The special problems of large-scale urbanization can best be treated on an individual basis by both state and Federal programs.
On balance, we believe the preferred approach for revenue sharing is to distribute funds in proportion to general revenues raised. As it turns out, large cities raise most of the local government revenues and, hence, they will receive most of the locally shared revenues under the Administration's proposal. In fact, for all cities of one million or more, the average per capita revenue raised in 1967-68 were $255.95, compared to $78.74 for cities with population of less than 50,000.
The third point of difference between the local distribution systems of the two proposals is that the Administration plan does not include a direct distribution to school or special districts, while S. 2483 includes revenue sharing with independent school districts. The total funds allocated to these districts would be related to the proportion of school taxes to the sum of school taxes plus state taxes.
We have not included any special purpose districts in our proposal because of the desire to avoid placing any program or project restrictions on revenue sharing funds. To distribute funds directly to fire districts, or school districts, or drainage districts amounts to widespread earmarking of substantial funds for specific programs. This does not mean that these functional areas will be left out in the ultimate distribution of revenuesharing funds. The officials responsible for managing and administering these districts Will look to the state government for additional assistance. Most importantly, however, the Federal revenue-sharing program would
CXV--1719-Part 20
not influence the allocation of funds to particular governmental functions. Such allocation decisions will be made by state and local officials in response to the needs of their jurisdictions.
TITLE II
Title II of S. 2483 provides for a partial Federal income tax credit for state and local income tax payments. Given the limited availability of funds for general intergovernmental assistance, we believe that the most effective course is to pursue a program of revenue sharing rather than tax credits. Revenue sharing provides immediate and direct benefit to the states and localities, without influencing their choice of tax systems. Furthermore, with a basis distribution among states on a per capital basis, revenue sharing is more "equalizing" than tax credits, which spread their benefits geographically in proportion to federal tax collections. With the budgetary pressures we face, it is necessary to choose among alternative forms of state and local financial assistance. There ls not room for both tax credits and revenue sharing, and we consider revenue sharing to be the best approach. Therefore, we would be opposed to enactment of Title II.
TITLE m Under present law a considerable degree of
cooperation exists between the Treasury (the Internal Revenue Service) and state tax officials in the administration of their income taxes under agreements which provide for exchange of information flowing from the audit of returns. The introduction of computers by both Federal and state tax administrations has increased the potentialities of this type of cooperation. The closer the conformity of the state law to the Federal law in the determination of taxable income the greater are the advantages of this exchange of information. Under these agreements both the state and the Federal Government have increased their collections and reduced their costs by substantial amounts.
The Treasury favors expansion of administrative cooperation in ways which would be mutually acceptable to the appropriate authorities of both jurisdictions, and therefore, has no objection to the enactment of Title III.
It should be pointed out, however, that any plan for collection of state income taxes by the Internal Revenue Service which is to achieve greater administrative efficiency will necessarily require close conformity of state income tax provisions with Federal income tax provisions. Although a substantial degree of conformity to the Federal tax ls provided in many of the state income taxes, significant variations exist in some states as to exclusion and deduction adjustments to gross income in arriving at taxable income for state tax purposes. Some of the states may have problems when it comes to enacting the necessary conformity legislation. The varying concepts of state taxing jurisdiction would also present problems until more uniformity is achieved.
It should also be noted that on the basis of our experience during the past three years with the Internal Revenue Service not being provided the full amount of resources that it would like to have in order to enforce collection of taxes due the Federal Government, we simply cannot take on work for the states beyond the receipt of tax returns and reInittances and their processing and deposit. The states would have to continue to assume the responsibllities of auditing and collecting any unpaid state taxes.
TITLE IV
Estate and gift taxes are one of the areas of Federal tax law which are not included in the Tax Reform Act of 1969. The Committee on Ways and Means in its report on this legislation, however, has indicated that it wlll undertake a study of this area as soon as possible. Insofar as the Title IV provision is
directed at influencing states which now impose inheritance taxes to adopt an estatetax type of death tax, we believe the provision might more appropriately be considered in connection with the broader study of the estate and gift tax area by the Committee on Ways and Means. To the extent that the provision is intended as a means of giving the states more Federal financial assistance we believe, as we have indicated with respect to the credit for state income taxes proposed in Title II, that given the limited availability of funds for general assistance a program of revenue sharing is to be pref erred to a larger credit for state death tax payments.
TITLE V
Title V would permit states and their localities to tax the personal property of private individuals located in areas under exclusive Federal jurisdiction, provided that an agency designated by the President certifies that persons living and working in these areas are afforded substantially the same rights, privileges, and tax-supported services available to other residents of the state.
The Treasury favors the enactment of this provision.
STATEMENT OF RICHARD P. NATHAN, ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF THE DUREAU OF THE BUDGET, SEPTEMBER 25, 1969 Mr. Chairman and Members of the Com
mittee, I appreciate this opportunity to testify on S. 2483, the Intergovernmental Revenue Act of 1969.
This bill, in a number of respects, conforms to the revenue sharing proposal made by President Nixon in his address to the Nation August 8, 1969. He said:
"We can no longer have effective government at any level unless we have it at all levels. There is too mucL. to be done for the cities to do it alone, or for Washington to do it alone, or for the States to do it alone."
The Administration's revenue sharing bill differs in several specific provisions from the bill before this Committee.
It is keyed to Administration budget plans and, hence, does not begin with as high an expenditure level as S. 2483.
It does not contain a tax credit proposal, which S. 2483 includes.
S. 2483 is based on the Advisory Commission on the Intergovernmental Relations formula which is a more complicated and in several respects different from the formula used in the Administration's bill, i.e., its treatment of school districts and small local governments, subjects dealt with in the testimony today of Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Murray L. Weidenbaum.
But, in a broad perspective, these two revenue sharing proposals contain more similarities than differences. With revenue sharing, we embark on an historic new dlirection for the domestic programs of the Federal Government. As the President said on August 8:
"This start on revenue sharing is a step toward what I call the New Federalism. It is a gesture of faith in America's State and local governments and in the principle of democratic self-government."
THE NEW FEDERALISM
I think it appropriate at this hearing to discuss the meaning and purposes of the New Federalism. Major themes of the New Federalism a.re:
First, responsible decentralization, our domestic programs must support and strengthen leadership at the State and community levels in the solution of public problems.
Second, a strong concern with basic systems, the Administration has embarked upon basic reforms of the Nation's failing welfare system, the Postal System., the draft, and its manpower programs to cite examples.
Third, greater emphasis on the effective
27276 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 implementation of government policies, that is on the process of converting "good" intentions into good results.
The first of these three themes--responsible decentralization-is best expressed in revenue sharing and in the President's proposed Comprehensive Manpower Act.
The new Administration came to office with a determination to strengthen leadership at every level of government. Of special importance is its commitment to increase opportunities for responsive decision-making by general purpose units of State and local governments and voluntary organizations.
Revenue sharing and the proposed Comprehensive Manpower Act are two important means of strengthening leadership and opportunities for innovation by State and local governments. In addition, the Administration has initiated important internal reforms of the e::isting grant-in-aid system. The problems created by grant-in-aid proliferation have been widely commented upon. The important hearings of this Subcommittee in 1966 on "Creative Federalism" highlighted many of the weaknesses of the existing grant-in-aid system.
President Nixon described these problems in the following terms in April of 1969.
"The number of separate Federal assistance programs has grown enormously over the years. When the Office of Economic Opportunity set out to catalogue Federal assistance programs, it required a book orf more than 600 pages just to set forth brief descriptions. It is an almost universal complaint of local government officials that the web of programs has grown so tangled that it often becomes impermeable. However laudable each may be individually, the total effect can be one of Government paralysis."
The Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations has repeatedly called attention to the need for reform of the grant system. In their 1969 Annual Report, they lamented the ... "hardening of the categories in the immense and intricate Federal grant-in-aid system."
Examples of grant-in-aid system reform measures inaugurated by the new Administration are:
The President's legislative proposal of April 30 to permit him to consolidate existing grant-in-aid categories if Congress, within 60 days, does not overrule proposals transmitted to them.
A major effort under the direction of the Bureau of the Budget's Office of Executive Management to simplify and develop uniform grant-in-aid administrative procedures.
Efforts through the budget and legislative processes to combine related grant-in-aid categories.
The restructuring of the regional boundaries of the major domestic agencies in the field, so that their headquarters cities are the _.same and the regions which they cover also conform.
The issuance of a Presidential Order on joint funding April 18, 1969.
REVENUE SHARING AS AN ECONOMIC POLICY
Revenue sharing is an economic as well as political reform. At the same time that it strengthens federalism by broadening the grant-in-aid system, it modifies the Nation's total tax system, placing greater reliance on the growth-elastic Federal income tax.
Consider these facts: The traditional mainstays of State and
local finances have been property and sales taxes. These taxes bear down most heavily on the poor and lag 40-50 % behind the rate of growth in the State-local expenditures.
The mainstays of the Federal Treasury a.re the personal and corporate income taxes. These taxes tend to be more equitable and grow rapidly, as much as 25-50 % faster than the economy.
Income tax revenues account for only 9 % of State-local revenues; almost half the
revenue of the Nation's total tax system is derived from income taxation.
The cumulative impact of this pattern of taxation is illustrated by recent experience with State tax laws:
More than half of all State tax revenues during the 1950-67 period were the result of painful rate increases or the enactment of entirely new taxes.
Over 200 rate increases were required in major State taxes between 1959 and 1967.
More than four-fifths of the State legislatures which met early this year, faced requests for tax rate increases.
The State-k>cal fiscal plight is made even more dramatic by the fact that the normal increase in Federal income taxes due to economic growth alone runs $10--13 billion, roughly equivalent to total State income tax receipts.
By enabling State and local governments to tie into the Federal income tax, revenue sharing will:
Improve the balance between service requirements and governmental resources.
Make the overall tax structure of the Nation more equitable.
Although it is more difficult, we also need to examine the expenditure side of the economics of revenue sharing, President Nixon said in his August 13 message to the Congress on revenue sharing.
"While it is not possible to specify for what functions these Federally shared funds will provide-the purpose of this program being to leave such allocation decisions up to the recipient units of government--an analysis of existing State and local budgets can provide substantial clues. Thus, one can reasonably expect that education, which consistently takes over two-fifths of all State and local general revenues, will be the major beneficiary of these new funds."
The following table summarizes total State and local government expenditures in recent years by various functional areas. It shows clearly that the largest single expenditure item in State and local budgets is education, and that education has been growing as a proportion of total expenditures. It seems reasonable to expect that this expenditure pattern will prevail over the next several years and that a major use of shared revenues will be for education.
TOTAL STATE-LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECT GENERAL EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION
[Fiscal years. Dollar amounts in billions)
1964 1968 Increase, 1964~8
Amount Percent Amount Percent Amount Percent
Function : Education. ____ ________ ____ __ $26. 3 38 $41. 2 40 $14.9 45 Highways __ __ __________ ___ __ 11. 7 17 14. 5 14 2. 8 8 Public welfare _______ ______ __ 5. 8 8 9. 9 10 4.1 12 Health and hospitals _____ __ ___ 4. 9 7 7. 5 7 2. 6 8 Police and fire protection __ ___ _ 3. 6 5 5. 0 5 1. 4 4 Parks and natural resources ___ 2. 9 4 3. 9 4 1. 0 3 All other_ ____ ______ ______ __ _ 14. 1 20 20. 4 20 6. 3 19
Total. ___ __ - - - - -- - - -- - - - -- 69.3 100 102. 4 100 33. 1 100
Source: Bureau of the Census, "Governmental Finances in 1967-68," August 1969, table 3.
REVENUE SHARING AND BUDGETARY REQUIRE
MENTS
It is estimated that revenue sharing under S. 2483 would cost $3 billion in fiscal year 1970, and would build up to $5 billion. Other sections of the bill would add $2.6 billion in 1970 and reach $5.9 billion by 1972. The Administration's bill, on the other hand, reaches the same $5 billion level for revenue sharing as S . 2483 when fully implemented. However, it starts at $500 m1llion for the first half year, reflecting our considered judgment of what is feasible in the near future.
ESTIMATED FUNDING FOR REVENUE SHARING UNDER ADMINISTRATION PROPOSAL, 1971- 76
Taxable 1 income
Fiscal base (in Percentage for revenue year bill ions) sharing
197L __ _ $315 2/12 of 1 percentz __________ _ 1972 ____ 346 5/12 of 1 percent_ __ ____ ____ _ 1973_ ___ 381 7/12 of 1 percent_ ______ ___ _ _ 1974____ 419 9/12of1 percent__ __ ____ ___ _ 1975_ ___ 461 11/12 of 1 percent_ _________ _ 1976_ ___ 507 1 percent__ __ ______________ _
Funds for revenue sharing
(in billions)
$0. 5 1. 5 2. 2 3. 2 4. 2 5. 1
1 The 1971 base is taken as calendar year 1967 taxable individual income. The base is assumed to grow at the rate of 10
pe!?~! :uri~~~~r amount will be paid out over the last 2 quarters for fiscal year 1971.
These levels of expenditure for revenue sharing were decided upon in conjunction with other budget priorities which the Administration has identified. In particular, the urgent need to reform the Nation's failing welfare program requires a major new initiative, estimated at an additional $4 billion in the first year of effect. Other program initia-
tives by the Administration include approximately $3 billion in FY 1971 for increased Social Security benefits, $1.5 billion for hunger and nutrition prognms, and $300 million for mass transit.
These proposals are part of a balanced program which will permit us to go forward on needed policy iniiiatives at the same time that we are maintaining a budget posture necessary to curb inflationary pressures.
And I would stress, Mr. Chairman, that these new initiatives are dependent upon what the President has referred to as a "predictable firmness" in the budget process. In short, we are attempting to reduce narrow purpose, categorical programs that either may have served their purpose and are now of lower priority, or are not delivering services effectively. We are also endeavoring to combine smaller programs through grant consolidation and administratively through joint funding. Finally, it is the Administration's intention to avoid enactment of highly compartmentalized new grant-in-aid programs, which are regarded as unnecessary, in part, because of the opportunities for State and local innovation which will be generated by revenue &haring.
REVENUE SHARING AND WELFARE REFORM
In closing, Mr. Chairman, I would like to call attention to the interrelationship between two New Federalism proposals-revenue sharing and welfare reform.
The Administration believes the Federal Government should do what it can do best and that State and local governments should be strengthened to provi6le the services which they are able to administer on a. basis which takes into account varying State-local conditions and needs. Providing basic cash assistance and Food Stamps to the poor is a job which the Federal Government can do
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27277 efficiently and equitably, as evidenced by the long, successful history of the Social Security program. On the other hand, providing social services to people is typically a task which requires State and local talent and administrative capability.
Both revenue sharing and welfare reform, as proposed by President Nixon, provide needed fiscal relief to State and local governments. All States would spend less in State and local funds for welfare in the first year of the Family Assistance Plan than they would if the existing program continued in effect. These resources, combined with revenue sharing, would provide a considerable and rising amount of resource support for State and local governments.
This strategy, along with other Administration domestic program initiatives, carries out the central purposes of the New Federalism-to strengthen federalism, to reform major program systems, and to improve the Nation's total governmental capability.
DRAFT ADJUSTMENTS FALL SHORT
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, notwithstanding the fanfare of the past few days, the Nixon administration's adjustments in the military draft will allow the survival of one of this country's most obvious denials of individual liberty.
Last Friday, the President announced what appeared to be a reduction of 50,000 in draft calls for 1969. It is to be accomplished by canceling the Defense Department's previously programed calls of 32,000 for November and 18,000 for December, and by spreading the 29,000 October call evenly over the 3 remaining months of the year.
But the reduction is an illusion. In fact, without the cuts we would have had a massive increase in draft calls for the year as a whole.
From June through October of 1969, the total draft quota was 135,700, compared with only 79,000 for the same period a year earlier. The inflation of nearly 57 ,000 in those 5 months easily left room for a 50,000 r eduction. Total draft calls for this year will be only about 2 percent lower than in 1968.
In effect, what appears as benevolence to the young men who might have been taken in November and December is no more than an announcement that they will not be called then because they have already gone. They were pressed into service as part of earlier quotas.
The !?resident :3Jso announced on Friday his intention to move forward on draft proposals which will es tablish a r andom system of selection, to put chance in the place of decisions presently made by some 4,000 local draft boards with the inspiration and guidance of Selective Service Director Lewis Hershey. The period of prime exposure t-0 induction would be reduced from as much as 7 years to 12 months.
It is impossible to respond negatively to such a proposal. Indeed, from the standpoint of the eligible pool of manpower, just about any change in the selective service system would be an improvement. The present system seems to rest on the assumption that exposure to compulsory military service, including a war which most Americans now regard as a blunder, is for some reason a healthy process for young Americans. General Hershey's efforts to use the draft as a
punitive device-without the delays and complications of due process-place it even more sharply in conflict with the fundamental ideals of a free society. No one who believes in those ideals can find grounds for objection to the changes planned by the President.
But here again the illusion of meaningful action outweighs the substance.
The adjustments annolliJ.ced on Friday leave intact the most pernicious single aspect of the selective service system. With or without the change, thousands of young American men each year will be compelled, willing or not, to serve in the Armed Forces. Their right to liberty, their right to follow pursuits of their own choosing, will be denied. Their occupations will be determined not by the incentives required to attract manpower in the competitive market, but by the dictates of intrusive governmental authority.
Mr. President, it has been widely speculated that the two steps announced last Friday are part of an a t tempt to defuse youthful opposition to the war in Vietnam.
L11 combination with the par tial troop withdrawals which are now underway, it has been suggested that the attempt t o beautify the draft and to briefly limit its effect will muffle the voices which are calling for a prompt end to our involvement in Vietnamese affairs.
If that is the strategy, it is bound to fail. It amounts to a grave miscalculation on both the motives and the percep tion of those who seek a change in policy. They object not so much because of pers~nal costs, but because they believe in the ideals for which th ey have been told this country stands. They can see no legitimate interest in Vietnam which could possibly justify the loss of 40,000 lives or even the risk of a single additional American. They can see no interest which demands that we neglect crushing problems at home while laying billions of dollars at the feet of a corrupt military government 10,000 miles away. And they can see no reason why a nation founded on liberty and professing human dignity as its goal should extr act involuntary service from any of its citizens.
The draft will not be acceptable until it is gone. The war in Vietnam will not be acceptable until it is over .
-we have waited too long on both.
ARMS SALES IN VIETNAM Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, the
possibility that the Government of South Vietnam is selling arms obtained from the United States to private dealers 1s most disturbing. Yesterday, I raised questions about the allegations that such sales had occurred. These questions have not yet been answered satisfactorily.
Part of the basis for the questions I have asked is a two-page document. This document was obtained from the South Vietnamese Embassy in Washington and has been explained to me as _a listing of the weapons being offered for sale by South Vietnam.
The first column on the-document lists a variety of types of weapons. The second
column indicates the number of each. The list is partly in the Vietnamese language. However, several of the items have been translated for me.
For example, item l is translated as pistol. Item 3 is translated as subma, chinegun. Item 27 is translated as Browning automatic rifte. Item 29 is translated as machinegun. Item 30 is translated as grenade launcher.
Most interesting are the symbols M-16 which appear on both pages of this document. There are two references to M-16 totaling 5,539.
In my letters to the Defense Department and State Department, I included copies of these materials and asked that they be authenticated for me. I have not yet had a formal response to my letters nor did I expect one this soon.
However, I understand that the Pentagon has made some public statements about this matter. I hope that tbe statement that I am making today will clarify the reasons for my raising questions.
I ask unanimous consent that the contents of the South Vietnamese document be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the document was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
1. Sung Luc cac loai (Pistol) ___ _ 2. Sung Tieu-Lien Mat 49 ____ ___ _ 3. Sung Tieu-Lien Sten (Subma-
chinegun) (Go-Vap) _______ _ 4. Sung Tieu-Lien Mas 39 _______ _ 5. Sung Tieu-Lien Madsan _____ _ 6. Sung Tieu-Lien MP 40 ______ _ 7. Sung Tieu-Lien CMH 2 _______ _ 8. Sung Tieu-Lien Mat 48 ______ _ 9. Sung Tieu-Lien Whang hieu
NII - - --------- ------------10. Sung Carbine 5,5 Phap(Carb) __ 11. Sung Truong 36 Ord _________ _ 12. Sung Truong Mas 36 LG 48 ___ _ 13. Sung Truong CR 39 _________ _ 14. Sung Truong MK 3 (Rifle) ___ _ 15. Sung Truong MK L----------16. Sung Truong 1903/ Al x A3 ___ _ 17. Sung Truong US 17 _________ _ 18. Sung Truong Mauser ________ _ 19. Sung Truong Nhat __________ _ 20. Sung Truong 07 x 15 ________ _ 21. Sung Truong 86 x 93 _________ _ 22. Sung Truong M-16------------23. Sung Truong 1874 ___________ _ 24. Sung Truong Linh-Tinh __ ___ _ 25. Sung Truong Ban dan chai
(auto Rifle)------------- -- -26. Sung tu dong Mat 49 _______ __ _ 27. Sung Trung-Lien 24 x 29
\Browning Aut o Rifle) ____ _ 28. Sung Trung-Lien Bren _______ _ 29. Sung Dai-Lion Rejbel (Ma
chinegu n ) - ------ --------- -30. Sung Phong Luu 50 M37 (Gre-
nade Launcher) __ _______ __ _ 31. Sung Phong Luu Mas 35 ___ __ _
Tong Cong Lo 2 (714t500) (Khau ) ___ ________ ____ ___ _
1. Sung Tieu-Lien Mc (Subm achinegun) (Trai Dong Th~p ) (255t200) - -------- - --
2. Sung Tieu-Lien St on (Go-Vap ) ------- - - - ---------- - -
3 . Sung T ieu-Lien Mas .38 _____ _ 4. Sung Tieu-Lien ___ _________ __ _ 5. Sung Tieu-Lien MP 40 (Rifle)_ 6. Sung Truong Mas 36 Ord __ ___ _ 7. Sung Truong M a s 36 LG-48 _ __ _ 8. Sung Truong MK 3 _______ __ _ 9. Sung Truong MK r_ _________ _
10. Sung Truong 1903/ Al x A3 ___ _ 11. Sung Truong US 17 _ _________ _ 12. Sung Truong Mauser __ _______ _
8763k 7288
2231 6279
535 286 84 63
66 74
35890 2444
317 2171 1314 775
1029 2134
121 10065 19429 3550
25 436
243 24
1899 1909
337
182 92
110.055
3604k
426 2555 1119
63 15641
2346 1928 2516
10024 3993 5721
27278 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 13. Sung Truong 07 x 15----------14. Sung Truong 86-93-----------15. Sung Truong M-16-----------16. Sung Truong Ban dan Chai ___ _ 17. Sung Truong 1902------------18. Sung Truong 1892------------19. Sung-Trung-Lien 24 x 29
(Browning Auto Rifle)-----Ton Cong LO 3 (255t200)
(:K.hau) --------------------
5087 8008 1989 1822
240 134
2041
69.257
CONCLUSION OF MORNING BUSINESS
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further morning business? If not, morning business is concluded.
FEDERAL COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFETY ACT OF 1969
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order the Senate will now proceed to the consideration of the unfinished business, which the clerk will state.
The BILL CLERK. Calendar No. 410, s. 2917, a bill to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
Mr. BYRD Of West Virginia. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without . objection, it is so ordered.
AMENDING THE FEDERAL PROPERTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES ACT OF 1949 SO AS TO PERMIT DONATIONS OF SURPLUS PROPERTY TO PUBLIC MUSEUMS
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the consideration of Calendar No. 419, S. 2210.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title.
The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 2210) to amend the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 so as to permit donations of surplus property to public museums.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the present consideration of the bill?
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill, which had been reported from the Committee on Government Operations, with amendments, on page 2, line 6, after the word "free", strike out "all residents of a community, district, State, or region," and insert "the general public"; so as to make the bill read:
Be it enacted by the Senate and Ho7.lse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That section 203 (J) or the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 ( 40 U.S.C. 484(j) is amended-
(1) by striking out "and (C) public libraries." at the end of the first sentence of paragraph (3) and inserting in lieu thereof "(C) public libraries, and (D) public museums."; and
(2) by adding at the end thereof the following new paragraph:
"(8) The term 'public museum•, as used in this subsection, means a museum that serves free the general public, and receives its financial support in whole or in part from public funds."
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the report · (No. 91-423), explaining the purposes of the measure.
There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
PURPOSE
S. 2210 provides for making public museums, like public libraries, eligible to secure surplus property which is usable and necessary for purposes of education, public health, or for research for any such purpose.
Section 203 (j) of the Federal Property and Admin.istrative Services Act of 1949, as amended, now authorizes the donation of surplus property to museums if they are a part of a school, college, university, or public library, but does not permit the donation of such property to a tax supported public museum. S. 2210 would extend this authority to such public museums in view of their contribution to education.
S. 2210 was approved by the Bureau of the Budget and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The General Services Administration, which administers the surplus property program, opposes the bill on the grounds that the inclusion of public museums would increase the competition among those who are now permitted to utilize such property. From the information submitted to the committee during the consideration of this bill, however, it would appear that public museums would need only a limited number of stock items of a rather representative nature, such as a weapon, uniform, etc. Moreover, in the event competition should develop, the law and procedures presently administered by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and the State agencies are adequate to resolve any foreseeable conflicts.
The amendment was agreed to. The bill was ordered to be engrossed
for a third reading, read the third time, and passed.
AMENDING THE FEDERAL PROPERTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES ACT OF 1949 TO PERMIT THE ROTATION OF CERTAIN PROPERTY WHENEVER ITS REMAINING STORAGE OR SHELF LIFE IS TOO SHORT TO JUSTIFY ITS RETENTION, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the consideration of Calendar No. 420, S. 406.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title.
The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 406) to amend the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 to per-mit the rotation of certain property whenever its remaining storage or shelf life is too short to justify its retention, and for other purposes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the present consideration of the bill?
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill, which had been reported with an amendment, on
page 3, line 12, after the word "out,'' insert "in"; so as to make the bill read:
Be it enacted by the Senate and House o/ Representatives of the United States o/ America in Congress assembled, That section 201 of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (40 U.S.C. 481) is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new subsection:
"(e) Whenever the head of any executive agency determines that the remaining storage or shelf life of any medical materials or medical supplies held by such agency for national emergency purposes is of too short duration to justify their continued retention for such purposes and that their transfer or disposal would be in the interest of the United States, such materials or supplies shall be considered for the purposes of section 202 of this Act to be excess property. In accordance with the regulations of the Administrator, such excess materials or supplies may thereupon be transferred to or exchanged with any other Federal agency for other medical materials or supplies. Any proceeds derived from such transfers may be credited to the current applicable appropriation or fund of the transferor agency and shall be available only for the purchase of medical materials or supplies to be held for national emergency purposes. If such materials or supplies are not transferred to or exchanged with any other Federal agency, they shall be disposed of as surplus property. To the greatest extent practicable, the head of the executive agency holding such medical materials or supplieL shall make the determination provided for in the first sentence of this subsection at such times as to insure that such medical materials or medical supplies can be transferred or otherwise disposed of in sufficient time to permit their use before their shelf life expires and they are rendered unfit for human use."
SEC. 2. Section 402 of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949, as amended (40 U.S.C. 512), is amended by
(a.) inserting, immediately after the section number "SEC. 402.", the subsection designation "(a)";
(b) inserting after the words "Foreign excess property" in the first sentence thereof the words "not disposed of under subsections (b) and (c) of this section";
(c) striking out in the first sentence thereof the clause designations " (a) " and "(b) ", and inserting in lieu thereof the clause designations "(1)" and "(2)", respectively; and
(d) adding at the end thereof the following new subsections:
"(b) Any executive agency having in any foreign country any medical materials or supplies not disposed of under subsection (c) of this section, which, if situated within the United States, would be available for donation pursuant to section 203 of this Act, may donate such materials or supplies without cost (except for costs of care and handling), for use in any foreign country, to nonprofit medical or health organizations, including those qualified to receive assistance under sections 214(b) and 607 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as a.mended (22 U.S.C. 2174(b) and 2357).
"(c) Under such regulations as the Administrator shall prescribe pursuant to this subsection, any foreign excess property may be returned to the United States for handling a.s excess or surplus property under the provisions of sections 202, 203 (j), and 203 (1) of this Act whenever the head of the executive agency concerned determines that it is in the interest of the United States to do so: Provided, That regulations prescribed pursuant to this subsection shall require that the transportation costs incident to such return shall be borne by the Federal agency, State agency, or donee receiving the property."
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27279
the RECORD an excerpt from the report (No. 91-424), explaining the purposes of the measure.
There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
PURPOSE
S. 406 would authorize the head of any Federal department or agency who ls responsible for the storage of medical materials or medical supplies held for a national emergency to determine when their shelf life is of too short duration for continued retention. Under the provisions of this bill, the head of the agency could declare such medical supplies excess to his needs and have them transferred to, or exchanged with, another Federal agency before the shelf life period has expired, thus minimizing the destruction of such medical supplies. The proceeds derived from such transfers would be credited to the current appropriation or fund of the transferor agency and would be available for acquistlon of new medical supplies or materials. Any materials or supplies not transferred to or exchanged with another Federal agency would become available for disposal as surplus property.
The blll further provides that the head of the agency holding such supplies make the determination to transfer or exchange the materials in sufficient time before expiration of the shelf life period as would permit other agencies to use the materials before deterioration or spoilage.
Section 2 of S. 406 would add new subsections (b) and (c) to section 402 of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 ( 40 U.S.C. 512), which is the basic authority for the disposal of foreign excess property. The new subsections would authorize the donation of foreign excess medical materials and supplies for use in any foreign country, to nonprofit medical or health organizations, including those qualified to receive assistance under sections 214(b) and 607 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, and also, under such regulations as the Administrator shall prescribe, the return of foreign excess property to the United States for handling as excess or surplus property under the provisions of sections 202 and 203(j) and (1) of the Property Act.
BACKGROUND
This bill emanated from hearings which were held by the Joint Economic Committee during the 89th Congress when it was reported to the committee that medical supplies held in storage for a national emergency had deteriorated to such extent that they had to be destroyed, because there was no legal authority for rotation or transfer to another Federal agency.
Senator Proxmire, sponsor of this legislation, stated on the floor of the Senate that--
• • • Under existing law Federal property can be given away only if lit is declared to be surplus to Federal needs. If this is the case, the property may be donated to public or nonprofit private, State, and local organizations.
Some items have to be destroyed because they never become surplus to Federal needs. They simply lose their efilcacy. This ls the case with stockpiled medical supplies. Substantial amounts of these supplies, which are stored in more than 2,500 packaged disMter hospitals, have short shelf lives. They cannot be declared surplus because they are needed for use in case of emergency until this shelf life expires. Yet, when they lose all of their value to the Federal Government they also are worthless for donation purposes. • • •
When S. 406 was introduced in the Senate, the sponsor reported that some progress had been made by the agencies involved in the ad.ministration of the national medical stock-
pile program but that additional legislative authority was needed to attain more effective utilization of such supplies.
He reported further as follows: "I am happy to say that since the time I
first introduced this legislation back in the 89th Congress the situation has improved somewhat, however. In 1967, General Counsel at the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Department responsible for the medical stockpile, found that items from the stockpile could be declared unsuitable for civil defense purposes because of limited remaining shelf life and disposed of as excess property. This means that the material could be transferred without reimbursement to other Federal agencies. The procedure is still under study by the Ofilce of Emergency Planning. The mapor problem is simply that of funding the replacement of materials that have been declared excess.
"I am happy to say that the bill I am introducing today has the approval and support of the General Services Administration, which administers the surplus property disposal program, as well as the concurrence of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare--the Department in charge of the emergency medical stockpile program-and the Bureau of the Budget. In fact, today's legislation represents a substitute suggested by the General Services Administration for S. 1717, the bill I introduced on this subject in the last Congress."
HEARINGS
On July 9-10, 1969, an Ad Hoc Subcommitee on Surplus Property held hearings on this blll, at which time it was suggested that it may be appropriate to amend s. 406 to include authority for rotation of similar short shelf life, common use items of supply which are stored by the Department of Defense, GSA, or other Federal agencies.
In this connection, Senator Lee Metcalf offered an amendment to authorize and direct Federal departments and agencies to rotate common use items of supply, such as ink, carbon paper, paint, and so forth, before they are retained in storage too long for issue.
On the assurance ef the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Mr. Paul H. Riley and Mr. Lewis Tuttle, Assistant Commissioner, Office of Personal Property Disposal, General Services Administration, Senator Metcalf withdrew his proposed amendment because he was assured that there was adequate authority for rotating such items of supply and that the agencies are now rotating such stock pursuant to an order issued by the Bureau of the Budget and other implementing regulations issued by the individual Departments. It was also reported to the committee that an interagency committee was established and has been coordinating activities in this area among the various agencies so that nonmedlcal items are rarely allowed to spoil or deteriroate into a useless state.
The amendment was agreed to. The bill was ordered to be engrossed
for a third reading, read the third time, and passed.
COM::l\llSSION ON GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the consideration of Calendar No. 431, H.R. 474.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title.
The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (H.R. 474) to establish a Commission on Government Procurement.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there
objection to the present consideration of the bill?
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I move to strike out all after the enacting clause and insert in lieu thereof the text of S. 1707, Calendar No. 423, the companion Senate bill, as reported with the committee amendments.
The motion was agreed to. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques
tion is on agreeing to the amendment. The amendment was agreed to. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The
question is on the engrossment of the amendment and the third reading of the bill.
The amendment was ordered to be engrossed and the bill to be read a third time.
The bill <H.R. 474) was read a third time and was passed.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the report (No. 91-427), explaining the purposes of the measure.
There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD as fallows: '
PURPOSE
S. 1707 would establish a temporary Commission on Government Procurement which would be directed to make a comprehensive study of Federal procurement statutes policies, and practices, submit a final ~eport of its findings and recommendations to the Congress within 2 years from the date of enactment of the bill, submit interim reports as it deems advisable, and cease to exist 120 days after the submission of its final report.
The bill states, as congressional policy, the promotion of economy, efficiency, and effectiveness in the procurement of goods services, and fadlities by and for the executive branch of the Government, and enumerates 12 policy goals to guide the Commission in the achievement of such policy. The Commission's specific areas of study would include (1) existing Federal procurement statutes; (2) executive branch procurement policies, regulations, rules, practices, and procedures; and (3) the organizations by which such procurement is accomplished to determine to what extent these facilitate the stated policy.
The blll, as amended, provides thait the Commission would be composed of nine members and the Comptroller General or his designee, ex ofilcio. The President of' the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives would each appoint two members from their respective House on a bipartisan basis; and the President of the United States would appoint five members from outside of the Government.
The Commission would select a Chairman and a Vice Chairman from among its members; five members would constitute a quorum; and vacancies would not affect its powers and would be filled in the same manner as original appointments.
Commission members from the Congress, and the Comptroller General or his designee, would receive no compensation for their services, but would be allowed necessary travel expenses and other necessary expenses incurred by them in the performance of their duties. Commission members from the private sector would receive compensation at the rate Of $100 for each day in which they are engaged in the actual performance of their duties, In addition to reimbursement for travel, subsistence, and other necessary expenses.
27280 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 The Commission, or at its direction, any
duly authorized subcommittee or member thereof, would have authority to hold hearings, take testimony, administer oaths and require, by subpena or otherwise, the testimony of witnesses and the production of books, records, correspondence, papers, documents, etc., as it deems advisable; and persons failing to comply with subpena requirements would be subject to judicial action by an appropriate U.S. district court.
The Commission would also have the authority to (1) acquire directly from the head of any Federal agency or department information deemed useful in the discharge of its duties, and all such agencies would be authorized and directed to cooperate with the Commission and to furnish it with all such information requested by its Chairman or Vice Chairman, to the extent permitted by law; (2) appoint and fix the compensation of necessary personnel without regard to laws governing the competitive service; and (3 ) procure the services of experts and consultants, and negotiate and contract with private organizations and educational institutions to make and prepare required studies and reports. In addition, all agencies and departments would be authorized to provide services to the Commission upon request, on a reimbursable basis or otherwise, pursuant to agreements between the agency concerned and the Chairman or Vice Chairman of the Commission.
EXPLANATION OF AMENDMENTS
The committee adopted several amendments which are designed to improve and strengthen the operations of the Commission and clarify language in the bill. The major amendments deal with the size and composition of the Commission and confer subpena powers upon it.
Section 3 of S. 1707, as introduced, provided for a Commission composed of 14 members and the Comptroller General of the United States, ex officio. The President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives were each to appoint four members, two each from their respective Houses on a bipartisan basis, and two each from private life; the President of the United States was to appoint six members, three from the executive branch and three from the private sector.
With respect to the size of the Commission, the committee considered that a 15-member Commission would be too large to function effectively; and tha.t the successful accomplishment of its mission would depend upon the quality of its members rather than their number. Accordingly, the committee red ucect the size of the Commission to nine members and the Comptroller General, ex officio; t wo each to be appointed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, and five by t he President of the Unit '3d Sta.tes.
With respect to composition, the committee determined tha.t the congressionally appointed members should all be Members of Congress and the presidentially appointed members should all be from outside of the Government. In the case of the former, it is felt that since the Commission will probably recommend changes in exist ing law, congressional participation might assist materially in congressional understanding, acceptance, and implementation of such recorrunendations. In the case of the latter, the committee felt that the objectives of the bill would best be served if all of the President's appointees are from the private sector. When and if executive branch expertise is required , the Commission, under t he terms of the bill , would be free to utilize the knowledge and experience of individual executive branch specialists for whatever services and assistance m ay be necessary.
With respect to the subpena power, the committee found that some temiporary mixed commissions have been given this power and
others have not. In view of the nature of the mission of the Commission on Government Procurement and the need for complete information to enable it to accomplish that mission successfully, the committee determined that it should have such authority. NEED FOR COMMISSION TO STUDY FEDERAL PRO-
CUREMENT LAW, REGULATIONS, PRACTICES, AND
PROCEDURES
The Armed Services Procurement Act and the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act--the two basic statutes which govern military and nonmilitary procurement--were enacted more than 20 years ago. During this period, there has been a phenomenal growth and expansion of Government responsibilities, activities, a,nd expenditures. Thus, the Federal budget rose from $40 billion in fiscal year 1949 to $186 billion in fiscal year 1969; new departments and agencies have been created and numerous new Federal programs have been undertaken in an effort to cope with social and economic needs; and the military arsenal now requires multibillion-dollar weapon systems. Reflecting this rapid expansion, the dollar value of procurement awards for supplies, equipment, and services has increased from $9 billion to $55 billion during this same period. Furthermore, it appears that Federal procurement now involves a veritable army of procurement officers engaged in a highly escalating battle of paperwork, resulting in a situation which is often as baffiing to the suppliers of goods and services as it is expensive to the Federal Government.
Despite this phenomenal increase in Federal procurement, the magnitude of expenditures involved, and an awareness of the fact that practices and procedures by which goods and services are secured are varied, uncoordinated, and lacking in uniformity, no comprehensive review of Federal procurement policies and practices has been undertaken since the first Hoover Commission filed its report in 1949.
It is the view of the oommi ttee, concurred in by the executive branch agencies, that the time has come for a close, hard look at the statutes, regulations, procedures, and practices governing Federal procurement. Even a cursory examination reveals that there are loopholes in the laws, inconsistencies in the regulations, conflicts in the procedures, and variations in the practices. The mountains of procurement paperwork grow taller and the maze of procedures more complicated with each passing day.
The committee recognizes that the existing complicated process cannot be reduced to a simple, neat formula in view of the different r«;iquirements of Federal departments or agencies and the million of individual procurement actions each year. What is needed urgently is a unified approach to procurement problems, and procedures which will facilitate sound policy decisions at the top and provide the means to see that they are implemented in the field. The committee believes that substantial economies can be realized through improvements in the present procurement practices by the Federal Government. Equally important, of course, are the savings in time, effort, and money that can be realized for those furnishing goods and services to the Government. Every member of this body is keenly, and sometimes painfully, aware of the problem.s enooun tered by those doing business with the Government. Complaints, inquiries, and suggestions regarding Government procurement con st!l.ntly fl ew t hrough t h e office of every Senator. Although efforts h ave been m ade to correct inequities or deficiencies in Federal procurement practices, these efforts have been fragmented, piecemeal, and, at best, only stopgap remedies.
Finally, attention has been directed recently to substantial cost overruns in connection with Department of Defense procurement of the C-5A aircraft and other pro-
curement. Recent figures on the C-5A indicate an overrun of $712 million between the original target price and the current price estimate. With respect to other Department of Defense procurement, between January 1 and December 31, 1968, cost overruns amounted to $611.8 mlllion, of which $228.2 million is ascribed to cost escalation, $300.2 million to quantity increase, and $83.4 million to new equipment or new configuration.
The committee believes that a broad-scale, sweeping study of Government procurement policies and practices is needed if these pressing problems are to be resolved. FISCAL YEAR 1968 PROCUREMENT EXPENDITURES
According to the latest information available, tJ::i.e Federal Government expended approximately $55 billion for the procurement of goods and services during fiscal year 1968. Of this amount, an estimated $44 billion was expended by the Department of Defense; civilian executive branch departments and agencies expended a total in excess of $10 billion. Complete data for fiscal year 1969 is not yet available. However, during the 9-month period which ended on March 31, 1969, the Department of Defense awarded procurement contracts totaling approximately $30.9 billion, an increase of about $1.1 billion over the same 9-month period in fiscal year 1968.
The nonmilitary agencies which expended the largest amounts for procurement in fiscal year 1968 were NASA, $3.5 billion; AEC, $2.5 billion; and GSA, $1.6 billion. Other agencies which devoted substantial amounts to procurement were Department of Transportation, $516.8 million; Department of the Interior, $408.6 million; TVA, $376.6 million; Post Office Department, $297 million; HEW, $224.2 million; VA, $220.4 million; Department of Commerce, $209.8 million; Department of Agriculture, $178.1 million; and the Office of Economic Opportunity, $170.2 million.
PRINCIPAL FEDERAL PROCU REMENT STATUTES
There are 25 key statutes which deal with the procurement of goods and services by Federal departments and agencies. Three of these cover the subject directly; the balance affect procurement collaterally and are considered ancillary. In addition, each agency concerned with procurement has adopted implementing regulations which have been characterized by the Comptroller General as "voluminous, exceedingly complex, and, at times, difficult to apply."
A summary of key legislation dealing with Federal Government procurement appears as appendix 1 to this report.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that Senate bill 1707 be indefinitely postponed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
ADMIRAL RICKOVER WRITES ON THE IMPORTANCE OF NUCLEAR CARRIERS
Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, during the debate on the military authorization bill, I wrote Admiral Rickover, on August 29, a letter of inquiry with reference to nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, asking him to respond on certain points.
Admiral Rickover replied to my letter under date of September 5, 1969. During that debate, Mr. President, I quoted rather extt nsively from the admiral's letter, and intended to ask that the entire letter be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks; but I overlooked making that request. I have had inquiries from Senators and others who are interested in the entire text of the letter.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27281
Anything that Admiral Rickover says on this subject, or any other subject in this field, is entirely worthy of consideration, and I therefore think it undoubtedly has a proper place in the CoNGRESSION AL R ECORD. Therefore, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent, as in the morning hour, that the entire 1€tter be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows :
U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION, Washi ngton, D.C., September 5, 1969.
Hon. JOHN STENNIS, Chairman, Armed Services Committee, U.S. Senate.
DEAR SEN ATOR STENNIS: This letter is in response to your request of 29 August that I give you m y views concerning the importance of proceeding with construction of the three Nimit z class nuclear-powered attack a ircraft carriers planned by the Department of Defense. You also asked me to comment specifically concerning the impact that deferrin g the $377 million requested by the President in his FY 1970 budget to complete funding for the second of these carriers-the CVAN69-might have on the naval nuclear propulsion program.
I welcome this opportunity to make clear my reasons for believing strongly that these three carriers should be built without delay.
For many years as you know, I have testified that because of t he vast improvements being made in weapons technology the Navy should wherever possible go underwater to carry out its missions. The most striking example of where this has been accomplished in the past decade is the transfer of the Navy nuclear war deterrent mission from bombers based on aircraft carriers to Polaris missiles launched from nuclear submarines. Increased emphasis has also been placed on nuclear-powered attack submarines for antisubmarine missions-a policy that should be con tinued.
I have never hesitated to call attention to what seems to me to be wrong with our Inilitary . I follow no "party line." In the past when Chiefs of Naval Operations favored aircraft carriers over nuclear submarines I spoke out against their stand. This is not the case with our present Chief of Na.val Operat ions, AdIIliral Moorer, who fully supports nuclear submarines.
There are, however, some important Navy missions, which cannot, in any known practical way, be carried out by submarines. One of these is the provision of sea -based tactical air power to protect our sea lan es and our air lanes over the seas, as well as to support amphibious opera.tions and overseas military land operations beyond the range of the land-based tac:t.ical air power available to us.
In a memorandum of 25 August 1969 to the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Naval Opera tions discusses at length the urgent need to cont inue building attack carriers. The memorandum, a copy of which is enclosed, responds to questions raised this year by those opposed to proceeding with the carr ier building program. I contributed to the preparation of Admiral Moorer's memorandum and I agree with its contents.
It is easy, of course, to take a negative stand on any matter-particularly if one merely urges delay so that the matter may be further studied. That way nothing has to be proved or decided. One contents himself with a$king m 3.ny simple questions about a complex issue; stat es that the answers he has r eceived do not completely examine all facets of the questions; then insists that the matter requires further study and the decision to go ahead should be delayed.
I do not believe further study of the attack carrier issue will change the basic facts summarized below. These, in my opinion, establish the need to proceed with construe-
tion of the Nimitz class carriers. These facts are discussed in more detail in the attached memorandum:
Three-fourths of the earth's surfa.ce is covered by water; 95 percent of the world's population live within range of carrier aJ.rcraft.
The United States is essentially an island between two oceans--an island dependent on free use of the seas for transport of materials and fuels necessary for our survival.
No valid plan exists for overseas Inilitary operations by the Army, by the Air Force, or by amphibious forces , which does not depend on our abilit y to guarantee free use of the seas. Virtually all supplies to Vietnam, for example, have been carried by ships.
Without a modern attack carrier force, the United States is not assured free use of the seas in those areas of the world t hat are important to us. It is simply not practicable to establish enough land air bases adequately prepared, provisioned, defended, and within range of potential areas of conflict.
To match the continually improving capabilities of our potential enemies, the Navy's carrier force must have a steady input of new ships. This is necessary to upgrade its capability through infusion of modern technology and to replace ships no longer capable of meeting the demands on them-whether because of their inherent design limitations or because of their age.
Seven of the sixteen carriers currently operating in the attack carrier role were launched during or shortly after World War II. Five of these cannot operate several of the modern aircraft types now in the fleet. They will not be able to operate air wings which can survive against Soviet weapons technology of the 1970's.
Each NlIIlitz class carrier will carry 50 percent more aircraft ammunition and twice as much aircraft fuel as the latest conventionally powered attack carrier. This, combined with the unlimUed high speed endurance provided by nuclear power will greatly increase their capability for sustained combat operations.
The Nimitz class will also incorporate improved design features in the areas of command and control, intelligence processing, ammunition handling, aircraft catapulting, fire fighting and drainage control. ·
The Nimitz class will be the best protected and least vulnerable carriers ever designed. The added protection is provided by extensive use of armor against bombs and guided Inissiles, as well as by improved anti-torpedo hull design. The unlimited endurance at high speed and freedom from the need to slow down to refuel provided by nuclear propulsion further reduce the carrier's vulnerability.
The second ship of this class, the CVAN69, is scheduled for delivery in 1974. It will replace the Bon Homme Richard which will then be a 30 year old veteran of World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.
If future analysis or budget stringency should require reduction in the attack carrier force level, this should be accomplished by retiring old carriers, not by canceling construction of new ones. Were the Navy required to operate a smaller carrier force, the improved capabilities of the Nimitz class would become even more important. The smaller the force, the more important it is that each carrier have the greatest achievable capability.
The maximum life of an attack carrier is 25 to 30 years. A 15 carrier force level requires construction of one new carrier every 2 years if they are to be replaced when they are 30 years old. If the force level weTe to be reduced to 12, it would be necessary to build a new carrier every 2.5 years.
The three NiIIlitz class attack carriers are the only ones authorized or planned from FY 1964 through 1972, a period of 9 years; this will average out to but one new attack carrier every 3 years.
If we do not continuously modernize our attack carrier force, its ability to protect
our naval and overseas mllitary forces and the logistic lifeline for our Inilitary and industrial needs against the increasing capabilities of potential eneIIlies will be degraded.
We no longer have friendly oceans to protect us. The Atlantic and the Pacific, once our shield and our protection, are now broad highways for launching attacks against us on, above, and beneath the surface of the seas. Further, the United States, being an island, has no contiguous land masses whence we can conduct military operations to protect our national interests or from which we can obtain the fuels and materials necessary to sustain a large-scale war effort. From our island position the only way by which we can project our national power beyond range of our land bases is through the Navy. For this, other than by an-out nuclear war, we must depend primarily on our attack carriers.
There are lessons to be learned from history that we should not ignore. Germany, the predoIIlinant land power during World Wars I and II, was able to use land transportation to extend her influence and support her Inilitary and industrial effort. The Germans knew full well that the Allied war effort was almost totally dependent on overseas transportation. Therefore, they built their naval forces to interdict sea lanesjust as Russia, today's predoIIlinant land power, is now doing. German submarine and air attack on Allied shipping almost succeeded in defeating her opponents in both wars.
In contrast , J a pan, an island empire, depended in World War II on the seas for her survival, as does the United States today. Aircraft carriers in that war were, therefore, the heart of the Japanese Navy. The turning point in the Pacific was the sinking of half Japan's carrier fleet in the battle of Midway in 1942. The decisive factor in her defeat was the ability of American submarine and air forces to interdict the flow of oil from overseas to the Home Islands, thus strangling her industrial and Inilitary effort and leading to her eventual collapse.
The ability of the United States to fight for an extended period of time in defense of its territory and of its areas of interest depends on our ability to maintain the .tlow of material and oil on the over the seas. The sheer bulk of the daily requirement of oil and petroleum products for military and intime stockpiling.
Your committee has always been fully aware that the vulnerability of our overseas logistic supply lines is greater now than in the past and that this vulnerability is increasing. This is so for the following reasons:
The increased threat of submarine attack brought about by the advent of the nuclearpowered submarine and the improvement in conventional submarines.
The increased threat of air attack because of the increased range of aircraft and missiles and their improved ability to detect targets.
The quantity of fuel that must be transported over the oceans has increased vastly because of the significantly higher consumption rate of modern Inilitary units.
Each tanker lost today has a many-fold greater impact because of the substitution of a smaller fleet of larger tankers for the large fleet of smaller tankers used in World War II. Most tankers then displaced 10,000 to 15,000 tons, the largest being 25,000 tons. Today, many tankers displace over 100,000 tons and plans are underway to build tankers of 500,000 tons and larger.
As the number of nuclea r submarines and the air strike capability of our potential eneIIlies increase, so does the difficulty of providing logistic support when supply lines are under attack.
Once more we are taught by the war in Vietnam-as so often in the past---that we must have free access to the seas. In spite of the publicity given to airlifting troops and supplies to Southeast Asia, over 98 percent
27282 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 of them have been transported by ship. The war, from the naval standpoint, has been like a War College exercise. Except for naval pilots and naval personnel engaged in river warfare, our naval presence in Southeast Asia has been unchallenged. No plane has attacked our ships; no submarine has fired torpedoes at them.
If we were in a conflict involving the naval and air forces of the Soviet Union or of Communist China, our naval aircraft carrier forces would have to protect our overseas supply lines, in addition to carrying the war to the enemy. Land-based aircraft could be used only for actions within range of protected air bases. Attack carriers are mobile air bases which can be deployed or withdrawn quickly and at will to meet changing international situations, yet without altering international com.mi tments.
The area of the world covered by our overseas land base system has been shrinking. Pressure continues at home and abroad for us to withdraw our deployed forces. As we approach the "Fortress America" concept there is a growing need for nuclear-powered attack carrier task forces capable of steaming at high speed to any point on the oceans of the world, and of conducting maximum sustained air operations for many days entirely without logistic support-a capabi11ty that can be obtained only by continuing to build nuclear-powered warships.
In modern war, particularly the kinds of war we envisage for the future, more military equipment and relatively fewer men will be used. We can no longer fight with rifles, cannon and mortars alone-all of which can be manufactured quickly and in numbers. Today's weapons--ours and those of our potential enemies-are complex and costly; it takes many years to develop and build them. Even in World War II we did not place into action a single airplane that had not been under design when we entered the war.
To build and equip a modern a.ircraft carrier takes 5 years. If we do not have enough of them when war erupts, it will be too late-no matter what effort and money we may then be willing to expend.
Our country is able to stay ahead in defense only because of our technology. If we do not take advantage of this technology to stay ahead we will have to fight wars with inadequate weapons and suffer higher casualties. Congress, for as long as I can remember, has done everything within its power to provide our military with the best weapons and such services that would reduce loss of life. I believe our people are willing to pay the taxes necessary to provide our men the best weapons our technology makes possible.
Nuclear aircraft carriers are expensive, as are all modern weapons. Opponents of military preparedness concentrate their criticism on the aircraft carrier because it is the largest single item of defense equipment-just as the Department of Defense, being the largest government department, has its activities and appropriations attacked more than any other department.
All weapons systems have increased in cost because of inflation and greater sophistication. Relatively speaking, however, the carrier cost has not increased as much as most major weapon systems since World War II.
On the other hand, the capabilities of today's weapon systems are much greater than those of their World War II counterparts. To give an example: The nuclear carrier Enterprise in one month off Vietnam delivered more than twice the tonnage of bombs her namesake, the conventionally powered carrier Enterprise, delivered throughout the Pacific Campaign in World War II.
When we look at the cost of a nuclearpowered carrier we should remember that toward the end of World War II the war cost us some $300 million a day; this would correspond to abou~ $600 million a day now. The
smaller cost of being adequately prepared should be set against the greater cost of risking war because of military weakness.
Delay in completing funding of the CVAN69 wlll increase its cost. Contracts authorized by Congress during the pa.st two years totaling $133 mlllion have already been placed for components. The nuclear propulsion plant for this ship is now being manufactured and the ship is scheduled for construction in series with the Nimitz, now about 20 percent complete. To hold up construction of the CVAN69, as has been proposed, Will delay modernization of the attack carrier force as well as availability of nuclear propulsion in the fleet. It wlll disrupt continuity of the Nimitz class construction program, considerably increasing the cost of these ships.
Let me also point out that a legal interpretation of the proposed amendment, number 136 to S. 2546, to delay the CV AN69 might require termination of the contracts for the $133 million of nuclear propulsion plant components already on order from funds appropriated in FY 1968 and 1969. This would disrupt the industrial base for the Nimitz class nuclear propulsion plants. It would also have an adverse impact on the willingness of manufacturers to enter into future contracts for naval nuclear propulsion components for submarines and frigates. These manufacturers have a large market available to them due to the considerable backlog of components for civilian nuclear central stations. Lack of a firm naval nuclear program in recent years has already led some naval component suppliers to divert their facllities to civ111an nuclear work.
It was the naval program which pioneered development of an industrial capability to design and manufacture nuclear reactor plant components and equipment for naval and civ111an use-a development that was arduous, time consuming, expensive. Because of the potential radiation hazards relating to use of atomic energy, it was necessary to develop and implement standards for design, manufacture and quality control much higher than were being used by industry for fossil fueled power plants. Until four years ago, naval orders constituted the major part of the nuclear component business. Since then, steady reduction in the number of nuclear ships authorized each year, and expansion in civilian nuclear power have caused the demand for civilian electric ut111ty reactors greatly to exceed the volume of naval reactor orders.
Industry currently has a backlog of over $3 blllion in unfilled orders for civilian nuclear plants. Because of the growth in demand for civilian nuclear plants and the decline in and uncertainty of future requirements for naval reactors, a number of suppliers have turned to commercial work exclusively. Once a supplier leaves the naval reactor business the task of reconstituting the specialized skills, the quality control, and the engineering groups to meet naval requirements is similar in scope to starting over again. It takes years to develop a company's capability to perform to the standards required, but this capab111ty Will be lost in a short time if the experienced technical and production personnel are disbanded.
The nuclear propulsion plant components for the CVAN69 are presently in varying stages of manufacture. I estimate that about $40 million of the $133 million obligated has been expended to date. If a law requiring termination of these contracts were enacted by November 1969, I estimate that $85 million of the $133 million would not be recoverable, in view of the expenditures to date and the cost of terminating these orders in the midst of production. Further, the incomplete state of the work on these components is such that they would be of no use for any other purpose; these funds would, therefore, be wasted.
For these reasons, termination of a major portion of the outstanding naval nuclear component orders would be wasteful and would adversely affect our abllity to build nuclear plants for future submarines and surface warships.
It ls easy to ask for drastic reductions in our armaments; for ending the Vietnam War at once; for doing away with the draft today; spending the money saved to solve domestic problems. But those charged with responsibility for our safety cannot afford to heed these siren calls. Pacifism and unilateral disarmament are not synonymous with peace. We must separate dislike of inefficient military procurement and the desire for peace from the determination of what is needed to protect the United States. What if those who advocate reduction in our military strength prove to be in error? What ultimate gain will there be if we save money but lose our freedom?
Is the decision to build or not build a weapon to be based on cost, or is it to be based on need? The cost of weapons is one of the sacrifices we must pay in order to remain free. I, too, Wish the world were different and that it were not necessary to lose lives and expend irreplaceable natural resources for defense. But we must survive in the world as it is, not as we dream it should be.
Freedom comes at a price. If we fail to pay for adequate defense now and our weakness invites attack, we will pay many times as much in dollars to wage war and infinitely more in young lives lost. And let us not forget that if we permit our military strength to erode and lose our freedom, we also lose our ability to improve the lot of our poor and relieve the plight of our ctties.
It is as true today as in the past that the price of liberty ls eternal vigilance. The early frontiersman had to carry his rifle while he plowed his field. So too must we today be armed while we go about our daily work.
Some may argue that we should not construct the Nimitz class carriers because the danger of war has been reduced; consequently our resources can be used for other desirable objectives. Granted the hideousness of modern war, can we deduce therefrom that mankind is now wise enough to forego recourse to arms? A glance at history should put us on guard against those who claim that huma.nity has now reached a state where the possibility of armed aggression can be disregarded in formulating national policy.
Although a precise comparison of U.S. and Soviet military expenditures is not available, it ls clear that the U.S.S.R. is spending much more annually for new weapons than the United States. Is it then rational for us to fall to moderni.ze our defenses, on the assumption that the danger Of war no longer exists? The first priority of all life ls survival; this ls likewise true of nations and is the primary function of a legislature.
Preaching peace is the calling of the theologian, aichleving it the calling of the statesman. Nelither has been able to attain it. Universal peace has been the goal of mankind for thousands of years. The noblest of our race has striven for it-all have been unsuccessful. Then why do some believe that, despite all the lessons of history, we can today achieve peace by unilateral dlsanna,ment? The thrust of those opposed to war is presently directed at our military. Are we expeoted to refrain from asking for the wea,pons we need to protect our country? Is to ask for these weapons not our duty?
During the 1962 Cuban Crisis three attack carriers and five antisubmarine carriers were ordered to take station off Cuba. What would have happened had our Navy not been prepared to cope with the situation? There could have been a nuclear war; alternatively Cuba might today be a Russian military stronghold.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 27283 A statement by Anthony Eden, Foreign
Secretary to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, on Britain's entry into World War II is worth pondering. He said:
"The Prime Minister would tolerate no interference in his policy toward the dictators. He believed he could negotiate agreements with Hitler and Mussolini which they would keep, and he was impatient of' any events or views that appeared to him to delay this policy.•'
We know the results of that policy. Yet those who today oppose military preparedness take the identical position.
We have been unprepared at the outbreak of every war. We have solemnly determined at the end of each war that we will never be caught unprepared again. But the lesson is soon forgotten. Each generation must seemingly make its own mistakes.
Our adversaries are ruthless. Their leaders alone decide what is to be done. I believe that given the mentality of the present Kremlin leadership, the best way by far for us to avoid war is to be strongstrong enough to deter them from believing they can win if they make war on us. Let it be remembered that whenever there is repression in a country, its leaders a.re tempted to unite their people by shifting domestic discontent to foreign ventures.
In S'Ummary, I recommend that construction of the three Nimitz Class nuclea.rpowered attack aircraft carriers proceed in accordance with the plan which has been in effect for the last four years; and specifically that the $377 million needed to complete the CVAN69 be included in the FY 1970 shipbuilding authorization.
Respectfully, H. G. RICKOVER.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I ask unanimous consent that the Senator from North carolina be permitted to speak out of order.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
JUDGE CLEMENT F. HAYNSWORTH, JR., AND THE DARLINGTON CASE Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, during the
hearings being conducted by the Senate Judiciary Committee upon the nomination of Chief Judge Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr., of the fourth circuit, to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, the charge has been made that Judge Haynsworth's participation in the Darlington case disclosed an antiunion bias on his part. This nomination will ultimately come before the Senate for its consideration. In order that Senators may have an opportunity to learn what a hollow ring this charge has, I have prepared an analysis of the Darlington case, and ask unanimous consent that it be printed at this point in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the analysis was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
THE DARLINGTON CASE
Much has been said during these hearings about the Darlington Manufacturing Company case.
THE ISSUES IN THE DARLINGTON CASE
This case presented these questions: (1) Whether Darlington's complete and final withdrawal from business was a violation of the National Labor Relations Act. (2) If not, whether Darlington's withdrawal from business, even though final and complete, was a violation of the Act because of relations alleged to exist between Darlington and the Deering Milliken interests, which controlled some 16 or 17 other textile companies operating some 26 or 27 mills. Stating the second question more succinctly, were Darlington and Deering Milliken a single employer.
The test of whether two or more businesses constitute a single employer within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act has been laid down by the National Labor Relations Board, which I shall hereafter call the Labor Board, as follows:
"It is now well established that for two or more legal entities to constitute a 'single employer' for purposes of assessing liability for unfair labor practices it must be shown that there was a sufficient degree of common ownership and common control of labor relations and operations so that it may be said that th~r engaged in a common enterprise ...
Under the law, a. common enterprise is an enterprise in which two or more individuals or corporations share equally or alike.
EVENTS OUT OF WHICH THE CASE AROSE
To understand the issues involved in the Darlington case, a knowledge of the background of the case is necessary. Darlington was an old textile plant, which began operations in 1883. Origin1'11lly, none of the fam.lly of Roger Milliken had any interest in Darlington. In 1937, however, Darlington went into bankruptcy and was reorganized and continued in business because Deering Milliken interests accepted stock in the reorganized company ln lieu of debts owing them by Darlington. In 1956, Darlington had 150,-000 shares of stock outstanding. Of this stock, 41.4 % was held by a sales corporation, Deering Milliken and Company; 18.3 % by the Cotwool Manufacturing Company, a textile manufacturing corporation controlled by Deering Milliken Interests; 6.4% by Roger Milliken and the immedla te members of his family; and 2.9 % was held by directors and employees of Deering Milliken and Company. The remaining outstanding stock, which totaled 31 % , was -held by 200 other stockholders who had no connection whatever with Deering Milliken interests or any textile plant operated by them.
Darlington did not have a very prosperous career following its reorganization. It managed to survive, however, because of economic benefits accruing to the textile industry during the Second World War and the Korean Conflict. During 4 of the 5 years preceedlng its dissolution, it managed to earn only a. 3% return on its invested capital. During the year of its dissolution, it lost $40,-000. and was confronted with the prospect of losing $240,000. additional during the following year.
As a consequence of these things, the board of directors, which consisted of Roger Milliken and three other directors affiliated with Deering Milliken interests and there independent directors, employed an efficiency engineering concern to devise a plan which would en.able Darlington to continue in business as a Viable economic entity. The engineering concern recommended to the directors of Darlington as the only plan which would continue Darlington in existence as a viable economic entity the expenditure of considerable sums of money to renovate its plant and to reequip it with new m.a.chinery. It also stated in its report to the directors that it was necessary for Darlington to obtain more efficient services from. its employees 1f it were to survive economically. Pursuant to the recommendations of the engineering concern, Darlington began to reno-
vate its plant and to purchase new machinery.
Ait this time, organizers of the Textile Workers Union of America appeaxed upon the scene and began an organ.izing campaign in which they pledged to the employees of Darlington that the union would not permit Darlington to carry out the recommendations of the engineering firm if a ma.jo.rity of the employees of Darlington chose the union as their bargaining agent in an election to be held under the direction of the Labor Board.
This election was held on September 6, 1956, and the union won the election by a 6-vote margin out of the 510 votes cast by Darlington employees. In view of the financial losses DM'Ungton was currently sustaining, the board of directors concluded that the arrival of the union and its pre-election pledge that it would not permit Darlington to do the things which the engineering concern had detailed as necessary to its survival as a viable economic entity doomed any pros• pect for successful operation of Darlington's plant in the future. AC'COrdingly, the 7 directors, including the 3 having no relationship whatever to the Deering Milliken interests, met on September 12, 1956, and voted to recommend to the stockholders that they dissolve the corporation and thus salvage for themselves their respective equities in the assets of the company.
On October 17, 1956, the stockholdem met and voted by 134,911 shares to 3,774 shares to dissolve the company and divide the assets remaining after the payment of its debts among the stockholders according to their respective equities. It ls noteworthy that Virtually all of the 200 independent stockholders voted for Darlington to take this action.
During the next 6 weeks, Darlington completed the filling of its existing orders and discharged its employees. The plant was closed on November 24, 1956, and shortly thereafter, i.e. on December 12 and 13, 1956, Darlington sold all of its equipment and machinery, which had been dismantled, at public auction. Darlington has not operated any plant anywhere since tha.t time, and shortly after its cessation of business, it was dissolved as a corporation pursuant to the law Of South 0arollna.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE LABOR BOARD
Meanwhile, on October 16, 1956, the Textile Workers Union filed a charge against Darlington alleging that it had committed an unfair labor practice in going out of business.
The General Counsel of the Labor Board issued a complaint on this charge and the Labor Board assigned one of its most competent and cilligent trial examiners, Lloyd Buchanan, to hear the evidence offered by the parties in relation to the charge.
The hearings were begun in January, 1956. During the course of the hearings, the Textile Workers Union offered evidence which it contended would show that Darlington was one of a chain of mills controlled by Deering Milliken Company, the sales corporation. The trial examiner rejected this evidence on the ground that it was not competent under the allegations made by the union in the original charge.
On April 30, 1957, the trial examiner filed his original intermediate report in which he found that the directors and the stockholders of Darlington had sufficient economic reasons to justify its going out of business and distributing its assets among its stockholders in accordance with their respective equities. He concluded, however, that Darlington had committed an unfair labor practice because it went out of business at the particular time it did because of the advent of the un1on. He found further, however, that Darlington would have had to have gone out of business wilthin the 1.mm.ediate future because of the dire economic situation confronting it. He concluded that Darlington could not be required to reinstate its discharged employees
27284 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 because it no longer had a manufacturing plant, and he recommended that the Labor Board refrain from allowing any allegedly lost wages because of the uncertainty of the time at which Darlington would have been compelled by economic circumstances to close if it had elected to operate subsequent to the advent of the union. The Labor Board took no action upon this intermediate report until December 16, 1957. On that date, the Labor Board, by a 3 to 2 vote, entered an order postponing any decision on the merits of the proceeding and remanded the proceeding to the trial examiner with direction that he take evidence concerning any relationship between Darlington and Deering Milliken ai1d Company, Inc., the sales corporation.
Pursuant to the order of remand, Deering Milliken and Company, the sales corporation, was made a party to the proceedings, and the trial examiner thereupon conducted hearings in which 2,500 pages of additional testimony were taken and 400 pages of exhibits were received. On December 31, 1959, the trial examiner filed a supplemental intermediate report in which he found that Deering Milliken and Company did not occupy a single employer status with Darlington and recommended the dismissal of the charges as 1io Deering Milliken and Company.
The Labor Board took no action upon the trial examiner's supplemental intermediate report between December 31, 1959 and January 9, 1961.
Meanwhile, it was revealed by the press that in June, 1960, Deering Milliken and Company, which had always been a sales corporation and not a manufacturing company, and Cotwool Manufacturing Company, a textile manufacturing corporation controlled by the Deering Milliken interests, had merged into a new corporation under the name of Deering Milliken, Incorporated.
At some time thereafter, the Textile Workers Union filed a motion with the Labor Board asking the Board to remand the proceeding to the trial examiner to take evidence concerning the merger of these two corporations.
On January 9, 1961, the Labor Board, by a 3 to 2 vote, remanded the case to the trial examiner for this purpose.
PRECEDING LITIGATION
Thereupon the merged corporation, i.e. Deering Milliken, Incorporated, brought a suit in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina against Reed Johnston, Regional Director of the Labor Board for the areas embracing North and South Carolina, praying that he be enjoined from carrying out the order of remand. The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina issued an injunction forbidding the Regional Director of the Labor Board to carry out the order of remand and the Regional Director appealed from this judgment to the Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit.
The decision of the Circuit Court, which was entitled Deering Milliken, Incorporated v. Johnston, as Regional Director of the Labor Board, and which is reported in 295 F 2d 856, was handed down on October 13, 1961 and was written by Judge Haynsworth. The opinion E.tates, in substance, that the proceeding had been pending before the Labor Board since about October, 1956, and that the Labor Board had not performed its statutory duty to decide the proceeding within a . easonable time. Despite these statements, who:> e truth cannot be disputed, Judge Haynsworth modified the injunction issued by tl1e U.S. District Court for the Middle Distr!ct of North Carolina and authorized the Regional Director to carry out the remand order to the extent of requiring the trial examiner to take evidence concerning the merger of the two corporations and other circumstances relating thereto.
I digress to note that this decision was never appealed to the Supreme Court and has never been overruled by the Supreme Court in any other case. Manifestly, Judge Haynsworth's action in this instance did not show any antiunion bias on his part because the decision was favorable to the union.
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS REFORE LABOR BOARD
~ubsequent to this decision, the trial examiner conducted further hearings and filed a third report in which he reached these conclusions: (1) That Darlington had violated the National Labor Relations Act by going out of business at the particular time it did ?ecau~e it was motivated in part by the union victory, but inasmuch as it had not been shown that Darlington would, in the existing economic circumstances, have continued to operate its mill for any definite additional period of time, any financial assessment against it would be punitive in nature and should not be made; and (2) That the General Counsel of the Labor Board and the union had "clearly failed" to demonstrate that Darlington and Deering Milliken constituted a single employer within the meaning of the Act. Subsequently, to wit, on October 18, 1962, the Labor Board handed down its decision with members Rodgers and Leedon dissenting. The majority of the Labor Board ruled, in substance, that even though it had genuine economic reasons for going out of business, Darlington violated Section 8(a) (3) of the Act because the closing of its plant was partly attributable to the employees' selection of the union.
It is to be noted that the 3 to 2 decision of the Labor Board required Darlington, in essence, to ignore the fact that in addition to ' its other economic woes, a union had appeared in its plant which had pledged itself to defeat the only program by which Darlington and the impartial engineering concern believed Darlington could survive econmnica.l.ly.
The 3 to 2 majority of the Labor Board also reversed the trial examiner on the single employer issue and held that Darlington and Deering Milliken were a single employer and that in consequence Deering Milliken was legally responsible for Darlington's action. THE FIRST DECISION OF THE cmcuIT COURT IN
THE DARLINGTON CASE
The decision of the Labor Board was appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, sitting en bane, which by a 3 to 2 vote refused to enforce the Labor Boa.rd decision.
The decision of the Court of Appeals was written by Circuit Judge Bryan, one of the ablest jurists of our land, and is reported in 325 F.2d 682. The basis of the decision of the Court of Appeals is stated in these words in Judge Bryan's opinion: "To go out of business in toto or to discontinue it in pa.rt permanently at any time, we think, was Darlington's absolute prerogative." The Court of Appeals did not pass upon the single employer issue because of its conviction that the closing of Darlington did not constitute an unfair labor practice regardless of whether Darlington was a single legal entity or a part of the Deering Milliken chain.
The opinion and decision of the Circuit Court in the Darlington case was in accord with the overwhelming majority of decisions of U.S. Courts of Appeals in the various circuits. It seems appropriate at this time to call attention to three of these decisions.
The first is Jay's Foods' Inc. v. NLRB, 202 F.2d 317. 320, a 7th Circuit Court decision which raised the issue as to whether th~ employer had cominitted an unfair labor practice in eliminating a part of its business, namely, an automobile repair shop which had been unionized. The Court declared that-
"An employer has a right to consider objectively and independently the economic
impact of unionization of his shop and to manage his business accordingly. Fundamentally, if he makes a change in operations because of reasonably anticipated increased costs, regardless of whether they are caused by or contributed to by the advent of a union or by some other factor, his action does not oonstitute discrimination within the provisions of section 8 (a) ( 1) , ( 3) and ( 5) of the Act."
The second is NLRB v. Rapid Bindery, Inc., 293 F. 2d 170, 172, 174, a 2nd Circuit decision, where the employer was charged with an unfair labor practice because he closed one of his plants and transferred all of his business to a second plant operated by him. The court declared that-
"Respondents admit that they were something less than happy to have the Union appear on the scene at a time when economic considerations were making some sort of a change in their business operations mandatory ....
"However, from the evidence that was adn:iitted it is clear that the transfer of operations from Dunkirk was indeed economically necessary. Despite this, the exaininer found that_ the move was not made solely for economic reasons but was made 'in an atmosphere redolent with hostility toward the Union, and for the purpose of discouraging membership in it', and consequently that the respondents violated section 8(a) (3).
"We are of the opinion that this last finding is an erroneous one in that it is not supported by substantial evidence and is not in accord with the law as the law has developed under section 8 (a) ( 3) . . .
"In those situations where a change or discontinuance of business operations is dictated by sound financial or economic reasons the courts have refused to find that section 8 (a) ( 3) has been violwted even though the employer action may have been accelerated by union activity."
The third case is NLRB v. R. c. Mahon Company, 269 S. 2d 44, 47, a 6th Circuit decision, where the employer was charged with an unfair labor practice by eliminating one of his departments, namely, a plant guard department which had been unionized. In that case, the court declared that-
"We find nothing in the National Labor ~elati?ns. Act which forbids a company, in lme with its plans for operation, to eliminate some division of its work. As held in National Labor Relations Board v. Adkins Transfer Company, Inc., supra, an employer faced with the practical choice, either of paying enhanced wage rates demanded by a union or of discontinuing a department of its business, is entitled to discontinue. The findings of fact and conclusions to the contrary made by a majority of the Board are not supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole nor do they accord with the applicable law."
THE SUPREME COURT DECISION IN THE DARLINGTON CASE
The Labor Board and the Textile Workers Union appealed the Circuit Court decision to the Supreme Court of the United States. As appears by the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which is reported in 380 U.S. 263 and was handed down on March 9, 1965, these two legal issues were raised by the appeal : ( 1) Whether Darlington's closing constituted an unfair labor practice under the National Labor Relations Act if Darlington constituted a separate enterprise; and (2) Whether Darlington's closing constituted an unfair labor practice under the Act if Darlington and Deering Milliken were a single employer.
I argued the first of these issues before the Supreme Court and Mr. Stuart Updike argued the second. In my appearance before the Supreme Court, I advanced these alternative 8:rguments to justify the position that Darllngton had an absolute right to go out of
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27285 business if it constituted a separate enterprise:
1. That any private employer in America has an absolute right under the National Labor Relations Act itself to go out of business for any reason satisfactory to him.
2. That if the National Labor Relations Act should be interpreted to deny any private employer in America this absolute right, the Supreme Court would have to adjudge the act unconstitutional upon these two grounds: ( 1) The act would exceed the legislative power vested in Congress by the Interstate Commerce Clause; and (2) The act would deprive the private employer of his property without due process of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
Manifestly, the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce does not authorize it to regulate a private business after it completely and permanently ceases the operation of a business affecting interstate commerce.
Moreover, Congress would be depriving a private business concern of its property without due process of law if it enacted a statute compelling such concern to continue in operation against its will merely for the purpose of giving employment to individuals having no interest in its property.
The Supreme Court sustained my initial argument by saying that: ... "We hold that so far as the Labor Relations Act is concerned, an employer has the absolute right to terminate his entire business for any reason he pleases, but disagree with the Court of Appeals that such right includes the ability to close part of a business no matter what the reason. We conclude that the caUJSe must be remanded to the Board for further proceedings." ...
The Supreme Court further declared: "While we thus agree with the Court of
Appeals that viewing Darlington as an independent employer the liquidation of its business was not an unfair labor practice, we cannot accept the lower court's view that the same conclusion necessarily follows if Darlington is regarded as an integral part of the Deering Milliken enterprise.
"The closing of an entire business, even though discriminatory, ends the employeremployee relationship; the f•orce of such a closing is entirely spent as to that business when ter<rnination of the enterprise takes place ... By analogy to those case.s involv-. ing a continuing enterprise we are constr.a.ined to hold, in disagreement with the Court of Appeals, that a partial closing is an unfair labor practice under 8(a) (3) if mot!vated by a purpose to chill unionism in any of the remaining plan ts of the single em -player and if the employer may reasonably have forseen that such closing would likely have that effect."
The Supreme Court adjudged that the Labor Beard had f.ailed t::> make findings and rulings with respect to whether the requisite "purpose" and "effect" had in fact existed in respect to t::ie closing of Darlingtcn anj ordered. the proceeding remanded to afford the Labor Board an opportunity to make findings and rulings on these matters. It noted that the Circuit Court h'<ii:l not passed on the question whether the evidence sustained the finding of the Labor Board that Darlington and Deering Millilrnn were a single employer within the meaning of the Act and observed that if it became ne~es·sary for it to do so, the Circuit Court could determine that question after the Labor Board had made findings and rulings with respect to the requisite "purpose" and "effect". The Supreme Court clearly stated t::iat nothing in 11:.s opinion remanding the proceeding could be construed to express any opinions on any questions of fact.
I take issue with the assertion made in these hearings that the Supreme Court unaruimously reversed the 1963 decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals. To be sure, it disagreed with the Circuit Court's view concerning the right of an employer to go
out of business partly even if he had a discriminatory purpose for so doing.
In legal effect, the Supreme Court reached a conclusion similar to that of the Circuit Court. It was that the Labor Board had not passed upon certain issues essential to the determination of the proceeding, and for that reason no order enforcing its decision could be entered.
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS BEFORE LABOR BOARD
Pursuant to the decision of the Supreme Court, the proceeding wa.s successively remanded to the Circuit Court, the Board, and the hearing examiner. The hearing examiner conducted further hearings and made a "Trial Examiner's Supplemental Decision". in which he made these findings and this recommendation:
"Having found and concluded on the evidence received at this hearing as well as on the record previously made and in the light of the opinion of the Supreme Court and the Board's remand order,
"l. That the persons exercising control over Darlington did not a.ct to close it in order to discourage unionization at other Deering Milliken plants (I am now regarding them as an integral part cf the Deering Milliken enterprise) or elsewhere; and
"2. That the evidence adduced does not indicate either
(a) That is was realistically foreseeable that employees at other Deering Milliken plants or elsewhere would fear that their place or employment would be closed down if they persisted in organization activities; or
(b) That such other employees were in fact led so to fear, I recommend:
'"That any allegation or claim of violation of Section 8(a) (3) of the Act because of chilling purpose or effect as defined in the Supreme Court's opinion of March 29, 1965, with respect to employees in plants or businesses other than Darlington Manufacturing Company be dismissed."
On June 29, 19.67, the Labor Board rejected the findings and the recommendation of the trial examiner by the vote of 4 of its members, the 5th member not participating.
It found that Darlington was closed for the purpose of chilling unionism in the Deering Milliken plants and that it had the effect of so doing, and that in consequence Darlington and Deering Milliken were required to make the discharged employees of Darlington whole for lost wages until they obt·ained other employment or were placed on a preferential hiring list at Deerin Milliken Mills. THE SECOND DECISION OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
IN THE DARLINGTON CASE
Darlington and Deering Milliken appealed the de::i~ion of the Labor Board to the Circuit Court of Appeals, and on May 31, 1968, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Labor Board in an opinion writte:i by Judge Butzner and concurred in by Judges Sobeloff, Winter, and Craven. Judge Haynsworth wrote a concurring opinion in harmony with the majority opinion, which noted other questions that had not been passed on. Judge Bryan wrote a dissenting opinion in which Judge Boreman ccn'.!urred.
I find it difficult to accept the assertion made by some in this hearing that Judge Haynsworth's vote in the 1963 decision to deny enforcement of the Labor Board's decision or his action in the 1968 decision indicate anti-labor bias on his part. His vote in the 1963 decision is in perfect harmony with the decision of the Supreme Court holding that the proceeding was not ripe for an enforcement of the Labor Board's decision at that time because the Board had failed to make findings and rulings concerning certain crucial issues, and his vote in the 1968 decision was in favor of the victory which the union achieved by that decision. Personally, I am unable to concede that any judge is biased against a party when he
joins in rendering a decision in favor of that party.
The majority of the Circuit Court decreed enforcement of the Board's decision, and the proceeding is now in the hands of the Labor Board for this purpose--13 years after it originated.
It is appropriate to end this phase of my statement with some observations made by James J. Kilpatrick in a column entitled "Deering Milliken Dil.spute: A Landmark Case", which appeared in The Washington Star on September 11, 1969. Mr. Kilpatrick said:
"In the course of its hearings on the nomination of Clement Haynsworth to the Supreme Court, the Senate Judiciary Committee will find itself nibbling at the edges of one of the landmark cases of labor law-the great Deering Milliken case from Darlington, S.C.
"No other case quite like it has ever come along. You have to go back to Charles Dickens' fictional masterpiece, the chancery cause of Jarndyce v. Jarndyce, to find a legal proceeding so likely to interest the lawyers and to baffle the clients. The great Deering Milliken case has been pending now for thirteen years this month.
"The story actually dates from 1883, when the Darlington Manufacturing Company came into existence. Apparently the company never knew happy days. In 1937, heavily in debt, it went into bankruptcy. The Deering Milliken interests took over a two-thirds ownership at that time. The company limped through the war years, but by the early 1950's its profits were under 3 percent.
"Darlington may not have been the pocr ~s t of D-M's 27 mills, but it was among the most feeble. The company was operating in a building erected prior to 1900. It was working 40-inch looms when the market demanded wider cloth. Its print-cloth products were out of style. By early 1956, seven of its ten best customers were cutting back.
"At this juncture, the Textile Workers Union (AFL-CIO) appeared on the scene, with an intensive organizing campaign at the Darlington plant. The company strongly resisted, warning that higher production costs might kill the operation altogether, but on Sept. 6, 1956, the union won a recognition election by 258-252. It was the last straw. On Sept. 12, the Darlington directors and stockholders voted overwhelmingly to liquidate the business.
"The union at once challenged this decision. Months of hearings followed. At last, the National Labor Relations Board, in a 3-2 ruling, held that a plant closing prompted even in part by employees' union activities constitutes an unfair labor practice. The NLRB ordered Deering Milliken to make restitution.
"In November of 1963, the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court voted 3-2 to reverse the NLRB. The majority opinion was by Judge Albert Bryan; Judge Herbert BOTeman and Judge Haynsworth joined him. They felt that it was Darlington's 'absolute prerogative' to go out of business whenever it wished.
"F'ive more years of litigation followed. The Supreme Court remanded the case to the NLRB, which again ruled against Deering Milliken. At long last, in May af 1968, a still-divided Fourth Circuit Court-this time Haynsworth reluctantly concurred-directed enforcement of the NLRB order: Back pay would have to be paid.
"For the past 16 months, the NLRB regional office at Winst::m-Salem has been engaged in a stupendous task. It has been tracking down the 523 workers who were on the Darlington payroll in September of 1956. Some have died. About 30 cannot be located at all. Most of the workers found other einployment in a few months or a couple af years after Darlington wa~ closed and its machinery sold at auction. Some workers who were in their late 50's and early 60's never found equivalent jobs.
"Using crystal balls, tea leaves, informed
27286 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969 guesses, Social Security records, and individual interviews, the NLRB now must draw up a backpay specification. If Darlington had stayed in business---and the oompany's contention is th.at Darlington was doomed regardless of the union's victory-how much would eaioh worker have earned before he obtained an 'equivalent' job?
"Reed JohnSton, the NLRB's regional director, says his task will be done in 1970. Then his findings go to a trial examiner. thence to the NLRB, thence to the courts for review, and thence, and thence ... New platoons of lawyers will appear, representing survivors, minor children, and relatives of claimants. After thirteen years, an end ls not even distantly in sight." UNSATISFACTORY PROCEDURAL RULES GOVERNING
CASES ARISING UNDER NATIONAL LABOR RELA•
TIONS ACT
The tribunal which has the duty to decide a litigated case must apply the relevant la.w to the facts of the case. Since the testimony of witnesses usually puts the facts in dispute, the tribunal must have a procedure for finding the facts. The experience of generations has shown that the most reliable procedure for finding the facts from con:fl.icting evidence is for the finder of the facts to see the witnesses and observe their appearance and demeanor while testifying. By so doing, the finder of the facts can determine most effectively the value and trustworthiness of the testimony of the various witnesses.
This procedure for finding the facts prevails in courts of law where the trial judge or the trial jury finds the facts from the con:fl.icting testimony of the witnesses and where there are methods for correcting erroneous findings of fact.
It is otherwise with respect tio proceedings under the National Labor Relations Act. This Act makes the Labor Board the sole finder of the facts, but under the oontrolling regulations that Board does not see the witnesses. The testimony in a proceeding under the Aot is heard by a trial examiner who has an opportunity to observe the appearance and demeanor of the witnesses and who reports the testimony and his recoznmendations upon 1t to the Board in writing. The Board makes its finding of fact solely upon the basis of the written testimony presented to it by the trial examiner and has absolute and unreviewable authority to reject any reoommende.tions made to it by the trial examiner with respect to what facts should be found.
Since the Board has no opportunity to judge the value and trustworthiness of the testimony of the various witnesses by observing their appearance and demeanor while testifying, it is comparatively easy for the Board to reach erroneous conclusions from the con.:fl.icting testimony of the witnesses. Obviously the testimony of an Ananias and a George Washington look alike when reduced to cold print.
Another unsatisfactory rule of procedure applicable to proceedings under the National Labor Relations Act is the statutory rule which makes the findings of fact of the Board binding upon the Circuit Courts and the Supreme Court if they are "supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole." As a practical matter, this means that a Circuit Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court must accept the findings of fact of the Labor Board if such findings are supported by any evidence, even though the evidence accepted by the Board is incredible in nature or is contradicted by overwhelming testimony to the contrary. This statutory rule is inconsistent with the rule governing courts of law where findings of fact must be supported by the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence.
As an inevitable consequence of the statutory rule governing proceedings under the National La.bar Relations Act, a party to a proceeding under the Act has no remedy
whatsoever against erroneous or biased findings of fact.
Circuit Judge Hutcheson of the Fifth Circuit made some comments upon this in his opinion in N.L.R.B. v. Caroline Mills, Inc., 167 F. 2d 212, 213, when he stated that Circuit Courts are not permitted to review Labor Board proceedings to determine whether the findings of fact made by the Board "have been fairly, impartially, and justly arrived at", but whether they are supported by any evidence in the case. He indicated that the findings of fact in that particular case were biased findings by saying that the case presented "the usual picture of supporting findings arrived at by a process of quite uniformly 'crediting' testimony favorable to the charges and as uniformly 'discrediting' testimony opposed."
Despite my reluctance to do so, I am compelled by truth to observe th.at many persons experienced in proceedings before it assert that the Labor Board which sat on the Darlington case is not an impartial tribunal, but on the contrary has a bia.s which prompts it to prefer unions over management, strong unions over weak unions, unions over dissenting members, and unions over individual employees who do not wish to be unionized. Those who make this assertion cite chapter and verse which they allege proves its truth.
THE TESTIMONY IN THE DARLINGTON CASE
I wish to make some observations at this point as to what I believe the evidence in the Darlington case actually showed. I will neither affirm nor deny that my views on this matter are in.:fl.uenced by the fact that I was an advocate in the case. I will assert, however, that my views are firmly and honestly held.
None of the members of the Labor Board or of the courts which considered the Darlington case saw any of the witnesses or had any opportunity to observe their appearance and demeanor while testifying. Of all the public officers involved in the case, only Lloyd Buchanan, an impartial and competent trial examiner, had this opportunity. Notwithstanding this fact, his recommendation to the Board in respect to the testimony were rejected by the Board.
As the trial examiner appraised the testimony, it failed to establish that Darlington and Deering Milliken were a single employer. I am satisfied that a majority of the members of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals would have concurred in his appraisal of the testimony relating to this question if the statutory rule had permitted them to look behind the finding of the Labor Board, and make their own appraisal of the evidence relating to this issue.
Under the decision of the Supreme Court, there could be no liability in the Darlington case for the closing of Darlington unless Darlington constituted a single employer with the Deering Milliken mills, and unless Darlington was closed for the purpose of chilling unionism at the Deering Milliken mills and had the effect of doing so. In the very nature of things, motivation involves the state of mind of the persons taking the action under inquiry, and must be established by inferences drawn from facts. As the trial examiner appraised the testimony, Darlington was not closed for the purpose of chilling unionism at Deering Milliken plants elsewhere, and did not have any such effect. The Labor Board rejected the trial examiner's appraisal of the evidence on these points and found as a fact that the "purpose" and the "effect" essential to liability existed.
I honestly believe that a substantial miajoriity of the seven judges of the Fourth Circuit Court who sat in the Darlington case would have reached the same conclusion that the trial examiner reached if they had been permitted by law to go behind the findings of the Labor Board and make their own appraisal of the facts in respect to "purpose" and "effect."
Judge Bryan and Judge Boreman who, were familiar with all the testimony, ooncluded that the findings of the Labor Board in respect to the requisite "purpose" and "effect" were not supported by any evidence. They concluded that this was the only inference which could be rightly drawn from the testimony, i.e., that the directors and stockholders of Darlington dissolved the company because they honestly <and reasonably believed th.at existing conditions made it impossible for Darlington to remain in business as a viable economic enterprise, and that common prudence required its dissolution and the distribution of its assets among the stockholders according to their respective equities. I share in full measure their views as to what the final decision in the case should have been.
To enable others to pass on this matter for themselves, I insert at this point in my remarks a copy of the dissenting opinion which expresses the views of Judge Bryan and Judge Boreman.
Albert V. Bryan, Circuit Judge {dissenting):
The Supreme Court's prefatory recount of the facts, 380 U.S. 263, 85 S.Ct. 994, 13 L.Ed. 2d 827 ( 1964) , necessarily taken from the Board's findings, discloses a complete knowledge of all of the conduct and tie-ins which is now the predicate of the majority opinion. These premises the Supreme Court declared fell "short of establishing the factors of 'purpose' and 'effect' which are vital requisites of the general principles that govern a case of this kind." The controversy was remanded to the Board to make further findings.
Nothing significantly new was introduced after the remand. This is the observation of the trial examiner who heard the evidence on the return of the case to the Board. Indeed, this is manifest too in the majority's reliance now on what was said in dissent here, of course before the appeal. 325 F.2d 682, 689 (1963). My difficulty is understanding how our Court sees the facts as supporting "purpose and effect" where the Supreme Court could not.
A single director's, Roger Milliken, statements, writings and attitude are now imputed to the entire board of directors, and a majority of the stockholders, of Darlington by the Court to sustain the NLRB's finding that both the purpose and foreseeable effect of the plant closure was to "chill unionism" in the other Milliken plants. All of the power of Roger Milliken, and the entire linkage of Darlington with the other Milliken corporations, upon which the Court now counts, were known to the Supreme Court when it decided this case, and yet it did not think this evidence sufficient to arrive at the judgment now delivered by our majority.
The answer is that for its support the majority draws inferences and makes assumptions which are not warranted by the proof. With nothing to sustain it, the majority terms some of the Milliken units as "paper corporations". Also, it adopts a sweeping implication that their directors would do just exactly what Roger Milliken wished, for fear they be at once removed and replaced by him to register his views. This undeserved derogation of the directors stands refuted both by the absence of evidence to establish it, and by obstinate facts and testimony exactly opposite.
Darlington was closed for economic reasons according to its directors. At least they said so and gave the basis of their determination. The NLRB recognized this fact. In its supplemental decision it admitted that,
"(a) ccording to the testimony in this case, the financial condition of Darlington was discussed at the board meeting. It was brought out that Darlington had averaged less than a 3 percent return on invested capital in the previous 5 years, including the current year in which a loss of $40,000 was expected, and that, if market prices did not
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27287 rise or costs decrease, a loss of $240,000 could be anticipated in the following year."
There was no impeachment of the Darlington's board's word save NLRB's argument, now accepted by the majority, that the members' votes were nothing more than echoes of Roger Milliken's partisanship. Truth is the directors were persons of conviction and unquestioned character. There were 7 including Roger Milliken, and 3 of them had no interest in any other DeeringMilliken corporations. The remaining 3 were connections of the Milliken family. The relationship alone does not impugn their evidence on the economic advisability of the plant closing.
The stockholders must also be found unworthy of belief, for they voted to ratify the directors• action. Additionally, the directors of Cotwool and Deering Milliken must also be condemned in similar fashion. Each board voted, in favor of the closure, all of the Darlington shares held by its corporation, constituting a majority of Darlington's outstand1ng stock.
The NLRB's supplemental decision, upheld by the court, tells Darlington tha.t it did not have a right to liquida.te after the union election but instead should have made that decision prior to the election. With the financial losses that Darlington was currently sustaining, the corporation reasoned quite realistically that the foreseeable additional costs resulting from the arrival of the union, would be simply too much for the corporation to bear. Surely this consideration may be indulged, and acted upon, without offense to the National Labor Relations Act--indeed even if it be a mistaken conclusion.
The Trial Examiner emphasized thait, "I find and conclude from all of the testimony • • • at this hearing, confirmed by tha.t previously received, that a purpose at Darlington with respect to employees elsewhere has not .been shown; and that testimony concerning related events at other mills is slight, considering quantity and credibility, and that such events can not be causally traced to a chilling purpose at Darlington." (Accent added.)
I think it appalling that the Board and the courts may step into a business and tell the directors that their Judgment of the economics of their business was not correct, that it did not warrant the closing of their plant and that in reality they were evilly motivated in reference to union organization. More astounding, the Board presumes to know betlter than do the directors the basis for their decision-that they were simply paying servile obeisan<:e to another.
I would not enforce the Board's order. Boreman, Oircuit Judge, authorizes me to
state that he joins in this dissent. CIRCUMSTANCtli ATTENDING MY APPEARANCE
BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT
It seems not altogether amiS'S to make some comments at this time on the circumstances attending my appearance before the Supreme Court in the Darlington case.
I had no connection with the Darlington case before it reached the Supreme Court, and have not participated in it since the Supreme Court decided it.
The Labor Board had made this decision in the Darlington case: Even though Darlington was a separate enterprise, and even though its bleak prospect of survival as a viable economic unit had been further dimmed by the advent of a union pledged to prevent it from carrying out a program it deemed necessary to insure its survival, the National Labor Relations Act denied Darlington the right to go out of business completely and permanently, and thus to enable its stockholders to salvage their equities in its remaining assets, because Darlington's decision to do so at the particular time it acted had been found by the Labor Board to have been influenced to some degree by its dis-
pleasure with the union's narrow victory in the representation election.
The Circuit Court had rejected this interpretation of the National Labor Relations Act and refused to enforce the Labor Board's decision on the ground that a private employer had an absolute right "to go out of business in toto or to discontinue it in part permanently at any time" for any reasona decision which was supported by the overwhelming weight of authority among Circuit Courts up to that time. The Supreme Court had agreed to review the ruling of the Circuit Court.
At this time, I was asked to appear before the Supreme Court in behalf of Darlington and argue one proposition, and one proposition only, namely, that any private employer has an absolute right under the National Labor Relations Act and the Constitution to go out of business completely and permanently for any reason.
I do not know who decided I should be requested to argue this proposition before the Supreme Court. Candor compels the confession that I was highly honored by the request because Darlington and Deering Milliken were already represented by some of America's ablest lawyers. I was informed, in substance, that the request was made of me because I was known to entertain the abiding conviction that the chief objective of the Constitution is to protect Americans from tyranny, regardless of whether it comes from the legislative or the executive or the judicial branches of government.
I thereupon agreed to appear before the Supreme Court and argue that any private employer has an absolute right to go out of business completely and permanently for any reason satisfactory to himself. I did so because I know that this right must be recognized and respected if our country is to remain the land of the free.
To be sure, I received compensation for my services as an attorney, which was duly reported for income taxation to the appropriate officials of the United States and North Carolina. Inasmuch, however, as the principle I advocated before the Court is essential to the continued existence of my country as a free society, I would have embraced an opportunity to champion it before the Court without compensation-a course I followed in Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, where I had the privilege of joining a great lawyer, Leo Pfeffer, in defending the right of Americans to be free from Federal taxation for the support of religious institutions.
It is absurd to suggest, as Mr. Meany did during his appearance before the Judiciary Committee, that in supporting the President's nomination of Judge Haynsworth for the post of Supreme Court Justice, I am merely "arguing for my clients."
The truth is I have no clients nowadays. My obligations as an attorney in the Darlington case have been fully performed. Moreover, I am under no obligation to any person on earth which impairs one iota my capacity and my purpose to perform my duties as a United States Senator in accordance with my own honest judgment. At the risk of appearing immodest, I will confess my belief that the people of North Carolina have returned me to the Senate by overwhelming majorities on four occasions because they know that I carry my own sovereignty under my own hat.
I do not know what persons connected With Darlington and Deering Milliken think of Judge Haynsworth. But if they adopt a test similar to that expressed, in essence, by witnesses for the AFlr-CIO before this Committee, I.e., that no judge ought to be promoted to the Supreme Court if he has ever decided any case in a manner displeasing to them, the persons connected with Darlington and Deering Milliken must be opposed to Judge Haynsworth, who on two occasions joined the majority of the Fourth Circuit Judges in
decisions in the Darlington case adverse to them.
WHY I SUPPORT THE NOMINATION
I did not know Judge Haynsworth personally until these hearings began. I base my purpose to support his nomination solely upon his decisions and opinions as a Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Circuit in which I reside. These decisions and opinions have engendered in my mind an abiding faith that Judge Haynsworth will perform the duties of a Supreme Court Justice with what Edmund Burke called "the cold neutrality of the impartial Judge." America must have Supreme Court Justices who Will do this if her people are to enjoy equal Justice under law.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. What is the will of the Senate?
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres
ident, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum cal be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
FEDERAL COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFETY ACT OF 1969
The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill <S. 2917) to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
AMENDMENT NO. 177
Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 177 and ask that the amendment, beginning on line 6 of page 1 and carrying over through line 2 on page 2 of the amendment, be read at this time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated.
The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. The Senator from Montana <Mr. METCALF) offers an amendment:
On page 86, between lines 18 and 19, insert the following:
"(J) At the commencement of any inspection of a coal mine by an authorized representative of the Secretary, the authorized representative, if any, of the miners at the mine at the time of such inspection shall be given an opportunity to a.ccompany the authorized representative of the Secretary on such inspection.".
Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, the whole purpose of the amendment is to provide that when the representative of the Secretary, the mine inspector, goes into a mine and makes an inspection, some member of the union or, if there is not a union, some worker be authorized to accompany the inspector to see what he has inspected and to report back to the miners.
This is a very important amendment because many of the miners would say, "Well, that inspection was a whitewash. The inspector just walked through the mine and did not observe any violations." This might be said if a representative of the union or a representative of the employees in whom the employees have confidence does not accompany him.
The only purpose of the amendment is to require the mineowner to let one of the representatives of the employees ac-
27288 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969
company the inspector as he goes through the mine.
In 90 percent of the cases, the mineowner will welcome such a representative of the union and be glad to have him accompany the inspector. However, there might arise a case where the mineowner would say, "Look, I own this mine. The only reason I am letting you come in is because of the passage of this legislation. But I am not going to let one of my miners follow along with you and make a report on the safety requirements."
If that were to occur, my amendment would come into play. That is the only purpose of the amendment. It is so that there will be confidence in the inspection that the Secretary is going to institute.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Certainly I have gone over this matter with the distinguished Senator from Montana. I believe that the objective is clear and worthy.
I would suggest that no people k11ow the mine that is under inspection as do the mine owner and the miners themselves. What the amendment would provide would be the opportunity for a representative of the miners, the men who work in that mine, to accompany the inspector as he goes through what, for him, could be ·a new mine or one that he has not seen in 3 or 4 months. The amendment would permit the miners to have a representative go with that inspe:::tor.
Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, it might well happen that that miner who has been working jn that mine would help the inspector by calling attention to cer tain safety violations. He is familiar wit l1 the operation of the mine, and he would be able to represent his fell ow union members or his fellow mine workers to reveal safety violations.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. They would be conditions that existed. Whether they were violations or not would be the inspector's conclusions. However, conditions as the miners themselves know them to exist from day to day in the mines could be pointed out.
I know that the Senator from Montana and I and other members of our committee have spent some time in the mines. It is easy to just get lost in the tunnels that wind their way, 200, 300, 400, 500, or 600 feet underground.
The illumination is not what, in my judgment, it should be, although the pending bill, by the way, would provide for illumination. However, for a multitude of reasons the miners themselves should have someone, I believe, accompany the inspector, as the Senator's amendment would provide.
Mr. :METCALF. I am glad that the Senator from New Jersey agrees with me.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. METCALF. I yield. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I join in
the comments made by the Senator from New Jersey. I think the amendment offered by the Senator from Montana is a very fine and helpful one. Certainly no one would be more interested in safety conditions in a mine than the miners who work in the mine.
It is a very fine amendment. Mr. METCALF. I thank the Senator.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, there is a provision in the bill that there be no advance notice given to the mine of an upcoming inspection under the law. And the pending amendment is in no way contrary to that provision.
Mr. METCALF. The Senator is correct. The inspector would call at the mine. He would report to the mine office and say, "I am going through the mine." There would automatically be a shop steward or some representative of the union present. Most of these mines are under the jurisdiction of the United Mine Workers. And if a mine were not under the jurisdiction of the United Mine Workers, the inspector would say, "Pick out someone to go through the mine to be confident that this inspection is not a whitewash or is not just a superficial sort of inspection. This is going to be a genuine survey and tour of the mine."
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, the amendment would not in any way delay a mandatory inspection under the law.
Mr. METCALF. I am not trying to delay any inspection at all.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, as the chairman of the subcommittee, I am sure the amendment would meet with the approval of the other members of the committee. I have discussed this amendment with Senator RANDOLPH, the ranking majority member of the committee, and he completely agrees that this is a useful and important provision. I am charged with the responsibility of presenting the bill to the Senate, and I am prepared to accept this most worthy and, I think, very important amendment offered by the Senator from Montana.
I believe that the Senator from Kent ucky <Mr. CooPER) , who comes from a State with a high concentration of coal mining, is of a similar view.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment of t he Senator from Montana <Mr. METCALF ) .
The amendment on page 86 of the bill was agreed to. -
Mr. SCHWEIKER. Mr. President, I rise in support of S. 2917, the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969.
My home State, Pennsylvania, was for many decades the leading coal' mining State of the Union. Today it is second only to West Virginia in tonnage produced. Therefore, I speak not only as a Member of this body but also as a Senator representing Pennsylvania, in expressing my support for what this bill aims to do and the.way in which it would accomplish it.
Coal mining has been called the deadliest major occupation in our Nation. Over the last 100 years that records have been kept, more than 120,000 fatalities have been recorded in coal mines. There are 1ess than 150,000 active coal miners today, but in 1968 they accounted for 309 mine fatalities-about one fatality for every 500 miners. Pennsylvania, with some 25,000 active coal miners, had 33 coal mine fatalities in 1968, and as of July 31 this year, it had another 24 reported coal mine deaths. In this day and age neither Pennsylvania nor the Nation
can afford to see this tragic and wasteful spectacle go on.
Beyond the stark numbers of coal miners who annually lose their lives, there are the less serious lost-time accidents, averaging three or four per miner in his lifetime. And finally there is the peril of pneumoconiosis, or black lung, which afflicts one out of 10 active miners and one out of five inactive ones.
Many things will be needed in order to reverse these serious health and accident trends in coal mining. We will need changes in mining technology, effective safety programs carried on by the industry and, in some cases, more safety consciousness among miners themselves. We will need better mine safety laws and enforcement by States. But in addition, it is essential that Congress act to strengthen the existing weak Federal coal mine safety legislation which has stood basically unchanged since 1952.
This new legislation, S. 2917, is strong legislation. It is legislation fully responsive to the safety crisis in the coal industry. It will stand as a forthright effort by Congress to insure the health and safety of the coal industry's most valuable resource, the miner.
Mr. President, I was a cosponsor of S. 1300, a coal mine health and safety bill offered by the administration and the bill which has provided the basis for much of what is contained in the bill before this Chamber, S. 2917. I have also been privileged to serve on the Subcommittee of Labor, which began its work on this bill with the first hearings February 27, · 1969. I would like to review briefly some of what I regard as the key provisions of S. 2917 and urge that they be passed by this body without any delay or any weakening amendments.
The bill will impose on coal mines for the first t ime a standard of purity for the air that miners must work in and will breathe underground.
The bill will set mandatory interim safety standards for such problems as roof control, ventilation, combustible materials, electrical equipment, and op~n flames inside coal mines.
The bill will for the first time require the same safety performance standards for so-called "non.gassy" mines as have been required in "gassy" mines.
The bill will ~ive the Secretary cf the Interior the power to insure new hP::iJ th and safety standards and the power to enforce these standards.
The bill will require regular Federal inspections of all coal mines at le~st four times a year, not counting spct inspections.
And finally the bill embodie3 a strengthening amendment wh'ch I proposed when the bill was before the full Labor and Public Welfare Comm' ttee July 30, and which was adopted unanimously. My amendment, designed t o protect miners in coal mines with excessive quantities of explosive gas, provided that the Secretary of the Interior cou1d station a Federal m·ne 1nspector daily at mines he considers most susceptible to explosions.
The Department of the Interior classtfies about 400 coal mines in the Nation as "gassy." About 100 of these are foimd )n Pennsylvania. And the danger of ex-
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27289 plosions at these gassy mines can be most acute.
It was a mine explosion that took 78 lives last November in the Farmington, W. Va., mine disaster. More recently, in an anthracite mine in Schuylkill County, Pa., on July 22, 1969, one miner was killed in an explosion caused by methane gas and six others were hospitalized with burns and concussions.
Clearly the miners who daily go to work in mines that have been proven to be excessively gassy need the added margin of security of a full-time Federal mine inspector.
Moreover, this provision will increase the participation of Federal mine inspectors in the effort to prevent mine explosions. It will impose on these -inspectors some duties they would not otherwise have had. However, I feel that just as Congress in this bill is imposing more stringent safety requirements on mine operators and on individual miners, Congress should likewise place some additional duties on the executive branch agency charged with implementing these laws. The effort to make mines safer and more healthful should be a united effort by the Federal Government, the mine operators and the miner himself.
Mr. President, Congress has a long overdue obligation to enact strong Federal laws to insure the safety and health of coal miners. I earnestly hope that this body can meet its obligation by promptly passing S. 2917, the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969.
Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, I voted to report S. 2917 from our Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. I did so because our hearings revealed a need for establishjng Federal health standards to protect the health of our Nation's coal miners, and also showed that many of the existing safety standards applicable to mine operators and miners under Federal law are inadequate.
In all fairness, I think it should be noted that the coal industry itself realized that present standards applicable to the health and safety of working coal miners should be substantially improved, and that the vast majority of stricter standards contained in this bill were adopted with the cooperation and support of the coal operators.
My State of Vermont does not have any coal mines, so I do not view myself as any kind of an expert on coal mine safety problems. We did have a similar health problem in that dust from our marble, granite, and slate industries often resulted in silicosis, a disease long diagnosed as tuberculosis and just as fatal as black lung. This problem, however, was remedied by appropriate State legislation during the 1940's.
Accordingly, I am not opposed to this bill in what it attempts to do. I am aware, however, of the pressures that have been brought to bear in drafting some of its provisions. Outside crusaders have come forward who, I venture, know little more about the operations of the coal industry than I do. Internal union conflicts, including a union election campaign, have forced both sides to try to outpromise each other as to what they desire in the way of legislation for their members, instead of taking a responsible
and objective view of what can be done given the present state of our technology.
My main concern is over whether in some areas of this bill, we may have engaged in "overkill." Not being from a coal-producing State, I shall not propose amendments on many provisions which I think my colleagues from States which mine coal should consider carefully.
With regard to my statement about overkill, I bring to my colleagues' attention the following paragraph which was included in the individual views to the committee report filed by the junior Senator from Colorado and myself:
We all desire a strong bill. But a strong bill must be workable to be effective. To be workable means more than merely the inclusion of tough standards. It requires the inclusion of the best administrative procedures we can devise to permit the most effective operation and implementation of this legislation. It means the establishment of realistic timetables for the adoption of mandatory standards dependent upon new technology. Above all, it is of vital importance that the legislation which we enact to strengthen the present law, with regard to the health and safety of our coal miners, not also include requirements that may well endanger the productive capacity of the coal industry or otherwise threaten the wellbeing of other segments of our economy.
I am informed that the bill in its present form may well bring on a shortage of coal which will have repercussions that our economy and people cannot afford. This possibility does concern me. It is no answer to say that if this does occur, Congress can enact emergency legislation to remedy this situation.
For example, electric utilities, especially, are heavily dependent on coal for their fuel supply. A decline in the production of coal can well lead to brownouts and blackouts in our major industries.
In this regard, the Director of the Bureau of Mines stated that natural gas could, to some extent, replace the coal needed to operate generators for the production of electricity.
He went on to say, however, that the capability- of the natural gas industry to supply significant amounts of fuel to electric utilities for a prolonged period of time is severely limited, particularly along the eastern seaboard.
With this background, the following two factors warrant critical attention by the Congress in enacting this legislation. I note them for the record, leaving my colleagues from coal producing States the burden of forming judgments as to whether there is sufficient merit t:> either, to warrant amendments to this bill.
The first factor involves the establishment of mandatory dust standards. The bill reported by the committee establishes a standard of 3 milligrams of dust per cubdc meter 6 months after enactment. Three years after enactment the standard is reduceci to 2 milligrams of dust per cubic meter.
During the first 3 years permits of noncompliance may be granted which will enable mines to operate with dust levels of up to 4.5. During the next 3 years certificates of noncompliance may be granted to permit the dust levels not to exceed 3. Six years after enactment, the 2 standard becomes mandatory for
all coal mines unless the Secretary of Interior has issued an order finding that technology does not permit a mandatory 2 standard which order has not been vetoed by either House of Congress.
The administration and Secretary Hickel favor a different approach. The Bureau of Mines states that all mines in the country can meet a 4.5 standard within a year and therefore take the position that the Secretary of Interior should be authorized to extend the time to meet the 4.5 standard on a mine-bymine basis for an additional 6-mJnth period, which would result in the 4.5 standard becoming mandatory 1 year after enactment.
Similarly, with respect to establishing the 3 and 2 mandatory standards the administration and the Department of Interior do not feel that present technology is far enough advanced to permit the establishment of dates certain f0r these standards in legislation. Their position has been that the Secretary of tJ.1e Interior should be directed to lower the dust standards to these levels as soon as possible consistent with the development of new technology rather than writing specific dates into legislation as to when these standards must be met.
The second factor which Congress shl>uld consider is a requirement that small drift mine oµerators must use the type of heavy permissible electrical equipment which is required to be used in the large underground shaft mines. The desire to eliminate the distinction between gassy and nongassy mines is perhaps understandable. On the other hand, consideration should be given to finding certain types of less expensive equipment permissible for use in drift mines which admittedly wou1d n:>t be perm!ssible in undergrou..11.d mines.
It is time we really started to consider what we are doing to small businessmen and to an ecJnomically depressed section of our country in the name of "health and safety," to determine whether health and safety considerations really necessitate applying the same standards for heavy permissible equipment to small drift mines which are to be applied to large underground mines.
These small drift mines produce around 150 million tons of coal a year, or about 25 percent of our annual coal production. Drift mines are very shallow. They are cut laterally into the sides of hills and most extend for only a few hundred yards.
By contrast, the remaining 75 percent of our annual coal production is done in large underground minrs. These mines are shaft mines and exte?J.d for miles underground.
I am concerned about the people in Appalachia. I am concerned about their health and safety, but I do not believe that requiring them to use only the heavy expensive equipmfnt required for underground mines will promote their health and safety.
This will promote the drift mine operators going out of business. It will promote more unemployment in Appalachia when the miners in these m;nes are jobless and when the railroads lay off additional workers because they are no longer needed on trains to haul the coal away.
27290 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
It will create further economic hardship in a section of our country now trying to get back on its feet again.
I am concerned about putting these small drift mines which employ an average of about 10 men each out of business by requiring them to purchase machinery and equipment specially designed for use in deep shaft mines if health and safety factors do not, in fact, require such action.
In conclusion, I repeat that I am strongly in favor of increasing the protection to the health and safety of our coal miners. I support most of the provisions in this bill and will vote for it on final passage, regardless of whether amendments I deem desirable are or not adopted.
I caution my colleagues, however, that there may well come a day of reckoning when we will regret our action if we enact legislation containing provisions which are unworkable, unrealistic, or inequitable, and which, apart from any health or safety considerations, cause substantial disruptions of any segments of our economy.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF HEARINGS ON DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC WORKS FUNDS Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, as
chairman of the Subcommittee on the District of Columbia of the Committee on Appropriations, I am announcing today that we are having a hearing at 2 :30 p.m. on Tuesday, September 30, toquestion the economic justification for timing of the expenditure of the large sums proposed for the District of Columbia subway, highway, and public works during this highly inflationary period.
The District is now asking that both fiscal year 1969 and 1970 subway funds be appropriated in the 1970 fiscal year. District of Columbia funds would trigger additional amounts of Federal transportation money which would bring the total to at least $120 million for fiscal year 1970. This is more than double the funds originally requested for the year in which initial construction was to begin.
This in turn means the eventual expenditure of at least $2.5 billion for the subway system. In the peak years, almost $400 million will be spent.
This is not all. Expenditures for a vast network of questionable bridges and freeways have been tied to the subway program. They include expenditures for the Three Sisters Bridge, the Potomac Freeway, the East Leg, and the North Central Freeway. Some $370 million are involved.
Not only is this a bad time to build, but also, many of these projects are highly questionable in themselves.
This is a period of excessive price increases. Except for unneeded military and space programs, nothing fuels the fires of inflation more than expenditures for public works. They bid up the price of raw materials and skilled labor. They have what the economists call a "multiplier effect," on the economy.
Yet, at the same time the President and the Budget Bureau have called for
cutbacks in Federal public works projects all over the country, they have supported a doubling of the subway funds in fiscal year 1970, total subway expenditures of at least $2.5 billion, and a go ahead on at least $370 billion of highly dubious bridge and road projects. While cutting back elsewhere, we are asked to start building the biggest public works project in the history of the District of Columbia, at a time of most serious inflation.
The subcommittee will want to question the economic justification for such vast expenditures in this period of very low unemployment and rapidly accelerating price increases. How can the Budget Bureau justify cutting back projects all over the country while at the same time they accelerate expenditures of subway funds here and approve highly questionable bridge and highway expenditures as a part of the program? The subcommittee will want to examine those questions very closely.
I do not mean to imply that I am opposed to the subway. It is an excellent long-term investment. It is obviously needed. But timing of expenditures is crucial in fighting inflation. It may be necessary to go ahead with the subway forthwith. But before we do so, the subcommittee and Congress should satisfy themselves that the expenditures will not add to the serious inflationary problem in the Nation.
The President has urged every State and locality to cut back on highway and other public works projects. We will want to ask if the District of Columbia is doing its part.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. PROXMIRE. I am happy to yield to the distinguished Senator from Kentucky.
Mr. COOPER. The Senator may recall that last year Congress considered the biennial authorization bill for the Federal-aid highway system. Something very unusual happened in the consideration of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968. In the conference between the Senate Public Works Committee and the House Public Works Committee, a conference on which I served, we found that the House had written into its bill a section purporting to require the city of Washington to accept a road plan which, curiously enough, was developed in the House.
The senior Sena tor from Wisconsin knows that it is the general practice-under the Federal highway acts and by regulation of the Bureau of Roads, now located in the Department of Transportation-that local bodies, the States, and the District of Columbia in the situation of a State, have the responsibility to lay out the road systems which the local government considers suit its needs. Of course, the Bureau of Roads and the Department of Transportation pass upon the State plans to determine if they meet the requirements of title 23 of the United States Code, encompassing the Federal highway acts. But this was the first time I recall that anyone had ever heard of the Congress attempting to lay out a road system for a local governmental body.
The District of Columbia had not approved this road system. T}J.e House bill asserted an authority to direct the District of Columbia to construct the system laid out in their bill, which included, of course, the proposed Three Sisters Bridge and Potomac River Freeway.
My understanding is that the superhighway would be tunnelel under the Lincoln Memorial, the Mall and the Tidal Basin and then join the Southwest Expressway, which is already tra:fficbound. It was also proposed that there should be a leg running through the center of the city, through a section in which there is very poor housing, which would drive those people out of their houses, and cause them to seek homes, at a time very difficult to buy or build a home.
But the chief point is that the House of Representatives undertook to impose this system on the District of Columbia. We opposed section 23 in the conference and did our best to have it removed. The House was adamant. It would not remove one section, although it was somewhat modified in conference. Inasmuch as the bill embodied the highway funds for all the States, the conference report came to the Senate. I spoke in the Senate on July 29 about this matter. I spoke against it, and voted against the conference report. But under the rules, a conference report cannot be amended or changed in any particular and must be adopted or rejected as a whole. So the Senate had no opportunity to consider the section on its merits.
I hope the Senator's committee will study this question very carefully. The effort represented in section 23 of the Highway Act is wrong in principle; it is wrong practically.
I understand what the Senator has said today. What would the people of the Senator's State of Wisconsin think, what would the people of my State think, if Congress attempted or asserted the authority to lay out their road system for them? We are not engineers. We have no expertise in this field. I say it is wrong in principle and it is wrong in practice.
Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the distinguished Senator from Kentucky.
I agree wholeheartedly about the gross unsoundness of Congress trying to legislate something that is as peculiarly local as a road system, and especially under the circumstances the Senator from Kentucky has just described.
I assure the Senator from Kentucky that our subcommittee will indeed inquire into that. The assumption has been made that once action was taken by the House, everyone could forget about the Senate, that we would just rubber stamp what they had. It seems to me that we do have a responsibility to consider this matter very carefully, and the subcommittee will certainly do so.
Mr. COOPER. I know it is a very difficult situation, because the District of Columbia needs a subway system very badly. But the House said, "We will not release funds for a subway system until you build this road system throughout the city of Washington."
The Senator's subcommittee should look into the questions raised by that bill.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27291 Mr. PROXMmE. May I say to the
Senator from Kentucky that I have been deeply concerned for a long, long time about some of the proposals involved in this matter, and this should be an opportunity for the subcommittee to go into it in detail.
I invite the Senator from Kentucky, if he has the time, to come to that meeting, which will be held on Tuesday afternoon at 2: 30, in the Capitol.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I opposed section 23 in conference, and I opposed it on the floor of the Senate when the conference report came out. The Senator from Montana, the distinguished majority leader, supported me. His colleague, the junior Senator from Montana supported me, as well as the Senator from Idaho <Mr. JORDAN) who was a member of the conference committee, and others. The Senator from Idaho made a great fight against it-in conference.
The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968 had within its scope the entire FederalAid highway system for the United States for 2 years. As I said, we had support from citizen's groups, the mayor and the District of Colwnbia Council, and from the Secretary of Transportation, among others. The newspapers in Washington gave us no support.
The principle is wrong, absolutely wrong. The practice is wrong to attempt to impose on a city a vast highway system which it does not ask for and objects to. That is the awful situation in which we find ourselves. I do not believe the Senate should acquiesce in it.
JUDGE HAYNSWORTH: TRIAL BY ORDEAL
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, the Committee on the Judiciary this morning concluded its ninth day of hearings considering the nomination of Judge Clement F.-Haynsworth to be Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Thirtyfour people were scheduled to be heard. The hearings were finished today, except for calling Judge Haynsworth as a final witness. This is scheduled for early next week.
These hearings have been extremely useful. They have provided the committee and the public with the information concerning Judge Haynsworth as an individual and as a jurist. They have provided to the committee the knowledge necessary to make its decision.
Unfortunately, however, these hearings have been much more. They represent a frantic effort to discredit the integrity of an honorable man and a fine jurist.
The integrity of Judge Haynsworth is a question properly to be investigated by the committee. If all of the testimony were truly concerned with this, I would not object. But the true attack is not being made on the issue of whether or when Judge Haynsworth bought stock, and his supporters and his detractors know it. The issue being fought over is this: What will be the political and philosophical viewpoint of those appointed to the Supreme Court?
There is no foundation for the charge that Judge Haynsworth should have dis-
qualified himself from the Darlington case. That allegation died in the second day of hearings from a lack of facts, a lack of improper conduct, and a lack of realism. Judge Walsh, former Deputy Attorney General of the United States, former Federal judge, and chairman of the American Bar Association Committee on the Federal Judiciary, testified that there was nothing improper or unethical about Judge Haynsworth's participating in the Darlington case.
There is no foundation for the charge that Judge Haynsworth violated the standards of ethics in the Brunswick case. The case was decided before the stock was purchased. Judge Winter, circuit judge and author of the Brunswick opinion, testified that Judge Haynsworth was not in violation of the canons or the statute because he did not disqualify himself.
There is no requirement of trial by ordeal to qualify a man for service on the U.S. Supreme Court.
The danger to the United States from such trial should be apparent. In commenting on a similar situation in the early 1930's, Mr. George H. Haynes, author of "The Senate of the United States," stated on page 760:
But the chief significance of the recent contests in the filling of vacancies upon the Supreme Bench lies not in the struggle between conservatism and liberalism, but in the group pressure which under the Senate's new procedure is likely to determine the fate of nominations. The nominee's entire record gets little chance for fair appraisal. It may prove a more difficult task in the future for the President to find strong men and able jurists, of the caliber of those who have built up the Supreme Court's prestige, who will allow their names to be placed in nomination, if they must first be subjected to an inquisition in committee heaiings as to their past records, pertinent or not pertinent to Supreme Court service, as to their personal investments, and as to the opinions which they hold upon complicated and controverted economic and social questions likely to be involved in litigation before the Court, and then must have their nominations made the subject of bitter debate on the floor of the Senate, where racial, sectional, and political considerations may bulk so big that questions of the nominee's character and fitness are half forgotten.
The Judiciary Committee is agreed and was agreed at the beginning of these hearings that a man's philosophy is not at issue here. That is determined by the President who nominates him. As it was put by a member of the Democratic Party who testified in support of the nominee:
Obviously given my point of view and experience I would without doubt have preferred a different administration to be appointing a more liberal Justice. But my side lost an election, and the fact of the matter is that as a member of the bar we are called upon by Canon 8 to rise to the defense ot judges unjustly criticized, and it is my abiding conviction, sir, that the criticism directed to the disqualification or nonqisqualtfication of Judge Haynsworth (in the Darlington case) is a truly unjust criticism which cannot be fairly made.
Mr. President, I will support the nomination of Judge Haynsworth to the Supreme Court. I am confident that I will be joined by a majority of members of the Committee on the Judiciary, and
when it comes to the fioor, by a majority of the Senate.
FEDERAL COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFETY ACT OF 1969
The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill <S. 2917) to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
<At this point, Mr. BELLMON assumed the chair.)
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, yesterday I queried the distinguished Senator from New Jersey with respect to the possibility of having language included in the bill which would provide for a program under which disability benefits would be paid to miners suffering from black lung and other pulmonary diseases who do not qualify under State law. At that time, the able Senator indicated it might be possible to work out a short-term interim program to provide disability payments to men disabled by the disease.
The able Senator said he would try to find some way to devise a temporary program leading ultimately toward a long-range program, thus giving the committee time in which to study the problem in depth.
I think it is fair to say for the RECORD that the able Senator and I have been conferring this morning and that we both have had discussions with the Representative from Kentucky in the other body, Mr. PERKINS, and that there seems to be favorable sentiment on that side of the Capitol for such an approach.
I just want to urge the manager of the bill at this time to devote every effort possible over the weekend to work out some program whereby these old and disabled miners, who have contracted this disease, perhaps 5, 10, or 15 years ago, and who have been in forced retirement for all these years but who have not qualified under State statutes for disability payments, can be given assistance through some Federal-State program.
I personally would urge that the cost of such a program be borne initially by the Federal Government. I hesitate to think that we would have to load an additional expense on the management of the mines at this time when overhead costs are already very high and at a time when it is difficult for the product to remain competitive in the marketplace.
I want to express the hope that we might devise some way for the Federal Government, along with the States, over a period of years, to shoulder the burden of the cost so that the mine management would not have to carry this additional burden.
But I strongly believe that out of fairness to the miners, and to the wives and widows of miners who have lost their lives through the contracting of pulmonary diseases from the inhalation of silica and coal dust, we in Congress have a responsibility to work out some program whereby disabled miners would be given help when they are not eligible under State workmen's compensation programs. Many of them cannot qualify under State statutes which are not retro-
27292 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENA TE September 26, 1969 active, and yet they do need assistance. I would like to see them get assistance so they would not have to be on welfare programs, so that they could have some steady income, and so that they might be able to provide for themselves and their families.
Mr. President, I wish to express appreciation to the manager of the bill for his sympathetic understanding of this problem and his strong assurance of cooperation in making the effort to work out some feasible program.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, let me say that following the ftoor discussions, prompted by the Senator from West Virginia's <Mr. BYRD) expression of concern in this area, considerable progress has been made, even to this point, in working toward exactly the objective described by the Senator. It is an objective which I can certainly understand will be agreed to, and we are working toward that end in a program the Senator suggests, which could be interim in nature until perhaps the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare could, after study, suggest an ongoing compensation program for miners disabled as a result of their occupation, particularly respiratory diseases which they have contracted, for only one reasson; namely, the inhalation of dust in the mines.
Thus, at this point, we are on our way to suggesting to the Senate exactly what the Senator from West Virginia hopes we will, and I hope it will be acceptable to all concerned.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I recognize the fact that there must be fairly accurate cost estimates worked out, and I realize that the Senator's committee wants to go into this phase of the problem before it launches into any longrange program. I am greatly reassured by the Senator from New Jersey, and I know that I express the sentiments of my colleague <Mr. RANDOLPH) in what I have said today. My colleague and I have discussed the matter at length upon several occasions.
THE NIXON SOCIAL SECURITY PROGRAM; OFF TARGET, AND NOT ENOUGH
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, President Nixon sent his social security message to the Congress yesterday, and it is a heartbreaking disappointment.
For one thing, the 10-percent increase he proposes would be wiped out by rising living costs months before .the first check would be mailed.
For another, the President has refused to grappel with the fundamental issue, which is simply that social security benefits are generally inadequate. Attaching a 10-percent increase will be of little help to most recipients, especially those who now receive the minimum of $55 a month.
President Nixon says he will seek an automatic cost-of-living increase to keep social security recipients' heads above water.
But what he really is proposing is this: First. That the 10-percent increa.se
take place in April. And yet, even by the
most conservative projections, the costof-living index would rise to the 10-percent level-from the time of the last social security increase-by December or so.
Second. Since the President proposes no increase in minimum benefits, those now at $55 a month would receive only $60.50 a month. Their case would continue to remain so low that any automatic cost-of-living increase would be pathetically low and meaningless.
Third. In other words, the President is simply asking that we perpetuate today's inadequacies, but on a slightly higher plateau.
What are the facts about social security coverage today? As one who has long supported the old age, survivors, and insurance program, I have supported congressional efforts for broadened coverage. But I would be blind indeed if I did not recognize its limitations.
The Senaite Special Committee on Aging recently asked a task force to evaluate social security coverage and other topics related to its subject: "The Economics of Aging: Toward a Full Share in Abundance."
About social security coverage, the task force had this to say:
1. At the end of 1968, Social Security benefits averaged $98.90 a month for the retired aged worker, $51.20 for the spouse, and $86.50 for the aged widow.
2. A 1963 survey of the Social Security Adml.nistraition found that a large number of beneficiaries had little cash in<:Ome besides their benefit. In 1962, about one-third of the non-married beneficiaries received less than $150 in money inoome other than benefits during the entire year. One-fifth of the couples had less than $300 in addition to their benefits.
And there had been little improvement in this respect since 1957, when the income of beneficiaaies had last been studied.
Clearly, a 10-percent increase will mean Ii ttle for the average social security beneficiary.
Clearly, we need far more thoroughgoing reform than proposed by the President.
One such plan for reform has been fashioned by Representative JACOB H. GILBERT in consultation with the National Council of Senior Citizens and with the technical assistance of the economics staff of the AFL-CIO.
The Gilbert plan is worthy of careful study because of dedication of its supporters and also because it offers a plan for genuine reform.
Its major features include an increase of 10 percent, effective in January as the first step toward an overall 50-percent increase in benefits; with an increase in minimum benefits from $55 to $80.
In January 1972, a 12-percent acrossthe-board increase with a $90 minimum benefit.
In January 1974, a 14-percent acrossthe-board increase with a $103 minimum benefit.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD a news release by Representative GILBERT describing major features of his bill, together with a statement made at the same time by Nelson Cruikshank, president of the National Council of Senior Citizens.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: CONGRESSMAN GILBERT PROPOSES INCREASED
SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS TO ELDERLY AND DISABLED
Rep. Jacob H. Gilbert (D.-N.Y.), today introduced a comprehensive Social Security and Medical Care proposal which would increase total social security benefits by at lea.st 50%. Improvements include a 40% general increase in benefits and a $103 monthly minimum accomplished in three steps spread over the next four years and thereafter would provide automatic increases tied to the cost of living.
"The need to substantially raise t.he general level of social security payments becomes very clear to anyone who looks at the level of payments and considers the fact that most social security beneficiaries have very little in the way of continuing income other than what they get under social security," Gilbert said as he introduced the legislation.
Social Security experts and observers agreed that Gilbert's bill is one of the most comprehensive ever submitted to the Congress. It calls for some 15 major changes in the current law. In addition to increasing benefits and tying them to the cost of living, it would finance the medical insurance part of Medicare through contributions pa.id during the beneficiary's working years, in the same way hospital insurance and cash benefits are now financed.
"The bill I am introducing today would go a long way toward maximizing the potential benefits of Social Security for the benefit of more people and. for the benefit of the nation as a whole," Gilbert said.
The bill contains these improvements: Retirement benefit increases ranging from
a minimum of $103 to a maximum of $378.50 for workers who draw benefits at age 65 or later.
Basing a worker's benefits on his highest ten years' earnings out of any 15 consecutive years·after 1950.
At age 65, one hundred percent widow's benefit.
Higher benefits for early retirees (those who retire before age 65) .
For beneficiaries who continue working, increases the amount of income a person can earn and still get full social security benefits.
Increasing the lump-sum death payment to $500.
Reduce the disability benefit waiting period from 6 months to 3 months and liberalize the definition of disability.
Eliminate the age-50 limitation for disabled widows and increase this payment to equal regular widow benefits.
Extend health insurance coverage to the disabled.
Extend medical care coverage to include presoription drugs.
Gilbert said the costs of his bill would be met out of a $15,000 contribution and benefit base; a one-tenth of one percent increase in the presently scheduled employee and employer contribution rates; and a gradually increasing government contribution eventually equal to approximately one-third the total cost of the program.
REMARKS BY NELSON H. CRUIKSHANK, PRESIDENT, NATIONAL COUNCIL OF SENIOR CITIZENS
Congressman Gilbert: I'm here today as President of the National Council of Senior Citizens and for two specific purposes.
The first is to thank you on behalf of our more than two million members of affiliated clubs of elderly people from coast to coast for your concern with the plight of the older American, and for your having introduced this bill with its ten-point program designed to meet their needs.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27293 There has been an increasing awareness,
in recent years especially, that the older citizen has not shared the expanding affluence of the American economy, and that his standard of living has not kept pace with that enjoyed by the great majority of his fellow citizens.
The findings of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, chaired by Senator Williams of New Jersey, have documented what we know to be the case from letters and reports that come to us from our members and clubs in every section of the country:
Three out of every 10 older people are living in poverty. Most of them were able to support themselves in decency and reasonable comfort--until they became old.
About half the families whose head is over 65 have less than $4,000 annual income-a fifth of them have les than $2,ffOO.
Older people living alone are the worst off. More than half have incomes below $1500 a year and one fourth are below $1000 !
While improvements in Social Security and Railroad Retirement benefits have been substantial, they have not kept pace with the rising cost of living, and have failed even more seriously to provide a full share in America 's rising living standards.
Private pensions and other income sources have not filled in the gaps nearly to the extent that many expected. Social Security benefits are the major source of income for most older persons.
It is obvious, therefore, that if the economic plight of the elderly is to be improved, it must be by strengthening the Social Security system. It can't be done with little bit.s of tinkering here and there. The changes must be bold, imaginative and even daringworthy of an America that is accustomed to thinking big. That is why we like your bill, Congressman.
We are confident, also, that along with the adoption of this measure, similar improvements will be made in the Railroad Retirement system.
In the health field, too, your bill meets the basic deficiencies of our present health insurance program. Medicare was a big step forward four years ago, but it could hardly be expected that this country's first venture into a national health insurance program would meet all the needs. Here, too, your bill aims high, as it must, for the health needs of the aged are critical.
My second purpose is to pledge you the full support of our organization and all its more than twenty-five hundred affiliated clubs across the country. I know I can do this as your bill is generally along the lines of the resolution on Social Security unanimously adopted by our national conven.tion just last June. We're not only going to do all we can ourselves, Congressman, but we're going to muster support from every ally we can enlist, and we believe they are many. Our many friends in labor, in the religious groups of every faith, in the welfare field, and elsewhere, we know, will rally to the support of this measure.
We are elderly citizens, Congressman Gilbert, so it goes without saying we've been around a long time. This isn't our first battle. We know the long, hard up-hill fight that lies ahead. We know the many hurdles that lie along the road between the introduction of a bill like yours and the day it reaches the President's desk. But you and we and our friends and allies are in this for the duration.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, I am, of course, giving careful consideration to the Gilbert bill, and 1 will soon introduce legislation similar in many resr-ects. I would like to point out, too, that on May 27 I introduced bills which have provisions similar to several that found their way into the President's message of yesterday. For example, I
asked for liberalization of the so-called retirement test on earnings of social security beneficiaries; and I asked for an increase in the amount of social security benefits payable to widows, from 82 % percent of the primary benefit of the deceased spouse to 100 percent. Another of my bills would require the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare to analyze various means of adjusting social security benefits so as to provide a builtin escalator in times of need.
As I asked at that time: How is the escalator to be geared? Should
it be based simply on fluctuations in the consumer price index? On increases in the costs of goods and services most needed, in particular, by Older Americans? On rises in the standard-of-living for the populace as a whole? On increases in wage levels? Or on a formula related to increased productivity of the work force?
There are no easy answers to such questions, and we should not plunge headlong into any cost-of-living escalator plan until we know its effects, exactly.
As chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, I have been deeply disturbed by much of the testimony taken during our hearings on the "Economics of Aging." We have firsthand commentary from the elderly themselves, from students of social insurance systems, from economists, and others which says-very plainly, for all to hear- that a retirement income crisis exists in this Nation, and it is getting worse, not better.
In the weeks ahead-before final decisions are made on social security revision-I intend to present to the Congress examples of the problems encountered by Americans who are old and poor or on the fringes of poverty. I also intend to get additional statements directly from the people of my home State to present on these pages.
We need thoroughgoing reform of the social security system; yes. But we must be sure that it is reform, and not just another empty promise.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
NO JUSTIFICATION FOR RELAXING MEAT IMPORT LIMITATIONS
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I should like to bring to the attention of the Senate a serious danger that threatens the beef cattle industry, and, in fact, the entire livestock industry.
At the outset, may I say that the junior Senator from Kansas (Mr. DOLE) had to be absent this afternoon on official business, but he did want me to say to the Senate that he has gone over the information which I shall speak about and that he wants to associate himself both with the substance and also with the conclusions which will be drawn by the Senator from Nebraska.
Today, livestock is the largest part of agriculture, and receipts from the sale of livestock and products last year amounted to more than $25 billion. Beef cattle production is the largest single segment of livestock operations today, and in many respects is the bellwether of the entire livestock industry.
The danger we face today is a new :flood of imports of foreign meat, which may have a catastrophic impact on our domestic livestock markets. Mr. President, in my comments today, I expect to develop the following points:
First. The meat import quota law of 1964 was passed on the basis of the unhappy experience of the effect of permitting a deluge of foreign meat to inundate our markets. The law does not prohibit imports, far from it. Last year beef and veal imports-including live cattlewere equivalent to about 8 percent of total U.S. production.
Second. To avoid having the mandatory import quotas on meat provided by that law from being invoked, foreign supplying countries have accepted voluntary limitations on the amount of meat they will permit to be shipped to this country during 1969.
Third. Our Government is now experiencing heavy pressure to permit those foreign countries to exceed their commitments and ship greater quantities of meat to this market, without having the legal quotas provided by law imposed upon such shipments. That could be accomplished only if the Government would agree to suspend the quota provisions of the law. When I say "Government" in this connection, I mean the U.S. Government.
Fourth. In support of suspending the quotas, it is argued that cattle and meat prices have been too high this year.
Fifth. Mr. President, although cattle prices rose briefly earlier this year, the fact is that for the last few months, cattle prices have gone down as abruptly as they previously went up. Today, they are almost as low as they were during the early months of 1969. They are very little higher than they were 10 years ago, or 20 years ago. And this is in terms of absolute dollars. This is not in terms of adjusted or constant dollars; and all of us know that, by rule of thumb, we can estimate that the purchasing power of the dollar today, as opposed to 20 years ago, is about half.
Sixth. As to retail beef prices, they were slower to rise than wholesale prices, and may be slower to go down, but during August they started down. In any case, the level of retail prices cannot be blamed on the cattleman, nor can it be affected by imports.
Seventh. The law provides that import quotas can be suspended only under extraordinary emergency conditions-conditions which certainly and demonstrably do not exist today.
Mr. President, during July of this year, imports of fresh, chilled, and frozen beef, veal and mutton amounted to 107 million pounds, an increase of 24 percent compared with July of last year. For the first 7 months of 1969, imports were 592 million pounds, 9 percent above last year.
This growth in volume of imports gives an indication of the pressure being put
27294 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE Septe1nber 26, 1969 on U.S. machinery for regulating our international trade in meat. For some of us, it awakens uneasy memories of the record volume of meat imports that led to enactment of the existing law for import control.
As recently as 1957, imports of beef and veal had a.mounted to only 395 million pounds calculated on a carcass equivalent basis. By 1963, that figure had grown to 1,678 million pounds.
This tremendous volume of foreign meat broke our livestock markets in this country and inflicted severe losses on thousands of domestic producers and feeders. It was this situation in 1963 that resulted in the enactment of the meat import quota law in 1964, designed to prevent foreign meat from taking over a steadily increasing share of the U.S. market, and to a degree that would be heavily and adversely disruptive to the cattle and livestock market here in America.
The act, which was signed into law that year in August, does not actually impose quotas but does provide the machinery wher~by quotas are to be imposed by the President if it is estimated by the Secretary of Agriculture that imports will exceed the quota figure for any given year by 10 percent. Since 1964, imports of the products covered by the law did not threaten to exceed the quota figure until the last quarter of 1968.
Sensing the possibility that exporting nations would overship the quota in the fourth quarter of last year, and obviously being reluctant to exercise the quota imposition provisions of the law, the Johnson administration entered into voluntary agreements with the major supplying nations that they would collectively hold their shipments to an annual volume of 1,035 million pounds, a figure approximately 5 percent over the 1968 quota of 988 million pounds, but under the level at which the quotas would have to be imposed.
The voluntary limitations on shipments to the United States at the level of 1,035 million pounds have remained in effect in 1969, since the quota for this year is about the same as that which had been determined for 1968. Throughout the first 7 months of 1969, supplying countries have held reasonably close to their agreements, even though imports in these 7 months amounted to 591.8 million pounds, 8.9 percent above shipments in the same period a year ago.
It has now been called to our attention vividly by various sources, including the American news media, that several of the foreign nations and some U.S. importers have imposed tremendous pressure on our Government to allow them to increase shipments to the United States for the remainder of 1969, increases which would probably exceed the trigger level for quotas which would be in excess of the amount of 1,087 million pounds. Not the least of this pressure is reportedly being put on by Australia, which country, expecting to fill its allowable volume before the end of the year, will have to cut back its shipments later in 1969, unless our Government could be prevailed upon to take steps whereby the quotas could be suspended.
The arguments being used by those
calling for increased imports insist that beef prices in the United States have risen to such an extent that it would be in the national interest to suspend the quotas and allow additional imports, which would be beef, principally. In making these contentions, those proponents of suspended quotas point to the period in May and June of this year when prices of fed cattle and wholesale beef did rise temporarily from an unusually stable level throughout 1968 and early 1969. However, they fail to take into account, or purposely overlook, the fact that this period of higher returns to cattle feeders was of short duration. In fact, as of now, live animal prices and wholesale dressed beef prices have declined to figures almost as low as those which prevailed in the early months of 1969.
For the remainder of this year, they are not likely to change much from present prices and values.
Thus, I emphasize that any relaxation of the restrictions on imports which have been imposed under the quota law would amount to a gross injustice to the ranchers and feeders of the United States. Furthermore, I submit the quotas could not be justifiably suspended in the national interest on the argument that prices to growers and feeders were unreasonably high.
To substantiate these contentions, allow me to quote various price levels and figures on fed beef cattle, wholesale beef and net farm values. In 1958, the average price of choice beef steers sold for slaughter on the Chicago market averaged $27.42 per hundredweight. The highest month in the year was March, when the average was $29.90 per hundredweight. The lowest month was August, when the average was $26.11 per hundredweight.
In 1968, the average price of choice steers, Chicago, was $27.74 per hundredweight. Note that this figure is almost the same as the average in 1958. Have any other prices or cost fallowed this stable trend in this 10-year period? The highest month in 1968 was December, when the average price was $28.88 per hundredweight. The lowest month last year was January, when the average price was $26.87 per hundredweight.
A more detailed picture of prices in 1968 is important to this discussion. The January average was $29.23 per hundredweight. A price rise was showing up noticeably in April, when the average reached $30.98 per hundredweight. The upward trend continued until June when the average choice steer price in Chicago reached $34.22 per hundredweight.
Thereupon, a 0.ecline set in that was equally as dramatic as the price increase. By July, the average price was back to $31.49 per hundredweight. The August figure was again lower at $30.94 per hundredweight. In the week ending September 4, the price was reduced another dollar to $29.84; in the week ending September 11, it was $29.80, and in the third week of September, the price had declined still more to $29.66 per hundredweight.
Note that just last week, choice steer prices at Chicago were practically equai to the averages in January and February
of this year. Wholesale carcass prices followed a similar trend. Since the highest point in June this year, choice steer prices have dropped nearly $5 per hundredweight. Early in June, the bulk of choice steer carcasses, carlot basis, Chicago, sold at $55 per hundredweight. At the end of last week, the same steer carcasses were selling at $45.50 per hundredweight, a drop of $9.50 from the June figures.
Proponents of relaxed quotas may point to retail prices of beef and argue that they became infiated and have not been reduced. This I submit as only partially correct. In the first quarter of 1969, the average retail price per pound of choice beef in the United States, according to the Department of Agriculture was 90 cents. In the second quarter-April to June-the average was 95.8 cents per pound. In the month of June alone, the average was 100 cents per pound and the figure did go up to 101.7 cents in July. The August average just recently computed reflected a decline to 100.1 cents per pound. With the trend in live and wholesale prices, it is reasonable to expect that the September figure will also be lower.
The explanation here is the usual circumstance where retail prices do not often react immediately to increases in wholesale values. At the same time, they usually do not immediately reflect downward trends in live and wholesale values. Be that as it may, the farm retail spread in choice beef prices was 34. 7 cents in the first quarter of 1969. By June, this spread had declined to 32.3 cents per pound. The July figure was an increase to 34.3 cents and by August the spread was 38.4 cents per pound.
My point in making these observations is merely that the ranchers and feeders of the United States have seen their prices return to figures very closely comparable to those they received in the early part of 1969. They can in no way be held accountable for any argument that consumer costs of beef have not yet declined to levels of 8 or 9 months ago.
With this record of price information and statistics, let me now return to the provisions of the 1964 meat import law. It is almost unthinkable that foreign nations and importers would attempt to influence our Government to suspend quotes on imports under the price circumstances I have just reviewed.
The law clearly states that the President may suspend any proclamation to impose quotas, or increase the total quantity allowable, if he determines and proclaims:
Such action is required by overriding economic or national security interests of the United States, giv ing specJal weight to the importance to the nation of the economic well-being of the domestic livestock industry. (Italic added.)
The law also allows for snspension of the quotas or increases in the allowable volume if the President determines that "the supply of articles of the kind described in subsection (a) will be inadequate to meet domestic demand at reasonable prices."
Surely, it cannot be substantiated
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 27295 that, with the numbers of cattle we have on feed in the United States and the magnitude of our beef factory, the supply of beef will be inadequate to meet domestic demand at reasonable prices. While retail prices have not declined from the June-July levels as much as live prices, the trend is downward.
Furthermore, there cannot be a valid argument that the suspension of quotas is required by overriding economic interests, particularly if special weight is given to the importance to the Nation of the economic well-being of the domestic livestock industry. The industry's economic well-being is not any better than it was the first of the year, and may even be less desirable having experienced a sudden rise and rapid decline in the price structure.
My remarks today are directed to serving notice of the severity of the problem that would face our domestic industry if our Government should succumb to the approaches of foreign suppliers and importers of beef products. Moreover, these remarks are for the purpose of focusing on the irrationality of contending that the United States can easily absorb an increased volume of beef imports without placing our domestic livestock industry in financial jeopardy. In giving foreign nations the privilege of shipping to us in 1969 a volume of products covered by approximately 47 million Pounds in excess of our quota figure, I believe the United States has been most generous.
There can be no justification for relaxing the limitation arrangements.
Mr. President, in making this statement I am entirely cognizant of the interest of the American consumer-the housewife, who does the buying-in the price of meat in the retail store. However, it is also my belief that the housewife does not expect the farmer to sell what he produces at less than cost, or to accept a poverty scale of living so that she may buy cheap meat. Farm prices for a farmer-especially from the ranch and from the feedlot in the case of cattle sales--are like the scale of wages for a workingman. The farmer must live and support his family on what he is paid for his crops and livestock. During the past 20 years, wages have more than doubled. According to Government figures, the average of factory workers in 1949 was $1.38 an hour. In August of this year it was $3.18 an hour. Surely, the factory worker will not expect the farmer's price to go down, while his own wage rate goes up regularly every year.
As I said earlier, the prices that the farmer receives on the ranch and from the feedlot are substantially the samein fact, in some cases lower-as they were in 1950, 1951, 1952, and a whole series of years from 1950 to 1969.
There can be no justification for relaxing the limitation arrangements which have been given to those supplying nations. They should be held within the fair shares that have been allotted to them, and which in most cases they have agreed to abide by. If then they should violate their commitments, the quotas should be imposed at the levels provided by the law, and the volume of imports held down to those levels for the remainder of this year.
Mr. President, in the course of my remarks several references were made on which documentation in the RECORD may be helpful and informative. I therefore request unanimous consent to have the following material printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks.
First, a memorandum from the Department of Agriculture regarding the commitments of various foreign countries in their shipments of meat under the quota program, with a list of the quantities of meat which might be shipped by each.
Second, a table showing the average price of choice steers at Chicago from 1949 to date, by months. From this table it is clear that during the last 2 month. , the price of cattle has fallen as fast as it previously rose. It is also clear that the present price, which is less than $30 per hundred, is not as high as it has been on many other occasions during the past 20 years. This is in contrast to the prices of most other products, which seem to set new high records every year in many instances.
Third, a table taken from the Marketing and Transportation Situation published by the Department of Agriculture permitting a comparison between the course of cattle prices and wholesale and retail beef prices. From the table it is clear that live animal prices and wholesale meat prices advanced quite sharply during the first half of this year. In both cases the peak was reached in June and there has been a sharp decline since then. It also shows that retail prices advanced somewhat more slowly but reached a peak in July, and then receded slightly in August.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(See exhibit U Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, last year
there was an election of the Chief Executive Officer of this country, normally and popularly known as the presidential election. Those of us from the Middle West wanted to know what the standing of the respective candidates for the Presidency was upon this issue. So request was made for the position of both major candidates. I ask unanimous consent to have printed at this point in the RECORD a statement by President Nixon which was made during the month of October-I believe it was on October 8. It was printed in the RECORD for Monday, October 14, 1968.
There being no objection, the statement was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: PRESIDENT NIXON'S STATEMENT OF OCTOBER,
1968 FAIR PLAY FOR THE CATTLE INDUSTRY
The cattle industry, our largest farm industry in terms of dollar sales, has consistently met the rapidly growing demand of the American consumer for high qualify beef. It ha.s done so independently, without any special government support program.
In the pa.st 20 years per capita consumption of beef in our country ha.s risen from under 70 to more than 104 pounds per person. In the same period, the average portion of family income expended on food ha.s actually doollned by more than 7 percent.
The cattle industry, however, has not kept pace with an increasing national prospertiy because of a severe cost-price squeeze, and
adverse governmental policies. The result ha.s been that many small family cattle operations, which represent the bedrock of the industry, have been forced out of business. Those that have survived have been saddled with crippling debts,.
In 1948 choice-fed steers in Chicago sold for an average price of $30.96 per 100 pounds; during the first 8 months of this year the selling price averaged $27.40 and it ha.s fluctuated below that figure during most of the pa.st 20 years. During 1964 following record imports, prices fell to a low of $20.52.
The official government index of prices paid by cattlemen, on the other hand, has increased 30 percent since 1948.
One cause of this severe cost-price squeeze has been the impact of imported meat. Because of the meat export subsidy practices of competing meat nations and the tariff restrictions of other nations, the American market has at times been flooded with cheap foreign beef.
In 1962 and 1963 meat imports precipitated a collapse in American cattle prices of as much as 30 percent in the course of a few months.
During the following year Republicans in Congress proposed legislation to fairly equate the flow of imports with the growth of the American market. The Administration stubbornly opposed it and the Senate defeated the first bill 4~4. with then Senator Humphrey -and Senator Muskie both voting against the legislation. The Congress later in 1964 enacted Public Law 88-482.
Because of Administration pressure. the meat import legislation ultimately enacted was riddled with loopholes.
As a result, and in spite of the law, the volume of imports this year threatens to be greater than in any past year, except the record year of 1963. Yet Secretary Freeman ha.s consistently failed to invoke even those provisions of the law which could be effective.
Loopholes in the present law must be closed so that domestic cattle producers can participate on a fair basis in the growth of the domestic market. Unfortunately, during the past Congess the Administration, of which Mr. Humphrey is a part, continued to oppose legislation in this field, notwithstanding the pious-pronouncements of the Vice President's colleague, Secretary Freeman, regarding the need for proteotion against subsidized foreign imports.
The Nixon administration will not turn its back on the needs of the cattlemen. The Nixon administration will be dedicated to seeing to it that cattlemen enjoy their full fair share of our increasing national prosperity and thtat Federal policies encourage the health and growth of this vital industry.
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I just want to call attention to the last paragraph of that statement:
The NiXon administration will not turn its back on the needs of the cattlemen. The NiXon administration will be dedicated to seeing to it that cattlemen enjoy their full fair share of our increasing national prosperity and that federal policies encourage the health and growth of this vital industry.
The industry and the public at large will have their justification for expecting that this statement of position will be most carefully abided by and complied with, and I have confidence that it will be; because, with all the other facets and with all the other features of the American economy going up in terms of dollars, we witness the very sorry spectacle of cattle prices being no more today, in terms of absolute dollars, than they were 20 years ago.
Needless to say, with the infiation that
27296 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
has crept into the dollar, with the reduced purchasing power of the dollar, it is worth about one-half as much as it was tben.
EXHIBIT 1
1969 MEAT VOLUNTARY ARRANGEMENTS
There are 13 countries eligible to ship meat (fresh, chilled, or frozen beef, veal, mutton, and goat meat) that are subject to the Meat Import Law. The governments of each of these countries, with the exception of Canada (which lacks the administrative machinery to control exports) and the United Kingdom (from which shipments of beef from Northern Ireland are small), gave commitments to the State Department to limit their shipments to the United States so that the level
of U.S. imports from them during 1969 would not exceed specified quantities. A summary of the commitments is set forth in the following table:
Calendar 1969 commitment level, million pounds
Country of origin: Australia -----------------------New Zealand ___________________ _
:M:exico -------------------------Canada -----------------------Ireland-------------------------Nicaragua ----------------------Costa Rica _____________________ _
Guatemala --------------------Honduras --------------- -------Dominican Republic ____________ _
Panama ------------------------
505.0 211. 0
65.8 1 62.7
62.7 37.6 33.4 21. 4 14. 1 10.5 5.2
Calendar 1969 commitment level, million pounds--Continued
Country of origin: United Kingdom________________ 1 3. 1 Haiti---------------- ----------- 2. 1
Total __________________________ 1,034.6
1 Estimates, not firm country commitments.
NoTE.-Performa.nce of each of the countries under this program of voluntary restraints is monitored based on weekly information supplied by the responsible agency administering controls of exports from each country involved, and checked with import data obtained from the United States Department of Agriculture Meat Inspection Service and, of course, the Bureau of Census.
BEEF STEERS, CHOICE, SOLD OUT OF FIRST HANDS FOR SLAUGHTER : WEIGHTED AVERAGE PRICE PER 100 POU NDS, AT CHICAGO, 1922
Year January February March April May June July August September October November December Weighted
average
1949 _______________ $24. 72 $22. 99 $24. 19 $24. 37 $24. 92 $26. 37 $25. 96 $26. 50 $28. 22 $29. 63 $29. 35 $29. 91 $26. 07 1950 ________ __ _____ 28. 14 27. 19 27. 33 27. 66 29.19 29. 99 30. 62 29. 97 30. 32 30. 42 31. 24 32. 98 29. 68 1951 _______________ 34. 77 35. 98 36. 67 36. 93 36. 52 35. 68 35. 47 35. 85 36. 68 36. 31 36. 09 34. 78 35. 96 1952 __ - - -- ---- ---- - 34. 68 34. 57 34. 69 34. 76 34. 17 32. 81 33. 03 33. 02 32. 53 32. 55 32. 20 30. 86 33.18 1953 _______________ 27. 84 24. 49 22. 68 21. 99 22. 36 22. 04 24. 41 25. 28 25. 87 25. 63 25. 03 24. 37 24. 41 1954 __ --------- -- -- 24. 74 23. 86 23. 89 24. 83 24. 25 23. 88 23. 99 24. 08 25. 00 25. 37 25. 85 26. 53 24. 66 1955 _______________ 26. 98 26. 17 25. 80 24. 62 23. 09 22. 63 22. 72 22. 43 22. 69 22. 01 20. 83 20. 35 23.16 1956 _______________ 20. 02 18. 88 19. 41 20. 56 20. 70 21. 05 22. 37 25. 81 27. 27 26. 08 24. 30 21. 99 22. 30 1957 _______________ 21. 23 20. 57 21. 86 22. 99 23. 31 23. 48 25. 12 25. 63 24. 98 24. 67 25. 20 25. 98 23. 83 1958 _______________ 26. 82 27. 54 29. 90 29. 37 28. 83 28. 07 26. 99 26. 11 26. 70 26. 67 26. 77 27.19 27. 42 1959 _______________ 28. 13 27. 85 29. 11 30. 33 29. 34 28. 48 27. 89 27. 56 27. 62 27. 19 26. 53 25. 57 27. 83 1960 _______________ 26. 42 26. 69 28. 08 27. 76 27. 43 26. 04 25. 64 25. 07 24. 80 24. 94 26. 08 26. 86 26 24 1961__ ____ __ _______ 27. 42 26.17 25. 70 25. 05 23. 43 22. 45 22. 38 24.13 24. 34 24. 55 25. 58 26.13 24.65 1962 ______ ___ _____ _ 26. 39 26. 76 27. 31 27. 45 26. 02 25. 25 26. 50 28.19 29. 85 29. 50 30. 13 28. 91 27.67 1963 _______________ 27. 27 24. 93 23. 63 23. 77 22. 61 22. 69 24. 72 24. 60 23. 94 24. 03 23. 51 22. 30 23. 96 1964_ - ---- ------ -- - 22. 61 21. 34 21. 56 21.28 20. 52 21. 57 23.44 25. 28 26. 07 25. 07 24. 64 24. 01 23.12 1965 _______________ 24. 28 24. 02 24. 31 25. 63 26. 88 27. 68 26. 88 27. 22 27. 08 26. 74 26. 46 26. 60 26. 19 1966 __ - - ------ ---- - 26. 87 27. 79 29. 22 27. 98 26. 75 25. 49 25. 41 25. 85 26. 11 25. 50 24. 94 24. 50 26. ~9 1967 _______________ 25. 25 24. 92 24. 67 24. 66 25. 46 25. 88 26. 40 27. 22 27. 62 26. 77 26. 51 26. 45 26. 04 1968 _______________ 26. 87 27. 34 27. 75 27. 49 27. 16 26. 89 27. 65 28. 01 28. 20 28. 21 28. 46 28. 88 27. 74 1969 ____________ ___ 29. 23 29. 11 30.19 30. 98 33. 85 34. 22 31. 49 30. 94 -- - -- ---- - - -- --- - --- - - - - - - - -- - -- - -- - - - - -- -- -- -- - - -- - - -- -- - - -
TABLE 3.-BEEF: RETAIL PRICE, WHOLESALE VALUE. FARM VALUE, FARM-RETAIL SPREAD, AND FARMER'S SHARE OF RETAIL PRICE, ANNUAL 1966~8, QUARTERLY 1968~9
(Beet, choice grade)
Retail Gross Byproduct Farm-reta!I spread
Net~~~~~~~~~~
price per Wholesale farm al :ow- farm Whole- Farm- Farmer's share
(percent) pound 1 .value 2 val ue a ance ' value ~ Total sale-retail wholesale
Date (cents) (cents) (cents) (cents) (cents) (cents) (cents) (cents)
1966 ____ ------- -- - ---- - - - - 84. 3 58. 9 55. 5 5. 9 49. 6 34. 7 25. 4 9. 3 59 1967 ___ __ __ - --- -- ------ --- 84. l 59. 7 54. 3 5. 0 49. 3 34. 8 24. 4 10. 4 59 19688 ___________________ -- 87. 3 63. 0 57. 5 5. 0 52. 5 34. 8 24. 3 10. 5 60 1968:
56. 3 4. 8 51. 5 34. 9 24. 4 10. 5 60 January- March __ . _____ 86. 4 62. 0 April- June ____________ 86. 6 62. 9 57. 8 5. 3 52. 5 34.1 23. 7 10. 4 61 July- September _____ - -- 87. 9 64. 1 58. 6 5. 1 53. 5 34. 4 23. 8 10.6 61 October- December ____ . 88. 3 63. 0 57. 4 5.1 52. 3 36. 0 25. 3 10. 7 59
1969: 60. 4 5.1 55. 3 34. 7 25. 0 9. 7 61 January-March _____ ._. 90. 0 65. 0
April-June ____________ 95. 8 72. 8 68. 2 5. 8 62. 4 33. 4 23. 0 10.4 65 June __________________ 100. 0 77. 7 73. 8 6. l 67. 7 32. 3 22. 3 10. 0 68 July __________________ 101. 7 77. l 72. 4 6. 0 66. 4 35. 3 24.6 10. 7 65 August__ ______________ 100.1 72. 7 67. 5 5. 9 61.6 38. 5 27. 4 11.l 62
1 Fstimated weighted average price of retai l cuts. 2 Wholesale value of quantity of carcass equivalent lo 1 lb. ot retail cuts: Beet, 1.35 lb. a Payment to farmer for quantity .of livP. anim~I equiva.lent.to 1 lb. of retail cuts : Beef 2.25 lb. • Portion of gross farm value attributed to edible and inedible byproduct. ~ Gross farm value minus byproduct allowance. 6 Revised .
(The following colloquy, which occurred during the delivery of Mr. HRUSKA's address, is printed at this point by unanimous consent.)
Mr. CURTIS. I commend my senior colleague, not only for the statement he is making today, but for the leadership he has given throughout the years in reference to our domestic meat situation.
This matter goes much farther than just the interests and welfare of the livestock producers. It affects every phase of agriculture. It has a profound effect on all feed grain&-and among those we must now include wheat, which is being used more and more all the time. Cattle, hogs, and sheep fed in this country to supply our market here, contrasted with
the livestock which is produced abroad, have a recurring and widespread beneficial effect on every phase of our economy, particularly our agriculture.
I commend my colleague for his leadership in general and for his very fine statement today.
Mr. HRUSKA. My colleague is very generous, and I am grateful to him for the information he has imparted.
The fact of the matter is, Mr. President, that the United States is about the only country in the world that does not have a very tight control upon the imP-Ortation of meats.
Mr. CURTIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield.
Mr. CURTIS. Mr. President, it was my privilege to be a guest at a school agricultural affair in Dublin, Ireland, last month. I happened to arrive when the affair was going on. The Secretary of Agriculture was invited. There was a wonderful display there. The people were delighted.
I pointed out that Ireland will not permit the importation of our beef into Ireland.
Mr. HRUSKA. Yet, they are the third nation in volume of importation of beef into the United States.
Mr. CURTIS. I told them, instead of speaking harshly, "I respect you for your action."
Ireland's greatest asset is grass, and the development of their livestock is very important to them.
I think there should be some concern on the part of our Government toward our domestic producers of all kinds of meat.
Mr. HRUSKA. We are the greatest nation with respect to feed grain, and we have as much in volume of feed grain as Ireland has of the lovely green grass they raise.
Mr. CURTIS. The Senator is correct. I have a great deal of respect for them and a more friendly feeling because they are willing to help themselves and make an effort on their own behalf.
I think that is true in international trade. I do not believe that the United States can create friends and gain the respect of other nations by refusing to act intelligently with respect to its own people.
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I thank my colleague.
September .~6, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27297
Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield. Mr. ALLOT!'. Mr. President, I com
pliment the Senator for presenting in his speech several issues which I think are very important to the whole beef association.
Before mentioning any of them, I point out that the senior Senator from Nebraska, more than any other Senator, has carried on this fight for the protection of our cattle industry. And he has done this not just today or yestentay, but also at the time we passed the meat import quota law of 1964. He was the one who carried the battle at that time.
I think the particular point the Senator made is very important inasmuch as we hear on the street the statement from consumers that the price of meat is so high and the cattlemen are getting rich, or something to that effect.
As the Senator well points out in his speech, that the price of beef did go up very dramatically for a short time and it then declined just as dramatically.
In the market, the price of beef went up, but it has not declined as dramatically. The important thing is that this should not be put upon the backs of the people producing beef this year.
The other point I believe is very important is that there was no self-triggering device in the 1964 law, although, as I recall the situation at that time, the distinguished Senator from Nebraska, as well as many other Senators, was trying to toughen the law in that respect.
Mr. HRUSKA. The Senator is correct. Mr. ALLOTT. We were simply unable
to do it on the floor of the Senate. Since we are the least diligent in protecting our meat imports of probably any country in the world, I think that the speech the Senator has made brings to the attention of the Senate and the American people the real facts.
Unfortunately, many of the things we read in the news media do not reflect the true facts. Rather, they try to make the stockmen or cattlemen the bogeyman in the particular situation we face in the market.
Mr. HRUSKA. The Senator comes from a beef State. The State of Colorado is famed for its production of livestock, and particularly beef. The Senator speaks the truth when he says that there is not much to the argument about the allegedly high prices of beef on the retail market.
The price to the farmer of beef cattle, choice, in 1950 was $29.68, as opposed to 1968 when it was $27.74. These prices are in absolute dollars and not in constant dollars.
I point out, if one thinks the prices in the retail markets are high, that during the last 20 years wages have more than doubled.
According to Government figures, the average factory worker in 1930 earned $1.38 an hour. In August of this year, he earned $3.18 an hour. However, the cattle raiser and cattle feeder is getting no more now for 100 pounds of beef than he was getting 20 years ago.
No housewife should expect to buy a product produced for the market by the farmer at a loss.
Mr. ALLOTT. The Senator is correct. And the price differential in those 20 years is almost $2 per hundred, as the Senator has pointed out.
I thank the Senator for permitting me to intervene in his remarks. I think that everything the Senator has said should be underscored and repeated 1,000 fold throughout the country so that the people might understand the facts with respect to this important industry.
In our State, we not only produce and raise cattle, but, as the Senator well knows, many of our cattle are not fed in our feed lots, but go into Nebraska and help build up that great industry in Nebraska of feeding cattle.
We furnish, of course, a lot of small grains and feed in my State.
This matter is of vital interest, in my opinion, to all of the Midwestern and Western States. The facts as stated here are not just of local interest and are not only applicable to the State of the Senator from Nebraska. It is something that, in my opinion, is applicable with great force to every State west of the Mississippi particularly.
I think the Senator has been of invaluable assistance in educating the Senate and the public on this matter today.
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Colorado.
Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield. Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I join
with the other Senators in commending the distinguished senior Senator from Nebraska for the splendid research he has done on this immediate problem, as is always done by him on any problem.
I desire to ask the Senator a question or two. It seems to me that what is happening here is not a lot unlike what happened a few years ago on the part of some very shortsighted individuals who, all of a sudden, became concerned over a rather short-range increase in meat prices.
The Senator will recall that, after going through a rather depressed pork market for many months, almost a year, for a period of a few months the pork producers received very good prices. In fact, as I recall, the prices were up in excess of parity. Of course, we had to have those prices to make up for the lean years when the prices were well below parity.
What happened? Thanks to some very good reporting by very hard-working members of the press, the attention of the public was focused on the fact that, by written correspondence from the then Secretary of Agriculture, Orville Freeman, the Secretary of Defense received a recommendation to cut back on pork purchases. And the Secretary of Defense thereupon cut back on pork purchases for members of the armed services in an effort to depress the prices.
There is no question but what that action did depress the prices temporarily. And I have a feeling-and I ask my friend, the Senator from Nebraska if he does not share--that some of the same individuals know better than to go to the present Secretary of Agriculture and make a suggestion that he do what a former Secretary of Agriculture did, but
hope that they can bring enough pressure and influence to bear on the administration to result in an increase in these imports in an effort to pull down the prices.
Does not the Senator from Nebraska feel that this is an objective that is being sought by certain individuals?
Mr. HRUSKA. Yes, I think so, in addition to the relaxation of the voluntary agreements that were entered into last year, and which are effective for this year as well.
Mr. MILLER. Does not the Senator also agree that the same situation exists today that existed in those days in the case of pork prices?
Mr. HRUSKA. Yes. Mr. MILLER. But we had a temporary
increase in beef prices which has now been rolled back-if not below-to what it was a few months ago, and the farmer is not the one to blame for the prices that the housewife has been paying in the grocery stores. I think the Senator has pointed out that, compared with 1950 prices, in terms of real dollars, the farmer is not receiving as much.
So does not the Senator think that the same situation is present today, and the same subtle effort is being made today, as occurred in the case of the pork fiasco involving Secretary Freeman a few years ago?
Mr. HRUSKA. The Senator has it analyzed very well and accurately.
Mr. MILLER. I thank my colleague. Mr. HRUSKA. I thank the Senator
from Iowa for his contribution. The State of Iowa is second in the production of beef in this country, Texas being first. That is what the books say. If the Senator from Iowa wants to dispute the records from which I cite, I will be happy to give him equal time.
Mr. MILLER. The Senator from Nebraska is most generous, and he is accurate except for one little detail. The State of Texas is indeed No. 1 in production of beef cattle, but that is not what counts, because the people are not enjoying that benefit. The people eat cattle that have been slaughtered; and Iowa, I am proud to say, is No. 1 in slaughter cattle production.
Mr. HRUSKA. I accept the modification.
(This marks the end of the colloquy which occurred during the delivery of
. Mr. HRUSKA'S address.) (At this point the Acting President pro
tempo re assumed the chair.) Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, will the
Senator yield? Mr. HRUSKA. I am happy to yield to
the Senator from Wyoming, who is a cattleman himself in that great, spacious, and beautiful State of Wyoming. Having visited his headquarters in the Jackson Hole country, I know he is a genuine cattle raiser and rancher.
Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, I wi.sh to express my profound appreciation to the Senator from Nebraska and to compliment him for his leadership role in seeing that the interests of those of us in the West who are engaged in agriculture are protected. The Senator from Nebraska has distinguished himself as a very knowledgeable advocate of the livestock industry, along with others in the
27298 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
Midwest. I am delighted that the Senator from Iowa <Mr. MILLER) is in the Chamber at this time, as is the distinguished senior Senator from Colorado <Mr. ALLOTT) , along with our newest colleague from cow country, the distinguished junior Senator from Oklahoma <Mr. BELLMON).
The Senator referred to the speech made by the Republican candidate for President, the Honorable Richard Nixon. I think the speech to which the Senator alluded was given on October 11 rather than October 8.
Mr. HRUSKA. I accept the correction and I am grateful for it.
Mr. HANSEN. I also would like to point out that the remarks by the distinguished Senator from Nebraska do call attention to the fact that the livestock industry is one which has not been supported by the Government of the United States through its various direct subsidy programs, as have other segments of the agriculture economy. It has tried to stand on its own feet; but that has not been easy because, as the Senator pointed out, prices today are about in the same notch in actual dollars as they were 10 years ago, and the same notch they were 20 years ago. This, of course, is a record. The Senator pointed out that these are not adjusted dollars, not dollars intended to reflect what the purchasing power might have been 10 or 20 years ago, but actual dollars.
Therefore, what we are seeing is that the purchasing power of a cattleman today, if he gets the same amount of actual dollars he did 20 years ago, is far less than his purchasing power 20 years ago. Did I understand the Senator correctly?
Mr. HRUSKA. Most certainly, and at the same time his taxes, the cost of his clothes, farm implements, feed, and everything else, have all increased remarkably.
Mr. HANSEN. I wish to compliment the distinguished Senator from Nebraska. I have no further questions at this time. I know the junior Senator from Oklahoma is most eager to participate in this colloquy and that he has some remarks he would like to make.
Mr. HRUSKA. I thank the Senator for his contribution.
Mr. BELLMON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield to the Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. BELLMON. Mr. President, I want to compliment the distinguished Senator from Nebraska for calling attention to
' this vitally important matter. Our State of Oklahoma is as vitally concerned about what happens in the beef business as are the more heavy beef producing States which are represented here today.
Our State has a growing beef cattle feeding industry, and in addition we produce large quantities of feeder calves, as well as grain.
The American cattle industry knows from sad experience what can happen when surplus beef from foreign countries is permitted to flood into our markets. In 1962 and 1963 we saw a tidal wave of foreign meat imports come into this country. In 1962 the beef and veal
imports amounted to 1,440 million pounds and in 1963 imPorts were 1,678 million Pounds. As recently ~ 1957 meat imports had been only 395 million pounds. When these tremendous quantities of meat came in from abroad, our cattle markets simply collapsed under the impact. Many cattlemen were wiped out. Cattle prices fell by as much as $10 per hundred. The entire industry suffered a severe setback.
During this time I was serving as Governor and I saw firsthand the devastating effect this collapse had on beef producers, on stalker calves, and on the producers of grain, as well as on local communities whose economies were tied up with agriculture. In addition the standard of living of wage earners was affected. There were protest meetings in my State to call attention to the serious problem. It was on the basis of that experience that the existing quota law was passed in 1964.
I would like to call attention to the fa.ct that these quota laws do not stop the importation of beef but produce a sharing of the market with other countries. What we are talking about is not an attempt to stop beef importation but rather regulation so it will not disrupt the local industry.
Now we may be faced again with a similar situation. It has been widely reported that various foreign countries have been pressing our Government for a relaxation of the restrictions on their shipments. Such an action could be taken only by waiving the provisions of the quota law.
There is no justification whatever for considering such a step. The existing quota law is not an embargo--far from it. It permits imports to continue on the basis of past experience, with permission also for eMh foreign country to share in the growth of our market. In other words, the law permits imports to increase year by year, at the same rate as our own domestic production increases. American producers are given no preference over foreign suppliers in thait; respect.
Furthermore, the law permits imports to exceed the amount of the quota by as much as 10 percent before quotas are Mtually imposed. Thus, the base quota for 1969, legally speaking, is set at 988 million pounds. However, imports could rise to as much as 1,086 million pounds before quotas would be imposed.
Foreign suppliers are given more than their fair share of our market by the present quota system. They should not expect to have the quotas lifted, which would mean giving away a further share of the market which rightfully belongs to our own producers.
There are a few comments I would like to make and perhaps ask the Senator a few questions. I am not sure anyone has considered the fact that the importation of meat has a very direct eff eot on the grain business. I am sure the Senator from Nebraska knows that it takes at least 8 pounds of grain to produce 1 pound of beef. When a live beef animal is slaughtered and dressed, one-half the weight is lost. So every time we bring in a shipload of beef from another country in effect we bring in 16 shiploads of grain.
This Government spends a large
amount of money supPQrting agriculture and in providing price supports, and a great deal of this money goes to support feed grains and wheat. Therefore, it is obvious that when we bring in beef we increase the cost to the Federal Government of agricultural supports.
Mr. HRUSKA. The Senator is eminently correct in that analysis. In earlier debates and from time to time this point has been brought up, but I am glad he has reminded us of it. The effect of these imports will not start and stop with the market price on the price of cattle. It will have lateral effects and direct effects on many other areas, but principally on the feed grain production of this country, together with the beneficial use of large areas of grazing land which cannot be put to other use.
Mr. BELLMON. The Senator is eminently correct.
I wish to point out another problem. Along with the distinguished Senator from Wyoming, I traveled to Japan in 1965. At that time he was Governor of Wyoming. We frequently were subjected to the Japanese diet which is almost totally free from beef. As I remember, the average consumption of beef was about 4 pounds per person per year; in this country it is 105 to 110 pounds per person per year. Japan, as we are all aware, has become a prosperous industrial nation and has need for additional supplies of high quality low-cost beef.
I would like to ask the Senator if he knows of any efforts on the part of our DepaTtment of Agriculture or on the part of the Department of State to increase the exports of American beef to Japan and other industrial nations where there is a very definite need for high quality and low-priced beef; and whether or not any efforts are being made to develop exports to other countries where there is a high degree of protein starvation among the citizenry which do not have access to beef as in our country. Does the Senator know of any such efforts?
Mr. HRUSKA. There have been efforts and there are efforts. However, the prospects are mighty dismal. Our beef is of high grade and our beef is produced in an economy where the cost of production is at a rate too steep for the countries to which we could export it. There have been efforts and there could be efforts, but they have not advanced much and have not produced significantly and would have little impact on this large industry which, after all, totals about $25 billion a year, the biggest single industry in the country.
Mr. BELLMON. Would the Senator from Nebraska be interested in trying to work out a program whereby we could encourage exports of beef?
Mr. HRUSKA. To encourage other countries?
Mr. BELLMON. To encourage the sale of our beef to other countries.
Mr. HRUSKA. That has been made constantly. Hopefully, we turn to them, but we have not been very gratified with the results.
Mr. BELLMON. I want tio conclude by emphasizing the fMt that I feel that foreign suppliers have been getting a fair share of the American beef market under the present quota system. I certainly
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 27299
do not feel that the quota system needs to be changed or abolished. It would be a great detriment not only to the beef industry but also to agriculture and this country as a whole if that ever should happen.
Mr. HRUSKA. I thank the Senator from Oklahoma. He is a farmer in his own right, too, so that he knows from direct contact and experience what is involved. Having been Governor of the great state of Oklahoma during those dark days of 1963 and 1964, when there was a collapse of the livestock cattle market, he certainly knows whereof he speaks.
In connection with the consumption of feed grains, to which the Senator from Oklahoma referred, there is another statistic that should be renewed and that is that beef imports in terms of the 1,885,000,000 pounds, which was the figure back in 1963, was calculated out by the Ohio Cattlemen's Association along this line. Insofar as displacement of actual cattle are concerned, in head of cattle, if there is a conversion of those imports to head of cattle, it would take 3% million cattle just to be the equivalent of the imports of those days, at an annual rate.
Added to that, of course, is the fow1-dation herd that runs along somewhere in the neighborhood of 4 million cattle in that second herd so that the impact is tremendous. It goes right down from there into all aspects of the agricultural picture in this country.
Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, will the Senator from Nebraska yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield. Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, I take
note of the fact that the distinguished junior Senator from Montana <Mr. METCALF) now occupies the chair. I have had the high privilege of working with him for 2 % years now. While we are on opposite sides of the political fence, there are few other fences that divide us where the interests of the West are concerned.
I know so well that Montana has a real stake in the cattle situation. I am certain, as a consequence, that the distinguished occupant of the chair will appreciate my observations when I point out that insofar as parity is concerned, cattle prices in 1968 averaged out at about 79 per,cent of parity.
This year, when prices peaked in June, parity rose to 95 percent but reflected the downward plunge in prices after the peak. Parity fell in August to 87 percent. It is expected to average out to about 84 percent for September of this year, re:flecting a continuing downward trend in prices.
I would further point out to my distinguished colleague from Montana that there is a very distinct relationship between imports, as he so well knows, between the volume of meat shipped to this country, and our domestic price in the United States.
The Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture points out to me that the estimates are that if foreign imports this year were increased above the adjusted base quota level by 50 million pounds, choice steer prices would drop from 40 to 50 cents per hun-
CXV--1720--Part 20
dredweight lower than if the imports 000,000 pounds-a scant 5 million pounds were disallowed. under the point where the Department
It does not take a mathematical of Agriculture would have been forced genius to carry this calculation further to impose a quota, thus invoking the proand apply it to what the situation might visions of the law. Imports in 1968 went be without imports at all, or with limited 13 million pounds above the base quota imports. level-the figure established at the be-
The distinguished Senator from Ne- ginning of the year, and which is inbraska has gone into some detail in call- tended to be recognized by foreign couning attention to the ramifications of tries as the figure beyond which they livestock prices in this country and the should not go. economic health of rural America. It is obvious from 1969 statistics and
I think that he would not object one estimated figures that this year is going bit to my underscoring his remarks by to be much like the last-and there is a pointing out the relationship between rumor that the administration is planf arm costs and debt as I find it to be ning to make matters worse by pulling today. the rug out from under the cattle
In 1960, farmers and ranchers in industry. America owed $23.6 billion in debts, Mr. President, the September 24, 1969, $12.1 billion of it in real estate debts. Wall Street Journal contained the usual
Today, their costs are more than commodity and market summaries and double what they were in 1960. projections. But buried at the very bot-
The total farm debt at the beginning tom of the price trends published on that of this year was a whopping $49 billion. · particular day were three paragraphs
The total debt in March 1969 was even that, although short in length and scant higher, $53.1 billion, $27 .8 billion of it in detail, were loaded with meaning for being the debt for real estate. America's cattle industry.
The total non-real-estate debt for The article said, and I quote: agriculture has increased from $11 % bil- cattle prices at Omaha., Neb., and Sioux lion in 1960 to $25.3 billion in 1969. City, Iowa, rose 25 cents a 100 pounds. At
In other words, the non-real-estate other centers, markets were about undebt for agriculture has more than changed. doubled between the years 1960 and -The Day's business had ende4 when llve-1969 but the price situation has been an stock and meat dealers received news that entirely difierent story, as has been the Administration is studying a possible lnpointed out by the distinguished Senator crease in beef imports. The intent ls to help
ease infia.t1ona.ry pressure, a. member of the from Nebraska. The price today is ap- PreS'ident's Council of Economic Advisers proximately the same as it was 10 years said. However, he expects opposition from the ago, and approximatley the same as it livestock industry. was 20 years ago. About the most that could be expected,
I defy any Member of this Chamber to the official said, would be a.n increase of point out a comparable situation regard- 100 m1111on to 200 m1111on pounds annue.J.ly, ing an important commodity in the mostly from Australia. and New Zealand. Both United States that has not reflected an nations have been ln touch with President upward price adjustment from 20 years Nixon on the matter. ago or 10 years ago. I have not yet been able to determine
These facts, of course, merely under- whether or not such an increase is, inscore the extreme urgency of this situa- deed, to be granted. But there is one tion and the need for clarification so statement in the article that is grossly that there can be no doubt at all, insofar understated, if these imports are to be as the position of this administration is encouraged. The administration can, inconcerned with regard to a matter so deed, expect opposition from the catvital to American agriculture. tie industry, and I feel strongly that the
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, the Sen- industry is 100-percent justified in its tor from Wyoming makes a most splen- opposition. did statement and has added much in- Mr. President, later on in my remarks, formation available to the Senate. I intend to document, with up-to-date
Mr. President, I yield the floor. figures, as accurately as I possibly can, Mr. HANSEN. I thank the Senator the reasons why any planned increase in
from Nebraska. beef imports should be immediately Mr. President, I have spoken out many shelved. But I want to point out first
times on the floor of the Senate regard- that in my opinion, this administration ing the impact foreign imports have on made some pledges to the cattlemen of our domestic livestock industry. this country long before election day
I have joined time and again with col- rolled around. Cattlemen were deepiy leagues also concerned with the impact concerned during the last political camof beef imports, to try and obtain passage paign about the position of candidates of legislation that would strengthen the for Congress and for the Presidency reexisting import quota law, Public Law garding imports from foreign countries 88-482. We have been unsuccessful to which the industry believes, and which date, but the need for strengthening I believe, compete unfairly with the dothe law is demonstrated time and again, mestic industry and adversely infiuence year after year, including 1969. the price received by the domestic pro-
In 1968, the cattle industry and Mem- dueer. bers of the Congress watched throughout During a speech to an agricultural the year as estimates of foreign meats group on October 11, 1968, at Dallas, subject to Public Law 88-482 were an- Tex., Presidential Candidate Richard M. nounced, and then revised upward-and Nixon said, and I quote from a copy of a then revised upward again. Total im- statement received from the Nixon camports for the year amounted to 1,001,- paign headquarters:
27300 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969 In the past 20 years, per capita consump
tion of beef in our country has risen from under 70 to more than 104 pounds per person. In the same period, the average portion of family income expended on foods has actually declined by more than seven per cent.
The cattle industry, however, has not kept pace with an increasing national prosperity because of a severe cost-price squeeze, and adverse governmental policies. The result has been that many small family cattle operations, which represent the bedrock o~ the industry have been forced out of business. These that have survived have been saddled with crippling debts.
Mr Nixon went on with his comments to q~ote figures showing the drop in prices, and he compared the pric~ in 1~48 to the price in 1968, noting the s1tuat10n for cattlemen has steadily worsened since 1948. .
After thus explaining the econom1c plight of the industry, Mr. Nixon then outlined his plan for aiding the cowman. He said:
One cause of this severe cost-price squeeze has been the impact of imported meat.
Because of the meat export subsidy practices of competing meat nations and the tariff restrictions of other nations, the American market has at times been flooded with cheap foreign beef.
Mr. Nixon continued his comments, ref erring to the meat import quota law enacted in 1964. He said:
Because of Administration pressure, the meat import legislation ultimately enacted was riddled with loopholes. As a result, an_d in spite of a law, the volume of imports this year threatens to be greater than in any past year, except the record year 1963. Y~t Secretary Freeman has consistently failed. to evolve even those provisions of the law which could be effective.
Loopholes in the present law must be closed so that domestic cattle producers can participate on a fair basis in the growth of the domestic market.
The Nixon Administration will not turn its back on the needs of the cattlemen. The Nixon Administration will be dedicated to seeing to it that cattlemen enjoy their full fair share of our increasing national prosperity and that federal policies encourage the health and growth of this vital industry.
Mr. President, the pledges and promises of assistance contained in that statement by the man who has since become our distinguished President were reasonable. They were deserved and appreciated by the livestock industry, and they were attainable. They are still attainable, and I believe they should be honored.
These commitments cannot be honored if the administration makes good the alleged invitation to Australia and New Zealand to send more beef imports, and I fervently hope that there is absolutely no basis in fact for the statements contained in the Wall Street Journal.
I say this knowing full well that the President has been approached by Australia and New Zealand, and that these countries have asked him to let them continue shipping beef to America.
One such request has been presented by members of the Australian Meat Board in behalf of the Australian meat industry.
Mr. President, I ask that a statement apparently prepared by the Australian
Meat Board, entitled, "Considerations Supporting Increased Imports of Australian Meat During 1969," be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
<See exhibit U Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, the bulk
of the meat board's statement is devoted to dramatically phrased pleas to the United States to bail Australia out of its economic problems.
The statement notes: Both the natural expansion of Australian
meat production and certain special factors which have developed during the present year place the Australian meat industry in a position where it must find a market for about 80,000,000 pounds of meat during the balance of 1969.
We believe that the present limitations under the voluntary restraints program affect our industry inequitably and we urge the United States government exercise its administrative discretion to afford us some measure of relief.
Mr. Pr·esident, I am sorry the Australian beef industry is having problems. American cattlemen have had problems too, and there no doubt can be generated at least some sympathy from those in this country who have been or still are in the same boat.
But I submit that the No. 1 concern of the American Government should be the well-being of the American livestock industry-not the Australian livestock industry.
The Australians and all the other nations that export beef and veal to America have known about our import quota law since the day it first was proposed and debated :.n the Halls of Congress.
These countries have known every year since enactment of that law exactly how it worked, exactly what the political considerations were that could play a part in the application of the law, exactly how it would affect their shipments to America, and that it could affect the domestic market.
The Australians have known since the beginning of this year that the Government of the United States had established-on the basis of what was considered to be in the best interests of the domestic livestock industry, the overall economy, and I presume, our relationships with foreign nations-an adjusted base quota level for all nations of 1,-035,000 pounds. They have participated this year, as in past years in negotiations from time to time with representatives of the United States and they are fully aware of all the conditions in this Nation which inftuence meat import decisions.
The Australians have already shipped to the United States their entire 1969 allocation of beef and veal for U.S. consumption. They have shipped in excess of 505 million pounds of beef to America already this year.
Now, Australian beef industry representatives come to the United States, and they tell us their industry is in trouble. They say they owe it to themselves to try and persuade the United States to come to their rescue. They say they understand that the U.S. beef industry has
economic problems, too, but they do not think it is unreasonable to ask that we ignore our own problems and, instead, take steps to help solve theirs.
Let us look at the cold, hard statistics with respect to the foreign import situation.
President Nixon illustrated the situation for the livestock industry in this country when, as a presidential candidate, he pointed out that in 1948, Choice fed steers in Chicago sold for an average price of $30.96 per 100 pounds.
During 1964, following record meat imports, the selling price averaged $20.52-down more than $10.
In January of 1968 the price per pound for Choice, live slaughter steers at Chicago was $26.69. In June of 1968, it was $26.55. In September a year ago, it was $27.90. In December 1968, it was $29.44.
In January of 1969, it was $28.89; in June, the price peaked at $34.68. And now, in September of this year, it is about $29.55.
The figures show, I believe, that while the price has fluctuated, it has never increased to the point where the cattlemen of this country could say they were receiving an income after expenses that was anywhere close to what citizens in other endeavors have received.
Since I first read the article in the Wall Street Journal which alleged that imports would be increased by 200 to 400 million pounds annually, I have talked with officials at the White House, and I have talked with official's at the Department of Agriculture.
USDA economists are po in ting to the drop in Choice cattle prices in September of this year as the first in a series of expected reductions. According to their projections, the $34.68 price paid in June of this year is a phenomenon of the past-a nice thing while it lasted, as far as the cattlemen are concerned.
In light of this situation, it seems tragic, indeed, that White House economists would decide at this time to entertain the idea of opening the gates to millions more pounds of beef to help speed a drop in the price.
And an of the discussion about price must be balanced with a cognizance of the fact that the cost of doing business for the livestock industry is at a recordbreaking, alltime high. The cattlemen suffer from inflation, too, just as the consumer does.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the article entitled "Commodities-Price Trends of Tomorrow's Meals and Manufactures," published in the Wall Street Journal for September 24, 1969.
There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
cattle prices at Omaha, Neb., and Sioux City, Iowa, rose 25 cen~ a 100 pounds. At other centers, markets were about unchanged.
The day's business had ended when livestock and meat dealers received news that the Administration is studying a possible increase in beef imports. The intent is to help ease infiationary pressure, a member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27301 said. However, he expects opposition from the livestock industry.
About the most that could be expected, the official said, would be an increase of 100 million to 200 million pounds annually, mostly from Australia and New Zealand. Both nations have been in touch with President Nixon on the matter.
EXHIBIT 1 CONSIDERATIONS SUPPORTING INCREASED IM
PORTS OF AUSTRALIAN MEAT DURING 1969 These facts are presented by the Aus
tralian Meat Board on behalf of the Australian meat industry. Our industry finds itself in a situation of serious emergency because of the restrictions on its sales to the United States under the voluntary restraints program. The Australian allocation for the entire year 1969 under that program is presently 505,000 ,000 pounds out of a total meat import quantity of 1,035,000,000 pounds. When the program for this year was established, Australia objected strongly to this allocation because it failed to recognize the historical percentage of U.S. meat imports that had been enjoyed by the Australian meat industry. Over a period of several years prior to the initiation of the voluntary restraints program, the Australian share had been in excess of 54 %, whereas the allocation required of us to cut our share back to less than 49%.
We are now experiencing the heavy impact of this curtailment of our market share.
With almost one-third of the year to go, now in early September, our entire quota has been allocated, only 3,000 tons of meat remain to be shipped and no additional Australian meat will be available to U.S. users during the final quarter of this year. At the same time, both the natural expansion of Australian meat production and certain special factors which have developed during the present year place the Australian meat industry in a position where it must find a market for about 80,000,000 pounds of meat during the balance of 1969.
On the other hand, the United States market has for a number of years suffered from a chronic shortage of manufacturing meat, which accounts for the great preponderance of Australian meat imports. Americans consume greater quantities of this meat proportionately than do consumers in other countries, and their rate of consumption is rising. The American meat industry cannot economically produce substantial amounts of manufacturing meat. In contrast, Australia is uniquely well suited for the production of this class of meat and the Australian industry has consciously geared up over a period of time to meet the American demand. The present Australian production reflects decisions ma.de by our industry several years ago in recognitlon of this American consumer demand and in reliance on being permitted at least to maintain our relative position in U.S. meat imports. Under the artificial limits of the voluntary restraints program the American consumer is thus deprived of an adequate supply of manufacturing meat and Australia finds itself with an unmarketable surplus.
We believe that the present limitations under the voluntary restraints program affect our industry inequitably and we urge that the United States Government exercise its administrative discretion to afford us some measure of relief.
Insofar as the operation of the program is concerned, the reasons for our belief that it is inequitable can be readily illustrated. In the years prior to the present limitation, as previously mentioned, Australia's share of total U.S. meat imports was in excess of 54 % . As applied to the present total of 1,035,000,ooo, this would make available to the Australian meat industry a total of about 559,-000,000 pounds. If we were accorded our
traditional share, therefore, we would be able to market in this country an additional 54,-000,000 pounds out of our existing surplus. Australia was the only country to suffer a substantial loss in market share under the present voluntary restraints arrangement. The Australian industry's acceptance of this reduction in 1968 was based on the assurance that our cooperation at that time would not prejudice our position in future years. We have, however, thus far been held at the same reduced share for 1969 and we now find that the inflexible continuation of the current restraint level would cause us severe injury. We are convinced that, under existing provisions of law, the United States Government is in a position to ease the present severe restrictions on imports of Australian meat to enable us to recover at least the greater part of the market share of which we have been deprived under the present voluntary restraints limit.
The Meat Import Quota law requires the Secretary of Agriculture to establish mandatory quotas only when he can foresee that a total figure set in accordance with the provisions of the statute will be exceeded by U.S. meat imports. For the present calendar year, this figure has been determined to be 1,087,-000,000 pounds. The Secretary of Agriculture estimated at the end of June that total imports would only come to 1,035,000,000 pounds, which of course is the amount of the voluntary restraints total.
Accordingly, the Secretary o! Agriculture could increase his estimate of the total volume of meat imports for this year by over 50,000,000 pounds without reaching the "trigger point" level which would bring mandatory quotas into play. The additional quantity legally permitted thus approximates the amount of which the Australian meat industry has been deprived under the voluntary restraints allocation presently applicable to us.
We believe further that the United States Government could permit Australia to ship in well over an additional 50,000,000 pounds without exceeding the statutory limits. Some of the countries exporting meat to the United States will undoubtedly fall short of the share allocated to them under the program of voluntary restraints. The understanding between the Australian Government and the Government of the United States is that Australia is to share in the allocation of any such shortfall.
We urgently request that the United States Government grant us an increase in our present allocation under the voluntary restraints program. The legal latitude is available for this exercise of administrative discretion. The margin between the legal limitation and the present voluntary restraints total, even disregarding shortfalls, approximates the amount necessary to restore to the Australian meat industry its traditional share of U.S. meat imports. Although this added amount will not accommodate the present Australian meat surplus, it will substantially alleviate the hardship that otherwise will be caused to Australian producers, packers and exporters.
As previously noted, the present Australian meait production results from past projections of growing demand for our product in the United States market. The present price situation shows that this planning was justified and that only artificial restrictions keep its consumption below proper levels. Our present problem is further aggravated by an emergency set of circumstances. Because of a continuing severe drought in Queensland, the cattlemen in that state are unable to continue to provide forage for their cattle herds. A drought in Queensland has vastly greater repercussions on beef exports than one in any other area because Queensland has over one-third of the cattle in
Australia and has three times the beef production of any other state. Queensland cattle must be slaughtered and marketed or allowed to die on the range. Under the drought conditions, there is no possibility of keeping this large quantity of meat on the hoof and off the market. Moreover, available storage facilities will be over-taxed by the amount of meat that will be produced during the remaJning months of 1969. Other world markets are inadequate to absorb the unavoidable surplus on an economic basis.
It is our conviction that we have cooperated in every respect with the United States Government in the development and implementation of the program of voluntary restraints. The degree of our cooperation threatens the Australian meat industry now with serious injury. The Australian Meat Board has the responsibility to do everything within its power to prevent the infliction of such heavy damage on the Australian moot industry. We recognize that U.S. Government officials have a similar responsibility to administer the laws ena.cted by the United States Congress. But the current voluntary restraint level, which cuts our meat industry down both below the percentage of the market which it has supplied historically and below the level which the United States Congress has allowed for imports before mandatory quotas are "trig· gered,'' need not be rigidly applied when the room to maneuver within the scope of the legal provisions is available to help both the Australian industry and the American consumer.
In our view, the preservation of a program of voluntary restraints requires its fair and flexible ad.ministration within legal limits. A rigid policy which compels us to ohap off new sales to the U.S. market for delivery during the balance of 1969 would make our continued acceptance of a voluntary restraints program incompatible with the responsibilities of the Australian Meat Board to the members of its industry.
It is also apparent that allowing the Australian meat industry an additional volume Of imports in the neigborhood of 50,000,000 pounds during the present calendar year could in no way injure American meat producers. Our chronic surplus of manufacturing meat, created by the existing artificial restraints, is matched by a chronic shortage in the United States Of that particular class of meat. A shutoff of the Australian supply during the last quarter of 1969 would mean that boneless manufacturing beef would not be available in sufficient quantities to meet your domestic demand. The increase which we request, and which is within the authority of the United States Government to grant, is a small fraction of 1 % of U.S. production. Its only impact in this country would be to benefit American meat processors and, even more importantly, American consumers. Moreover, it is clear that an artificial and unnecessary shortage would apply heavy pressure to prices of meat products utilizing manufacturing meat. The granting of the additional import share permissible under the present law will serve to prevent the development of greater inflationary pressures.
An exercise of the discretion available to the United States Government thus will serve to prevent serious hardships to the Australian meat industry and will directly benefit American meat users and consumers. It will serve these purposes without any possible harm to American meat producers.
Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I wish tQ add my warning against any action which would open up our domestic market to larger imports of foreign beef than the amount permitted under the present quota laws.
27302 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
Any such step would be extremely dangerous to our domestic producers.
The fact is that during the past few weeks, prices in the cattle industry have been experiencing a very serious decline.
Last spring, cattle prices rose quite sharply. In June, the price of choice steers in Chicago reached a level of about $35 per hundredweight. However, prices have fallen as fast as they went up. In the course of 8 weeks, they dropped over $5 per hundredweight. During the past few weeks, choice cattle have averaged less than $30 per hundredweight. This does not take into account the fact that these are inflated dollars and _not real dollar prices.
The sharp declining cattle prices have inflicted serious injury on many segments of the livestock industry, not to mention agribusiness in general.
Likewise, wholesale prices of dressed beef have declined from about $55 per hundred pounds to $45.50 per hundred, a decline of $9.50 per hundredweight-almost 20 percent.
High prices being paid by the housewife at the grocery store should not be blamed on the farmer. To depress further the market by increasing imports would be most shortsighted.
VIETNAM TROOP WITHDRAWAL Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, one of
the most interesting aspects of the President's announcement that he was withdrawing 35,000 additional troops from Vietnam has been the Communist reaction to it. Both at Paris negotiations and in the Communist press, the withdrawal has been described as meaningless and insignificant. On the other hand, in South Vietnam itself, Vietcong propaganda banners and bulletins displayed the message:
The Americans are running out on you.
In other words, the enemy talks out of both sides of his mouth.
Of course, the other side hopes that one of these two extremes will be believed by some people--that either we are doing nothing-which means that opposition to the war in America will mount; or else that we are going out too fast-which means that our allies in South Vietnam will surrender so that the enemy can take over the country. The truth of the matter, of course, is that neither of those extreme interpretations is accurate. The President is steering a middle course between too little and too much-between the Scylla of inaction and the Charybdis of panic-between perpetual stagnation and headlong retreat. He is reducing the American presence in Vietnam, to be sure. But he is doing so at a pace which does not impair the overall military position, and I am confident that this pace will not be affected by any resolutions introduced in the Congress with attendant fanfare, calling for a specified timetable for comt>lete withdrawal.
The President has indicated that there are three factors which will determine the number and the size and the timing of troop withdrawals: First, the progress
of the Paris peace talks; second, the level of activity on the battlefield, and third, the ability of the South Vietnamese Army to take over the military burden. It is in this third area where the picture reportedly has been most promising. The withdrawals made and planned are premised primarily on this development.
We can be sure that the President will continue to most carefully evaluate all three of these factors as he makes his difficult decisions. Clearly, however, the behavior of the other side will affect these decisions. If they mistake his intentions, then the end of the war will be further delayed.
At the same time, it is imperative that we pot blind ourselves to Hanoi's ultimate designs of conquest in our haste to find a solution. Nor, in seeking breakthroughs, can we afford to dismiss its past deeds. It is for this reason that members of the press today have an even greater responsibility to examine closely and objectively the actions of Hanoi. They have a similar duty to not condemn out of hand everything which has a Saigon dateline, while ignoring the implications of datelines from Hanoi and Peiping.
Robert Spiegel, the able and astute editor of the Mason City, Iowa, GlobeGazette, put his editorial finger on the basic point when he wrote on September 17:
It is easy, and often proper, to attack the Saigon regime for its excesses, weaknesses and undemocratic methods. It is never proper to do so without considering the cruel alternat ives offered by the land of Ho.
I commend this editorial to my colleagues and ask unanimous consent that it be inserted m the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. PELL in the chair). Without objection, it is so ordered.
(See exhibit 1.) Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I am cer
tain that the President has taken these alternatives into account as he has made his decisions. I am not so sure that those who would force a fixed timetable for complete withdrawal of U.S. forces have done so.
All of us both in the Congress and in the Nation-should join in commending the President for his honest and conscientious efforts to bring about a negotiated settlement. We should either support him as he puts his strategy into deeds or at least refrain from the kind of criticism which gives aid and comfort to the enemy. Only in this way can we make it more likely that the will and purpose of our country will be correctly interpreted.
EXHIBIT 1 THE CRUELTY OF Ho
The death of Premier Ho Chi-minh brought reluctant recognition that, at one time, he had been the main unifying source in Vietnam.
Some have called the Marxist leader the "George Washington" of Vietnam for that very reason. The parallel should go no further.
P. J. Honey, a British authority on Oriental nations, has long been a student of Ho's life. He points to the killing of 50,000 to
200,000 Vietnamese who were executed by Ho following his defeat of the French.
Ho's excuse was to eliminate "exploiting landlords." In most instances these were village leaders. Honey writes: "By forcing villagers to participate in the deaths of people they knew to be guiltless, Ho involved them in collective guilt. By giving authority to villagers who never expected it, he secured their cooperation."
This same cruelty is known by American prisoners of war.
For the first time this month, the U.S. government has let two former American captives tell about the way it is.
Navy Lt. Robert Frishman was one of three Americans released last August. All three suffered from wounds or bad treatment.
Frishman estimated some 600 Americans are being held prisoner under harsh, often inhumane circumstances.
"Are rebreaking broken bones in solitary confinement humane? ... I don't think solitary confinement, forced statements, living in a cage for three years, being put in straps, not being allowed to sleep or eat, removal of fingernails, being hung from a ceiling, having an infected arm which was almost lost by not receiving medical care, being dragged along the ground with a broken leg, or not allowing an exchange of mail to POW's are humane ... "
The U.S. government had not allowed Americans released earlier to tell their stories, apparently to avoid provoking retaliation against remaining prisoners.
The facts are being told now because it has become obvious that silence is not winning fair treatment for those still in prison camps.
Relatives of prisoners and those missing in action were informed prior to Frishman's statement that an imminent announcement mighit be distressing to them.
Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird added: "There is clear evidence that North Vietnam has violated even the most fundamental standards of human decency ... "
And Frishman said Americans still in prison camps in Hanoi knew he was going to speak out: "I feel as if I am speaking not only for myself, but for my buddies back in camp to whom I promised I would tell the truth.
"I feel it is time people are aware of the facts."
This is so. It is easy, and often proper, to attack the
Saigon regime for its excesses, weaknesses and undemocratic methods. It is never proper to do so without considering the cruel alternatives offered by the land of Ho.
LETTER FROM SGT. KENNETH L. PETERSON, PUBLISHED IN FORT DODGE, IOWA, MESSENGER
Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, one of the most moving letters I have read appeared as a guest editorial in the September 4 edition of the Fort Dodge, Iowa, Messenger. It was written by a young Fort Dodge marine who was twice w.ounded in Vietnam. While Sgt. Kenneth L. Peterson has seen the ugliness of war, his faith and pride in his community, State, and Nation remain undimmed. And his deep love and respect for his parents should serve as an inspiration to those who are so quick to condemn.
It is a most meaningful letter, and I ask unanimous c.onsent that it be placed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the letter
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27303 was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
THANK You, IOWA
(By Sgt. Kenneth L. Peterson) (NoTE.-From a 21-year-old Marine who
was wounded twice in Vietnam and has since been in Hawaii comes the following moving guest editorial. Sgt. Kenneth L. Peterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Peterson, 1343 S. 26th St., suffered a chest wound and two hours later a serious neck wound while fighting with a Marine unit in Vietnam Feb. 6, 1968. He lay in pain for seven houTs before he was evacuated by helicopter. Since that time he has been in Hawaii , first recuperating from his injuries and in recent months assigned to duty in the Marine liaison office of Tripler Army Hospital, Honolulu. The young Marine NCO writes feelingly of home and parents in this letter.)
While sitting at my desk here in Hawaii a thought came to me. How lucky I am! ...
Lucky to have had been reared in Iowa. We now live in a mixed up society-people just can't seem to get along with one another. This is when I decided to write and thank my parents for bringing me up to be God fearing.
Then I thought "why thank my parents when it wasn't just them who were totally responsible, but every person in a young man's environment?" This mean I should thank each and every person in the community.
So I entitle my message "Thank you, Iowa." This is how my letter to an Iowa. community reads!
Sitting here in Ha.wail trying to get in the mood for writing a long overdue letter to my parents, I started thinking-what has come over me? Why is it so hard to sit down and write a few deserving line::; to the ones who love me? It was once easy for me to write. Was it because I just left you? Was it because everything I did was new-people, places, fr iends and experiences? This was my first reaction, my easy way out.
Thinking it over a. little more carefully, I come up with thoughts and reasons much deeper. Mother, I am a product of your and my father's upbringing. My thoughts and first judgments come from you. This means basically, my thoughts are your thoughts.
I think of all those times when I was young. You were always there for guidance. I ask myself, am I a "midwest man"! different than any other man?
Sitting at a. social party with friends one evening conversing in a broad manner, a question arose as to why we have a high rate of juvenile delinquency in our cities. Ea.ch person made his statement. After ma.king my statement on the matter, a. very good friend of mine said jokingly, "what do you know about city life, living in Iowa."
I returned his remark with, "how right you are, but let me tell you about my little city in Iowa. I come from a city of approximately 30,000 people located in the north central portion of Iowa, called Fort Dodge.
"My whole life has mainly consisted of that particular city and state. At the age of 4, I started in Iowa schools. My family is an ordinary Iowa family. I really didn't have the opportunity to see any fancy museums or theaters. My early childhood consisted of long hours with God present all a.round me. You see my friends, in many ways, I am luckier than any other person.
"In what large city can you really see wild flowers bloom, a deer graze in a nearby pasture, beavers building their dam, fresh alfalfa being cut, and the brisk fresh smell of a morning's richness?
"Thanks to that small city and the state of Iowa, I had all this and much much more. I guess for the most part I have to thank you, Dad, you along with every Little League coach or manager. Every time I had a. little boy's problem you. were there. Always ready to give advice, but never forcing
it. I would go to the YMCA in my little city with all my nine-year-old problems. There the answer would always lie with a tall lanky college age student, or that short pudgy middle-aged janitor or that elderly retired desk manager.
"I often hunted raccoons along the Des Moines River and trapped muskrat in Lizard Creek.
"Why, oh why, America., can't you be a. little more like my little city in Iowa.? If our younger children could only have that opportunity. Not only to have good parents, but equally as important, to have people around where they live take an active interest in their behavior, instead of teaching them the ugliness of rioting and protesting."
You see my friend, I'm proud to say that I'm from a city small in size, but immense in thoughtfulness and love. Thank you God for letting me be fortunate enough to be raised in a state such as Iowa..
"Thank you, Iowa, for your knowledge and love."
RELAXING MEAT IMPORT LIMITATIONS
Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, I am very grateful to the Senator from Rhode Island for relieving me of the chair and giving me an opportunity to respond to some of the matters that my friend from Wyoming mentioned a few moments ago in his discussion of prices of beef.
I think the Senator from Nebraska has made a significant contribution to our understanding of beef prices and the problems of cattlemen in the West. Of course, he was joined by the Senator from Iowa, the Senator from Wyoming, the Senator from Oklahoma, the Senator from Colorado, and other Senators.
I want to especially underscore, however, the statement the Senator from Wyoming made on the increased indebtedness of the stockmen and cattlemen in their agricultural real estate as a result of meat imports from all over the world. Instead of the kind of indebtedness which is ordinarily incurred in carrying on their ordinary business, they have more than doubled the indebtedness on their real estate. One of the reasons why they have had to borrow more and more on their ranches in the West is the decline in the price of beef. We have to recognize that this facet of indebtedness has not only doubled so far as money is concerned, with respect to mortgages on ranches, but has also doubled as far as interest rates are concerned. This has been brought a:bout by importation of beef and the fact we have not been sustaining this very important industry.
Ordinarily a current operation pays for itself when the calves are raised and then paid for at the end of the year when they are sold to the feedlots. The rancher goes to the bank and gets his money. But year after year the stockmen of Montana, Nebraska, Texas, Iowa, Wyoming, Oklahoma, and other States where livestock is produced have been finding that they do not have enough money at the end of the year to come out even. So they borrow a little more on their ranches. They increase the mortgage on the real estate involved.
This is a very serious situation that we should recognize today and that we should take care of today. We should be
sure we understand that this is a manifestation of a price crisis that can bring about a great crisis in a most important economic activity of the West.
Mr. HANSEN. I thank the distinguished Senator from Montana.
ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT UNTIL MONDAY
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that when the Senate completes its business today, it stand in adjournment until 12 o'clock noon on Monday next.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.
FEDERAL COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFE'I'Y ACT OF 1969
The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2917) to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Vermont <Mr. PROUTY) is recognized.
Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, I yield to the Senator from West Virginia. AMENDMENT INTENDED TO BE PROPOSED TO S.
2917--COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFETY BILL BY SENATORS FROM WEST VIRGimA; WOULD ADD
NEW TITLE ON COAL MINER'S WORKMEN' S
COMPENSATION IMPROVEMENT
Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I send to the desk an amendment which may be proposed by me for myself and my distinguished West Virginia colleague <Mr. BYRD) to S. 2917, to improve the health and safety conditions of persons working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
The amendment would be on page 123 after line 23 and would add a new title VII, Coal Miners' Workmen's Compensation Improvement. Part A would be extension of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act to employees not covered by State workmen's compensation laws. Part B would provide minimum compensation benefits for employees covered by State laws. Part C is administrative provisions. And part D is amendments to other acts.
There is Federal precedent in other Federal statute for this amendment which would extend to miners coverage for death or disability from respiratory disease. This objective would be accomplished through extension of the Federal Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers• Compensation Act to those engaged in mine work.
The States would be given 2 years to amend, revise, or otherwise modify State worker's compensation laws to provide such coverage. In the event that a State does not provide such coverage, the Secretary of Labor could provide benefits for miners under the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers• Compensation Act.
Under this amendment, employers could provide compensation coverage through private insurance or as self insurers. The Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Act would be amended to provide that claims for compensation on account of death or disability resulting
27304 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
from respiratory disease shall be conclusively presumed to be under the provisions of the Federal Act if a miner involved worked for at least 5 years in the coal mining industry.
The Federal statute would be amended to permit the Secretary of Labor to determine if an individual would have been entitled to compensation under State w01kers' compensation or under the Federal statue if this title had been in effect at the time of death or disability. This would provide compensation in those cases during the interim period between enactment and the implementation of the provisions of this title for individuals who are not eligible for compensation now.
Mr. President, I submit a section-bysection analysis of our amendment which may be offered, and ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of these remarks.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amendment will be received and printed, and will lie on the table; and, without objection, the section-bysection analysis will be printed in the RECORD.
The material referred to fallows: SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS
PART A
Section 701. This section would extend the coverage of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act to any employee of any employer engaged in the coal mining industry if such employee is not covered by a state workmen's compensation law two years after the 31st day of December following the date of the enactment of the title.
Paragraph {b) of the section provides that if an employee engaged in the coal mining industry suffers death or disability as a result of a respiratory disease and the State workmen's compensation law does not contain provisions substantially the same as those contained in Section 20{b) of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, then the employee may elect to be covered by such Act. (Section 20 of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act is amended by Section 341 of this title to provide compensation to coal miners suffering death or disability resulting from a respiratory disease after working five or more years in the coal mining industry.)
Section 711 provides that two years after the 31st day of December following the date of enactment of the title, every employer in the coal mining industry shall secure the payment of compensation for employees covered by a state workmen's compensation law at benefit levels not less than those prescribed by the appropriate provision of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act either as a self-insurer or by insuring and keeping insured payment of compensation for miners with stock companies or mutual companies or State insuring funds.
Paragraph (b) of the section contains requirements for the contents of every policy or contract of insurance with respect to the payment of benefits at levels consistent with the title irrespective of the provisions of State workmen's compensation laws which may provide for lesser payments and appropriate provisions that insolvency or bankruptcy of the employer or his discharge shall not relieve the insurance carrier from payment of compensation.
Paragraph (c) of the section makes provision for notice of cancellation for the policy or contract of insurance issued by an insurance carrier under this section.
Section 712 provides for claims procedures.
Section 713 authorizes the Secretary of Labor to enter into agreements with appropriate State agencies charged with the administration of State workmen's compensation laws for utilizing the services of State and local agencies in handling and processing claims.
Section 714. This section establishes in the Treasury of the United States a separate fund to be known as the Employees' Benefit Fund for the purpose of making payments in accordance with the provision of section 722(e). Payments to the fund shall be ma.de as follows:
" ( 1) The sum of $5,000 shall be paid for the death of an employee of an uninsured employer where the employee's death was due to his employment and there is no person entitled under this part to compensation for such death.
{2) All amounts collected as fines and penal ties under the provisions of this part.
(3) The moneys recovered by the Secretary pursuant to Section 322.
(4) Such amounts as the Congress of the United States may appropriate from time to time."
Section 715 provides for penalties for failing to secure payment of compensation in accordance with the requirements of the Act.
Section 721 authorizes the Secretary to make necessary rules and regulations.
Section 722 provides subpoena powers for the Secretary.
Section 723 provides that nothing in the title shall be construed as repealing or modifying any other Federal law providing compensation coverage.
Sect ion 724 specifies that unless the context otherwise requires, the Act shall take effect upon enactment and apply only to injuries which occur after its effective date.
Section 725 defines terms used in the Act. Section 731 amends the Longshoremen's
and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act to provide:
" (b) (1) In the case of a claim for compensation on account of death or disability resulting from respiratory disease if the injured employee worked for five years or more in the coal mining industry it shall be conclusively presumed that the claim comes within the provisions of this Act. This subsection shall not be deemed to affect the applicability of subsection (a) in the case of claims on account of death or disability resulting from respiratory disease when the injured employee has not worked in a mine for as much as five years.
" (2) For purposes of paragraph (1) years worked in the coal mining industry shall be determined on the basis that two hundred and forty days of work constitutes one year of work."
{b) The amendment made by this section shall apply with respect to injuries or deaths occurring after the effective date of this Act."
Section 732 adds a new section to Chapter 81, subchapter II, title 5 as follows:
"S. 8174. Respiratory disease claims. "If the Secretary of Labor determines that
(1) an individual would be entitled to compensation under a State workmen's compensation law, or under the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, on account of death or disability resulting from respiratory disease if title VII of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 had been in effect at the time of the death or injury, and (2) such individual is not entitled to such compensation, then the Secretary shall pay compensation to such person from the Employees' Compensation Fund at the rate and for the period he determines such individual would receive it if he was entitled to compensation under such laws. No payment shall be made under this section for any period prior to the effective date of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969. Original claims under this section shall be made within one year after such effective date, but the Secretary of Labor shall make
exceptions to this requirement for reasonable cause shown. The provisions of sections 8121, 8122{b), 8123, 8124, 8125, 8126, 8127, 8128, 8129, 8130, 8131, 8132, and 8135 shall apply with respect to claims under this section."
Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, shortly I shall raise a point of order against a section of the pending legislation. Specifically, the point of order is to section 502 of the bill, which provides that each producer or importer of coal shall pay an assessment of 1 cent per ton to the United States on all coal production in or imported into this country from the operative date of this legislation until June 30, 1970. The assessment is then raised 1 cent per ton at the beginning of each succeeding fiscal year, until it reaches 4 cents per ton, commencing July 1, 1972.
The Constitution of the United States clearly and unambiguously prohibits the Senate from originating this type of legislation. The first paragraph of section 7 of article I of the Constitution of the United States of America reads as follows:
All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the house of representatives; but the senate may propose or concur with amendments as on other bills.
So, in accordance with my previously announced intention, Mr. President, I make a point of order against section 502 of the pending bill, for the reason that it is a revenue raising measure, which, under the Constitution, must originate in the House of Representatives.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Chair had been informed of the point of order.
The Chair rules that the point of order raises a constitutional question on which the Chair is not authorized to rule. Under the uniform precedents of the Senate, the Chair submits all constitutional questions to the Senate for decision, which are debatable and decided by a majority vote.
The question now is, Is it the judgment of the Senate that this point of order is well taken?
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I object. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem
pore. Objection is heard. The clerk will reswne the calling of the roll.
The bill clerk reswned and concluded the calling of the roll, and the following Senators answered to their names:
Allott Bellmon Byrd, W. Va. Cook Cooper Fulbright
[No. 102 Leg.] Grimn Hansen Hruska Kennedy Long Metcalf
Pearson Pell Prouty Randolph Sparkman Williams, N .J.
Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Senator from North Dakota (Mr. BURDICK), the Senator from California <Mr. CRANSTON), the Senator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON), the Senator from Tennessee <Mr. GORE), the Senator from
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27305
Indiana <Mr. HARTKE), the Senator from Hawaii (Mr. INOUYE), the Senator from Washington <Mr. JACKSON), the Senator from Montana (Mr. MANSFIELD)' the Senator from Wyoming <Mr. McGEE), the Senator from New Mexico <Mr. MONTOYA) , and the Senator from Utah <Mr. Moss) are necessarily absent.
I further announce that the Senator from Washington <Mr. MAGNUSON) and the Senator from Iowa <Mr. HUGHES) are absent on official business.
Mr. GRIFFIN. I announce that the Senator from Delaware <Mr. BOGGS), the Senator from Massachusetts <Mr. BROOKE ) , the Senator from Kansas <Mr. DoLE) , the Senator from Arizona <Mr. GOLDWATER) , the Senator from New York (Mr. JAVITS), and the Senator from Illinois (Mr. SMITH) are necessarily absent.
The Senator from Colorado <Mr. DOMINICK), the Senator from Illinois (Mr. PERCY), and the Senator from Ohio <Mr. SAXBE) are absent. on official business.
The Senator from Vermont <Mr. AIKEN), the Senator from Hawaii <Mr. FONG), the Senator from Idiaho <Mr. JORDAN), the Senator from Maryland (Mr. MATHIAS), the Senator from California (Mr. MURPHY ) , and the Senator from Texas (Mr. TOWER) are detained on official business.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tern. pore. A quorum is not present.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I move that the Sergeant at Arms be directed to request the attendance of absent Senators.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the motion of the Senator from Massachusetts.
The motion was agreed to. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem
pore. The Sergeant at Arms will execute the order of the Senate.
After some delay, the following Senators entered the Chamber and answered to their names: Allen Gravel Pastore Anderson Gurney Proxmire Baker Harris Ribicoff Bayh Hart Russell Bennett Hatfield Schweiker Bible Holland Scott Byrd, Va. Hollill'gs Smith, Maine Cannon Jordan, N .C. Spong ca.se Mccarthy Stennis Church McClellan Stevens Cotton McGovern Symington Curtis Mcintyre Talmadge Dodd Miller Thurmond Eastland Mondale Tydings Ellender Mundt Wllliams, Del. Ervin Muskie Yarborough Fannin Nelson Young, N. Dak. Goodell Packwood Young, Ohio
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. SCHWEIKER in the chair). A quorum is present.
Mr. KENNEDY obtained the floor. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I yield
to the Senator from Vermont. Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, what is
the pending business? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The
pending question is: Is it the judgment of the Senate that this point of order is well taken?
This p0int of order raises a constitutional question on which the Chair is not authorized to rule. Under the uniform precedents of the Senate, the Chair submits all constitutional ques-
tions to the Senate for decision, which are debatable and decided by a majority vote.
Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a sufficient second. The yeas and nays are ordered.
Mr. KENNEDY and Mr. HOLLAND addressed the Chair.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
Mr. PROUTY. I am ready to vote on this matter at any time. Let us vote.
AMERICAN INDIAN DAY-1969 Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, today
has been set aside by many States and a number of organizations as American Indian Day. It provides us with an opportunity to reflect on the important contributions of the American Indian to our society and pay tribute to the many accomplishments and rich heritage of the "first Americans."
Contrary to popular folklore, the American Indian is no longer the "vanishing American." There are now approximately 700,000 American Indians in the United States, and they are the fastest-growing ethnic group in the Nation. If we were to count all of the people with known Indian fore bears, we could take pride in an "Indian population" of over 10,000,000. Despite tremendous odds and many misguided attempts by the dominant society to assimilate all Indians into the "mainstream," viable Indian oommunities can still be found in every State of the Union, in some cases :fighting for survival, in other cases intact and flourishing. Despite the pressure to assimilate, the American Indian has retadned much of his social and cultural identity. Nearly 300 Indian languages and dialects are still spoken in this country, and at least 45 of these languages are spoken by more than 1,000 Indians. At least 50 percent of the Indian children of school age still speak their native language at home and in their communities.
The oldest continually inhabited community on the North American continent exists on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona. Old Oraibi's original inhabitants date back to 500 years before the first discovery of America by European explorers. It is a thriving Indian community today, and shows every sign of continuing on for centuries to come.
From everJ point of view, the American Indian is the most unique of all of our citizens. He entered the New World over 25,000 years ago. Based on our present knowledge, he had populated all of the Western Hemisphere, with an extraordinary diversity of cultural groups, reaching the southern extreme of South America, more than 10,000 years ago. From the very first day of his arrival, the American Indian was confronted with the problem of adapting himself to a new and frequently hostile environ-ment and supporting himself under these conditions. How this was accomplished has considerable relevance to our present Government policies, for the American Indian has demonstrated an
extraordinary capacity for survival, adaptation, and change. Yet we tend to see Indian communities as static museum pieces, archaic anachronisms in our technological society, something for tourists to stare at and take pictures of, and as "Indian problems" for the Federal Government to solve.
Why is it that we only see poverty but fail to understand the wealth of a people who are still atuned to the beauty of nature and feel a rapport and spiritual attachment to the land they inhabit?
Why is it we only see the uncleanliness of a dirt floor hogan but never the warmth or richness of the human relationships in an extended family?
Why is it we observe only the lack of material possessions which we prize so highly and fail to understand the sense of loyalty and generosity that permits an Indian community to survive on so very little?
Why is it we see only an overcrowded Indian home, when we could observe the presence of grandparents who are still revered and have an important role to play in the raising of children?
Why is it we see only idleness and despair while we fail to understand a fierce sense of individual pride and a strong expression of autonomy and freedom?
Indeed, we have much to learn from the American Indian and his cultural differences-an interest in people rather than things, a strong feeling of belonging, of a need to share with others, of dignity in harsh circumstances, of a love for nature which is not exploitative, and of measuring a man not by what he has or looks like or says, but by what he is. These values which we are so often blind to, make middle-class America look culturally deprived.
Perhaps we should begin by assessing how much the American Indian has contributed to our society. It is a sad commentary on our present state of affairs to find out that a thorough study of the impact of Indian cultures on American society is yet to be written. The material and institutional impact of Indian culture remains inadequately understood and largely underestimated.
Much of the impact of Indian cultures has blended into our natural environment and is simply taken for granted. More than half of our states have Indian names, as do thousands of cities, towns, rivers, lakes and mountains. Americans meet in a caucus, run the gauntlet, smoke the peace pipe, hold pow wows and bury the hatchet. Settlers trekking westward followed Indian traJls, which have been developed into much of our present system of national highways. In many subtle ways, Indian cultures have strongly influenced our national character--our love of athletics, our national worship of sun, air, and water, and the flowering of the Boy Scout movement.
The changes that American Indians wrought in the life of our pioneers were far more impressive and less destructive than any changes white teachers have yet brought to Indian life. The early colonists learned from the Indian how to hunt, how to farm, and ultimately how to survive in the New World. In less than a century, more than 50 new foods had
27306 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE September 26, 1969
been carried back to the Old World, including maize, potatoes, pumpkins, turkey, squash, and various kinds of beans. These agricultural products had a tremendous impact on the European and eventually on the world economy. Potatoes and maize now rank second and third in total tonnage of the world's crops. Considerably more than half of our nationai farm produce today consists of plants domesticated by Indian botanists long before Columbus landed. And it was not only the agricultural products that the American Indian gave to the white settlers-but also the procedures for planting, irrigation, fertilization, cultivation, storage, and utilization. This in itself was an enormous contribution and one which meant survival for the white man in the New World. But this is only part of our indebtedness.
In medicine, as in the production of food and textiles, the conventional picture of the Indian as an ignorant savage is far removed from the truth. Cocaine, quinine, novocain, witch hazel, and many other drugs were developed and used by the Indian before Columbus landed. In the 400 years that physicians and botanists have been examining and analyzing the flora of America, they have not yet discovered a medicinal herb unknown to the Indians.
The social significance of such material contributions is impressive, but the Indian gave more in the realm of the intangible. The distinctive political ideals of young America owed much to a rich Indian democratic tradition-a debt often recognized by statements of our leading colonists. The pattern of States within a State that we call federalism, the habit of treating chiefs as servants of the people instead of masters, the insistence that the community must respect the diversity of men and their dreams-all these things were part of the American way of life before 1492.
Franklin carried his admiration for the Iroquois Confederacy to the Albany Congress, and Jefferson made numerous references to the freedom and democracy of Indian society which achieved the maximum degree of order with the minimum degree of coercion. The late Felix Cohen, noted legal scholar and Indian authority, remarked:
Those accustomed to the histories of the conqueror will hardly be convinced, though example be piled on example, that American democracy, freedom, and tolerance are more American than European, and have deep aboriginal roots in our land.
One of the most remarkable examples of adaptation and accomplishment by any Indian tribe in the United States is that of the Cherokee. Anyone who doubts the capacity of Indian communities for constructive change and self-determination should take cognizance of this accomplishment.
In 1820, the Cherokee Nation established a government of laws. They adopted a constitution, patterned after that of the United States, which provided for courts, representation, and jury trials. Their constitution gave the national council authority to remove the principal chief for disability and gave the vote to all those over 18 years of age.
They divided their nation into eight
districts, and each district was entitled to send four representatives to New Echota, the capital of the nation. The national committee and the national council served as an upper and lower house whose members were elected by their constituents. Each district had a judge, a marshal, and a councU house where meetings were held twice a year. Laws were passed for the collection of taxes and debts, for repairs on roads, for licenses to white persons engaged in farming or other businesses in the nation, for the supPort of schools, and for the regulation of the liquor traffic. The system compared favorably with that of the Federal Government and any State government then existent. After the Cherokee institutions were destroyed and they were forcefully removed from Georgia and resettled west of the Mississippi, another national convention was called, and a new constitution adopted. The institutions were reestablished and flourished until Oklahoma became a State in 1906 when they were again abolished.
Equally as remarkable was the development of an extensive educational system of high quality and accomplishment. Funded largely by moneys received from the Federal Government as a result of ceding large tracts of land in 1819, 1828, 1835, and 1866, the school system flourished until 1903 when it was taken over by the Federal Government. It is estimated that the Cherokee Nation invested up to 50 percent of its annual budget in operating its school system.
Two things were provided for in the treaty of 1828 which had tremendous implications for the development of the Cherokee school system and are unique in the history of Indian education in this country. The treaty provided $500 for the use of George Guess, better known as Sequoyeh or the inventor of the Cherokee alphabet and syllabary. In addition, $1,000 was provided for the purchase of a printing press. The remarkable consequences of these two provisions was that the Cherokees were 90 percent literate in their native language in a period of several years and in the late 1880's, had a much higher English literacy level than the white population of either Texas or Arkansas. Until the late 1890's, both the Cherokee and Choctaw Nations operated very extensive and highly successful school systems-well over 200 schools and academies-sending numerous graduates to enter eastern colleges. These school systems, until they were abolished in 1906, were clearly the finest west of the Mississippi.
In addition the Cherokee published a bilingual newspaper beginning in 1828 and continuing until 1903. The paper was originally called the Cherokee Phoenix. The name had been carefully chosen to symbolize that day when according to the first editor.
All Indian tribes of America should arise, Phoenix-like, from their ashes, and when the terms "Indian deprivation," - "war whoop," "scalping knife," and the like, shall become obsolete and forever be buried deep under the ground.
Unfortunately, as one surveys the present status of the American Indian, we have not yet arrived at a Federal Gov-
ernment policy enlightened enough to foster the regeneration of Indian communities, the elimination of Indian poverty, or a citizenry well enough informed to set aside the stereotypes and prejudices of the past.
For example, the Subcommittee on Indian Education visited the Cherokee in east Oklahoma in February of 1968. We found family after family with annual incomes of less than $1,000. In Adair County, which has the largest Indian PoPUlation, we found 90 percent of the Cherokee families living on welfare. In McCurtain County, which has the largest Choctaw Indian population, we found 99 percent of the families liv.ing below the poverty line.
In subcommittee hearings, we were told that the droPout rate of Cherokee Indian children in public schools was running as high as 75 percent. We were informed that the median number of school years completed by adult Cherokees was 5.5 and that 40 percent of the adult Cherokees were functionally illiterate in English. Contrasted with the magnificant self-generated accomplishments of the previous century, the Cherokee have suffered a severe decline.
This example does not stand by itself, it is in fact typical of the poverty and educational failure that can be found in Indian communities across the country. The national statistics are well known and need not be repeated, but their implications are clear-the "first American" is the "last American" today in terms of housing, health, income, education, and an equal opportunity to share in the material wealth of our Nation. My brother, the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy, has called this a national tragedy and a national disgrace. Clearly, it can no longer be tolerated by the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, and the one most deeply devoted to cultural pluralism and individual freedom. Where have we failed?
The essential failure, I believe, has been a failure of national policy. Through all of our history, states as well as the Federal Government have been frustrated with respect to solving the problems of the American Indians. We have vacillated between: First, the policy of starving the Indians into throwing in the sponge and "getting lost" in the general population; and second a "kinder" policy of helping them to get themselves ready to leave Indian ways and get lost in the general population.
In either case, they would then be off our consciences and finally out of our pocketbooks. Both policies have failed.
It is a challenge which has never been met in the United States to help the Indians to adjust economically and socially to American life, so that they actually become financially independent. We cannot begin to solve the problem unless we first recognize that Indians have a right to make this adjustment as Indians. What folly it has been to demand that Indians cooperate in plans for making them something other than they want to be. What an interesting experiment, on the other hand, once the block is removed, to develop with them ways toward that greatest freedom which comes with economic independence.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27307
The present policy, aimed at the disappearance of the Indians, is a doubleedged sword. On the one side there is a nauseating paternalism. Indians get help from the Government because, since we destroyed their means of livelihood, they need it; and it is our moral obligation to continue this help until we and they are wise enough to make them once again independent. But meanwhile, the Indian Bureau, like any overprotective parent, demands that the Indians manage their own affairs; but, on the grounds that they do not know how, never lets them try, and becomes sure more than ever that they are incompetent to do so. They say, in effect, that as long as we pay the bills, we shall manage your communities. If you think you are competent to manage your own affairs, then cut yourselves off from the :financial assistance as well. Money to live on, or freedom; you cannot have both, so take your choice.
We need an entirely new approach. We need to separate the two problems of the money which the Indians need for their community services from the way the money is used.
Nobody should ever again interpret our policy as one which is importantly influenced by a desire to save money to the detriment of Indians and in violation of our traditional and moral obligations. It has been and should be our policy to make it unnecessary to provide special services, hence to make Indians independent. But until this is accomplished, the money should be provided because it is needed and because it is right. But this money should be spent by the Indians, for themselves, rather than for the Indians by bureaucrats.
Throughout the 1960's we have been groping toward a more enlightened national policy, but the result can be measured largely in terms of words not action. Numerous studies, task force reports, and commissions have come forth with their "final solution" for the Indian problem, but the crucial ingredient that has always been missing is Indians speaking for themselves about what is wrong, what they want and need, and what our policy should be. On numerous occasions, the Federal Government has suffered the embarrassment of putting forward grand schemes to solve the Indians problems without really permitting the Indian to determine these policies and programs for himself. This is not only a hypocritical national charade which breeds cynicism and frustration on both sides but also, more important, a perpetuation of our accumulative failures.
The question that needs to be answered is whether or not this Nation has reached a sufficient stage of maturity and self-awareness to recognize its failure and to call upon a strength of intellect, conscience, and vision, to permit the prophecy of the Cherokee Phoenix to come true.
FEDERAL COAL MINE HEALTH AND SAFETY ACT OF 1969
The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill <S. 2917) to improve the health and safety conditions of persons
CXV--1721-Part 20
working in the coal mining industry of the United States.
Mr. HOLLAND. Mr. President, I would like to address a question to the acting majority leader. Is it the intention of the acting majority leader to allow a vote to take place this afternoon?
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, the Senate will come to a vote, as at other times, in aceordance with its procedures and according to its rules. This matter is now open for debate and discussion which, under the rules, may be unlimited. The position of the distinguished Senator from Vermont is understood. We are trying to work out an agreement. The solution is not yet clear. Senators on both sides of the aisle may wish to speak on the matter, and they will have an opportunity to do so.
Mr. HOLLAND. Mr. President, if I may express the opinion of one Senator, I think it would be very unfortunate to have a bare quorum of 51 Senators pass on a point of order addressed to a constitutional question which, as I understand from the Parliamentarian, differs in some degree from any such question that has been offered heretofore.
Without expressing any commitment one way or another, after reading section 502 of the pending measure, i.t seems to me the question of whether or not the point of order is well taken depends entirely on whether the assessment mentioned in that section is a tax and is a revenue measure as defined by the Constitution. Surely, that is a matter of sufficient impcrtance that it should be addressed to the consciences of the full Senate, or as near a full Senate as could be here at a regular session, and not on a late Friday afternoon.
I would hope that there would be no intent to have a vote this afternoon, and if necessary and if there are other Senators who would like to debate this matter, the Senate would give permission to the Senator from Vermont to withdraw his point of order and renew it Monday, when the Senate will be in session with a substantially full membership here. I would very much dislike to see this poi.nt of order decided by a bare quorum of the Senate.
Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I send to the desk an amendment, which I intend to offer for myself, my colleague from West Virginia <Mr. BYRD), the Senator from New Jersey <Mr. WILLIAMS), the Senator from New York (Mr. JAVITS), and the Senator from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH).
It would be an amendment-possibly it may be offered-to S. 2917, aimed at the problem of providing benefits to coal miners, together with their dependents, who are totally disabled from complicated pneumoconiosis--black lung-resulting from their employment in the coal mines, and who are no longer gainfully employed.
It does not apply to active coal miners. It provides temporary disability benefits for these inactive coal miners and their dependents. It is aimed at an emergency situation since present State laws do not provide these benefits. This temporary measure would utilize half of the funds which woud be received in the trust fund
intended to be established under this bill, as well as direct appropriations for making grants to the States to pay benefits in accordance with standards to be established with the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. At the same time, I stress, the proposed amendment recognizes that more information is needed on this problem of disability from complicated pneumoconiosis, and it would direct that a study to be completed in a year, thereby enabling the Congress to review the entire matter and to consider alternative methods or other approach options.
This interim proposal also would enable the States to act during the interim period to develop their own programs along conventional lines for providing compensation, both relating to active and inactive miners.
The amount of the benefits would be determined in accordance with a formula described in the amendment proposal. It would establish benefits for a totally disabled miner at 50 percent of the minimum amount payable to a Federal employee at a G-2 level under the Federal Employment Compensation Act. This benefit would be increased percentagewise depending on the number of dependents. In addition, it would provide · a similar benefit to the widow and children of such a miner.
Mr. President, the RECORD will disclose that yesterday, my able colleague from West Virginia <Mr. BYRD) discussed these problems of compensation. They are very real problems. We have a bill which we have jointly sponsored. S. 1716 was introduced in the Senate March 27, 1969.
Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, may we have order in the Senate?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate will be in order. The Senator from West Virginia has the floor.
Mr. RANDOLPH. There has been a continuing dialog on this very important subject of crippling black lung disease which has afflicted many of the coal miners of the United States of America.
Can we do something on an interim basis? On a more permanent basis? These are matters of real concern.
The House Education and Labor Committee's bill, as we understand it, approaches this matter, and what we are doing and what the House of Representatives does will, of course, be a matter for conference on the mine health and safety legislation.
I wish to emphasize that the amendment which has been authored by those of us who have joined in its sponsorship is one that may or may not be considered formally in the Senate, but it is one that we think should be made part of the RECORD. It can thus be studied by our colleagues who, we believe, are intensely interested in this subject matter, including, as it does, not only health and safety but the compensation of needy miners not now active who have contracted black lung disease.
I am in full accord with the position taken by our distinguished colleague from Florida (Mr. HOLLAND) that this pending business is, of course, a complicated measure. He has not used that exact language, but now a constitutional
27308 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE September 26, 1969
point is raised concerning the research trust fund :financing feature of S. 2917. There are Senators who, I know, will wish to be present as we discuss that matter and as we discuss the matter of compensation in one form or another, and the approach that we shall take to it. I think that the Senate, in the final analysis, will commit itself to what I believe will be well-reasoned legislation on the overall subject of mine health and safety, and compensation possibilities for the sufferers of respiratory disease occupationally associated.
I am now associated with two potential approaches to the compensation area of consideration. I placed another proposal at the desk earlier. So we will have at least two, and possibly other, amendments on the issue to study and choose between. I believe it is good that we have alternatives to consider and choose between.
Mr. President, I feel that any legislation we pass must be realistic and workable, but legislation which will come to grips with the problems of the health and safety of our miners. Although I have never felt we should legislate under what one might call the heat of emotion, there are elements of compassion which surely will enter into the feelings of Senators who are attempting to cope with this very compelling problem.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment will be received and printed, and will lie on the table.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I wish to respond to the inquiry earlier of the distinguished Senator from Florida <Mr. HOLLAND) about whether a vote will take place this afternoon.
It is not our intention to have any vote this afternoon. It is the present intention of the leadership, after such time as Senators desire, for any other additional speeches or entries into the RECORD, to move that the Senate stand in adjournment; and under the previous order, we will meet at noon on Monday next.
Mr. HOLLAND. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Senator.
Mr. KENNEDY. At that time, with the concurrence of the floor manager of the bill and the leadership, and those who have amendments, it may be that unanimous-consent request can be propounded.
Mr. GRIFFIN. Mr. President, will the Senator from Massachusetts yield?
Mr. KENNEDY. I yield. Mr. GRIFFIN. A Senator with a special
interest in this matter finds it very difficult to be here on Monday, when the matter would be brought up. There has been some discussion that there might be a possibility of laying the point of order aside temporarily and having it be the pending business on Tuesday, and that we might proceed to consider some other amendment or amendments in the interim.
The Senator from Kentucky (Mr. COOPER), for example, has an amendment that he would like to offer. If that would be convenient to all Senators, that would be a way of cooperating with the Senator in question. Obviously, if there
is any objection or inconvenience to anyone else, of course, we would not be able to do that.
Mr. KENNEDY. We have tried, at times in the past, to make such adjustments and accommodations in situations of this nature. Given the present circumstances, however, I think it would be difficult at this time to get an agreement for a specified time. I think this may be a close, difficult question that the Senator from Vermont has raised. We will have to move for adjournment when no other Senator desires to speak, and leave this unfinished business at the conclusion of the morning hour on Monday.
Mr. PELL. Mr. President, will the Senator from Massachusetts yield, for clarification?
Mr. KENNEDY. I yield. Mr. PELL. Can any indication be given
to us as to when the first vote might come on Monday?
Mr. KENNEDY. No, we could not give any assurance on that.
Mr. HOLLAND. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. KENNEDY. I yield. Mr. HOLLAND. As I understand it-
and I should like to be confirmed on this point, or corrected-the point of order is debatable, is it not?
Mr. KENNEDY. That is correct. Mr. HOLLAND. And we do not know
how long that debate will require. Mr. KENNEDY. The Senator is correct.
MINE SAFETY-LONG OVERDUE
Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, it is only recently that the phrase "black lung" has become a household word in America. But the killing and maiming of coal miners underground is as ancient as coal mining. We in the United States have lived with it for generations. Coal miners and their families live with the prospects of injury, disability, and death every day of their lives.
I am proud, as we all must be, to be able to rise in support of S. 2917, the coal mine health and safety bill, which offers the promise of healthy mines and safe mines to our Nation's coal miners.
The bill, S. 2917, not only provides for the health and safety needs of today, it establishes an administrative framework for assuring continued improvement of conditions and practices in order to assure that the miners can work their entire adult lives without the ever-present fears of mine hazards. For, today, the bill promulgates interim health and safety standards. As the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. WILLIAMS) has indicated, these standards do not provide complete protection against health and safety hazards, although they do provide new and significantly improved measures to combat death and injury. Because of the inexplicable failure of both the industry and Government over the years to take all necessary steps to apply existing tech-nology to the health and safety of the industry, and to develop its technology to overcome the hazards, a comprehensive and costly research program must be undertaken. The legislation mandates that this be done, and that it be done without delay. Furthermore, those charged with the administration of the
law are directed to promulgate as early as possible improved standards so that the health and safety of the miners can be insured.
I know that the members of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, whether from coal-producing States or otherwise, have labored tirelessly in order to present to the Senate the most effective possible legislation. I know that the members of the committee who are from coal-producing States, lent the guidance of their special knowledge to their colleagues, and thus enabled the committee to report out a workable piece of legislation.
I know that my colleague from New Jersey, Senator HARRISON A. WILLIAMS, has devoted endless hours, days, and weeks; first, to the preparation of this complicated legislation, and then to the painstaking chore of guiding it to the Senate :floor.
Mr. President, we have here the results of his work. They consist of five volumes of hearings on this matter, five separate parts, to complete the hearings on this important bill. His leadership, as chairman of the Labor Subcommittee, as chief sponsor, and as floor manager of this legislation, has been most effective. Although Senator WILLIAMS is not from a coal-producing State, it has been his guiding hand which has brought the legislation through 9 days of hearings and a dozen subcommittee and committee executive sessions to this point of being reported to the Senate by a unanimous rollcall vote of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.
Mr. President, the pending bill is brought to the floor of the Senate through the great leadership of the Senator from New Jersey by a unanimous rollcall vote. And every member of both political parties voted for it. I know that his leadership on this bill will prove as effective as was his leadership on the construction health and safety bill signed into law by the President on August 9.
I would also like to note my great appreciation to the two men who are not only ranking majority and minority members of the Labor and Public Welfare Committee, they are also the ranking members of its Labor Subcommittee.
The Senator from West Virginia <Mr. RANDOLPH) as ably as in all legislation, but especially on coal mine health and safety, has brought to the subcommittee and committee his special knowledge of the coal mining industry and of the needs of the miners. Despite his other major responsibilities, he has devoted endless hours and days to the goal of enacting this legislation to benefit the miners and the industry.
The Senator from New York <Mr. JAVITS), like the subcommittee chairman, and like myself, is not from a major coal-producing State. Yet, he has tirelessly worked toward the drafting and passage of the legislation to improve the health and safety of working men. He has devoted himself to ensuring the speedy enactment of a comprehensive and effective Coal Mine Health and Safety Act.
September 26, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 27309 As chairman of the Labor and Public
Welfare Committee, I fully appreciate the assistance of such able and dedicated colleagues without whose efforts the Senate would not be considering this legislation today.
Mr. President. I express my appreciation and pay my compliments to the members of the committee. I pay tribute to the great dedication of the present Presiding Officer, the Senator from Pennsylvania <Mr. SCHWEIKER) , who was present and helped to make a quorum every time. We were able to make quorums through the presence of the distinguished Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. President, our work throughout the course of this difficult legislation has been, I think, a tribute to the committee. Many people had said that due to the differences of opinion, we would not be able to report a bill. However, we brought out a comprehensive bill that will do a great deal of good in this field of safe mines and safety for the workers. It is the most comprehensive coal mine safety legislation in the history of our country.
After days of work in an effort to report the bill, when the chips were down the members of the committee on both sides of the aisle voted for the measure.
I pay tribute to the present chairman of the subcommittee, the distinguished Senator from New Jersey, who worked throughout four volumes of testimony and an appendix volume, in addition, and was there many days. We spent many days, as the Presiding Officer knows, in executive hearings.
I extend my thanks to our colleagues whose effort brought forth the legislation we are considering today.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr.YARBOROUGH. I yield. Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr.
President, I express my deep gratitude to the Senator from Texas for his personal references to me.
I emphasize, however, that the subcommittee has received more than full cooperation from the Senator from Texas, our distinguished committee chairman.
I think the chairman of our committee, the Senator from Texas, would agree that the committee has a broad range of matters before it. And as a committee, working with its subcommittee, it has been working with full steam ahead.
We hear some comments from some quarters that not much is being done in Congress. With reference to the work of our Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, is it the feeling of the Senator from Texas that a great deal of work is being done in the full committee to meet the needs of our country through our responsibility as members of that committee?
Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, I do not know of any member of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare who thinks that not much is being done. If there is someone, I wish he would give me his name, and I will give him a number of additional assignments.
We have executive hearings scheduled
2 and 3 weeks ahead for every day beginning next week. We are going to work day after day on the hearings in the mornings.
We have been in hearings in different subcommittees. I have not had the information compiled, but I do not think there has been a day for 1 month that the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare or some of its subcommittees have not been holding hearings or having executive sessions.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, I do not like to make public complaint or lament, but I will state the fact-and it is a fact that should be known-that many times the subcommittee of which I have the honor to be chairman has extended an invitation to the responsible members of the executive department to come before the subcommittee and state their business. We have been postponed and delayed. We have been on again and off again.
If there is any complaint that I have, it is about the failure of so many of those in positions of responsibility in the executive department to come before us and give us the help we must have on the legislation pending before us.
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. I yield. Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, I repeat
one more time that more than 100 bills of substance are pending in committee.
It is my sincere hope that the committees will stop their foot-dragging and report the bills.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, that is all I am asking for. All I am asking for is their cooperation. I could name the measures on which we have not had cooperation, if the Senator desires. We do not know where we want to go.
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, with the greatest respect to the Senator, I must again point the arithmetic of the equation to the fact that the majority controls all committees in the Senate and in the House of Representatives. The chairmen have often been able to work their will. The majority control. And, of course, that is reflected in the fact that whenever a committee wants to report a bill, they can do so. I do want to assure all Senators that we Republicans will do our duty by the legislation, and we are most anxious to cooperate; and I particularly want to congratulate the majority for its recent and belated spurt of activity.
Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. I think we should stop right there. I am not the leadership.
Mr. SCOTT. I do not want to take advantage of the Senator. I want the Senator to know it was not critical of him.
Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, the distinguished Senator from Pennsylvania is not a member of our committee. Still, I do not believe he complained to me of any inactivity. We have 61 education bills pending. We have had one report from the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare out of 60 pending bills. We have submitted these bills. The executive department has given us
a report on one bill. We have 69 health bills. We have had reports from the Executive on 11.
Mr. SCOTT. I could never be critical of the distinguished Sena tor from Texas for his energy and his activity, for his effectiveness in bringing out the bills; and I would urge him to continue on his usual effective course; and I say again we will always be glad to cooperate--we in the minority.
Mr. YARBOROUGH. I will say to the distinguished Senator from Pennsylvania that we have had a bipartisan effort in the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare in bringing the safety construction bill to the ftoor and also the mine safety bill. There have not been obstructionist tactics in the minority, but we had great diligence. We had to call the committees; we had to get the quorums; we had to hold the hearings. While we did have the cooperation of the minority, we were under the leadership of the able chairman of the subcommittee, and we were driving forward all the time. We have not been dragging our feet.
Mr. SCOTT. I would indeed be in the depths of misery were the Senator from Texas and I to have any disagreement on any matter.
Mr. YARBOROUGH. I thank my distinguished colleague. He and I served together for 7 years on the Committee on Commerce, and I left that committee only because of appointment to the Committee on Appropriations. It was a great pleasure to serve with him.
Mr. SCOTT. I thank the Senator. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair
recognizes the Senator from Wyoming.
LET US NOT AID THE ENEMY Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, state
ments have been made to the press, and on the floor of this Chamber recently, that most Americans feel have strengthened the resolve of the enemy-that enemy being the Vietcong, who are killing American men on the battlefields of South Vietnam, and the North Vietnamese Regular Army who are killing American men on the battlefields of South Vietnam.
There has been much criticism of America's role in seeking world stability through efforts to establish stability in Asia. We have heard the war in Vietnam called, variously, "Kennedy's war," then "Johnson's war," and now "Nixon's war,'' by some who feel President Nixon is not entitled to more than a few months to end a war which his predecessors could not bring to a halt in a number of long years. This sort of labeling has made a few people forget who the enemy is. Our soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen are in a war that is very real to them. And they are in a war with the Army of North Vietnam, even though there has been no· official declaration of war by the United States on North Vietnam, and no invasion of the hostile nation that is supplying most of the troops who kill our men.
The many men I have talked with who have been in Vietnam carrying the bur-
27310
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE
September 26, 1969
den of the fighting-from generals to
privates-know who the enemy is. They
know who is committing the atrocities in
the murder of innocent women and chil-
dren, and they know who is the invader.
They know this enemy is North Vietnam
and that country's Communist agents in
South Vietnam who are called the Viet-
cong. The American men in uniform are
proud to fight for the right of self-deter-
mination and the right to peace for the
South Vietnamese people against the
murderers of the North. None has ob-
jected to me about the principle of Amer-
ican involvement in Vietnam-the prin-
ciple to prove to the Communists that
their Iron and Bamboo Curtains will
not be allowed to expand through use
of military might-that communism
will not have the right to advance by
means of a purge by murder of all who
stand in its way.
I speak specifically today of the pro-
posed Vietnam Disengagement Act of
1969. In effect it proposes a timetable
for American disengagement in Viet-
nam. In effect it tells the Communist
enemies that if they will stubbornly re-
fuse to negotiate for an end to the blood-
shed in Vietnam until December 1, 1970,
American forces will no longer stand be-
tween them and conquest of South Viet-
nam and their final solution-annihila-
tion of all those who have opposed the
Communists.
If there was promise of progress at
the negotiating table in Paris, if there
was hope of settlement through words
rather than bullets, this proposal has at
the very least advised the Communist ne-
gotiators to reconsider any sort of com-
promise and to wait and watch and hope
that such a deadline for total American
withdrawal will be set.
The fighting men of America who have
returned from Vietnam and with whom
I have talked have one main and persist-
ent objection to their personal involve-
ment in this war.
They choose to relate it to the sport of
football. That game cannot be won if you
refuse to cross the 50-yard line. And that
game also cannot be won if you tell the
opposition at half-time that your team
will leave the field before the final quar-
ter.
The same is true of telling North Viet-
nam that America will quit the war by
December 1, 1970. Such action would tell
the enemy that they will win, and it will
strengthen their will to continue.
The Vietnam Disengagement Act
should be defeated resoundingly so that
the enemy will not be deceived about
American determination, so that they will
know the United States is united, so that
they will harbor no false hopes of total
American withdrawal and desertion of
the cause for which so many fine young
men have already died.
Let u s defea t th is p rop osa l and a ll
those like it so that the enemy will know,
without the shadow of a doubt, where we
stand.
We must not aid the enemy.
ADJOURNMENT UNTIL MONDAY,
SEPTEMBER 29, 1969
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, if there
be no further business to come before the
Senate, I move, in accordance with the
previous order, that the Senate stand in
adjournment until 12 o'clock noon on
Monday next.
The motion was agreed to; and (at 4
o'clock and 8 minutes p.m.) the Senate
adjourned until Monday, September 29,
1969, at 12 o'clock noon.
NOMINATIONS
Executive nominations received by the
Senate, September 26, 1969:
ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
Carl Walske, of Virginia, to be Chairman
of the Military Liaison Committee to the
Atomic Energy Commission.
NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE
Jack Malcolm Layton, of A rizona, to be
a member of the Board of Regents, National
Library of Medicine, Public Health Service,
for a term expiring August 3, 1973, vice Dr.
Stewart G . Wolf, Jr., term expired.
CONFIRMATIONS
Executive nominations confirmed by
the Senate September 26, 1969:
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
Robert F . Keller, of Maryland, to be Assist-
ant Comptroller G eneral of the United States
for a term of 15 years.
RENEGOTIATION BOARD
Daniel Eldred Rinehart, of Maryland, to
be a member of the Renegotiation Board.
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVEL-
OPMENT
Eugene A. G ulledge, of North Carolina,
to
be an A ssistant Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development.
IN THE Am FORCE
The following officers for appointment in
the A ir F orce Reserve, to the grade indi-
cated, under the provisions of chapter 35 and
sections 8373 and 8376, title 10, of the United
States Code:
To be major general
Brig. G en. Joe M. Kilgore, FV437412, Air
Force Reserve.
Brig. G en. Rollin B. Moore, Jr., FV397579,
Air Force Reserve.
Brig. G en. Gwynn H. Robinson, FV791240,
Air Force Reserve.
Brig. G en. John H. Stembler, F V342806,
Air Force Reserve.
To be brigadier general
Col. William H. Bauer, FV857929, Air Force
Reserve.
Col. G erald A. Hart, FV755937. Air Force
Reserve.
Col. Ralph G . Hoxie, FV650233, Air Force
Reserve.
Col. Michael J. Jackson, F V440840, A ir
Force Reserve.
Col. Duncan N. P. Pritchett, FV1863021, Air
Force Reserve.
Col. Robert W. Valimont, FV560437, Air
Force Reserve.
Col. Alfred Verhulst, FV697071, Air Force
Reserve.
The following officers for appointment as
Reserve commissioned officers in the U.S. Air
F orce, to the grade indicated, under the pro-
visions
of sections 8218, 8351, 8363, and 8392,
title 10, of the United States Code:
To be major general
Brig. G en. G eorge W. Edmonds, FG 755898,
California Air National G uard.
To be brigadier general
Col. Ralph W. Adams, Sr., FG 793233, Ala-
bama Air National G uard.
Col. Rollin M. Batten, Jr., FG 946592, Ne-
braska Air National G uard.
Col. Nowell
0 . Didear, FG 682941, Texas
Air National G uard.
Col. W illiam C. Smith, F G 796038, Ten-
nessee Air National G uard.
Brig. G en. James S. Cheney, SSAN
FR to be the Judge Advocate G eneral,
U.S. Air F orce, and appointment to the tem-
porary and permanent grade of major gen-
eral, under the provisions of section 8072 and
chapter 839, title 10 of the U nited S tates
Code.
IN THE ARMY
The U .S. A rmy Reserve officers named
herein for promotion as Reserve commis-
sioned officers of the Army, under provisions
of title 10 , U nited S tates C ode, sec tions
593(a) and 3384:
To be major general
Brig. G en. Raymond E. Mason, Jr., SSAN
.
To be brigadier general
Col. Cullen U. G ulko, SSAN ,
Transportation Corps.
Col. George F . Hamner, SSAN ,
Corps of Engineers.
Col. Russell T. LeBlanc, SSAN ,
Corps of Engineers.
Col. Sterling R. Ryser, SSAN ,
Military Intelligence.
Col. F rederick W. Wunderlich, SSAN
, Corps of Engineers.
The Army National G uard of the United
States officers named herein for promotion
as Reserve commissioned officers of the Army,
under the provisions of title 10, United States
Code, sections 593 (a) and 3385:
To be major general
Brig. G en. Daniel K. Edwards, SSAN
.
To be brigadier general
Col. William M. Buck, SSAN ,
Infantry.
Col. Joseph R. Chappell, Jr., SSAN
, F ield Artillery.
Col. Austin C. Chidester, Jr., SSAN
, Air Defense Artillery.
Col. G eorge H. Dale, SSAN ,
Signal Corps.
Col. James R. Duren, Jr., SSAN
, Infantry.
Col. Joseph B. Flatt, SSAN , In-
fantry.
Brig. G en. Robert R. Goetzman, SSAN
, Adjutant G eneral's Corps.
Col. James W. Henderson, SSAN
, Air Defense Artillery.
Col. Vernon B. McMillen, SSAN
, Infantry.
Col. William R. Sharp, SSAN ,
Armor.
Col. John F . S. Sims, SSAN ,
Transportation Corps.
Col. Clarence A. Wilson, SSAN ,
Infantry.
The Army National G uard of the United
States officers named herein for appointment
as Reserve commissioned officers of the Army,
under the provisions of title 10, United States
Code, sections 593(a) and 3392:
To be brigadier general
Col. Robert L. McCrady, SSAN ,
Infantry.
Col. Wilfred C. Menard, Jr., SSAN
Field Artillery.
Col. Carl F.
Schupp II, SSAN ,
F ield Artillery.
The following-named officer, under the
pro-
visions
of title 10, United States Code, sec-
tion 3066, to be assigned to a position of
im-
portance
and responsibility designated by
the President under subsection (a) of sec-
tion 3066, in grade as follows:
To be lieutenant general
Maj. G en. G eorge G ray O'Connor, 021088,
U.S. Army.
The following-named officers for tempo-
rary appointment in the Army of the United
S tates to the grade indic ated under the
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-xx-x...
xxx-...
xxx-...
xxx-xx-x...
xxx-xx-x...
xxx-...
xxx-...
xxx-xx-xxxx
xxx-...
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xxx...
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xxx-xx-xx...
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September 26, 1969
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
27311
provisions of title 1 0, United S tates C ode,
sections 3442 and 3447:
To be major general
Brig. G en. R obert C linton Taber,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Charles Carmin Noble,
, A rmy of the United S tates, colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. James Francis Hollingsworth,
, A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Burnside E lijah Huffman, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Warren Kennedy Bennett,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. John R eiley G uthrie,
, A rmy of the United S tates, (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Edwin I. D onley, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army).
Brig. G en. Thomas Matthew R ienzi,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Felix John G erace,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Thomas Harwell Barfield,
, A rmy of United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Edward Michael Flanagan, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Bernard William Rogers,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. A llen Mitchell Burdett, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. John A lbert Broadus D illard, Jr.,
, Army of the United States (colo-
nel, U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. R ichard L ogan Irby,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. R ichard McGowan Lee,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. John D aniel McLaughlin,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. Gen. George Mayo, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army) .
Brig. Gen. A lbert Hamman Smith, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. John S tephan Lekson,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Franklin Milton Davis, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. L eo E dward Benade,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Theodore Antonelli, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
A rmy).
Brig. G en. William Bennison Fulton,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. James G eorge Kalergis,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. A rmy).
Brig. Gen. Erwin Montgomery Graham, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. Harry L ee Jones, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. A rmy).
Brig. G en. R obert Paul Young, -
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. John Joseph Hennessey,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. D arrie Hewitt R ichards,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Howard Harrison Cooksey,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Verne Lyle Bowers, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army) .
Brig. G en. William Warren Cobb,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Fred Kornet, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (major, U.S .
Army) .
Brig. Gen. Harold Gregory Moore, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates (lieuten-
ant colonel, U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. George William Casey,
, A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. A lexander Russell Bolling, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. William Love S tarnes,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
Army).
Brig. G en. John Howard E lder, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Joseph Edward Pieklik,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
The following-named officers for appoint-
ment in the R egular A rmy of the United
S tates, to the grade indicated, under the pro-
visions of title 10, United S tates C ode, sec-
tions 3284 and 3306:
To be brigadier general
Brig. G en. L eo E dward Benade,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. R ichard L ogan Irby,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Charles Carmin Noble, -
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. George Mayo, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army) .
Brig. Gen. Felix John Gerace, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army) .
Brig. G en. Franklin Milton D avis, Jr.,
3, Army of the United States (colo-
nel, U.S . A rmy).
Brig. Gen. George Samuel Beatty, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. R obert C linton Taber,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
A rmy).
Maj. G en. Paul A lfred Feyereisen,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. Gen. A lbert Hamman Smith, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Maj. Gen. R ichard George C iccolella,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. James Francis Hollingsworth,
, Army of the United States (colo-
nel, U.S . A rmy).
Maj. Gen. Wesley Charles Franklin,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
A rmy).
Brig. G en. Edwin I. Donley, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
A rmy).
Brig. G en. William Warren Cobb,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
A rmy).
Brig. Gen. Edwin Montgomery Graham, Jr.,
, Army of the United States (colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Thomas Harwell Barfield,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. John D aniel McLaughlin,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. R ichard McGowan Lee,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Maj. Gen. Jack Jennings Wagstaff,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
Army) .
Brig. G en. Warren Kennedy Bennett,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Maj. G en. Harris Whitton Hollis,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
A rmy).
Brig. G en. John S tephan Lekson,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. John A lbert Broadus D illard,
Jr., A rmy of the United S tates
(colonel, U.S. Army) .
Brig. Gen. Robert Paul Young, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (colonel, U.S .
Army) .
Maj. G en. Francis Paul Koisch,
, Army of the United States (colonel, U.S.
A rmy).
Brig. G en. Thomas Matthew R ienzi,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Maj. G en. Willis D ale C rittenberger, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (col-
onel U.S. Army) .
Maj. G en. Kenneth Lawson Johnson,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Maj. G en. D onald Hugh McGovern,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. Gen. Joseph Edward Pieklik,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. William Love S tarnes,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. E lvy Benton R oberts,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army).
Brig. G en. William Bennison Fulton,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. G en. Harry L ee Jones, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Brig. Gen. James George Kalergis,
, A rmy of the United S tates (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
Maj. G en. L eonard Burbank T aylor,
, A rmy of the United States (colonel,
U.S. Army) .
The following-named officers for temporary
appointments in the A rmy of the United
S tates, to the grade indicated, under the pro-
visions of title 10, United S tates C ode, sec-
tions 3442 and 3447:
To b e b r igadie r gene ral
Col. Thomas McKee Tarpley, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. John Willson Donaldson, ,
U.S. Army.
C ol. Ira A ugustus Hunt, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Frederick James Kroesen, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
Col. E rnest G raves, Jr., , U.S .
Army.
C ol. Herbert Joseph McChrystal, Jr.,
4, A rmy of the United S tates (lieu-
tenant colonel, U.S. A rmy).
Col. Alexander Meigs Haig, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army).
C ol. G eorge S hipley Prugh, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
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27312 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
September 26, 1969
Col. Frank Ambler Camm, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. William Roy Wolfe, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Robert Morin Shoemaker, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Adrian St. John II, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Charles Robert Myer, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army).
C ol. G ordon James D uquemin,
, A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army).
Col. Henry Everett Emerson, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
C ol. Herbert A rdis Schulke, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Charles James Simmons, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Harold Ira Hayward, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Thomas Joseph McGuire, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
Col. John Quint Henion, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Charles Austin Jackson, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army).
Col. Charles Echols Spragins, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Robert Neale Mackinnon, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. George Magoun Wallace II,
, A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Henry Richard Del Mar, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. William Randolph Bigler, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
C ol. D eWitt C linton Smith, Jr.,
. A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Edward Bartley Kitchens, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
Col. Jonath.an. Rowell Burton, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Thomas Wilson Brown, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Archelaus Lewis Hablen, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
Col. Harold Robert A aron, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. James Bradshaw Adamson,
U.S. Army.
Col. Robert Leahy Fair, , Army
of the United States (lieutenant colonel, U.S.
Army) .
Col. Wilbur Henry Vinson, Jr., ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
C ol. G eorge Smith Patton, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
C ol. John R oyster Thurman III,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Kenneth Trevor Sawyer, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. John Einar Murray, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Edwin Thomas O'Donnel, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Kenneth Banks Cooper, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Lawrence McCeney Jones, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army).
Col. Rolland Valentine Heiser, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Harry Ellsworth Tabor, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. William Holman Brandenburg,
, U.S. Army.
C ol. Harold Burton G ibson, Jr.,
, A rmy of the United States (lieutenant
colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. John Alfred Kjellstrom, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Peter George Olenchuk, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Charles Maurice Hall, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army)
Col. D aniel O rrin G raham, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. John Thornton Peterson, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Frank Anton Hinrichs, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Joseph Charles Fimiani, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. John Walter Collins III, ,
U.S. Army.
Col. Theme T roy Everton, ,
U.S. Army.
C ol. John C arpenter R aaen, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
Col. Alvin Curtely Isaacs, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Carl Vernon Cash, , Army
of the United States (lieutenant colonel, U.S.
Army) .
Col. Carl Ray Duncan, , U.S.
Army.
Col. Bruce Campbell Babbitt, ,
A rmy of the United S tates (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Robert Charles Hixson, ,
U.S. Army.
C ol. John Murphy D unn, ,
A rmy of the U nited S tates (major, U .S .
Army).
Col. James A lexander G rimsley, Jr.,
, Army of the United States (lieuten-
ant colonel, U.S. Army) .
Col. Eugene Priest Forrester, ,
A rmy of the United States (lieutenant colo-
nel, U.S. Army) .
T he following-named officer, under the
provisions of title 10, United S tates C ode,
section 3066, to be assigned to a position of
importance and responsibility designated by
the President under subsection (a) of sec-
tion 3066, in grade as follows:
To be lieutenant general
Maj. Gen. A lexander Day Surles, Jr.,
, U.S. Army.
IN THE NAVY
Vice Adm. Lot Ensey, U.S . Navy, for ap-
pointment to the grade of vice admiral on
the retired list, pursuant to title 10, United
States Code, section 5233.
R ear A dm. Frederick H. Michaelis, U .S .
Navy, having been designated for commands
and other duties determined by the Presi-
dent to be within the contemplation of title
1 0, United S tates C ode, section 52 3 1 , for
appointment to the grade of vice admiral
while so serving.
Rear Adm. Isaac C . Kidd, Jr., U.S . N avy,
having been designated for commands and
other duties determined by the President to
be w ithin the contemplation of title 1 0,
United S tates C ode, section 52 3 1 , for ap-
pointment to the grade of vice admiral while
so serving.
Vice Adm. Bernard F. Roeder, U.S. Navy,
for appointment to the grade of vice admiral
on the retired list, in accordance with the
provisions of title 10, United S tates C ode,
section 5233.
Vice Adm. Vernon L. Lowrance, U.S. Navy,
for appointment to the grade of vice admiral,
when retired, pursuant to the provisions of
title 10, United States Code, section 5233.
The following-named officers of the Navy
for permanent promotion to grade of rear
admiral:
Medical Corps
John H. Cheffey
Ralph E. Faucett
Chaplain Corps
Francis L. Garrett
Rear Adm. Walter L. Curtis, Jr., U.S. Navy,
having been designated for commands and
other duties determined by the President to
be w ithin the contemplation of title 1 0,
United States Code, section 5231, for appoint-
ment to the grade of vice admiral while so
serving.
IN THE MARINE CORPS
The following-named officers of the Marine
C orps for permanent appointment to the
grade of major general:
Jonas M. Platt
Robert G. Owens, Jr.
Clifford B. Drake
Earl E. Anderson
Wallace H. Robinson, Michael P. Ryan
Jr.
The following-named officers of the Marine
C orps for permanent appointment to the
grade of brigadier general:
John N . McLaughlin Carl W. Hoffman
Jacob E. Glick
William G. Johnson
John E. Williams
Henry W. Hise
R obert R . Fairburn Edwin H. S immons
Homer S. Hill Robert B. Carney, Jr.
Edward J. Doyle
Herman Poggemeyer,
Leo J. Dulacki
Jr.
Harry C. Olson
IN THE AIR FORCE
T he nominations beg inning Huey P.
L owery, to be first lieutenant, and ending
R ichard R . Valenzi, to be second lieutenant,
which nominations were received by the Sen-
ate and appeared in the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD on August 6, 1969; and
The nominations beginning John G . A b-
bott, Jr., to be captain, and ending John C .
Walters, to be first lieutenant, which nomi-
nations were received by the Senate and ap-
peared in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD on Au-
gust 29,1969.
IN THE ARMY
T he nominations beginning Johnny L .
Montgomery, to be major, and ending Mi-
chael A . Zolezzi, to be second lieutenant,
which nominations were received by the Sen-
ate and appeared in the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD on August 11, 1969.
IN THE NAVY
The nominations beginning N athaniel R .
Robertson, to be lieutenant commander, and
ending G eorge A . Ulch, to be a permanent
lieutenant (jg.) and a temporary lieutenant,
which nominations were received by the Sen-
ate and appeared in the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD on August 8, 1969;
T he nominations beginning E ugene B.
Ackerman, to be captain, and ending Barbara
Wirth, to be a permanent lieutenant ( jg.)
and a temporary lieutenant, which nomina-
tions were received by the Senate and ap-
peared in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD On Sep-
tember 12, 1969; and
The nominations beginning Alice V. Brad-
ford, to be commander, and ending Mack H.
Flanders, to be ensign, limited duty only,
which nominations were received by the Sen-
ate and appeared in the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD on September 15,1969.
IN THE MARINE CORPS
T he nominations beginning R obert L .
Blake, to be second lieutenant, and ending
R ichard L . Y oerk, to be second lieutenant,
which nominations were received by the Sen-
ate and appeared in the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD on September 2, 1969; and
The nominations beginning Hugh S . A it-
ken, to be colonel, and ending James R .
Y oung, to be colonel, which nominations were
received by the Senate and appeared in the
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD on September 12,1969.
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September 26, 1969 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 27313
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS TWO CHICAGO ALDERMEN SUE
AUTOMAKERS FOR $3 BILLION DAMAGE IN AIR POLLUTION CASE
HON. ROMAN C. PUCINSKI OF ILLINOIS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
MR. PUCINSKI. Mr. Speaker, two of our most distinguished members of the City Council of Chicago yesterday filed a $3 billion damage suit against the three major automobile producers charging them with conspiracy to delay the research and development of air pollution control devices in their automobiles.
This unprecedented action was brought about by Alderman Thomas E. Keane, who is chairman of the finance committee and leader of the city council, and also Alderman Paul Wigoda, who is the majority whip in the city council.
I call this suit to the attention of my colleagues because it offers our beleaguered communities some hope for early relief from the mounting crisis of air pollution.
Alderman Keane and Alderman Wigoda have chartered a new course for communities all over this country to pursue. Both of these men have announced they want no personal :financial remuneration and have stated that whatever damages are won by themselves in this lawsuit will be turned over to the city to step up its anti-air-pollution activities.
Both Alderman Keane and Alderman Wigoda are regarded as two of Chicago's outstanding attorneys and so this is not a suit based on either whim or caprice. It is a very carefully thought out legal action to bring the people of Chicago meaningful relief from the growing hazard of air pollution.
I am enclosing in my remarks today a story which appeared in this morning's Chicago Tribune outlining the basis for the suit.
I believe not only the people of Chicago but Americans throughout the Nation owe a debt of gratitude to Alderman Keane and Alderman Wigoda for their initiat_ive and legal enterprise in helping chart an effective manner for dealing with air pollution. I expect many other communities to follow suit and I do hope that this action will impress upon Congress the need for even stronger air pollution legislation than we already have enacted.
I recall well the effort that I made on the fioor of the House in support of an amendment to the Anti-Air-Pollution Act which would have prohibited the manufacture of automobile engines 8 years from now which emit air pollutants in excess of tolerable limits.
Aldermen Keane and Wigoda have alined themselves on the side of those who have fought stubbornly against the menace of mounting pollution.
It is my hope that in the wake of this action brought by these two distinguished
members of the Chicago City Council, the city of Chicago on its own volition will seek an injunction against the airlines for emitting the long trails of gasoline fumes from jet aircraft arriving and departing O'Hare Field. I have urged such legal action by the city of Chicago.
I also hope that this legal suit filed by these two distinguished aldermen will inspire more legal action against those who pollute Lake Michigan and also inspire Congress to enact my proposal, which would bar all dumping by the Corps of Engineers and others into Lake Michigan.
The Chicago Tribune article follows: AUTOMOTIVE'S "BIG 3" SUED FOR POLLUTION
Two CITY ALDERMAN AsK $3 BILLION IN ACTION
(By Rlobert Enstad and Edward Sohreli.ber) Two Ohioago aldermen filed a 3 billion dol
lar damage suit against three major automobile producers yesteroay, charging that they have conspired to delay the research, development, and installation of air pollution control devices on theiil" automobiles.
Ald. Thomas E. Keane (31st) and Ald. Paul Wigoda (49th] filed the suit, as private citizens, on behalf of all of the residents of Chicago, who, they say, have been damaged and harmed by the increase of air pollution in Chicago caused by the motor vehicles turned out by the three manufacturers.
"BIG THREE" NAMED Named as defendants in the suit are the
F'ord Motor company, General Motors, and the Chrysler corporation.
The suit contends that the automobile manufacturers knew about harmful emissions from motor vehicles as early as 1952, but have delayed, up to the present time, equipping vehicles with adequate devices for controlling air pollution. The manufacturers are capable of doing so, the suit said.
Am POISONS CITED In the suit, filed in federal District court,
the aldermen said most of Chicago's air pollution comes from automobile emissions. The suit contends that if the manufacturers had not agreed to the conspiracy, thete pollutants would not be in Chicago air today.
Keane is Mayor Daley's fioor leader in the city council.
A similar suit was filed in California by the justice department's anti-trust division in Januairy, but President Nixon's ainti-trust chief announced last week that a consent decree had been reached and the auto companies would not have to go to trial.
A group of liberal Democrats aind Rialph Nader pl·an a protest because they say once the decree ll3 signed, all government recoros against the auto manufacturers would be sealed from public view, putting a severe handicap on private suits such as that filed with the aldermen.
Automobile emissions, in 1965 alone, accounted for 2,250 tons of carbon monoxide, 359 tons of hydrocarbons, and 74.8 tons of oxides of nitrogen in the Chicago atmosphere, the suit said.
NUMBER OF VEHICLES In 1968, the aldermen said, there were
942,959 automobiles, and 669,437 trucks and buses registered in Chicago. In addition, they said, 250,000 vehicles entered the city from other areas each day.
The conspiracy, accordlng to the suit, consisted of the manufacturers agreeing among themselves to restrict publicity about air pollution control devices in order to eliminate competition ln their research and develop-
ment. The suit said the manufacturers conspired to eliminate competition for patents on these devices.
The suit said that in 1961, the automobile manufacturers had agreed to delay installation of positive crankcase ventilation on new vehicles until the 1963 model year, even tho they were capable of the installation in 1962.
COST OF POLLUTION Keane said yesterday that the cost of air
pollution to the average Chicago citizen each year is $84, and this doesn't include the damage to health, present or future .
Atty. Jerome Torshen, who filed the suit on behalf of the aldermen, said any damages received would be distributed to Chicago citizens who could prove damages caused by air pollution. This could take the form of laundry bills, health problems not caused by smoking, and property damage, such as paint on homes which has been dirtied by air pollution.
If the 3 billion dollars is awarded in the suit, he said, it would be turned over to the city to use in a program to combat air pollution. He said that neither he nor Wigoda want any financial gain.
Named as co-conspirators, but not defendants, in the suit are the Automobile Manufacturers Association, Inc.; American Motors corporation; Checker Motor corporation; Diamond T Motor Car company; International Harvester company; Studebaker corporation; Kaiser Jeep corporation; and Mack Trucks, Inc.
DALEY CHANGES MIND Keane said it had been expected that
Mayor Daley would announce the filing of the suit at his press conference Monday, but, at the last minute, he didn't. A press aide o! Daley said yesterday the mayor had changed his mind about the announcement.
Keane said he hoped the suit would broaden the scope of a federal investigation of the automobile industry. He said he thinks the suit will make the manufacturers aware that "the public will no longer tolerate footdragging."
Court observers said the aldermen's suit was the largest they remembered ever to be filed in Chicago.
ADDRESS BY HON. MILLS E. GODWIN, JR., GOVERNOR OF VIRGINIA, AT MEMORIAL SERVICE AT LOVINGSTON, NEL.SON COUNTY, VA.
HON. HARRY F. BYRD, JR. OF VIRGINIA
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
Friday, September 26, 1969
Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, on Sunday, September 21, an unusual memorial service was held at Lovingston, in Nelson County, Va. The service gave expression to sorrow for those who lost their lives in Nelson County during the devastating fioods which struck the area on August 19. The fioods resulted from vicious storms on the fringe of Hurricane Camille.
More than 100 Virginians lost their lives in the :flooding, many of them in Nelson County, one of the hardest hit sections of the State.
At the memorial service, the Honorable
27314 Mills E. Godwin, Jr., Governor of Virginia, delivered a moving address. I ask unanimous consent that Governor Godwin's statement be printed in the Extensions of Remarks.
There being no objection, the statement was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
REMARKS BY Gov. Mn.LS E. GODWIN, JR. I have come to Nelson County many times
to share joyous occasions with you, and now I come to jo!n you in sorrow.
I come accompanied by a number of my official family from State agencies in the hope that if I cannot find appropriate phrases of comfort, our combined presence will speak for all of us.
We can usually find appropriate words to express our thoughts at a memorial for those who gave their lives for their country or for some equally noble purpose.
It is far more difficult for us to express ourselves when lives are snuffed out without warning, apparently without reason.
On such occasions, it is natural for us to wonder why, but there is no answer that we can understand. If there is a Divine purpose, it is one we cannot see with our limited vision.
If Nelson County were in the normal path of hurricanes, the disaster we have witnessed might have been something we could expect, but the most expert observers cannot tell us why this storm traveled hundreds of miles across several States to vent its fury on this particular section of Virginia.
For the living the storm aroused all that we admire in our fellowmen, a great compassion and an indomitable spirit. All of us have spoken of these.
Now we pay our silent respects to those who were the innocent victims of the storm. They cannot hear us for they are beyond pain and suffering.
But there is small comfort for those they left behind, the young people who became orphans overnight, the children swept from their mothers' arms, the families decimated by the on-rushing waters.
Only time and the understanding of friends will finally ease the ache in their hearts.
But if we seek something special by which to remember them, let it be the rebuilding of the stricken sections of this county, the transformation of chaos into better homes, better communities, better bridges and better highways, better fields and crops.
If we remember them this way, then perhaps they will not have died in vain.
And as we look with pride upon that handiwork in future years, perhaps we will have found that there was in this sudden onslaught from the sky, a Divine purpose after all.
SHOULD THE UNITED STATES PARTICIPATE IN AND ENCOURAGE THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE UNO
HON. JOHN R. RARICK OF LOUISIANA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
Mr. RARICK. Mr. Speaker, an interesting debate on the subject, "Should the United states Participate in and Encourage the Development of the United Nations?" is scheduled for this evening at Westchester County Center, West Plains, N.Y., under the auspices of the Westchester County Committee, New Yorkers for the Constitution.
Mr. Arch E. Roberts, lieutenant colonel, Army of the United States, retired,
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
an author, renowned traveler and proven American patriot, who is a participant in the debate, has made available a copy of his succinct, pro-American argument in support of constitutional government as opPosed to anarchy and our bankrupt international policy.
Because this distinguished scholar has prepared such an interesting and timely manuscript I feel that it is of profound interest to all of our colleagues and I include it in the RECORD at this point:
ROBERTS' ARGUMENT
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I hold for the prosecution.
During the next twenty minutes the prosecution will attempt to prove the following charges against the United Nations Organization:
1. That the United Nations is a subversive Organization.
2. That vital powers of government held in trust for the American people have been illegally transferred to the United Nations Organization in violation of the prohibitions of the Constitution.
3. That the United Nations Charter was foisted upon the American people to serve those who seek to overthrow the Constitution and coerce American citizens into a socialist animal farm.
Consonant with facts presented in official documents and public testimony, I shall utilize the war in Viet Nam to prove these accusations, and to expose the real objectives of the United Nations and those who promote its cause.
During the course of my indictment of the United Nations it will be wen to keep in mind the following axiom:
Wars-under whatever name--which do not reduce the political power of an officially named "enemy" of the American people, and which do not increase the political power of the United States, must in the end reduce the political power of the United States and thus serve the secret objectives of a concealed enemy.
Let us begin our introduction for the prosecution by calling on the testimony of Lyndon B. Johnson, then president of the United States: Mr. Johnson told the American people on 13 July, 1965, that their soldier-sons are dying in Viet Nam because of United States oommitment to the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.
During a White House news conference on this date President Johnson stated: "I thiink that it is well for us to remember that three presidents have made the pledge for this nation, that the Senate has ratified the SEATO Treaty by a vote of 82 to 1, pledging the United States to come to the aid of any nation upon their request who are parties to that Treaty ... "
President Johnson then went on to say, "We expect to keep that commitment. Our national honor is at stake."
Four yea.rs later, nearly to the day, President Richard M. Nixon was to use the same words in describing our commitment to the SEATO Treaty.
On Monday, 29 July, 1969, in Bangkok, Thailand, headquarters for the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, Mr. Nixon reiterated his pledge to the SEATO Treaty in these words:
"We a.re determined," Nixon testified on world-wide television, "to honor our commitment to the Southeast Asia Treaty."
Neither Mr. Nixon nor his predecessors have, of course, admitted that the Southeast Asia Treaty, a treaty which our sons "honor" in blood and agony, was framed under the provisions of articles 52 and 53, United Nations Charter.
As we shall see, however, SEATO is a "regional arrangement" formed to deal with matters relating to the maintenance of in-
September 26, 1969
ternational peace and security "consistent with the Purposes and Principles of t he United Nations."
The prosecution will prove that the "nowin" war in Viet Nam is secretely a United Nations war and that it is being conducted to serve the "Purposes and Principles" of the United Nations Organization.
We will also reveal why this strange war has clearly failed to reduce the political power of the "communist enemy." Instead, the war has increased the political power of the United Nations and thus serves the objectives of a concealed enemy.
Our first exhibit for the prosecution is, "The Story of SEATO," a booklet published by the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.
On page five of, "The Story of SEATO", we find the following declaration:
"The members of SEA TO have chosen a collective defence system, under the authority of the Charter of the United Nations."
SEATO, in this statement of purpose, asserts that it is an agency-an extension-of the United Nations Organization.
Let us now join this information to exhibit number two for the prosecution; the SEATO Treaty.
"The Parties", says Article I of SEATO, "undertake, as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations, to settle any international dispute in which they may be involved by peaceful means ... and to refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations."
American casualty figures in this interminable war are stark evidence that the military "force" used in Viet Nam is applied in a manner consistent with the "purposes of the United Nations."
United States Ambassador to Viet Nam, Ellsworth Bunker, made this point crystal clear in his personal testimony on "Meet the Press," 19 November, 1967.
"It seems to me that what we are doing (in Viet Nam) is to make credible our commitments under the United Nations and under SEATO Treaty to resist aggression. . . . We have made a commitment."
Unfortunately, Ambassador Bunker failed to identify the U.N. agency which is charged with conducting the Viet Nam war "under the United Nations." The infonnation to fill this important omission can be found under Article IV, SEATO Treaty. I quote: "Measures"-the words "measures" means "military action"-"Measures taken under this paragraph shall be immediately reported to the Security Council of the United Nations."
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, the chain of command could not be more specific than that: The Security Council is the war-waging arm of the United Nations.
However, let us pinpoint the U.N. articles which make "credible our commitment under the United Nations and under SEATO," as Mr. Bunker so lucidly explained on "Meet the Press."
For the purpose the prosecution now introduces exhibit three: the United Nations Chart er.
As predicted in "The Story of SEATO," the authority for construction of the UN-SEATO "collective defence system" is revealed in Chapter VIII, "Regional Arrangements." A comparison of U.N. and SEATO articles also shows that the quotations made previously from the SEATO Treaty are, in fact, faithful duplication of the provisions of articles 52 and 54, United Nations Charter.
"Nothing in the present Charter," says Article 52, "precludes the existence of regional arrangements . . . provided that such arrangements or agencies are consistent with the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations."
It is immediately apparent that Article I of SEATO exactly reproduces the authority of Article 52, United Nations Charter.
September 26, 1969 Article IV of SEATO similarly re1lects the
provisions of Article 54, United Nations Charter.
"The Security Council," commands Article 54, "shall at all times be kept fully informed of activities undertaken or in contemplation under regional arrangements . . . "
This means, of course, that U.S. military operations "undertaken or in contemplation" in Viet Nam are 1lrst submitted to the U.N. Security Council for approval.
The evidence permits but one conclusion. The strategy of "Perpetual War for Perpetub.l Peace" ... a. strategy which sends Americans into battle "with neither promise nor hope of Victory" . . . is United Nations strategy.
U.N. war-making powers, a.nd the usurpation of congressional authority which permits it, was dramatically illustrated by James Reston in his column of 13 July, 1967, entitled "Isolation Echoes By U.S. Move In Congo."
"The administration's position," Reston testified, "is that it is committed under the Charter of the United Nations, under various treaties, and under the Truman Doctrine, to do whatever it can to maintain peace anywhere in the world."
You now realize, of course, that the real objective of ''no-win" wars is NOT "international peace and security" as U.N. supporters a.re lead to believe. The true "Purpose and Principle" oJ U.N. military adventures is to manipulate the United States armed forces under Security Council control; To force all of the nations into line and to deliver them up to a one world government.
For proof, I invite your attention to Chapter V, U.N. Charter, headed, "The Security Council-Functions and Powers."
Article 24: "In order to ensure prompt and effective action by the United Nations, its Members confer on the security Council primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security ... " and, Article 25: "The Members of the United Nations agree to accept and carry out the decisions of the Security Council ... "
In simple language, ladies a.nd gentlemen, these two U.N. articles transform the power of self-defense given to the Congress by the States, to a. blanket authority to send Americans into battle anywhere in the world at the direction of the U.N. Security Council.
The Constitution is, of course, very specific about the powers of keeping peace and waging war. Nowhere does the Constitution authorize the transfer of these powers to an international agency.
The prosecution has therefore established the fa.ct that Senate ratification of the United Nations Charter on 28 July, 1945, is in violation of the Constitution of the United States. Being illegal it must be put down.
Perhaps the members of this jury have wondered why the war in Korea and the war in Viet Nam saiw the outpouring of vast resources of U.S. men and material into a. land war in Asia. without a form.al declaration of war by the United States Congress. Well, Article 39 of the United Nations Charter explains why . . . and, more Importantly, why the U.N. Security Council can, at any time, force the entire population of this nation into a military posture without the consent of an impotent Congress.
"The Security Council," Article 39 directs, "shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or a.ct of aggression and shall . . . decide what measures shall be taken in accordance with Articles 41 and 42, to maintain or restore international peace and security."
Articles 41 and 42 spell out the full au-thority and extent of U.N. military action and authorize the use of "air, sea, and land forces as m.ay be necessary" to maintain or restore "international peace and security."
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS Additionally, the military muscle needed
to enforce Security Council edicts is provided by usurped sovereign powers as spelled out in articles 43 and 46. These U.N. laws order the transfer of "armed forces, assistance, and facilities" from Member nations to the U.N. Security Council for use as the Security council may determine in its application of armed forces anywhere in the world.
To give legal coloration to this breach of public trust, the Congress of the United States, on 26 September, 1961-just eight years ago-ratified Public Law 87-297, "The Arms Control and Disarmament Act." This unbelievable legislation purports to "legalize" the transfer of the United States military establishment, and American citizens in uniform, to a United Nations one world army.
Members of the jury, fellow Americans, your sons now serving in Viet Nam are, by U.N. Charter definition, members of a United Nations world army and take their ol"ders from the United Nations Security Council "consistent with the Purposes 1:1.nd Principles" of the United Nations Organization.
As final proof in the case for the prosecution I read from Joint House Resolution Number 1145, "Gulf of Tonkin Resolution,'' which is often quoted as Congress's approval to commit Americans to the Viet Nam war.
"This resolution," states Section 3, "shall expire when the President shall determine that the peace and security of the area is reasonably ~ured by internationa.l conditions created by the actiou of the United Nations."
Ladies and gentlemen, I respectfully submit that the prosecution's oase against the United Nations is now legally established.
a. The prosecution has demonstrated that the articles of th3 United Nations Charter amend, by deceit and subterfuge, the Constitution of the United States in a manner not sanctioned by Article V of the Constitution.
The United Nations is, therefore, a subversive organization and is a threat to the freedoms of person a.nd property guaranteed to the people by the Constitution.
b. The prosecution has demonstrated that the authority to commit Americans to battle anywhere in the world has been surreptitiously transferred from the Congress of the United States to the Security Council of the United Nations.
Vital powers of government held in trust for the American people have, therefore, been 1llegally usurped by the United Nations Organization in violation of the prohibitions of the Constitution.
c. The prosecution has demonstrated that the real but concealed objective of the United Nations Organization is to place the military power of the United States at the disposal of the United Nations Security Council; To force all of the nations into line and to deliver them up to a one world government.
The United Nations was, therefore, foisted upon the American people to serve those who seek to overthrow the Constitution and coerce American citizens into a socialist animal farm.
In this brief indictment of the Untted Nations the prosecution has also revealed that, as the political power of the United States is dissipated in "no-win" military adventures, the political power of the United Nations, and those who promote its Purposes and Principles, is increased.
In summation, the prosecution declares that the United States should NOT participate in or encourage the development of the United Nations.
To the contrary, the prosecution claims that it is the clear and urgent duty of all federal officeholders to cllsmantle the United Nations Organization in consonance with their oath to "defend and preserve this Constitution."
27315 During the question and answer period I
will, if asked, identify the concealed enemy who seeks to overthrow the United States Constitution.
The prosecution rests.
SENATOR RANDOLPH LOOKS INTO THE FUTURE OF THE INTERSTATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM
HON. MIKE GRAVEL OF ALASKA
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
Friday, September 26, 1969
Mr. GRAVEL. Mr. President, questions are now being raised as to the future course to be followed on completion of the 42,500-mile System of Interstate and Defense Highways, expected to be finished in the early 1970's.
The distinguished Senator from West Virginia (Mr. RANDOLPH) is particularly concerned in his capacity as chairman of the Committee on Public Works.
Last week, in a wide-ranging speech to the National Association of Motor Bus Owners at its 40th annual meeting in Atlantic City, N.J., Senator RANDOLPH took a thoughtful look at the question.
I ask unanimous consent that his speech be printed in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the speech was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: CHALLENGES AND CHANGES IN TRANSPORTATION
(Address by Senator RANDOLPH) When the accelerated Interstate highway
construction program was authorized by law in 1956, it was heralded as the largest single public works undertaking on which any nation has ever embarked. That legislation came into being after two years of active Congressional consideration and following the recommendations of a Presidential Study Commission.
In authorizing that accelerated construction program, the Congress moved with a giant step from the previous approach of authorizing a primary and a secondary road system and their urban extensions paid for from the General Fund, to a long-term authorization of construction funds guaranteed by a self-sustaining trust fund.
It was estimated that the massive construction program would cost $27 billion, with a Federal share of $24.825 billion. In the last of the allocations under the 1956 Act, the sum of $1.025 billion was to have been made for the fl.seal year ending June 30, 1969. Construction, as then planned, would end by June 30, 1971. The Highway Trust Fund and the special taxes provided by the Congress to pay for this mammoth public works undertaking were to be terminated on June 30, 1972.
It is now September 17, 1969. We have not yet made the last apportionment of Interstate highway funds. In fact, with the enactment of the Federal Aid Highway of 1968, authorizations for the Federal share of the Interstate had reached the total of $50.325 billion. It had been estimated at only half that amount in 1956. The 1968 act, as you know, extended authorizations for the Interstate System through Fiscal Year 1974.
The orderly pursuit of our goal of a system of express highways connecting the major cities of the United States has been impeded by two slowdowns in the release of funds to the States in the pa.st two years. President Ntxon has asked the Governors to
27316 join With him in withholding action on construction programs. While the Federal Government has not cut back on highway funds, such action is a distinct and painful possibility. When I became apprised of the consideration of a general reduction in the Federal construction effort I sent the folloWing telegram to the President: ''THE PRESIDENT, "The White House.
"DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: As you and the Cabinet refine decisions relating to the economy of the United States, it is to be hoped that the impact of these decisions Will not fall adversely on such facilities as hospitals, educational institutions, p05t offices, sanitation and pollution abatement works, highways and bridges, mass transportation, airports, flood control works and watersheds, and our harbors and navigable streams. These are programs of investment for our people, their safety, and their physical and economic well being. They are already too far behind the needs of the times to be set back further while we spend lavishly on probes of outer space and overcommit funds for the defense program. Experience With construction cutbacks has not demonstrated that they achieve beneficial effects as inflation retardants but has demonstrated that they create confusion and cause additional expense to both the public and private sectors, while dislocating resources in many communities. I have discussed these views with numerous senators who have told me that they concur.
"JENNINGS RANDOLPH, U.S. Senator."
For the past two or three years, we have been estimating the cost of the Interstate System at something in excess of $60 billion. We now understand that the Secretary of Transportation feels that the final total cost of the system may be nearly $70 billion.
While the Committee on Public Works of the House and Senate have been reviewing the program pursuant to the periodic cost estimates required by the Act, and extending the time for construction in light of the information presented to us-and while we have witnessed construction changes and the development of a more sophisticated highway system than had originally been conceivedthe taxes dedicated to the Highway Trust Fund are approximately those which were adopted in 1956. Except for certain additions made in 1961, and extension to September 30, 1972, of the period for collecting those taxes, the Ways and Means and Finance Committees have not enmined in detail the Highway Trust Fund and its revenues since 1961.
Important changes in the highway program were made in 1968. We adopted a broad relocation assistance authorization and we gave our support to a policy of expanding the role of people and communities in highway location and construction. In addition, we directed the development of an equal employment opportunity program and added 1500 miles to the Interstate System. All of these modifications will add significantly to the C05t.
The 1968 Act was landmark legislation for the highway program, but 1970 will be its year of challenge. Important determinations relating to the Highway Trust Fund must be made. If affirmative action is not taken to extend the life of the Trust Fund, and possibly to increase the revenues going into it, the Interstate System could not be completed, and we would have to halt further work on the vital network. Even if we were to indefinitely postpone some of the more controversial Interstate segments in major metropolitan centers, we would be talking of only 150 miles of the total system. These are expensive miles, but they do not represent the difference in the amount which will be
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
available to pay for the Interstate System and its total cost of construction.
I have discussed highway history, though you, as highway users, are familiar with it. I have done this to emphasize the crucial nature of the situation we now face. My purpose is to emphasize a problem, a serious problem, but not an insurmountable one. And I underscored it for a particular reason and for a definite purpose.
The decisions to be made in 1970 are important beyond their critical effects on the the completion of the Interstate System. For, Without clear evidence that highway user revenues will continue to be dedicated to highway construction purposes, there is no prospect that the Senate and House Public Works Committees can devise, develop and recommend a workable program for highway construction following the completion of the Interstate System.
Frankly, the "post-'75" program must rely on the continuation of Highway Trust Fund :financing. Recently, I commended President Nixon for focusing the Nation's attention on the need for a meaningful mass transportation program. I questioned, however, the desirability and efficacy of such a program if it is to be financed from general revenues. I emphasized the need for a trust fund to provide our Nation With needed public transportation facilities. I reiterated my strong support for an airport trust fund, as well as continuation of the Highway Trust Fund.
The uncertainties of general fund financing through direct appropriations Will not facilitate the long-term planning and development of such public works undertakings. This is especially true for highways. We know this, but knowledge alone is not sufficient. We must have clear and positive indication of what the future funding system Will be for highways.
It is my intention to involve Secretary of Transportation John Volpe and Federal Highway Administrator F. C. Turner before our Subcommittee on Roads this fall to give us their counsel on the direction the highway program should take. We Will discuss their recommendations and other possible options with them and we will publish the record Of our hearing so that all interested parties and the public at large can study it and give us the benefit of their thinking on the "post-'75" program. There are many questions to be answered. The relationship between various transportation facilities, the relationship of the Federal, State, and local governments, the kinds of roads, the level of funding, the matching ratios-all of these facts--will be examined.
We should also look to the development of a special bridge construction program because many of our major river crossings are more than 40 years old and were designed and construoted to serve a population and an economy and vehicles much smaller and less mobile. As the oldest segment of the highway transportation industry you are aware of the changes wh1ch have taken place in the dimensions of vehicles being operated in inter-city travel.
As members of the National Assoc1Sltion o! Motor Bus Owners, you represent the oldest organized major transportation group in the United States. You provide opportunity for transportation over the very roads we are discussing to millions of our people and visitors to our Nation. It is my understanding that there were some 375 million inter-city bus trips made during 1968. You, therefore, are concerned with rendering service to a substantial portion o! the American population and its economy since you also transport much of the Nation's small package freight. You are key persons who must make known the need for action in the coming yea.r 1f this Nation is to have the highway system it must have to support business and com-
September 26, 1969 merce, to have its citizens live in comfort and to prosper.
I have alluded to the need for improved air transportation facilities. I would add that we mu.st find a way of providing better coordination between our air facilities and our surface transportation facilities. It would seem that buses will provide a considerable amount of the connecting system between the airports and our population centers.
The Committee on Public Works is interested in the matter of highway safety as it is in highway construction programs. This past June, we held four days of review hearings on the highway safety program established by the Congress in the Highway Safety Act of 1966. As carriers of people, you must, of necessity, be extremely safety conscious.· Since your vehicles are longer, wider, higher and heavier than passenger cars, you share the same relationship toward passenger cars that a big brother does toward a smaller one. It is incumbent on your organization and you, its members, to do everything you can to participate in the development of the community safety programs which the 1966 legislation envisioned.
The active participation of those who are commercially involved in highways and who benefit from their existence is a prerequisite to the success of the safety program and is an unshirkable obligation. Your participation in the development in State Legislatures of proper safety laws in keeping with the guidelines established by the Department of Transportation, is a responsibility and a duty to your fellow citizens.
I emphasize the importance which the members of the Public Works Committee attach to the success of the National Highway Safety Program. While the National Traffic Safety Act, which passed in 1966, and which concerns itself with the vehicle design and equipment was given much greater publicity, I have shared with Senator John Sherman Cooper, the Ranking Minority Member of the Public Works Committee, the belief that it is the highway safety program which in the long run will have the greatest payoff in lives saved and accidents avoided.
The challenges and changes in transportation which we have all seen in the past generation continue to occur. Each change is more remarkable and more consequential than those which preceded it. It is only through the vision of those who participate in the development and operation of our transportation network that we shall succeed in achieving our goal of providing our country and its people with a dynamic transportation system that will meet the needs of our grow1ng America.
DEMOCRATIC STUDY GROUP FACT BOOK-FISCAL YEAR 1970 DEFENSE BUDGET
HON. DONALD M. FRASER OF MINNESOTA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
Mr. FRASER. Mr. Speaker, floor consideration of the military research and development and procurement bill is near and it is important for each Member of the House to inform himself on the new weapons systems requested by the Defense Department for fiscal year 1970. For a factual presentation of the issues involved in the controversial new weapons systems we will be asked to authorize, I commend to the attention of all Members the Democratic Study Group's
September 26, 1969
"Fact Book on the Fiscal Year 1970 Defense Budget." Beyond describing new weaPons systems and providing a rationale and critique for each system, the DSG fact book relates these new weapons systems to the contingencies the systems are designed to meet. Also discussed in the fact book are some of the foreign policy assumptions on which our contingency planning is based.
Mr. Speaker, I insert the DSG "Fact Book on the Fiscal Year 1970 Defense Budget" in the RECORD at this point:
THE FISCAL YEAR 1970 DEFENSE BUDGET (Prepared by the Democratic Study Group,
U.S. House of Representatives) INTRODUCTION
This DSG Fact Book contains: An overview of the FY 1970 Defense
Budget. Brief analyses of the contingency planning
upon which the defense budget is based. Fact sheets on controversial new weapons
and programs for which FY 1970 funding has been requested.
The conflict over defense spending is likely to occupy public, Congressional, and Executive attention for some time to come. In order to better understand this conflict, it is useful to visualize it as three separate battles being fought concurrently, although the three battle zones often overlap each other.
First is a skirmish between the Congress and Defense Department management and procurement technicians involving efforts to assure more efficient and economical allocation of funds for programs conceded by both sides to be essential to the national security. At issue is about $10 billion.
Second is a clash of massive public constituencies over the post-Vietnam division of the national economic pie. On one side the poor, the environment, and the oppressed taxpayer plead for attention. On the other defense industries press for new weapons to avoid problems of economic conversion such as unemployment and lower corporate earnings. At stake is two-thirds of the $30 billion being spent on the war.
Third-and perhaps most significant---is a battle being fought high above these two visible conflicts. This battle is taking place in the rarefied air at the top of the Administration and in government-supported and private think tanks. The whole range of possible defense postures-from fortress America to Pax America-is being reviewed within the Administration while the think tanks are hard at work designing post-Vietnam foreign policies and assigning defense dollar costs to each. This process is largely hidden from Congressional and public view, even though the stakes in this battle are the highest of all-Defense budgets ranging from $35 to $115 billion for the 1970's.
It is hoped that this fact book will provide a framework for discussion of the current defense budget and contribute to better understanding of defense issues generally. Every effort has been made to give a fair and factual presentation of arguments for and against the various military concepts, programs and weapons systems involved in this increasingly important debate. This fact book is not intended, however, to be a comprehensive or definitive analysis of current or future national security issues. SECTION ONE--OVERVIEW OF THE FISCAL YEAR
1970 DEFENSE BUDGET Background
The FY 1970 Defense budget first came into public and Congressional view in the middle of January, 1969, when then-Secre-tary Clifford presented it to the Congress along with his annual Posture Statement. The· Defense budget at that time requested $80.6 billion in new budget author11;y. The
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS budget reflected the best intelligence estimates of various threats to the immediate national security and to various foreign policy commitments undertaken by the U.S. to that time. The $80.6 billion emerged as the request after about $40 billion had been cut within the Defense Department from the total of the Hmounts submitted by the military services and defense agencies.
Congressional committee work could not begin until after the new administration had taken office and prepared its amendments to the budget. Prior to presenting its amendments, the new Administration undertook a comprehensive review o". strategic nuclear policy and considered five force options ranging in cost from $6 billion to $16 billion. The study recommended a strategic nuclear posture outwardly similar to the previous Administration's costing $10 billion. The new Administration also initiated a comprehensive review of general purpose force levels, considering 10 options with price tags ranging from $14 billion to $85 billion. The recommendations of this review have not yet been made public.
At the end of March, Secretary Laird presented the new Administration's "mini" Posture Statement to the House Armed Services Committee. The amended request in new budget authority was $78.5 billion, a $2.1 billion reduction. Key changes in posture all appeared in the strategic nuclear area, and centered around shifting Sentinel to Safeguard, improving Poseidon MIRV capability against hard targets, and speeding manned bomber development. While these changes all involved small amounts of money, they refiected either new intelligence assessments of the Soviet threat or a U.S. decision to adopt a more forward strategic stance.
Spring saw widespread Congressional activity in the area of tightening management and procurement practices. The Joint Economic Committee took on questionable activities in the 0-5A and F-111 programs and in June issued a report recommending thorough review of Defense Department procurement. Also during this period public concern focused on the issues involved in specific controversial programs, including the Safeguard anti-ballistic missile system and chemical biological warfare. Safeguard particularly served to open the door on the whole question of our strategic relationship with the Soviet Union and served as a catalyst for grass-roots pressure to shift resources from the defense to the domestic sector.
Against this background the House and Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees continued work on the key FY 1970 military procurement and R & D bill, containing $22 billion in requests. This bill in its House and Senate versions contains money for programs having a total five or ten year systems cost far in excess of the amount authorized in FY 1970; programs funded will lay heavy claim during the 1970's on savings resulting from liquidation of the Vietnam war. The Committees also considered requests for $1.9 billion for military construction. $46.3 billion requested for operations and maintenance and military pay, in addition to $7.8 billion in procurement funds, requires no new authorization. A final $400 million requested for military assistance is under the authorizing jurisdiction of the Foreign Affairs and Foreign Relations Committees.
Format The basic breakdown of the amended FY
1970 Defense budget is by title, as follows:
[In millions] Military personneL---------------- $24, 390 Operation and maintenance________ 21, 960 ProcureDlent --------------------- 21,560 Research, development, test, and
evaluation---------------------- 8, 300 MUitary construction______________ l, 310
[In millions) Family housing __________________ _ Civil Defense _____________________ _ Military assistance _______________ -
Subtotal -------------------Budget concepts adjustments _____ _
Total new obligational aulihority, (78.5 billion)------
27317
$615 75
410
78,620 -140
78,480
The Defense Department also provides a breakdown by component, which for analytic purposes is useless, and a category breakdown, which is useful only in that it distinguishes strategic forces (FY 1970 unamended: $9.6 billion) from general purpose forces (FY 1970 unamended: $32 billion).
There is no way of determinlng accurately the total oost of a weapons system either from the basic Defense budget presentation or from the Secretary of Defense's aiccompanying Posture Statement. While procurement and R&D estimated costs for a given fisoal year are identified in the Posture Statement, such estimates do not include funds for paying troops, constructing facilities, providing housing, or operating and maintaining the system. These funds a.re all submerged in the basic categories for all systems and programs. Related costs are particularly important for modern weapons systems because such systems require expensively trained personnel and costly maintenance procedures. Such costs are available to Members of Congress only by request and then in very generalized form.
Another key defect in the present basic Defense budget presentation is the la.ck of an unclassified 5-year-or-longer systems cost. Members of Congress can, again by request, obtain a very rough estimate of such costs for individual systems. But a comprehensive and accUl"late estimate of the total 5-year costs of weapons systems authorized in a given fiscal year is not available, even for the procurement and R&D categories. The high cost of modern weapons sysitems again makes it important that such information be easily available to all Members of Congress, indeed to the public at large.
Perhaps the most useful document for analyzing the Defense budget is the annual Posture Statement which accompanies the initial budget presentation to the Congress. It is organized by program and provides a national security or a geopolitical rationale for each request. Thus the broad outlines of Secretary Clifford's FY 1970 posture staitement have been adhered to in the foUowing breakdown of Senate Armed Services Committee action on the Administration's FY 1970 procurement and R&D requests, and in Parts II (Strategic nuclear forces) and ill {General purpose forces) of this Fact Book.
Senate action After requesting guidance from the De
feru;e Department in making its determination, the Senate Armed Services Committee, in early July, reported S. 2546 authorizing FY 1970 appropriations for military procurement, R & D, and Safeguard construction. The report also contained supplementary views critical of the Safeguard proposal signed by four Senators.
The Committee authorized $20 billion for the purposes of the bill, $1.96 billion below the Administration's request. Following is the breakdown of Senate Committee action, presented in the same format as the Secretary of Defense's Posture Statement.
St rategic Nuclear Forces (Procurement and R. & D.)
Added $153 million to the $352 million requested for nuclear attack submarine procurement and recommended full funding for three boats instead of two. The Committee cited an increased Soviet submarine threat to both carrier strike forces and the Polaris
27318 deterrent. It also cut $29 million from $119 million requested for advance funding for five additional submarines because of the decision to authorize procurement of a third submarine.
Approved a $400 million reduction recommended by Secretary Laird for MOL (manned orbiting laboratory) R & D. $125 million remaining of the $525 million total request was authorized for termination costs.
Cut $44 million from $60 million requested for AWACS (advanced airborne warning and control system) R & D. It also cut $16 million from $18.5 million requested for R & D on F-106X interceptor modifications. The Committee recommended extensive study of bomber defense, citing wide differences between the National Intelligence Estimate and the Air Force estimate of the Soviet bomber threat.
Cut all of $20 million requested for SRAM air-to-surface missile procurement, recommending further R & D. The Committee also cut $40 million from $550 million requested for aircraft modification, citing decreased need for B-52 modification in light of the SRAM procurement cut.
Cut $14 million from $121 million requested for ABRES (advanced ballistic reentry system) R & D.
Cut all of $20 million requested for ULMS (undersea long-range missile system), and recommended termination of the program. General Purposes Forces (Procurenient and
R&D) Land war forces
cut $20 million from $67.5 million requested for M60Al tank procurement. The Committee also cut all of $3.8 mi111on requested for laser range finder procurement and all of $3.5 million requested for a training launch control system, both related to use of the Shillelagh ant i-·tank missile on the M60Al.
Cut $15 million from $45 million requested for MBT-70 tank R & D. The Committee recommended re-orientation of this joint West Germ.an-U.S. program.
Cut $5 million from $53 million requested for Sheridan reconnais·sance/ attack tank procurement.
Cut $14 million from $156 million requested for TOW anti-tank missile procurement. In hearings the Committee cited Army overestimation of the Warsaw Pact tank threat.
Cut $18 million from $110 million requested for CH-46E transport helicopter procurement. The Committee also cut all of $15 million requested for R & D for a new heavylift helicopter and $28 million from $33 million requested for Mohawk observation helicopter procurement.
cut all of $16 million requested for offensive CBW R & D.
Cut all of $8.5 million requested for Interrogator air defense control system procurement.
Cut all of $1 million requested for LIT (light intra-theater transport) R & D.
Tactical Air Forces Accepted a Defense Department recom
mendation that the total Cheyenne attack and armed escort helicopter procurement of $429 million be cut. The Committee also cut all of $16.5 mlllion requested for Cheyenne R & D, thus leaving the program unfunded.
Cancelled A-7D attack aircraft procurement and recommended that the $375 mllllon for A-7D be used for F-4E attack aircraft procurement. The Committee noted that the A-7D required complete air superiority whereas the F-4E has unescorted. interdiction and air-to-air combat capabil1ties. The Committee also cut all of $100 million requested for A-7E attack aircraft procurement.
Cut $22.5 m1111on from $38.5 million requested for A-37B attack fighter procurement.
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS Cut $21.5 million from $28 million re
quested for T-X navigational trainer procurement.
Cut all of $15 million requested for RF-111 reconnaissance aircraft R & D.
Cut all of $3 million requested for AGMX-3 air-to-ground missile R & D. The Committee ol.ted extensive duplication in air-toground missile programs.
Naval War Forces Cut all of $66 million requested for new
ASW aircraft R & D, recommending termination of the program. The Committee also cut $25 million from $165 million for VSX ASW aircraft R & D, citing delay in finding a contractor.
Cut $43 million from $68 million requested for ASMS (air-to-surface missile system) R&D.
Airlift/ Sealift Forces Cut all of $187 million requested for pro
curement of three FDLSs (fast deployment logistic ship) . The Committee called the proposed ships a low-priority item.
Deferred $50 million of $1 billion C-5A transport FY 1970 costs to FY 1971. The Committee noted that six month's slippage in C-5A production allowed deferral of these spare parts funds.
Strategic and General Purpose Forces Cut all of $75 million requested for SAM-D
anti-aircraft system R & D. While recognizing the need for a follow-on air defense system, the Committee doubted that SAM-D met this requirement. The Committee also cut $9 million from $99 million requested for Hawk surface-to-air missile procurement.
Other Cut $130 million from $1.3 billion re
quested for a variety of R & D projects such as communications, intelligence, CBW, electronic surveillance, nuclear monitoring research, and certain classified progra.ms. The Committee did not specify items but directed the Defense Department to distribute cuts among the military services and defense agencies.
cut $51 mill1on from $631 million requested for basic scientific R & D and project Themis, which seeks to divert military research from universities to other organizations.
Cut $1.5 million from $13.3 million requested for foreign affairs research.
Beyond these specific program cuts, the Committee directed that the Defense Department make additional cuts in R & D activities but left it to the Department to apply the cuts to programs of their choosing. The Committee remarked that it had deviated from the traditional across-theboard approach in specifying programs to be cut in the R & D area.
The Committee also expressed concern about management and procurement practices and the high cost of new weapons systems and directed the Defense Department to file quarterly progress reports with the Committee on such weaipons systems.
SECTION TWO-STRATEGIC NUCLEAR FORCES
This section wm first briefly describe nuclear war strategies. It also contains fact sheets on selected strategic items in the FY 1970 authorization requests, and discusses some pros and cons of the requests.
First strike
This strategy requires an offensive capability so great that most of one's opponent's deterrent forces are destroyed, and requires an ABM and bomber defense so efiective that damage to one's own cities is very limited.
Destruction of an opponent's deterrent forces can only be accomplished with large numbers of very accurate or very large missiles. At the present time, it is more effective to launch accurate small missiles, or missiles
September 26, 1969
with accurate multiple warheads, than it is to launch large warhead missiles.
Some parts of the deterrent are harder to destroy than others; the safest deterrent forces at present are Polaris-type missiles. It would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to destroy Polaris forces before they were launched, decreasing still further the plausibility of first-strike.
A first-strike capability is much more expensive than are retaliatory forces, because it costs more to destroy an enemy missile before it is launched than it costs the enemy to deploy another missile. If one nation is seeking a first-strike, the opponent can keep even by spending the same amount of money, assuming technological parity. Deploying more missiles and building more Polaristype submarines are steps which can be observed by one's opponent; in the time it takes to deploy these, the offsetting retaliatory weapons can be deployed.
Putting multiple warheads on missiles, instead of adding more missiles, is less expensive and cannot be detected by one's enemy. If the multiple warheads are accurate, however, new and complicating factors are introduced. (See the Fact Sheet on MIRV.)
The intelligence community is of the consensus that the Soviet union is not planning a first-strike capabllity; but there is undoubtedly a small probability of such a development. At the same time, the Soviet Union must perceive our stepped-up strategic deployment as posing a small probability that the United States is adopting a first-strike strategy.
Damage limitation
Damage limitation is the ability to reduce the amount of damage by a nuclear attack, either by means of offensive or defensive weapons or passive defenses.
Offensive weapons are used for damage limitation when they are used to destroy enemy strategic missiles prior to their being launched, presumably in the later hours of a nuclear war.
Examples of defensive systems used for damage limitation are Sentinel (not Safeguard), bomber defenses, and the Soviet Galosh ABM. Passive defense generally refers to civil defense.
Deterrence Deterrence is a policy of ensuring that if
an enemy should launch a first-strike, one will have sufficient second-strike or retaliatory forces remaining to inflict unacceptable damage on the enemy. Secretary McNamara, in his FY 1969 Posture Statement, estimated that a sufficient deterrent against the Soviet Union would be the capability on our part to destroy one-fifth to one-fourth of her population and one-half of her industrial capacity.
Many of the weapons used for first-strike are also used for deterrence, including landand-sea-based missiles, bombers, and aids to help these forces to penetrate enemy defenses. One's deterrent is secured by defensive forces, such as Safeguard, point-defense of bomber bases, hardening of missile silos, and ASW (Anti-Submarine Warfare) protection of the Polaris-type forces.
Deterrent capability is decreased by an enemy's defensive damage limitation capability. Increasing the capa.b111ty of one's missile force by adding missiles, using multiple warheads, or deploying penetration aids are methods of neutralizing enemy damage-limitation and preserving one's deterrent.
Safeguard ABM Description
The Safeguard ABM system is made up of Sentinel components that are themselves a configuration of the basic Nike-X components. The system is made up of missiles, radars, computers, and interlocking command and communications elements.
Septernber 26, 1969 The missiles are the 400 mile Spartan and
the 25 mile Sprint, both carrying nuclear warheads designed to destroy incoming ICBMs by detonating in the vicinity of the incoming warhead. The radars are the long range PAR for initial acquisition and the shorter range MSR for target tracking. The computer network will be the most complicated ever developed and will be tested only by tapes of Soviet missile launches.
The system is to be deployed in the first phase at twu Minuteman bases in Montana and North Dakota and in the second phase, if this deployment option is exercised, at two more minuteman bases, seven bomber bases, and around Washington, D.C.
Costs Since the early 1960s about $3 billion has
been spent on ABM. Western Electric was in charge of packaging Sentinel and performs the same task for Safeguard; in 20 months between July 1967 and April 1969 the company was paid $1 billion for procurement and R & D. Major subcontractors were Raytheon ($109 million for MSR), McDonnell Douglas ($90 million for Spartan), Martin Marietta ($70 million for Sprint), and General Electric ($45 million for PAR). Five electronics companies were paid another $60 million for computer work.
The Defense Department puts the total cost at $6.6 to $7 billion for a fully deployed Safeguard system, but admits this excludes $1.2 billion in warhead costs in the AEC budget. The Defense Marketing Survey, a service for defense contractors, puts the total procurement and R & D package at $12.2 billion. Estimates of the cost of main:taining the system on short alert once it is deployed are not available. Such costs will be formidable because of the state of readiness required, the need for expensively trained personnel to operate the sophisticated computers and radars, and the maintenance and operating requirements of such sophisticated equipment.
$345.5 million has been requested in FY 1970 for procurement and $400.9 million for R & D, for a total of $746.4 million, in addition to $16 million in construction funds. Unexpended funds from previous ABM authorizations may also be used for all Safeguard purposes except procurement of operational missiles; such funds may push FY 1970 Safeguard costs to $1 billion.
For Rationale and Critique see DSG Fact Book entitled ABM, Congressional Record, June 20, 1969 (PS. 6871). MIRV (Multiple independently targeted re
entry vehicle) Description
MIRV is the loading of an ICBM with more than one warhead, each of which is separately aimed. The missiles designated for MIRV are the Air Force's Minuteman IlI and the Navy's Poseidon C3. The Department of Defense presently plans to replace about 500 of 800 Minuteman I's with Minuteman Ill, and 31 of 41 Polaris submarines with Poseidon.
The warheads on a MIRVed missile are carried in a "bus," which releases each warhead in its turn and then shifts course to release the next warhead at another target. Current plans call for 3 warheads in the bus designed for Minuteman III and up to 14 in the bus designed for Poseidon. Warheads can be replaced with penetration aids if circumstances require such a mix. The Poseidon warheads are expected to be in the low kiloton range if targeting accuracy improves sufficiently to make a warhead this small effective. Also, kiloton warheads can be easily tested underground.
There is question about the accuracy of MIRVed missiles. Use of MIRV as a deterrent weapon by targeting it against cities would not require a high degree of accuracy. If MIRV guidance systems are so improved as to be accurate within a fraction of a mile, a MIRVed missile becomes a first-strike weapon.
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
Costs Estimates of the total cost for the MIRV
program range from $3 to $12 billion. It iS difficult to determine how much of the FY 1970 budget is allocated to MIRV, but the Defense Authorization bill before the Senate allocates $301.4 million (to go with $139.6 million previously authorized) for conversion of 6 PolariS submarines to Poseidon and $157.5 million in advance for conversion of 12 more submarines. The bill also allocates an unspecified amount for Minuteman conversion.
The Nixon Administration added $12.4 million to the original MIRV requests to improve the accuracy of the Poseidon in order to enhance its effectiveness against hard targets.
Rationale MIRV is economical. Putting three war
heads on one missile is less expensive than constructing three missiles. This iS so even when one accounts for both the reduced warhead size and the reduction in total megatonnage per missile going from ICBM's to MIR V's.
MIRV increases our deterrent. One of MIRV's purposes is to penetrate ABM systems by firing a succession of warheads toward the same area. Thus the Soviet Union would know that if they launched a first strike, their ABM system would not protect their cities from our second strike. In increasing our second strike capability, MIRV would decrease the likelihood of the Soviets launching a first strike.
Proceeding with MIRV would hasten arms limitation talks, since MIRV's ability to penetrate Soviet ABM systems would give the USSR an incentive to trade an ABM halt for a MIRV halt.
Critique MIRV accelerates the arms race, at a cost
of increased world tension and billions of dollars.
The intelllgence community has produced no evidence that the Soviet Union is flighttesting MIRV. Their recent multiple warheads tested have not been independently targeted; the U.S. has had such MRV capability for some time. Because we are far ahead of the Soviet Union, we can safely negotiate a MIRV test ban now and lessen the need for ABM on both sides, saving billions of dollars. If MIRV testing is completed, an agreement cannot be verified by unilateral means, such as satellites, which greatly reduces the chances of either side signing it.
With testing completed or near completion, the Soviet Union will assume deployment is imminent and will develop and deploy MIRV themselves. Particularly disturbing is the Administration's request for $12.4 million to improve MIRV guidance systems against hard targets. This threat to the Soviet deterrent taken with ABM deployment is evidence of intention to develop a first strike capability.
MIRV on both sides increases the possibility that the U.S. or the Soviet Union will consider a first strike strategy because:
MIRV is an extremely cheap way of suddenly and secretly multiplying the number of deliverable warheads.
A MIRVed deterrent force equivalent in deliverable warheads to a non-MIRVed deterrent force is far more vulnerable to a first strike because the number of actual missiles has been reduced. Since a MIRVed deterrent is more vulnerable to a first strike, the temptation to launch missiles as soon as incoming missiles are detected--or before--is much greater. Decision-times are shorter and the possibility of rash action is increased.
ABRES (Advanced Ballistic Reentry Systems)
Desert ptic:xn ABRES is a joint R & D program to im
prove the maneuverabillty of ICBM reentry vehicles and the effectiveness of penetration aids. Part of the program offers the pos-
27319 sibility of advancing the MIRV weapons system by adapting individual guidance units to each of the several re-entry vehicles loaded in one ICBM. The MIRV weapon now being t.ested releases one warhead at a precise point during the missile's trajectory, then shifts course to release the next warhead at another target. MIRV technology developed under ABRES will enable ea.ch re-entry vehicle to alter course, maneuver around an antiballistic missile system, and guide the H-bomb to its target.
The ABRES program in addition involves continuing R & D on penetration aids such as heatshields, decoys, chaff, and electronic counter-measures. ABRES also comprises defensive technology such as hardening concepts and characteriStics of re-entry vehicles to failitate destruction of incoming enemy warheads.
Costs The ABRES program has been in opera
tion since 1963. Over $1.3 billion has been spent since FY 1962 on technology development for ICBM reentry vehicles and penetration aids. DOD requested an additional $121 million in R & D funds for FY 1970, which was cut by $14 million by the Senate Armed Services Committ.ee. Singer-General Precision, Inc., was recently awarded a $3.9 million contract to develop and build parts for a new guidance system, an indication that the Pentagon intends to go ahead, with an advanced MIRV weapon. Total R & D costs for the ABRES program for the next 5 years are e&timated at over $600 million.
Rationale ABRES is int.ended to increase the tech
nological data available for new weapons development and does not involve effort on deployed systems. The effort is primarily in the area of improving capability to penetrate Soviet defensive systems, although hard target capability is improved in some ABRES activities. The central objective, however, of the ABRES program is the maintenance of our deterrent by enhancing the penetration capability of our re-entry vehicles.
Improvement of our hard target capability iS not directed toward a U.S. first-strike, but supports our second-strike damage limiting ability, a secondary U.S. strategic requirement.
The portion of the ABRES program relating to an improved MIRV guidance system in fact decreases our ability to hit ha.rd targets because installation of a guidance system capable of maneuvering around Soviet ABMs requires a trade-off in accuracy and warhead size. In any event research on maneuvering re-entry vehicles does not imply a plan to use them.
Critique The necessity for maintaining a techno
logical base for future weapons development is generally accepted, particularly as far as R & D is concerned. It is not clear. however, that the ABRES program is confined solely to R & D efforts. The Singer-General contract, for example, is for production of parts for a new guidance system--clearly a step beyond research and development as it is normally defined.
ABRES, like any other new weapons program, develops its own momentum for deployment. Once the technology becomes available for successful introduction of a new system or a system refinement, the pressure for production and deployment becomes irresistible. Unfortunately, the ABRES program has been so tightly classified that it is impossible to determine at what stage the components of the program have arrived.
With regard to the U.S. secondary strategic mission of limiting damage by destroying hardened enemy missile sllos, such a capability clearly presents the President with a first-strike option. A potential enemy, of course, has only the President's word that the
27320 option will not be exercised. For an enemy strategic planner to meet contingencies on this basis would surely be too much to ask. Therefore, the damage limiting mission becomes an excuse for enemy planners to go ahead with weapons systems designed to dig out our missiles, which in turn raises firststrike fears in this country and sends the strategic arms race into another upward spiral.
SRAM (short range attack missile) Description
SRAM is an Air Force missile which will arm the FB-111 and the G and H models of the B-52. It is supersonic, air-to-ground, and nuclear-armed, for use against cities.
Costs The original contract between the Air
Force and Boeing for the R & D phase of the total SRAM system, including mating the system to the aircraft, was for $142.3 million. The overrun has been set at $55-$60 million by the Air Force and higher than $80 million by the Senate Armed Services Committee. SRAM is the second Air Force hardware program (the other was the C5A) to be developed under terms of this total package concept.
The FY 1970 budget contains $20.4 million for SRAM procurement (all of which has been deleted by the Senate Armed Services Committee) and $84.7 million for R & D.
Rationale With SRAM, the bomber does not have to
fiy on to the target, which is likely to be heavily defended. Therefore, SRAM extends the useful life of the B-52 and FB-111. This diminishes the need for an advanced manned bomber, and might save billions of dollars.
Critique Critics within the Pentagon state that if
adoption of SRAM could in fact delay advanced manned bomber development, it is an excellent idea. SRAM, however, has been hindered by poor R & D management. The program has been pushed too fast-for example, the FB-111 was not operational when SRAM design started.
Technical problems encountered during research and development have included:
Developing a restartable, solid-propellant motor.
Designing a missile capable of being carried on both the supersonic FB-111 and the subsonic B-52.
Modifications in the FB-111 have necessitated modifications in SRAM.
The test schedule has fallen behind. A number of critics, of course, question the
assumption that we need manned bombers at all (see AMSA); SRAM would not be needed if we phased out our manned bombers.
SCAD (subsonic cruise armed decoy) Description
SCAD is an air-launched decoy to go with the B-52 and FB-111 as a complement to SRAM. SCAD's radar image is identical to the B-52, thereby confusing enemy detection. It also has a multiple warhead capability to destroy enemy bomber defenses.
Costs
Total funding to this point has been $15 million. SCAD is still in the R. & D. stage. The amount requested in the FY 1970 budge•t is classified.
Rationale SCAD increases the ability of manned
bombers (FB-111 and B-52) to survive and penetrate the expected improved Soviet air defense system of the mid-1970's.
Critique SCAD and SRAM are related programs
(e.g. they will use the same launching and control apparatus, and both extend the useful life of the present manned bombers).
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS Critics fear that classification of the amounts spent on SCAD could be concealing cost overruns similar to SRAM's. AMSA (advanced manned strategic aircraft)
Description AMSA is a swing-wing manned bomber for
the 1970s and 1980s. It is as large as the B-70, but can fly at 200 feet for 1,000 miles at the speed of sound, thus giving it the capability to fl.void air defenses. It has a range with one refueling of 6,700 miles and a top speed of 1550 miles per hour. AMSA could be armed with nuclear bombs or nucleartipped air-to-ground missiles.
Costs $140 million has been spent on R & D to
date. The estimated total R & D costs are $1.76 billion. Unit cost estimates run from $20 million to $80 million. With a production run of 2£3 as currently estimated, total production cost estimates run from $5.26 billion to $21 billion.
The FY 1970 budget contained a request for $77.2 million for R & D. Secretary Laird added $23 million to this request and the Senate Armed Services Committee approved the FY 1970 total of $100.2 million for R & D.
Rationale The U.S. arsenal must contain a mixed
force consisting of both bombers and missiles in order to insure against missile unreliability or improvements in Soviet missile defense systems. Bombers are more flexible than missiles because they can be redirected to other targets while in flight or called back.
An investment in AMSA would require the Soviet Union to build a new bomber defense system, complicating their defense problem and requiring diversion of resources from ABM programs. AMSA could also be used for other military efforts such as non-nuclear bombing in limited wars.
Critique The Pentagon itself has repeatedly in
formed the Congress that: The Soviet long-range bombers number
less than one-sixth of our B-52 force, and are inferior to that plane.
The Soviet SST cannot be redesigned to be a manned bomber.
There are no signs that the Russians are developing a new bomber.
The intelligence community is of the consensus that the Soviet medium-range bombers represent so small a threat that the National Intelligence Estimates omit mention of them altogether.
Critics assert that the deployment of large numbers of intercontinental land-and-sea based missiles has placed bombers in a secondary strategic role. Hidden or hardened missiles are far less vulnerable during a first strike thus providing a more credible deterrent. In 1966, Secretary McNamara pointed out that even if 50 % of the missiles the U.S. deployed were faulty, or were shot down by a Soviet ABM system, the U.S. could still deliver more warheads per dollar by missile to the Soviet Union than by manned bomber.
Limited warfare roles of bombers do not require AMSA. B-52's have flown thousands of missions over Vietnam without one loss to hostile action; AMSA would cost more to do the same job.
Industry sources indicate that the present specifications may be impossible to achieve . Any unexpected development in R&D, such as a weight increase, a loss in engine efficiency, or an increase in the penetration aids AMSA must carry, will do to it what similar problems did to the Boeing swing-wing SST, which was abandoned.
Bomber defense Description
NORAD (North American Air Defense Command) is the basic U.S. defense against the Soviet bomber threat. It consists of ra-
September 26, 1969 dars, communications, computers, control centers, missiles, and interceptors. The system was developed in the early 1950's when the Soviet strategic capability depended on a large bomber fleet.
Essential components of t he system are: The DEW line radars. The SAGE (Semi Automatic Ground En
vironment) system, a computerized command and control system for the missiles and interceptors.
The BUIC (Back-Up Interceptor Control) system, designed to take over if SAGE is destroyed.
Nike Hercules, Hawk, and Bomarc surfaceto-air missiles, deployed at 110 sites around the U.S.
Forty-one interceptor squadrons C1f about twenty planes each, deployed at bases around the U.S.
NORAD was constructed at a cost of tens of billions of dollars when a first-strike would have been against cities, but being carried out by bombers, would have allowed many hours warning time.
Costs The Pentagon has this year proposed grad
ually phasing out SAGE and replacing it with a new, more efficient system. The new system ls designed to counter a Soviet B-70, AMSA, or SRAM-type missile on their present aging bombers.
The new system is to consist of the following:
OTH (Over-the-Horizon) long range radar. Costs of OTH are not available.
AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) large aircraft with radars capable of "looking down" at a Soviet bomber attacking at very low altitudes (200 feet), and controlling the interception of such bombers. AWACS will be invulnerable to missile attack. $60 million is included in the FY 1970 budget for R & D on AW ACS, O! which the Senate Armed Services Committee cut $45 million, recommending that the program be deferred one year.
F-106X (an improved F-106 interceptor), which will have a "look-down/ shoot-down" capability against low-fiydng Soviet bombers. The FY 1970 budget contains $18.5 million for R & D on modernizing the F-106, of which the Senate Armed Services Com.mi ttee cut $16 million. The program will have an estimated investment cost of $'750 million to $1.2 billion. Annual operating costs are expected to be $700 million.
Sam-D (a new anti-aircraft system to replace Nike Hercules and Hawk) . The system includes radar, electronic guidance, and missiles. $75 million is in the FY 1970 budget for contract definition for advanced development. The Senate Armed Services Committee cut this item in its entirety, stating that its development was not urgent and that it might not be the most efficient system for the requirement.
The Air Force has recommended the Lockheed F-12 as a possible alternative to an improved F-106. F-12 would be a 1950 mileper-hour interceptor with a uni t cost of $40 to $50 million. Annual operating costs of a pure F-12 force are estimated at $750 million.
This interceptor, also with a look-down/ shoot-down capability, could deter or defend against a Soviet AMSA or a SRAM-like missile, but only marginally better than F-106X. The F-12 has the disadvantage of possibly encouraging Soviet AMSA development, just as the Russian ABM brought on our MIRV.
Rationale A strong bomber defense is necessary at
the present time to deter development of a Soviet B-70, for which they now have a sufficient technological base. If the Soviet Union should develop and deploy such a bomber, the U.S. could not be caught without an adequ~te defense. At present, t he Soviet Union has a fleet of about J 50 longrange bombers.
September 26, 1969 In addition, it is conceivable that coun
tries other th.an the Soviet Union, such as Cuba, could attack the U.S. with manned bombers and inflict serious damage. If the costs of defense are lower than the probability of such an attack, defense is warranted.
It is also likely that bombers would be used in a European, Middle Eastern, or Asian confiict. If the U.S. gets involved, we must protect our forces and allied forces and cities with sufficient bomber defenses.
Critique Bombers are useless in a strategic offen
sive force unless a nation does not have ICBMs or Polaris-type forces. Soviet bombers flying to American missile silos would find them empty upon arrival. U.S. bombers withheld from a Soviet first strike attack, if not destroyed in the first round, would fi.nd few targets left of any real strategic importance.
Bombers cost so much more than the moreefficient missiles that if a nation needed an improved deterrent, and built bombers instead of missiles, it would be diminishing its own national security. The Pentagon states that the Soviet heavy bomber force is expected to continue its gradual decline, and that medium bombers could not play an important part in an attack on the United States. The Russian SST would be extremely difficult to convert to a modern bomber. Both the United States and the Soviet Union decided in the mid-1960s not to go ahead with bomber development.
Given the low probability of a bomber attack, critics argue that defenses against bombers are unnecessary. If, however, one concedes a need to defend against a greaterthan-expected threat, there are less costly alternatives to OTH, AWACS, SAM-D, F106X, andF-12.
The Senate Armed Services Committee decided that the present system has sufficient capability against the greater-than-expected threat. The present system has low research and investment costs. On the other hand, despite the fact that it is being made more efficient each year, it has an operating cost estimated at from $733 million to $1 billion annually.
Some critics suggest turning the tracking and identification responsibilities over to the Federal Aviation Administration, maintaining an F-106 force sufficient to defend against the existing threat, and finishing the R & D on OTH, AW ACS, and F-106 so that these systems can be immediately deployed if the Soviet Union starts development of an AMSA.
SECTION THREE-GENERAL PURPOSE FORCES
This section contains a brief discussion of the military doctrine that underlies our general purpose forces. Following are four subsections covering land, tactical air, and sea war, and airlift/sealift war, introduced by a discussion of contingency planning and force levels for each type of warfare and fact sheets on controversial weapons systems or programs in the FY 1970 budget.
Flexible Response Under the doctrine of flexible response,
the United States reserves for itself a number of options in a crisis, ranging from threatening the selective use of conventional forces through tactical nuclear war. Because an opponent can threaten any level of violence, prudence requires a response at the same level but with greater force, thereby deterring the opponent without unilaterally escalating to a more drastic type of war. The doctrine was adopted during the Kennedy Administration in the belief that a major power which relies solely on strategic nuclear weapons, as the U.S. did during the 1950's, is faced, in a crisis, with the unsatisfactory choice of using the weapons or accepting diplomatic defeat.
Hundreds of billions of dollars were spent by the Defense Department in the preKennedy years. The military services spent
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS the money on long-range m.anned bombers, high Army and Marine force levels, and as large a surface Navy as possible. These expenditures resulted from the ceiling on the defense budget and interservice rivalry. The services spent money on programs which symbolized institutional power, rather than programs calculated to improve our overall defense posture. After the 1961 decision, Secretary McNamara, through improved management and some expenditure increases, built up our flexible response capability. The policy is very expensive, costing about 70 % of the non-Vietnam defense expenditures during the last 10 years, or $350 billion.
Two Major/One Minor Wars The factors which determine the level of
defense spending are the contingencies we view as likely to come about, and our interpretation of their effect on our national security. For general purposes forces, Lt is the kind of wars we want to be able to fight, simultaneously and on short notice, that determine how large our forces must be in peacetime, and therefore the size of much of the defense budget.
U.S. planning for non-strategic war aims at a high degree of readiness to fight three confiicts arising simultaneously. The three oonfiicts are a Vietnam-size contingency in Asia; a Dominican-Republic size intervention in this hemisphere; and a tactical nuclear land war in Western and Central Europe. The duration of the confiicts for which preparations are made is classified.
Critics emphasize that such contingency planning must be re-thought if policies are to be changed. They argue tha.t the contingencies of a tactical nuclear war or a protracted war at sea are highly unlikely, and that the probability of both conflicts arising simultaneously is next to zero. They recommend re-defining those areas of the world in which our national security is truly engaged, and reassessing the ability of military force to accomplish ends judged vital to our national security.
Land war forces Current Mission
Current contingency planning for land war assumes that U.S. national security would be critically involved in a confront.iation between the European NATO countries and the Warsaw Pact, in Communist military aggression or large-scale insurgency in Asia, in Soviet direct intervention in the Middle East, and in certain Caribbean contingencies. In their initial phases these wars would all be limited wars. Contingency planners prepare for three types of limited land war:
Slow build-up/long term, such as the war in Vietnam.
Fast build-up/long term, such as the Korean War.
Fast build-up/short term, such as a new Korea or a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
Planners now believe that a fast build-up in defense can shorten a war. Planning for a fast build-up requires large peacetime foreesin-being and a great deal of mobility, which is the reason for the Strategic Reserve and airlift/ sealift oapabllity. Our overall posture is designed to cope with two major and one minor contingencies arising from situations as described above.
Critique All of the contingencies for which we cur
rently plan are of low probab111ty. Current planning assumes that in order to deter intervention by the Soviet Union o'r other powers, we must think 1n terms of putting ground f-orces into a confiict. If one reviews contingencies, however, one is hard put to imagine a case outside of Europe where we would again be prepared to take such action. our security interests in Asia now center around Korea and Thailand. Both have the ground troops to defend themselves and
27321 would be better supported in a crisis by U.S. firepower rather than manpower.
With regard to Europe, it is difficult to conceive of confrontations between the Warsaw Pact and NATO which would be l<>ng-term and non-nuclear, because:
Soviet and U.S. units are placed very far forward in Europe and would become engaged almost immediately.
The U.S. has 7,000 tactical nuclear warheads in Europe, including nuclear land mines along the ea.stern NATO line.
Casualties in combat units in a tactical nuclear war are estimated at 20% per day.
Force Levels Combat division strength and basing are
largely determined by the contingencies for which we prepare. Considerations such as the balance of payments and the usefulness and mobility of the reserves also influence current force levels and basing. In the future new factors will influence force level and basing decisions:
Greatly increased mobility, making it possible to station more combat troops outside theaters of operations for rapid deployment.
Reduced manpower requirements, due to a reluctance to involve U.S. ground forces in protracted confiict.
The expiration of base agreements, and political changes in countries which in the past bave provided the U.S. with basing facilities .
In the past, the military services have asked for and been routinely authorized arbitrary troop strengths. Unit sizes and over-all force levels have been calculated on the basis of the last war. For the future, we must more accurately determine troop requirements, and design forces to attain the goals for whioh we are likely to be fighting. For instance, we should determine whether we are in Europe as a trip-wire or to fight a longterm land war on the continent, before we size our forces there.
Our force levels for land war should also be determined on a long range basis to allow for more efficient manpower management. The Five Year Defense Program could usefully serve this need.
Sheridan Description
Sheridan is a lightweight armored reconnaissance attack vehicle intended to provide the Army with substantial improvement over existing armored vehicles. The tank is to provide amphibious and airborne capabilities, high mobility, increased rate of fl.re, and better hit probability. It employs the Shillelagh anti-tank missile system. It travels 43 miles per hour and has a 350 mile range.
Costs $1.2 billion has been spent on the Sheri
dan-Shillelagh program to date, with no combat-operational tanks yet available. Sheridan was put into production even though testing showed it to have numerous shortcomings. Millions of dollars have been spent on modifications of the unusable weapons which were produced. Prime contractor 1s General Motors, using government-owned facilities in Cleveland, Ohio. The Senate Armed Services Committee has deleted $5 million from the $53 million requested for procurement in the FY 1970 budget.
Rationale Sheridan is essential to counter the quan
titative and possible qualitative superiority of the armored units expected to be deployed by the Warsaw Pact countr~es.
Critique · Although the Senate Armed Services Com
mittee reported that the Sheridan was performing in an outstanding manner, the House Armed Services Investigating Subcommittee (Report, July 9, 1969) reviewed the Army tank program and concluded:
While the Army considered the M60Al main battle tank equal or superior to Soviet-
27322 designed tanks, it failed to maintain an adequate production rate of M60Al 's during the 1960's. Citing the thus limited armored capablllty, and fearing loss of program funds, the Army ordered mass production of Sheridan before there was any adequate assurance that the design was suitable.
Misleading reports and unwarranted overconfidence of Army developers .influenced the decision to produce Sheridan. Despite continuing development failures, production decisions were made so that an appearance of satisfactory program progress would lessen the chance for searching and critical review by the Office of Secretary of Defense and the Bureau of the Budget. Hasty production decisions caused millions of dollars to be spent to reconfigure and modify the equipment in order to even partially achieve design goals.
Despite design defects in the Sheridan system, the Army hurriedly modified a small number of Sheridans and released the vehicles to Vietnam in early 1969 to demonstrate the Sheridan's value as a weapon as soon as possible. The release was conditional because known safety hazards and performance limitations had not been eliminated. Not one Sheridan as originally designed and produced was suitable for combat use without extensive and costly retrofits. A few so modified were sent to Vietnam for test purposes under combat conditions, but hundreds of defective Sheridans remain in storage. Although "caseless" 152m.m am.munition is being supplied to Vietnam, it is &till unsatisfactory and has impaired the Sheridan's effectiveness. Misfires, broken rounds, and other serious defects, have ca.used casualties lowering crew confidence in the weapon.
The Australian Government tested two Sherldans in 1967 and identified the same deficiencies found in the U.S. test report. The Australian Minister for the Army rejected Sheridan.
So much time and money had been spent developing the Sheridan/ Shillelagh system that the developers became irrevocably committed to production. Under such circumstances the Project Manager became a captive rather than a manager of his project. Such attachment inevitably results in management of doubtful quality.
In light of these facts, the Committee concluded that there is no convincing evidence that Sheridan represents enough of an improvement in combat capability over existing weapons to justify any more expenditures of time and money.
MBT-70 (Main Battle Tank) Description
The MBT-70 is a joint U.S.-West German heavy tank designed to operate in the environment of a tactical nuclear or chemical/ biological war in Europe. It employs the Shillelagh tank missile system. It is intended to be more maneuverable and less vulnerable than existing tanks, and superior to future Soviet armor.
Cost The prime contractor for the MBT-70 ls
General Motors Corporation. The United States and Germany agreed in 1963 to divide evenly the estimated R & D cost ot $80 million. However, R & D cost estimates have been repeatedly revised upward; t.o $138 million in 1965, $303 million in 1968, and most recently to $554 million. The cost to the U.S. has risen 528 % over the original estimate. The production engineering phase of development is estimated to add $188 million.
The final per unit cost of the MBT-70 will be between $520,000 and $750,000. Repeated delays have deferred the target date for production from 1969 to 1974.
The Senate Armed Services Committee has cut $15 million of the $45 million requested in the FY 1970 budget for R & D. The FY 1970 budget also contains $25 million for MBT-70 production base support.
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
Rationale MBT-70 is needed to off-set the quanti
tative and potentially qualitative superiority of Soviet armored vehicles. As the U.S. must be prepared to fight a tactical nuclear land war in Europe, a tank capable of operating in this environment ls required.
Critique The MBT-70 utilizes highly sophisticated
materials that are quite probably unsuited to cost-effective tank development. For instance, casting the armor with boron steel attempted to utilize a process that had not been fully developed. The Shillelagh missile system with which the tank ls to be equipped has not lived up to expectations. Difficulties in the R & D phase have driven the estimated unit cost to over half a milllon dollars, or almost three times its soviet equivalent.
Aside from technical and cost considerations, the assumptions cited by the Army in 1963 for developing such a tank no longer apply in 1969. By 1974, the time the tank will be ready, the nature of tactical warfare will have changed as to make MBT-70 ob&olete. If, in spite of the drop-off in the Warsaw Pact tank threat, a new tank is still required, the Army should initiate MBT-80 now and abandon MBT-70.
There is great question whether tanks will ever be effective in warfare again. The 1967 Arab-Israeli war showed how vulnerable tanks are to tactical air. In any tactical nuclear war it ls very doubtful whether a tank could survive. Troop-launched guided missiles also will by the mid-1970s make tank warfare a risk proposition.
Dragon, Shillelagh, and Tow (Antitank Missiles)
Description Dragon is a light Army missile system de
signed to destroy all but the heaviest armor. It is guided by a reusable infrared sighting device linked to the missile by wire. It travels at about 400 miles per hour and has a maximum range of 1,200 yards. Dragon will be deployed at the platoon level, and will replace the 90mm. recoilless rifle.
Shillelagh is a lightweight guided missile to be launched from a combination 152mm gun/launcher. It is guided on a boost-glide trajectory by electronic equipment in the launch vehicle. It is to be deployed on the Sheridan, modified M60Al, and the MBT-70.
Tow ls a supersonic anti-tank missile system slmllar in guidance system to Dragon. It travels at about 650 miles per hour and has a maximum range of about two miles. In its surface-to-surface version, the system weighs 200 lbs. but can be truck mounted. Tow can also be mounted for air-to-ground use from the Cheyenne attack helicopter. It replaces the 106m.m recoilless rifle.
Costs In FY 1969, $18 mllllon was requested for
Dragon production engineering, bringing total outlay to $35 million. Procurement costs for the system are currently estimated at $133 million over a three year period.
$110 million was spent for Shillelagh procurement in FY 1968 and FY 1969. The FY 1970 budget contains $50 million for continued procurement.
Total R & D and procurement costs for Tow through FY 1969 were $192 million. The FY 1970 budget contains $156 million for procurement and $2.5 m1111on for additional R & D. The Senate Armed Services Committee cut $14 milllon from the procurement request, citing overestimation of the Warsaw Pact tank threat by the Army.
Rationale Anti-tank guided missiles are needed be
cause such missiles have a superior kill capability over conventional artillery. Such increased kill capability ls needed to counter the quantitative and possible qualitative superiority of tanks deployed by the Warsaw Pact countries.
September 26, 1969 Critique
Dragon has poor capablllty against heavy armor and a limited range. Tow is extremely cumbersome, requiring a three man launch team. Continued Tow R & D expenditures indicate difficulties and suggest procurement has been rushed. Shillelagh does not work well at night or in the rain, and no satisfactory launching mechanism has been developed for the missile. All three missiles will not work if anything interferes with the gunner's continuous observation of the target.
It is not likely that any of the missiles work much better than ENTAC, which was abandoned at a systems cost of $50 million. All three missiles are far more expensive than ENTAC. ENTAC was so expensive that personnel were not permitted to train with the missile itself, but instead had to rely on a simulator. Since there is a request of $4.6 million in the FY 1970 for a device to permit Shillelagh training without firing a missile, it is likely that this problem is besettng Shillelagh and wlll beset Tow and Dragon.
The 90mm and 106mm recoilless rifle are adequate to deal with a low-probability contingency such as full non-nuclear war in Europe. Dragon, Shillelagh and Tow can all be countered with electronic countermeasures; should this occur, we would find ourselves without effective anti-tank weapons, having phased out the recoilless rifles.
The Warsaw Pact tank threat has been over-estimated. It has been used to justify air-to-ground missiles, tank programs, antitank missiles, attack helicopters and even tactical aircraft. Because Of such over-reaction, each $250,000 tank built by the Warsaw Pact requires the United States to spend m.illions in overlapping systems, and this, for the low-probablllty contingency of a full conventional war in Europe.
CBW {Chemical/Biological Warfare) Description
CBW includes research on offensive and defensive chemical and bacteriological agents and delivery devices, the procurement, manufacturing, and stockpiling of these materials and devices, and the maintenance of fac111ties for greatly-increased production should the U.S. feel compelled to use these devices in time of war.
It also includes the present large-scaie production and use of chemical anti-crop and personnel agents in Southeast Asia.
Costs FY 1969 expenditures are estimated as
follows: [In millions]
Research and development _____________ $90 Procurement ------------------------- 240 Operations and maintenance___________ 20
Total--------------------------- 350 In addition, it is estimated that $100
mllllon is spent on chemical warfare in Vietnam annually. Because CBW funds are not specifically identified in the Defense Budget, it has proved difficult to itemize CBW requests in the FY 1970 budget. The 1970 R & D request is for $88 million. The Senate Armed Services Committee cut $16 million of this amount alloted for offensive lethal weapons.
Riationaile The Soviet Union is estimated to have a
considerable CBW capability, including offensive weapons, despite the fact that it is a signer of the 1925 Geneva Protocol banning first-use of these weapons. Our offensive weapons are designed to deter and to be used if our opponents have already done so. Peacetime activities are necessary to ensure preparedness in time of war.
Critique Although the U.S. has stated that it would
not initiate the use of CBW in wartime, it has not signed the Geneva protocol which
September 26, 1969 contains such language. American CBW materials are stockpiled not only in the U.S., but also abroad. The U.S. has been the world's biggest user of non-lethal chemical agents.
Other deterrents are more deadly to the enemy and less so to ourselves, and evoke fewer emotional and moral reactions in world opinion. Especially pertinent are the dangers posed to one's allies and self by the use of such weapons. Scientists have testified that use of bacteriological agents could rebound with disastrous effect, not only on troops but also on friendly populations. Their use in wartime would be far more dangerous than their use in peacetime laboratories and test facilities, where numerous accidents have nevertheless taken place.
Serious ecological problems are created by the need for eventual disposal of stockpiles of CBW agents. According to some scientists, pumping materials into the ground in Colorado has increased the danger of earthquakes. Dumping agents into the ocean endangers fish, animal, and human life and is in violation of international agreements.
Manpower Description
Mil1tary manpower includes questions of total force requirements, considerations of economy of force, and managerial problems of manpower and personnel. The Defense Department currently has 3.4 million men on active duty, 1 million in the Selected Reserve, 1.7 million in other reserve components, 200,-000 in ROTC, 800,000 mllltary retirees, and 1.2 million civilian employees.
Celllngs on troop strength, as well as authoriza tlons for certain combat elements, such as ships, divisions, and wings, are provided by the Congress, but the ceilings on active forces have been suspended for some time. The Pentagon has only recently attempted to determine troop levels on the basis of the sizes and role of operating units around the world. Within such general guidelines on troop levels, the military departments manage their own manpower and personnel programs.
Costs The Pentagon lists the average active duty
military salary as $5,947, not including costs of food, housing, training facilities, procurement, transportation, benefits, or the government's obligation to ex-servicemen. A more accurate estimate of the money saved by dropping one man from the active forces would be $10,000. Figures are imprecise because there ls no agreed method of calculating personnel costs.
The salaries of the 3.4 million active duty soldiers total $20.2 billion, plus an estimated $14 billion for support.
The Pentagon requests for obligational authority for personnel and housing this year are $21.9 billion and $.6 billion respectively.
Rationale The size of our present forces ls related to
our commitments around the world and cannot be changed without changing our commitments. An arbitrary Congressional cut in the size of our forces would impair our national security.
For example, NATO agreements determine the number of combat units we have committed to the European theater. NATO troop strength is determined by analysis of the deployment of Warsaw Pact forces in Eastern Europe, and unilateral action on the part of the U.S. would not only undermine the confidence of our NATO allies but would require excessive risks in light of the size of opposing forces.
With regard to manpower management, there are fundamental operational differences among the services, which require individual programs. Each service requires different administrative and leadership qualities for its top management, and imposition of
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
standardized manpower and personnel practices would undermine morale and efficiency.
Critique Manpower levels depend on contingencies
for which we unilaterally choose to prepare, rather than commitments. Any shifts in contingency planning would allow for reductions in manpower levels; contingency planning is a function of threat estimation and not our commitments. For the following reasons it should be possible to redlWe force levels without reducing our commitments:
Warfare has become less manpower-intensive and more dependent on firepower and moblllty.
While our strategic mobility has increased dramatically, our force levels have not declined but have in fact increased.
The probability of direct American intervention has declined as a result of our Vietnam experience.
Efficient manpower management methods currently exist which if adopted would radically increase efficiency and perm.it force level reduction.
Specialists in defense manpower management have recommended that the Defense Department provide Congress with an analysis of the relationship between contingency plans and force levels and between combat forces and support troops. They recommend that the Pentagon be directed to trade foreign basing for stateglc mobility, and devise more efficient ratios of combat troops to supporting manpower. The Five-Year Defense Program should be the basis for manpower procurement, induction, training, assignment, retention, promotion, and retirement.
A standardized and automated manpower and personnel information system, including cost information, should be designed for the entire Defense Department, as was done for supplies a decade ago. Critics within the Pentagon have stated that because present information procedures are so undependable 125 men have to be given orders to Vietnam in order to get 100 men there. They charge that more men must be drafted than needed, because no detailed plans exist for manpower utilization. It is also reported that, at any given time, the Army cannot account for tens of thousands of men because reporting is so inaccurate.
Congressional critics have recommended that manpower costs be charged to a fixed operating budget of the military organization which uses the manpower, so that wasted manpower would cut into budget allocations and create an incentive for efficiency. To accomplish this, an improved accounting system for operations, such as project PRIME, should be immediately implemented.
The above problems, serious as they are, only scratch the surface. Until the Hubbell Report is enacted, servicemen with the same skllls as civllians will still receive lower pay, causing hundreds of trained men to leave the service for similar but higher-paying jobs elsewhere. If they stay in the service, they change jobs so rapidly that they fail to achieve the technical or managerial expertise they would in civlUan life. Until such problems are solved, the Pentagon will continue to waste billions of dollars annually on unsound personnel and manpower management.
Tactical air forces Current mission
Tactical air forces have been designed for the following missions:
Establishing air superiority in combat zones.
Engaging in attacks far behind enemy lines.
Intercepting air attacks from opposing forces.
Providing close support for ground troops. These missions must be carried out in
three theaters simultaneously and on short notice. Naval and Marine Air Forces are car-
27323 rler-based and are designed to be operable anywhere in the world.
Critique Estimates of enemy capabllitles upon
which our tactical air contingency planning is based come from within the defense community and are not necessarily the consensus of the intelligence community. Over the last ten years, the defense community's estimates of enemy capabilities have proved excesslve--more than prudence would require. The defense community appraises the threat in terms of total aircraft inventory, while rating our own preparedness after large discounts for aircraft used in training and under repair or modification.
The Soviet Union has 1n the past manufactured more different advanced prototypes than the U.S., but put the less-advanced aircraft into mass production. They have deployed these aircraft only in the Soviet Union during the first several years of their useful life, and not equipped allied air forces with them. When experimental prototypes are shown, military intelllgence predicts deployment of the aircraft. Thus the need to develop a new aircraft to maintain U.S. air superiority becomes immediate.
Instead of a well-managed research and development effort, what results ls a crash program, like the F-14. Modifications became necessary to correct faults which might have been caught earlier 1f a more deliberate pace had been set. The later modifications often turn out to be almost as costly as the aircraft themselves, and the readiness and performance of the aircraft are seriously degraded by the low quality of the developmental effort.
The lead-time required to add a new e.ircraft to the force exceeds the time sgan of plausible intelligence estimates. Hence the Soviet policy of designing many advanced aircraft, but deploying only those models which respond to t~e probable threat. In the United States, defense planners put themselves in a position of authorizing the development of new tactical aircraft which may turn out to be unnecessary or overelaborate.
Problems have also arisen in the military services' attempts to hybridize and overelectronicize our aircraft, and to try to develop aircraft which rely on unproven technologies. This practice is based on the assumption that as soon as new developments are available they can be included in modifications, making them easier to sell to the Congress because the basic aircraft are already in existence.
Critics also contend that the U.S. is getting very few aircraft for the price. The estimated cost of the Mig-21 is $2 million; that of its American equivalent, the F-4 Phantom, is $4 milllon. Estimates of the eventual cost of the Mig-23 are $3 million; Pentagon sources state that the F-14A will cost more than $12 million, and the F-15 only slightly less. Yet the F-14A and F-15 are responses to the Mig-23.
Force levels The United States maintains 39 tactical
air wings around the world, with a large supplementary force in the Reserves. Although these forces are supposedly justified by contingency planning, no specific number of aircraft is tied to a certain set of contingencies. In fact, the number 39 does not relate to contingency planning. The number of Marine air wings (4) was set by statute to ensure the survival of the Marine Corps. The 12 naval air wings depend on the number of carriers (15), which has never been justified, and on the Navy's role in providing support to the Marines. Hearings in 1968 indicated that the 23 Air Force wings were a compromise between what the Joint Chiefs requested and what Secretary McNamara thought necessary; no more rational explanation of the number has been made. The
27324 Army has built up a considerable gunship force without authorization of any wings from anyone.
Tactical air force levels should be determined by the number of sorties per day each aii'craft is capable of flying, distance of targets from bases, possible multipurpose roles, attrition rates, characteristics of enemy aircraft and ground defenses, effectiveness of ammunition and ordnance, and aircraft range and loiter time. While modern aircraft can perform these functions much better than their predecessors, aircraft are still replaced on a one-for-one basis and no consideration is given to reducing the total number of ta<:tical air wings.
While the U.S. normally has five wings deployed on its carriers, in addition to several wings at overseas bases, including the most advanced attack aircraft, the Soviet Union has adopted no policy that could be called similarly aggressive. Published statistics concerning aircraft in Europe indicate that NATO has a much greater ground attack/ deep interdiction and close air support ca· pability than the Warsaw Pact forces. The "threat" from the Warsaw Pact is from a much more defensive force .
Plans which depict American planes fighting Soviet planes are unrealistic. If the Soviet Union attacked NATO bases in Europe, the conflict would be extremely diiµcul t to contain. Once the conflict escalated, tactical air forces would become unimportant. Dogfights between U.S. and non Soviet air forces are possible, but because the Soviet Union waits several years before selling or deploy· ing new aircraft in allied or client nations, no crash development program for F-15 need take place.
AGMX-3, Condor, Maverick, and Tow (Airto-Ground Missiles)
Description AGMX-3 would be a long range Air Force
tactical missile for use against targets such as bridges, buildings, troop concentrations, and anti-aircraft installations. It would have an all-weather guidance capability.
Condor is a long range Navy tactical missile for use against the same targets as the AGMX-3. It is T.V. guided and once it has been launched, the pilot of the launching aircraft can fly on to another target and direct Condor down at the same time. It has a range of 40 miles, weighs 2,500 pounds and has an electronic countermeasure capability which makes it effective against SAM antiaircraft sites. It is to be launched from the A-6A.
Maverick is a short range Air Force tactical missile carrying a shaped charge for use against hard targets such as tanks and pillboxes. It is T.V. guided and can be launched at supersonic speed from a low altitude. It has a range of under 10 miles and weighs 500 pounds. It is to be launched from the F-4, the A-7, and the F-111.
Tow is a short range Army tactical missile for use against tanks. It is wire guided and of limited range and speed. It is to be launched in its air-to-ground role from the Cheyenne helicopter.
Costs The Air Force requested $3 million for
R&D for the AGMX-3, which was deleted by the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Condor per unit is one of the most expensive missiles ever considered for use against tactical targets. It has been under develop-ment for a number of years at a cost of $100 million; total R&D estimates are now $150 million. The Navy is requesting $12.9 million for R&D in the FY 1970 budget. Estimates for production and deployment run as high as $500 million.
The original R&D estimate for Maverick was $95 million; the present estimate is $143 million. The Air Force envisions a production run of 17,000 missiles at a cost of $306 million,
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS or $18,000 per copy. $129 million has been spent for Maverick R&D to date. The FY 1970 budget contains $39.6 million for R&D.
The Army is requesting $156 million for Tow procurement. Only a portion of the missiles procured will be used in the air-toground configuration. The Senate Armed Services cut Tow procurement to $142 million.
Rationale These missiles represent t he greatest tech
nical revolution of the decade relative to other air-to-ground ordinance. T.V. guided glide bombs such as Walleye and Fat Albert have significantly reduced time over target and number of sorties; powered air-to-ground tactical missiles will improve this capability and provide even greater aiccuracy.
Maverick and Tow are needed to counter the Warsaw Pact tank threat in Europe and to improve our worldwide tactical air capability. AGMX-3 and Condor are essential to provide standoff capability against soft targets and to counter anticipated improved Soviet SAM capability.
Critique The T .V. guidance systems of Condor and
Maverick limit them to use during the day and in good weather. Tow is useless in its air-to-ground configuration without Cheyenne, which is unlikely to ever be deployed. At $200 to $300 million before deployment the cost of each system ls prohibitive; when deployed, each missile will cost far more than its intended targets. The Pentagon has repeatedly admitted overlap in the capabilities of these and other missiles.
There is also an overlap of threat. The same Warsaw Pact tank threat, which did not materialize at the expected level, has been used to justify Tow and Maverick as well as two new tank programs. Moreover, this threat was computed not on the basis of tanks facing NATO but on the basts of total Warsaw Pact inventory.
Condor and AGMX-3 are being justified primarily on the basis of a. new generation of Soviet SAM. Soviet SAMs had a less than 2 % kill ratio (94 of 5500 hits) over North Vietnam a.nd it ls unlikely that even if a new generation of SAM were under development it would function much better. The U.S. already has sufficient radar-homing airto-ground missiles, such as Standard-ARM and Shrike, to deal with any foreseeable Soviet SAM.
Beyond these considerations, critics assert that the Executive branch and Congress should consciously determine tha.t we should be prepared for the contingencies for which Condor and AGMX-3 a.re being developed. They are useful only in full conventional war with the Soviet Union or in a limited war in which the U.S. is directly engaged against an opponent supplied with a new generation SAM by the Soviet Union.
·AX lAttack Bomber) Description
AX is a small turboprop attack bomber able to operate effectively a.t a large range of subsonic speeds, and possessing short takeoff and landing capability. It is uncomplicated and easy to operate but can be used only when the U.S. has clear air superiority and when enemy anti-aircraft weapons are not sophisticated. Prime function is the ground support mission now assigned to the more expensive F-100, F-105, and F-4. AX will be armed with a variety of conventional bombs and strafing guns.
Costs Initial design work has just begun. $12
million requested for FY 1970 is for contract definition and engineering development. R&D costs are estimated at $137 million, although the Air Force FY 1971 budget contains $140 million for AX development a.lone. Unit cost is estimated a.t $1.2 mlllion.
September 26, 1969 Rationale
Because the engine design and electronics already exist, the aircraft can be developed in a short time and wlll be highly reliable and inexpensive. Our expensive and complex aircraft currently performing the ground support mission should be replaced by the reliable and cost-effective AX.
Critique Critics assert that AX is clearly intended
for counterinsurgency warfare. Questions about its technical details are less relevant than discussion of the assumptions underlying the need for an aircraft with its capabllities. AX is intended for use in Vietnamtype conflicts and the request for such an aircraft is indicative of Defense Department plans. Critics maintain that the Executive branch and Congress should define the role of the U.S. in future insurgencies before authorizing additional hardware to deal with such insurgencies.
As far as current needs are concerned, the highly efficient OV-10 at $450,000 a copy is more than $137.
Cheyenne Description
Cheyenne is a.n Army helicopter for use as a weapons platform and escort vehicle for troop and supply-carrying helicopters. It cruises at 210 knots, faster than any previous helicopter, and has attack as well a.s escort capability. It carries rockets and machine guns, has heavy firepower, and electronic aiming and firing mechanisms. It replaces the Huey and Cobra.--llghter, smaller and slower gunships.
Costs The prime contractor for Cheyenne is
Lockheed Aircraft. Originally, fifteen aircraft were to be bought in FY 1969 a.s part of a total package contract calling for procurement of 375 Cheyenne helicopters over a three-year period a.t $875 million. However, the contract has been cancelled for default of the contractor. Technical difficulties encountered dealt primarily with the rotor which caused severe limitations in maneuverability. The original unit cost estimate of Cheyenne was $992,000, though the actual unit cost, exclusive of R. & D. costs, amounted to $2.2 mlllion. The Senate Armed Services Committee has deleted a.11 of $16.5 million for R. & D. and all of $429 million for procurement requested in the FY 1970 budget.
Rationale The air-mobile divisions of the armed
forces need faster helicopter escorts. Cheyenne will replace the less effective helicopters now operating in Vietnam. Such an aerial weapons system could supplement or replace tanks, artillery, and planes with heavy fire power in support of ground operations.
Critique R. & D. problems encountered with respect
to fire control and the avionics indicate that the helicopter cannot be produced within its original specifications. Also, the fixedrotor concept has not lent itself to implementation as originally planned. The unit cost is already so high that it is unlikely that it can ever be made cost-effective.
In its attack role it largely duplicates existing tactical air capability and the proposed AX. With respect to its anti-tank role (when mated to the Tow air-to-ground missile), the Warsaw Pact threat it is designed to counter has not materialized. Its remaining use, in counter-insurgency, seems less likely after Vietnam.
CVAN-69 (Nuclear Attack Aircraft Carrier) Description
The U.S. has maintained 15 Carriers and their escort fleets ever since World War II. They a.re used to provide bases for taotical
September 26, 1969 aircraft operations on short notice in places where land bases cannot be used. Each carrier is a base for about 75 aircraft.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff calculate that 13 carriers would be needed to fight 2 major I 1 minor wars simultaneously in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, and that two more are needed as a reserve. During peacetime, two are stationed in the Mediterranean, three in the Pacific, and ten are not deployed.
The carriers are not designed to be used as permanent airbases, but rather as temporary bases until land bases can be established or constructed. Carriers are useful for quick response in a crisis situation. The Soviet Union has no carriers.
Cost.G The FY 1970 budget contains a request for
$377 million to complete funding of a third nuclear carrier, CVAN-69. The estimated total cost of this carrier is $510 million. Pentagon sources indicate that estimates have already been revised upward and that a final cost of $700 million is not unlikely. Because a carrier never sails without its escort fleet , that cost must be added to that of the carrier--$405 million for escorts and $400 million for logistics ships. The total cost of a task force without aircraft is $1.3 billion. The Pentagon estimates the yearly operating costs of a carrier at $114 million, not including the costs of fueling and repair bases or opera ting the aircraft on the carrier.
Rationale The carrier provides a mobility impossible
to obtain otherwise. In addition, this form of airbase requires no basing rights or diploma tic negotiations to obtain, and does not contribute to the balance of payments problem.
Critique Many milit ary strategists argue that sur
face navies are themselves obsolete, because of the effectiveness of submarines and the limitations of anti-submarine warfare. The Soviet Union seems to have recognized this and invested heavily in attack submarine forces .
Carriers are only effective against enemies without submarines, and in situations in which the U.S. has air superiority. Thus they are only effective against weaker nations in limited wars. Because such wars are likely to develop slowly, quick-response forces may not be needed.
For the situations the U.S. is likely to face, land air bases can more effectively provide an air capability than carriers. The Air Force estimates the cost of a foreign base for a wing of aircraft at $6 million. Since U.S. engagement would be on behalf of an ally, one can assume that such a base would be available, Should an &lly deny landing rights , we might seriously question our commitment to defend him.
Many suggestions from inside and outside of the Pentagon have been made to reduce the cost of carrier operation:
Secretary McNamara had planned to reduce the carrier force to 12 in the 1970s.
The Air Force has the capability to convert existing airfields to air bases on extremely short notice, thereby reducing the need for carriers.
Carriers could be deployed without aircraft, and aircraft flown to the carrier when needed, thus reducing the need for a reserve wing for each carrier.
Since carriers are not defensible, they could be deployed without escort ships.
F-15 Description
The F-15 ls a twin engine, single seat aircraft capable of speeds of 1350 mph for extended periods, and hlgher speeds for brief intervals. It ha·s high maneuverability and acceleration. The F-15 is designed for air-toair combat. It is the Air Force's air superior-
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS lty fighter, replacing the F-4 phantom by 1975.
The F-15 is to be armed with yet to be developed air-to-air missiles such as AIM-82 and RAM designed for close-in dogfighting. It will also be armed with a rapid-fire cannon using light, caseless ammunition. The F-15 is expected to be superior to the Soviet MIG-23.
Costs $45 million was spent on F-15 in 1969 for
contract definition. Competitors are Westinghouse and Hughes Aircraft (radar); Pratt and Whitney, Fairchild Miller, North American, and McDonnell-Douglas (airframe) ; and General Eleciric (engine) . Exact data on procurement oosts or number of F-15's to be purchased ls not available, but the unit cost is currently expected to be under $12 million. One-for-one replacement of the F-15 for the F-4 could result in total procurement of 2,000 aircraft at cost of $20 billion.
Rationale In view of Soviet progress in developing
effective fighters, it is essential that the U.S. have an air superiority fighter to counter the expected Soviet fighter threat, as well as for protection of ground forces and for escort purposes. The F-4 has reached the limit of refinement of engine and airframe, and except for the Na.vy's proposed F-14 there exists no other aircraft suitable for the important air-to-air mission.
Critique The MIG-23, unlilre the F-15, is a defen
sive interceptor. The MIG-23 is also still in development and the Soviets have often not deployed weapons they have developed. If the Soviets do decide to produce the MIG-23, it will require several years to deploy and 5 more years before it is distributed to allies of the Soviet Union.
At present, the NATO forces have four times the fighter inventory of the Warsaw Pact-an aggressive stance. The Warsaw Pact nations, on the other hand, have four times the NATO interceptor inventory-a defensive stance. Buying the F-15 would only further disrupt the European balance.
A better response to MIG-23 deployment, should it occur, would be tactical missiles, or a shift of F-4Js from Vietnam to Europe. Further F-15 development could easily force the Soviet Union to produce the very threat F-15 is supposed to deter, just as the threat of the B-70 led to the TALLINN air defense system which in its turn became a justification for AMSA.
F-14 Description
The F-14 is a multi-mission carrier-based fighter under development for the Navy. The A model, to be operational in 1973, is a swing-wing supersonic aircraft, using the engine and avionics of the now abandoned F-lllB, redesigned for tandem seating, for fire control of existing Sparrow and Sidewinder air-to-air missiles and for the yet-tobe developed Phoenix system. Titanium is to be used in the airframe for lightness and maneuverability in dogfights. It is designed to replace the Navy's F-4 Phantom in the mid-1970's and, with the Phoenix missile system, to perform the fleet air defense mission of the F-lllB. It could have air-toground attack capability. F-14B and C have the same airframe as the A model, but will have advanced technology engines. The C model will incorporate advanced avionics. The B model is expected to be operational in 1975, and the C model in the late 1970's. The A model will be retrofitted with the advanced B engine.
Costs The F-14 is the outgrowth of an unsolic
ited proposal by Grumman in late 1967. The current estimate of the unit cost is $8 mlllion. This assumes a production run of 460
27325 aircraft in the A and B versions, and the aosence of technical problems and delays. other estimates within the Defense Department run $2 to $3 million higher. Not included in the estimate are the costs of procuring the Phoenix missile ($219,000 each) as well as the costs of other missiles and ordnance and part of the $2 million unit cost for Phoenix avionics. Current plans call for replacement of most F-4's; eventual procurement of F-14 could go as high as 1000. Estimates for systems cost of F-14 (R&D, procurement, spare parts, training and maintenance) are classified, but unofficially reported estimates range from $15 to $30 billion over a ten-year period.
The FY 1970 budget contains $275 million for procurement of 6 F-14A test models and $175 million for F-14B&C R&D.
Rationale The F-14 replaces the F-4 as an air-su
periority fighter and escort, performs the fleet air defense mission of the F-lllB, and has an air-to-ground attack capability.
While it meets a wide si>ectrum of possible threats, the key role of F-14 is air defense for carriers in a conventional war with the Soviet Union. It could also be used in a conflict with Communist China, in limited war, in show-of-force or deterrence situations and in nuclear engagements. By the mid-1970's present carrier-based airborne weapon-systems and aircraft will be outclassed in all roles by sophisticated Soviet capabilities.
Critique A recently-resigned Defense Department
official says the F-14 is the weakest and, at $15 to $30 billion in eventual cost, one of the most expensive programs in the FY 1970 budget.
Full scale conventional war with the Soviet Union seems unlikely now or in the foreseeable future. Nonetheless, if we prepare for the contingency, and if we assume Soviet use of the weaponry it currently has, then the U.S. carrier ta~k forces appear to be exceedingly vulnerable with or without the F-14.
The Navy's existing aircraft, such as the brand new and proven F-4J, can do the job for show-of-force and deterrence missions, the roles for which carriers are best suited. There are also electronic counter-measures and point defense systems presently deployed or planned for the fleet for additional protection from the Soviet threat. Deterrence will be achieved as much by Soviet reluctance to directly engage American armed forces as by deployment of advanced fleet air defense capabilities.
The F-14 also is unnecessary in show-offorce roles which do not directly involve the Soviet Union. The F-4 has proved to be a match for the high performance MIG-21's in Vietnam. Even if the Soviet Union started to produce the more advanced MIG-23 its allies would be unlikely to get it for five years. The F-4J is equipped with 2 of the 3 air-to-air missiles planned for F-14.
Other contingencies in which it is contended that the F-14 is essential, such as conventional war with Red China, initial surge operations at the outbreak of limited war, or skirmishes off the coast of hostile countries can also be performed with existing aircraft. In limited war operations landbased aircraft could be relied upon in any event.
Additional technical considerations also call into question the desirability of a new multi-purpose fighter-particularly one deFigned to carry the cumbersome Phoenix missile. The heavy engines, complex avionics, and the Phoenix are the same problems that plagued the F-lllB. Navy pilots themselves have expressed reservations about the complexity and weight of the F-14 for the a.irto-air combat mission. Like SRAM and Sheridan, F-14, is being designed to operate with a
27326 system (Phoenix) which does not yet work. In the best of worlds the F-14 would be only marginally superior to the presently deployed F-4 and a great deal more expensive.
Phoenix Description
Phoenix is a long-range air-to-air standoff missile designed to defend the fleet from air attack. It is extremely sophisticaited with an electronic countermeasure capability. It weighs 1,000 pounds and requires a specially designed airframe currently under development for the F-14.
Costs The cost is currently estimated at $219,000
per missile. F-14 avionics associated with Phoenix will add an estimated $2 million to the cost of the aircraft.
The FY 1970 budget contains $18 million forR&D.
Rationale Phoenix is needed to protect the fleet
from air attack. It gives the F-14 an important standoff capability.
Critique Since the Phoenix is designed for use
with the F-14, the F-14 critique applies to the Phoenix. In addition, effective countermeasures that will render Phoenix obsolete before it is deployed are forseeable. Because of its weight and the special airframe required to carry it, it seriously impairs the dogfight capability of any fighter to which it is attached. The complex avionics required in the mother aircraft add weight and unreliability.
Sea war forces Current mission
The Navy is charged with several missions in addition to operating the Polaris deterrent:
Maintaining a long-term land war seallft capabllity to supply operations in Europe or in Asia.
Keeping quick-response tactical air forces ready for rapid deployment in crisis situations tha.t could lead to limited war.
P!"'oviding amphibious forces for beach assault.
Protection of the fleet from air, surface, or submarine attack.
Insuring freedom of the seas and international waterways for world trade.
In order to perform these missions for the future, it will be necessary to completely modernize the fleet during the 1970s. Such modernization has been estimated to cost upwards of $30 billion, but for this cost we will have a fleet that will provide for the above contingencies for the rest of the century.
Critique The probability that future wars in either
Europe or Asia will be long or limited enough to allow transoceanic supply of men and equipment is decreasing. If a European war escalated to the tactical nuclear level, ship operations would be greatly complicated. Even at the non-nuclear level, the massive Soviet undersea fleet would find large surface ships easy targets. ASW and fleet air defense have only limited capability to protect surface ships in such a contingency. With carrier task forces costing over $1 billion each, an opponent would surely commit the cheaper forces to adequately destroy the carrier.
In Asia, the post-Vietnam probability of protracted non-nuclear engagement is also low unless we desire to continue to police the · Third World, in which event a large surface fleet will be needed. We should decide upon our foreign policy goals prior to commiting ourselves to a $30 billion modernization of the fleet.
With regard to limited wars, the probab11ity that na.tional security would require us to fight such wars on short notice in re-
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS gions where tactical aircraft could not be land-based quickly is also low. Certainly any ally we chose to defend would be willing to provide us with landing rights for combat aircraft. Finally, Lt is unlikely that a surface fleet alone could deny a determined opponent's attempt to restrict freedom of the seas. Such an attempt would bring a.bout other confrontations; the outcome would be determined elsewhere and the naval conflict would be of secondary importance.
Force Levels The Navy considers the current fleet in
adequate to perform the missions assigned the Navy if these missions a.re to be continued for the future. Items requested ln FY 1970 to modernize the existing fleet are as follows:
[In millions] 1 nuclear attack carrier (total cost
$500-$700 million) ----------------- $377 2 nuclear guided missile frigates (total
cost $370 million)------------------ 264 8 destroyers (total cost $600 million)__ 360 2 landing/ helicopter assault ships (total
cost $304 million)------------------ 288 3 fast deployment logistics ships (total
cost $187 million)------------------ 187 4 guided missile frigates (total con
version cost $140 million)----------- 44
These requests total $1.5 billion; the complete FY 1970 request for shipbuilding and conversion is $2.6 billion.
Critics suggest that what we a.re buying is another WW II navy and recommend that we concentrate on countering the real Soviet threat and acknowledge the technological obsolescence of a surface navy. The 15 attack carriers and 8 ASW carriers we currently maintain are extremely vulnerable to the 330 non-Polaris type submarines the Soviets have constructed since WW II, at a fraction of the cost of our surface navy. Anti-missile and anti-submarine defense is most unlikely to achieve the breakthrough required to guarantee even a small margin of safety for the fleet because of rapid advances in electronic warfare. The Soviet Union is entirely capable of frustrating any aittempt we might make to resupply ground forces in Europe. intervene in limited conflicts, or guarantee freedom of the seas, if they so choose.
ASW (Antisubmarine Warfare) Description
ASW is the detection, identification, surveillance, and, in time of conflict, destruction of enemy submarines. The United States has developed a complex system of airborne and seaborne detection systems and weapons designed to deal with the Soviet submarine threat.
ASW has both land- and sea-based elements. The land-based aircraft are used for surveillance of large areas all over the world. They drop buoys into the water to detect enemy submarines and are capable of dropping sub-killing torpedoes. Aircraft from 8 ASW carriers perform the same roles in areas inaccessible from land.
ASW carriers and escort ships carry sonar and other detection devices, and, like the aircraft they carry, can attack enemy submarines with torpedoes.
Our 56 "first line" attack submarines carry complex arrays of detection and kill devices. It is generally felt that our ASW technology is superior to Soviet technology, and that the U.S. would have the advantage in a.ny undersea. confrontation.
Costs The costs of the ASW program are ex
tremely difficult to pinpoint. The R. & D. costs for FY 1970 are $472 million, 21 % of the Navy's research budget. Other costs can only be estimated, since ASW does not constitute a separate funding category in the Defense Budget. It is also difficult to isolate the costs that relate solely to ASW. For example, a. destroyer with ASW capability usu-
September 26, 1969 ally has land bombardment and anti-aircraft capabilities as well. Approximately $1.2 billion is spent annually operating the ASW carrier forces. The best estimate of annual spending on ASW procurement is $2.3 billion, bringing the annual total for ASW t o over $4 billion.
Rationale The Soviet Union now has more than 375
submarines performing a variety of missions. Of this force, more than 50 a.re nucleP.rpowered. The force includes missile-firing submarines which pose a threat to the continental U.S., and submarines with a significant anti-shipping capability. Most indications are that Soviet submarine construction will continue at a steady rate for the foreseeable future.
Critique ASW is extremely complex; the size of t he
ASW R & D budget suggests that much remains to be done before a high-confidence system can be achieved. The key characteristic of our ASW force is that so many diverse components are used to perform similar tasks. This diversity suggests that none of the individual components is very reliable. The history of complex electronics is studded with failures, and it has not been demonstrated that the ASW program is an exce:_Jtion.
Since our own Polaris forces have been said to be almost perfectly secure, one can assume that our ASW capabilities do not present much threat to the Soviet forces. Since it has been demonstrated that we cannot track our own Polaris submarines it seems doubtful that the Soviet Union can.
Critics assert that ASW is losing ground to new evasion and silencing techniques. Too often counterforce weapons systems are justified solely on the basis of threat. In the case of ASW, the threat from the Soviet submarine force is real; what must be questioned ls whether we are getting $4 billion per year worth of protection from our ASW program. A more effective approach to the problem might be to cut back ASW procurement and operations and spend the money developing a better system.
According to an article published by a Pentagon analyst, continued operation of carrier-based ASW, particularly with the planned but controversial VSX aircraft, is implausible. The major Pentagon document on the question recommended that VSX not be bought. Both Se~retaries McNamara and Clifford have indicated that carrier-based ASW was not very effective but quite expensive.
Difficulties have also beset the MK-48 ASW torpedo. The program has been underway since 1964, but is still encountering technical problems. The FY 1970 budget contains funds for further R & D work, and Secretary Clifford stated that he believed "the solut ions are now within reach". With the solutions only "within reach", however, the Navy is also requesting $118 million for FY 1970 MK-48 Procurement.
Finally, although ASW constitutes approximately one-fifth of the Navy budget, there has been very little public discussion of the program. Information on ASW is overclassified.
S-3A (Anti-Submarine Warfare Aircraft) Description
The 8-3A, formerly designated VSX, is a carrier-based aircraft to be used in the detection, surveillance a.nd, in time of conflict, destruction of enemy submarines. It will replace the Grumman S-2 Tracker series, and will complement the land-based P-3C ORION anti-submarine aircraft. The 8-3A will carry a.n integrated sensor system, called VS/ ANew, operated by a crew of four rather than ten needed on ORION. The primary sensor is the sonobuoy, dropped from the aircraft at cruising altitudes a.nd laid in carefully se-
September 26, 1969 lected patterns for greatest coverage and data return. After detecting an enemy submarine, the S-3A ls capable of dropping either depth charges or homing torpedoes.
The S-3A will be powered by two turbofan engines, giving it a speed over 450 miles per hour and a. 2,000 mile range. It will ha.ve an all-weather capability a.nd can carry rockets, missiles, and mines in a.ddition to depth charges a.nd homing torpedoes.
Costs In early August the Navy a.warded a. $461
million contra.ct to the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation for the production of six R & D models of the S-3A over the next three yea.rs. The Navy ha.s option to buy 193 production models. The celling procurement and R & D cost of the ten-year program is projected at $3.2 billion, or $16.2 million per aircraft. 50% of the cost of S-3A will be for avionics.
The VSX: will be procured according to periodic production and performance achievements by Lockheed, rather than by a total package contra.ct such a.s tha.t which contributed to sizable over-run costs on the c-5A and to cancellation of the Cheyenne helicopter. Lockheed was the contractor in both instances.
Funding of the $120 million first year's installment on the airframe contra.ct depends on Congressional approval of the $165 million requested for FY 1970 for S-3A R & D. The Senate Armed Services Committee ha.s recommended that $25 million be cut from the request because the 4-month delay in finding a contractor means this much initial funding can be deferred. First flight is expected in 1972 with fleet introduction the following year.
Rationale The Soviet Union ha.s over 375 attack and
ASW submarines, of which about 50 are nuclear-powered. This force can contest our control of the sea.s by presenting a. 3-dimensional threat consisting of strategic ballistic missile attack, stand-off attack against our naval forces with cruise missiles, and attacks on allied lines of communication with torpedoes and mines.
Recent significant developments presage the emergence of an even greater Soviet naval strength and opera.ting capability. In any event Soviet submarine construction will continue at its current rate of about 12 per year for the forseeable future.
Countering this threat can best be performed by aircraft such a.s ORION and 8-3A. Continuous surveillance of enemy submarines over thousands of square miles of ocean forces them into evasive tactics reducing their effective range and time-at-sea.
Critique The S-3A carries extremely complex com
puters and electronic equipment. Since each individual sensor system has severe limitations, the integrated system is unreliable. The responsibilities of the crew for computing and interpreting data, performing navigation and communications chores, and managing sonobuoys and ASW weapons, will make their mission almost impossible.
In order for the sensor system to be effective, the aircraft's ability to navigate with respect to the sonobuoys must be improved. The most difficult part of the ASW mission ls fixing the aircraft's position relatJ.ve to the sonobuoys, which drift with the surface winds. Without this capability, the range and direction data between the submarine and the sonobuoys is useless. The degree of accuracy required is far greater than that for normal navigation, due to the limited kill radii of ASW weapons. The S-3A can also be countered at little cost with electronic countermeasures.
The S-3A will have difficulty operating at night or during foul weather. At night a searchlight or a low-light-level viewing system ls required. At night a searchlight pod
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
on the S-3A is limited by a low duty cycle, high glare which interferes with the crew's dark-adaptation, and the ability of the quarry to detect the light.
Aside from the technical difficulties of the 8-3A, the assumption that we need to deploy carrier-based ASW aircraft at all must be challenged. Land-based ASW aircraft currently cover 80% of the ocean surface. We do not need to police areas such as the Indian Ocean where land-based ASW aircraft cannot be deployed. Strategic missiles launched from the Indian Ocean could not reach the U.S. All shipping channels used by our surface and merchant fleets can be protected by land-based ASW aircraft in time of hostilities. Secretaries McNamara and Clifford maintained carrier-based ASW to be costineffective; the major Pentagon document on ASW recommended S-3A not be bought. It is a marginal system for a low probability contingency and does not justify an expenditure of over $3.2 billion.
LHA (Landing/Helicopter Assault Ship) Description
LHA is a large, conventionally-powered ship which can land 2,000 troops with equipment by helicopter and landing craft in an amphibious operation. The ship will replace four types of ships in the present amphibious fleet, and, like FDL, will be able to unload smaller vessels within its own hull.
The concept emerged from a comprehensive review of the role of amphibious forces while Robert McNamara was Secretary of Defense. The mission of the amphibious forces is to be able to land one marine division in the Pacific area and two-thirds of a division in the Atlantic area simultaneously and on short notice. Old·er, slower ships would continue to be a part of the force.
Costs In FY 1969 the cost of the first LHA was
estimated at $153 million; the cost of an additional eight ships was to be $122 mllllon each. For FY 1970 the estima,.te has risen to $185 million and $140 million, respectively. The increase in price is attributed to inflation, better estimating methods and higher shipbuilding cost.s. No estimates Of operating costs for the LHA are available, but operating costs for amphibious forces are estimated at $950 mlllion annually.
The first LHA was authorized last year at the $153 million price, with $63 million for advance procurement. The FY 1970 request is $270 mHlion for two LH.A's, and $17 million more for a.dvance procurement. The Senate Armed Service Committee recommended approval of the request.
Rationale The present fleet of amphibious ships is
obsolete. Previous classes of ships ha.ve dwindled to a few survivors of each class, creating operating, training, and maintenance problems. LHA can solve all these problems. By letting industry design the ship, millions of dollars have been saved by application of modern mass-production techniques matched to the shipyard which will build LHA.
The amphibious forces provide tne U.S. with the capability to seize advance bases for initial operations, to set up staging areas, and to gain beachheads to enable more substantial follow-on forces to mount an offensive, in the event of a major war. The United States must also be able to meet less drastic contingencies with varying degrees Of force. Amphibious forces are essential for fl.exlbiUty and for quick response oapability.
In Vietnam, amphibious operations have proved that amphibious forces can carry out operations in an insurgency environment. There are amphibious squadrons prepared to intervene whenever necessary in the Mediterranean and in the Caribbean. This kind of readiness ls necessary to deter conflicts or to defend threatened U.S. interests.
27327 Critique
LHA ls a perfect example of how hardware determines policy. The ships are being justified on the basis of replacing existing inefficient equipment, rather than on a need created by a new threat such as a hostile island power or an interventionist foreign policy projected for the 1970's and 1980's. An examination of likely future wars reveals few plausible contingencies requiring an assault by troops across a. beach. LHA could be deferred until decisions a.re made on the role of amphibious forces in future foreign policies.
Many critics not only recommend delaying LHA, but mothballing the older ships in the amphibious fleet, with resultant savings of up to $190 million annually on ships alone.
In a major war, an amphibious landing would be impossible if either submarines or tactical nuclear weapons were used. If amphibious forces can only be used in limited wars, it must first be decided where we will be involved in these wars before Investing $500 million plus in LHA. Amphibious landings in Vietnam might have been justified to keep the troops in practice, but the landings were unopposed and did not prove anything except that we were still using World War II tactics against the Viet Cong.
Airlift/ Sealift forces Current mission
Requirements for mobility are based on the assumption that we must prepare for large-scale contingencies in Asia and Europe and a lesser contingency in this hemisphere. We plan the capability to build up simultaneously and rapidly in these theaters for conventional or tactical nuclear land warfare.
We assume that threats to our national security can be mounted by enemy forces in three hemispheres simultaneously. This dictates that an enormous amount of air/sea.lift capacity be available on short notice. If we instead planned to be able to respond to 2Y2 Berlin-type crises within 18 monthsnot simultaneously-the amount and readiness of air /sea.lift needed would be less than current estimates.
The current mission calls for air/sea.lift which is so ready that we can escalate a confl.ict very rapidly. In the past we have relied on ships and planes in commercial service during peacetime. With the advent of FDL we are moving away from convention vessels toward permanent peacetime shipboard storage of war material near theaters of operation.
We must also provide men and equipment to fight different kinds of wars. As new tactics for the deployment of general-purpose forces have been devised, such as the Airmobile Division, heliborne amphibious assault, counterinsurgency, and tactical nuclear war, new mixes of men and equipment are required. These new demands have created new needs for air/sea.lift capability.
Critique Critics of the air/sea.lift program contend
that plans for response to three crises simultaneously should be reviewed. As long as we expect to be world policemen, we will need large numbers of aircraft and ships to transport our forces anywhere on short notice. These forces will have high investment and operating costs. The more we assume we must intervene on short notice, the less this cargocarrying capacity will be available for peacetime commercial use.
The length of the confl.icts for which we prepare .also determine what supplies will be needed and how useful sea.lift, as opposed to airlift, will be. If wan; are expected to be short, they will be decided by supplies already in the theater and by airlift. Critics assert that our logistics planning and the air/
27328 sealift capacity it requires a.re b~ upon false expectations of long wars.
Ships carrying supplies for use against a European .ally of the Soviet Union, to say nothing of the Soviet Union itself, would_ be attacked by Soviet submarines; defendmg these ships would be extremely difficult. In a war which assumed aittacks on American harbors, loading supply ships would become impractical as would unloading in the zone of confiict because port f.acilities are extremely vulnerable to tactical nuclear weapons. In war where control of the air was not a.58ured, subsonic transport aircraft would be vulnerable to enemy attack in flight or unloading.
In the early 1960's a comprehensive plan for airlift/ ooalift requirements and caipability into the 1980's was devised. A mathematical model of global limited-war contingency requirements, taking into consideration threat, desired response, patterns of basing troops and suppLi.es, and the capabilities of the air and maritime transportation industries, was used to provide approximations of the capacity which would be required during the years covered by the model. The calculations indicated that a mix of commercial and special purpose equipment would be the most efficient solution. The special-purpose systems which resulted from this review were the C5A and the FDL. Current requests for airlift/ sea.lift are ba.se<i on this model.
This model should be re-analysed to determine if the assumptions upon which it was based are still valid. If the assumptions a.re no longer valid because our national security requirements no longer require the capability to meet three widely separated serious contingencies arising simultaneously, it follows that our airlift/sealift requirements would diminish.
FDL Description
FDL is a large Navy cargo and troop deployment ship with a capacity seven times that of World War II vintage ships. It carries helicopters and self defense missiles and can store pre-positioned material for long periods of time offshore near a possible combat theater. FDL can load and unload small vessels within its hull structure, permitting offshore unloading. Its purpose is the rapid resupply and equipping of airlifted forces, requirement of forward defense tactics. Because it is a special-purpose ship, and because of its pre-positioning capability, it wm not be usable for commercial shipping during peacetime.
Costs Originally the Defense Department planned
for 30 FDLs at $47 million each, for a total cost of $1.41 b1llion. The request was included in the FY 1968 and 1969 budgets, but was entirely deleted by Congress each year. For FY 1970 the Pentagon asked for $187 milllon for the first three ships-a unit cost of $62 million. The average cost of 15 ships is expected to be $55 million, up $8 million each from the original estimate. The first ships are more expensive because of tooling-up costs.
A parallel expansion of the charter fleet is to be accomplished by constructing 30 conventional ships, each with half the capacity of FDL but without its loading features. These ships would be used by commercial interests during peacetime, and would be built privately with Defense Department contracts guaranteeing enough business to return investment. While the Senate Armed Services Committee deleted the request for three FDLs it did not comment on the charter-ship plan. Estimates of the annual operating cost of FDL are $1.65 million, compared to $1.35 million for the existing sea transport.
Rationale Since future wars, except insurgencies, are
likely to build up quickly, we need active and mobile forces. Such a capability requires forward basing of both men and equipment.
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS Pre-positioned ships such as FDL can proceed to the conflict, unload, and continue to support combat units by transoceanic voyages. Other ships that might serve the same purpose lack the ability to handle the special cargoes FDL can, are not capable of offshore unloading and loading, and can deliver far fewer supplies at greater cost.
Requirements for FDL were determined after careful analysis and fully take into account the possibility of employing existing shipping. Accordingly, the minimum number of FDLs are being requested.
Beyond these considerations, the design and production techniques applicable to FDL will go far to modernize the American shipbuilding industry, and the advantages to the industry will more than compensate for relatively small losses in charter revenue.
Critique Critics question the assumptions upon
which overall force levels are based. If we adopt something less than the 2 major/ l minor doctrine, the number of FDLs required diminishes. As the production run is shortened, unit cost rises, making other designs more attractive.
FDL is also provocative. Storing munitions and equipment around the world signifies an intention to police the world. The decision to procure and deploy these ships should follow, not precede, a political decision to continue or modify post World War II U.S. foreign policy. FDL is designed to enhance our ability to intervene rapidly-precisely the kind of action which could escalate to more drastic conflict.
Most of the companies which bid on FDL were aerospace firms; the ships may not be built in a traditional shipyard at all. This could make even more precarious the survival of an industry which would be vital to us in a long war if we are to transport supplies in American ships.
C-5A Description
C-5A is a huge Air Force jet cargo transport. It is subsonic, can use airfields which present cargo planes cannot, and has special loading features. It has 4¥2 times the capacity of the most recent Air Force transport, the Cl41, and can carry bulky items which other aircraft cannot, such as tanks, bridge parts, and helicopters. It also carries the operators of such equipment. The Defense Department plans to purchase a total of 115 aircraft.
Costs When it was drawn up, the C-5A contract
was a new idea in defense procurement, a "total package" contract covering R & D, testing, and procurement. The contract stated an estimated target price, which paid the contractor, Lockheed, a fair profit. It also stated a higher ceiling price, up to which the government would absorb 70% of an increase, but above which the costs would be completely absorbed by Lockheed. Thus, a low price would bring Lockheed a high profit while a high price would cut into profits.
The original target cost was $2.9 billion for R & D and 115 planes. By October, 1968, Air Force estimates indicated costs of $4.5 billion for the same 115 planes. Later, $486 million for construction and spare parts was added to the $4.5 billion.
These increases in quoted prices have become the greatest procurement scandal in several years. The Air Force was inexplicably late in discovering the increases and for a variety of reasons, attempted to minimize or hide the overruns.
The Air Force attributes the cost increases to inflation, technical difficulties, and an adjustment for a larger aircraft--all, of course, beyond Air Force control. Independent Pentagon analysts charge that the fundamental problem is one of management attitude, that the Air Force staff simply does not provide manufacturers with incentives to be
September 26, 1969 efficient or to develop high quality systems. The C-5A contract also has loopholes which, combined with the Air Force's attitude toward the contractor, minimize incentives for contractor efficiency and instead make it more efficient for the contractor to be wasteful. The most costly loophole identified to date is the formula which re-prices the second production run according to increased costs in the first run . The repricing formula provides a "negative incentive" to Lockheed, in that the amount of money the company loses by overrunning the ceiling price on the first run is exceeded by the company's increased income from the second run. This is the so-called "golden handshake" clause. The Air Force has acknowledged this flaw in the contract.
In spite of the price increases, the Air Force has not sought alternative sources for airlift capability or reconsidered the size of its order.
The FY 1970 budget requests C-5A authorizations as follows:
[In millions) Research and Development_________ $34. 2 Procurement:
Aircraft------------------------- · 533.0 Spare parts___________ _____ ____ __ 209. 8
70 percent of Lockheed's over-target costs---------------------------- 225.0
Total ----------------------- 1002.0 Of this, the Senate deleted $50 million
because a 6-month delivery delay meant spare parts could be deferred.
Rationale The C-5A is part of a strategic mobility
plan including conventiona l air-sealift and FDL; without FDL, the need for the 120 planes is even greater. Even allowing for the increase in costs, the C-5A allows dramatic reductions in ton-mile cost and speed of shipping military supplies to forward areas of a combat zone, necessary to a forward defensive strategy.
C- 5A is preferred over other large jet transports because of its short takeoff and landing ability and because it provides unmatched ea,se in loading. Its landing gear "kneel" to put the cargo floor at truck bed level, and the dimensions and strength of the floor simplify the loading process. Although there are shortcomings in the contract, it still exerts pressure on the contractor because should the government decide not to exercise its option to buy the second production run, Lockheed will suffer serious financial loss.
Critique The C-5A was originally part of a mobility
package that included FDL and was based on assumptions that must be re-examined. The mobility package is designed to provide the U.S. with the ability to intervene on short notice in any area of the world. Before proceeding with all or part of the mobility package, the question of whether we desire this capability for the 1970s at a cost of billions should be debated at greater length. The FDL has been repeatedly cut by the Senate precisely because the Senate Armed Services Committee believed that the U.S. did not require such capability.
There are in any event several less expensive alternatives that would provide sufficient air mobility for any contingency for which we need be prepared. The Civil Reserve Air Fleet currently has 465 707s and DC-8s available on short notice, and the Air Fleet is capable of considerable expansion.
If in fact a new jumbo transport i& needed, the government should reconsider the Boeing 747, which was submitted in competition with C-5A in 1965, not chosen, but developed successfully on a commercial basis. The government has grounds to cancel the second run of the C-5A. While C-5A has some special characteristics, these special characteristics are not worth billions of dollars.
September 26, 1969
HIGHWAY BEAUTIFICATIONFACT OR FICTION
HON. RICHARD D. McCARTHY OF NEW YORK
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, in 1965, · the Congress passed the Highway Beautification Act. The purpose of that act was to preserve some of the natural beauty of our magnificent country. The act was an early hesitant step toward a goal of intelligent use of our natural resources. It was designed to prevent the thoughtless destruction of views of our countryside that each generation of Americans should have the opportunity to enjoy. It was designed to stop the use of our roadsides as junkyards or garbage heaps. It was designed to emphasize the fores ts of pine or redwood or oak, not the forests of advertisements or billboards.
In some parts of our country the Highway Beautification Act has been put to good use. The State of Vermont has adopted legislation that has removed the hoards of billboards that threatened to blot out the very beauty that attracted tourists. In other parts of the country, separate roadside areas have been constructed and attractive advertising combined with telephones that can be used to make reservations are made available to the motorist. In these areas the motorists have the best of both worlds, the trees, hills, the plains, and the fields. It is unfortunate that these areas are the exception rather than the rule.
The Census Bureau and other population forecasters now tell us that there will be 300 million Americans by the year 2000, one-half more than the 200 million alive today. This population growth will put pressure on our undeveloped lands, our rural areas near ow· big cities, and the highways that link these urban areas. Unless we act with sense-unless we take the trouble to prevent the ruin of these undeveloped areas with unattractive, unplanned, and uncontrolled roads and highways-we will foul the heritage that we turn over to the next generation.
I urge that every Member of Congress consider the problems of intelligent use of our land and the incorporation of esthetic factors in the planning of new towns, cities, and highways. There is no better place to start than on the Highway Beautification Act of 1965. Rather than watching this law decay and become a dead letter, I urge that we take steps to strengthen it.
In a perceptive article appearing in the Washington Post on September 15, 1969, Edward P. Morgan comments at length on the problems that highway construction and urban expansion has had on the beautiful and unique Shenandoah Valley. I am including his remarks in the RECORD for the information of my colleagues:
THE UGLIFIERS ZERO IN ON A LoVELY VIRGINIA TOWN
(By Edward P. Morgan) LEXINGTON, VA.-What is the country com
ing to? The answer is simple--a. dead end,
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS buried under asphalt and marked by the standard and beautiful tombstones of the times: the flashing neon sign, the bill-board, the gas station, the motel and the hamburger stand.
It is a hard job to ruin the looks and the life of this lovely town, first laid out in 1777 in t he verdant Shenandoah Valley, but the highway builders and the civic developers are in the process of doing it--and thus keeping faith with touching dedication to that new national ideal of polluting and u.glifying the land and the communities on it as fast and as thoroughly as possible.
Lexington's historic charm is not quite lost yet. Ante bellum mansions still sleep in the shade of gracefully aging trees on narrow street s . Almost in the center of the town rise the red brick and the stately white columns of Washington and Lee University, whose green, rolling campus surely is one of the most delicately handsome left in the land. Here is where after the Civil War Robert E. Lee presided over Washington University before it became Washington and Lee and here, in a dignified tomb, is where he is buried.
Adjoining the campus is the austere but equally proud home of Virginia Military Institute, where Stonewall Jackson once t aught (he too is buried in Lexington) , and where Gen. George Catlett Marshall, one of the 2C>th Century's most distinguished and civilized leaders, went to school as a cadet.
But despite this heritage and the legacy of some of the (once) most beautiful countryside in Virginia, Lexington is almost certainly doomed. Until recently she had enjoyed a reprive in being off the beaten p ath . Now, however, Interstate 81, an arching concrete link in the nation's chain of super highways, is crunching through the outskirts, leaving poisonous exhaust fumes and the litter of roadside commerce in its wake, like flootsam and jetsam driven onto a pristine beach by a hurricane.
Just south of Lexington the road maps mark a scenic wonder called Natural Bridge, already so beset with the hysterical hideosities of commercial exploitation that it might as well be some cantilevered concession in a traveling carnival. Further down the western flank of the Blue Ridge, around Roanoke, before 81 thrusts into Tennessee, gigantic roadsigns, some of them 50 feet high and more, embellish the view. They are an inspiring tribute to the ingenuity of the American entrepreneur in spitting on the spirit if not the letter of the federal highway legislation diffidently designed to reveal something of the landscape besides billboards and auto junkyards.
Indeed this section of Route 81 is just one more exhibit to support the recent New York Times expose of what a mockery the four-year drive to tidy up the nation's highways has become. But the problem is not just beauty and it is more than skin-deep.
Here is a travel tip: on your next commute, take with you a new book by A. Q. Mowbray, a devastating study of the federal highway program, aptly titled "Road to Ruin." At the first major traffic jam en route, you can sit back, relax and enjoy such items Mowbray has expertly unearthed from the roadfills and extracted from the girders in the overpasses of our motorized obsession as the following:
There are 3,600,000 miles of roads and streets in the United States, one mile for every square mile of the nation's total land area, and the mileage is steadily lengthening. "The United States," Mowbray writes, "is swiftly destroying its cities and its wilderness with highways."
By 1980, according to estimates, Los Angeles will have given up 34 square miles to freewa.ys--an area equal to the size of Miami.
Highways, calculates one University of California. expert, are driving from their condemned homes approximately 90,000 persons a. year-the majority presumably in poor
27329 areas. This hardly decreases the tensions of the slums.
The 41,000-mile interstate system, originally price-tagged at about $40 billion may actually cost $60 billion or more. The cost of a city freeway today is often at least $10 million per mile. "This nation," says Mowbray, "has apparently dedicated itself to the proposition that there is no higher good than the unimpeded movement of automobiles, and there is no higher use of t heir land than to provide for t hat movement."
He concludes t hat such drast ic steps as limit ing by fiat t he manufact ure of cars and trucks, the closing of state borders t o mot or traffic, the destruct ion rather than expansion of freeways, garages, bridges and tunnels must event ually be taken "if we hope to save ourselves. Population grows, asphalt spreads, and land diminishes, and there is a finite end t o it all. Long before the limit is reached, the environment will have become u t terly hostile to human life."
Some years ago a former government official told me there was no more powerful combine operating in Washington than the so-called "highway lobby" because it consisted of so many influential and int erlocking parts: the car capital of Detroit, the steel industry, tire manufacturers, the cement business, labor, unions, politicians and proud and greedy local citizens who measure "progress" by the truckload of paving materials and the profits they will bring.
The fact that such a myopic outlook is ruining the republic doesn't seem to mat ter. That's the way it is. Who cares if he t ravels over the hill t o destruction if he can ride on a six-lane highway?
RESOLUTION ON WAR IN VIETNAM
HON. ROBERT W. KASTENMEIER OF WISCONSIN
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
Mr. KASTENMEIER. Mr. Speaker, following the Wisconsin Democratic Party Convention resolution that American troops be withdrawn from Vietnam, the Democratic Party of Dane County, the second most populous county in Wisconsin, earlier this month amplified !ts views with respect to the administration's failure to show real progress in bringing the war to an end.
While I fully realize that a divergence of opinion exists among my congressional colleagues, and even among my fell ow Democrats as to how to bring about peace in Vietnam, I commend to all concerned citizens the resolution adopted by the Dane County Democratic membership which urges "a massive national effort to return our Government to the path of peace."
The resolution follows: At the 1969 State Democratic Party Con
vention in Stevens Point the Dane County Democratic Party joined with others in calling for the immediate withdrawal of United States Armed forces from Vietnam.
Since then President Nixon has done little to bring a just and honorable end to this ghastly conflict. His current proposals to withdraw 35,000 more troops from Vietnam and to temporarily suspend the draft calls are admittedly designed to defuse the antiwar movement. They a.re Nixon tricks, for which he is well known, to fool the people and to promote their apathy.
The Democratic Party urges all citizens not to be misled, but to continue their fl.rm, open,
27330 and active opposition to the war and to the militarization of our country. It demands the immediate cessation of the killing and devastation. It condemns the continuing sacrifice of American lives. It insists on the return of all American troops in Vietnam to their homeland and the return of Vietnam to the Vietnamese. And finally we urge all citizens to continue to voice their anti-war resolve through all organizations at their disposal and in all manners which their convictions and consciences dictate. What is required at this moment is a massive national effort to return our government to the path of peace. Only continued pressure from the people will accomplish this end.
A GOVERNMENT'S DUTY IS TO PROTECT ITS PEOPLE
HON. JOHN R. RARICK OF LOUISIANA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, September 25, 1969
Mr. RARICK. Mr. Speaker, I note a rising crescendo of attacks on our friends and allies in southern Africa. It is interesting to observe which nations sustain the most strident and prolonged attacks from the far left. Invariably they are the nations which have succeeded in protecting themselves from the internal subversion planned by the international Communist conspiracy.
From time to time we should look at our own history in relation to the international problems of today. The rest of the world certainly does. This is particularly appropriate when we consider the nations of southern Africa. Their history parallels ours, and that parallel cannot be ignored.
The United States, the Republic of South Africa, and Rhodesia, ait different times, became independent by the unilateral severance of their ties with the British crown. In each case, independence was not achieved by the revolt of indigenous natives against the rule of a colonial power. It was, rather, the act of the civilized colonials who acted to preserve their civilization by the replacement of a faraway sovereign who had become tyrannical and unresponsive to the needs of the people. Those who deplore the status of the native populations of Southern Africa would do well to reflect on the history of our treatment of the indigenous savages who occupied our land.
Again recalling our own history, we have had experience in our early days and recently in the necessary exclusion from the United States of foreigners whose presence within our borders was deemed inappropriate by our Government.
While George Washington was yet President, France and England were at war. Our established national policy was one of neutrality. Americans, however, found themselves divided into pro-English and pro-French political factions.
At this point the new French Ambassador, Citizen Genet, undertook a deliberate policy of interfering in the internal affairs of the United States by fanning the pro-French sentiment and attack-
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS
ing the Government's policy of strict neutrality. He was phenomenally successful. President Washington, in his house in Philadelphia, was physically endangered by mobs aroused by Genet in support of France. Ultimately it was necessary to ask for his recall by his government.
Mr. Speaker, those of us who have the honor to serve our constituents as Members of this House must realize that in foreign countries we are frequently regarded as spokesmen for the United States rather than as representatives of ow· constituents. It behooves us to govern our conduct accordingly. This means that we must voluntarily exercise such restraint in our foreign appearances-whether they be personal or official-as to minimize the possibility of needlessly strained diplomatic relations.
It could not conceivably serve the interests of the United States for Members of this body, at this time, to make controversial appearances in many foreign countries to address certain groups, visit certain individuals, or espouse certain principals. Suppose, for example, the furor which it would create for Members to visit Czechoslovak:a for the purpose of publicly supporting deposed party leader Dubcek. Or to visit Israel for the purpose of publicly advocating, contrary to the policy of the Israel Government, that troops be withdrawn into their own boundaries.
No government worthy of the name can permit foreigners, whatever their rank, to enter their borders for the purpose of creating or magnifying domestic controversy, no matter how much good such a visit might do the foreigner in his own country. We learned that lesson from Citizen Genet. Our Government applied it more recently to support the policy of the party in power when two African leaders, the late Moise Tshombe and Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith, were denied unconditional entry into the United States.
Mr. Speaker, I include a concise summary of the Genet affair in my remarks:
FRICTION WITH FRANCE, 1789-1800
THE ALLIANCE BECOMES AN ENTANGLEMENT
As long as the wars of the French Revolution were confined to the continent of Europe, the United States was able to avoid serious international friction. But the picture became dangerously clouded when, on February 1, 1793, France declared war on England. A cry rose from thousands of Jeffersonian Republicans that America should rush to the assistance of the nation that had helped her in the hour of need. The common foe--so it appeared-was Great Britain, that ancient enemy and oppressor of human liberty, that arrogant power which seemed to be making every effort to strangle the United States in the cradle, "Americans, be just!" proclaimed the New York Journal. "Remember ... who stood between you and the clanking chains of British ministerial despotism."
President Washington now found himself in an agonizing predicament. His fixed policy was to avoid hostilities at all hazards while the nation was stm unstable. Yet by the Alliance of 1778 the United States was bound "forever" to assist France in the defense of her West Indies. Unless America :flagrantly disregarded her now distasteful obligations, she could scarcely avoid the very calamity that the Hamiltonians were seeking to avertr-war with England.
September 26, 1969 At this critical hour Washington turned to
his Cabinet for advice as to whether the pacts with France should now be considered binding. Hamilton, who had no love for the French or the French alliance, argued that the treaties were not in full force because they contemplated only a defensive war and because they had been negotiated with the French monarchy under Louis XVI-and both the monarchy and Louis XVI were dead. Jefferson, though by no means desiring war with England in behalf of France, insisted that simple honesty should prevail:
The treaties between the United States and France, were not treaties between the United States and Louis Capet (Louis XVI], but between the two nations of America and France; and the nations remaining in existence, though both of them have since changed their forms of government, the treaties are not annulled by these changes.1
As it turned out, France did not call upon the United States to defend her West Indies. The Washington administration, therefore, was not compelled to take an official stand on the applicability of the Alliance of 1778. The course pursued by the Paris officials was not dictated by solicitude for the United States but by purely selfish motives. If the Americans had possessed a strong naval and military force, France would almost certainly have insisted that they live up to their treaty obligations. But since the United States had no considerable navy and since the Americans, as neutrals, were able to ship food to both France and her hungry West Indian colonies, the expected demand was never made. America could be far more useful as a friendly feeder than as an ineffective fighter.
Washington also asked his advisers if, in their opinion, he should receive a diplomatic envoy from the newly created French republic. This was an important decision, for the reception of such a person would mean official recognition of his government. Jefferson, applying the "consent-of-the-governed" philosophy of his own Declaration of Independence, had already outlined in classic form a recognition policy for the United States.
We certainly cannot deny to other nations that principle whereon our government is founded, that every nation has a right to govern itself internally under what forms it pleases, and to change these forms at its own will; and externally to transact business with other nations through whatever organ it chooses, whether that be a King, Convention, Assembly, Committee, President, or whatever it be. The only thing essential is, the wlll of the nation.2
This policy-in effect a corollary of the Declaration of Independence-was adopted by President Washington and was consistently followed by all his successors, with minor departures, until the time of Woodrow Wilson.
NASCENT NEUTRALITY AND CITIZEN GENET
During these months of unbridled political passions, the danger was ever present that some irresponsible persons might plunge the country into war. Washington therefore discussed with his advisers the desirability of issuing a pronouncement that would oool the .ardor of the more bellicose spirits. Every member of the Cabinet strongly favored a policy of nonbelligerency, but there was not unanimous agreement on the manner of announcing it.
After considerable argument the document now known as Washington's Neutrality Proclamation was given to the world on April 22, 1793. Though its purpose was unmistakable,
1 A. A. Lipscomb, ed., Writings of Thomas Jefferson (Monticello ed., Washington, 1904), Ill. 227-228 (April 28, 1793).
2 Ibid ., IX, 7-8 (Jefferson to Pinckney, Dec. 30, 1792).
September 26, 1969 the declaration did not, curiously enough, contain the word "neutrality." It merely stated that the conduct of the United States should be "friendly and impartial toward ~h:e belligerent powers," and that American c1t1-zens found guilty of illegally assistine- the warring nations would be prosecuted. Congress provided the appropriate teeth when it passed the Neutrality Act of 1794. The Neutrality Proclamation itself was a notable d~ument in t he evolution of American policy, primarily because it helped set the ship of state on a course away from Old World embroilments.
But the proclamation came as a bitter pill to the great mass of ardent Jeffersonians who were expecting active intervention on behalf of France. They denounced government "by proclamat ion" and showered upon Washington's head a storm of abuse that sorely tried his spirit. But in the end saner counsels prevailed , and most Americans accepted the proclamation as a wise and necessary measure.
The neutrality policy of Washington was given its severest test by the conduct of the first minister from the new French repu~lic, Citizen Edmond Genet. Although only thirty years of age, Genet had behind him a remarkable record of intellectual achievement and diplomatic experience. Unfortunately, he lacked balance and sound judgment. Aflame with enthusiasm for the ideals of the French Revolution, impulsive, passionate, and hotheaded, he was at times all sail and no anchor.
Genet reached Charleston, South Carolina, early in 1793. There he was greeted with a wild enthusiasm that would have turned the head of a less excitable man. Although he could not act officially until he had presented his credentials in Philadelphia, he was so carried away by the huzzas of the masses as to engage immediately in questionable activities. In disregard of American neutrality, he sent out French privateers that returned with British prizes, some of them taken within the three-mile limit. He also opened negotiations with a number of American frontier leaders, notably the disgruntled George Rogers Clark, with a view to attacking Spanish territory in Florida and Louisiana. (It will be remembered that from 1793 to 1795 Spain was fighting against France on the side of England.)
Genet might have proceeded to Philadelphia by any one of three routes: by sea, by land up the coast, or by land through the back country. Whether by accident or design, he chose the back-country route--the one that best lent itself to his purposes. The people in this region were small farmers who favored the democratic, pro-French, Jeffersonian Republican party and opposed the aristocratic, pro-British, Hamiltonian Federalist party. As a consequence, Genet's leisurely journey through the back country quickly turned into one long ovation. The trip, which might have been made in less than a week, was dragged out over twentyeight days, to the accompaniment of salvos of artillery, fraternal embraces, and frenzied cheering. One wag remarked that the Americans burned more powder in celebrating French liberty than was consumed in achieving it .
GENi:T'S INDISCRETION
The streets of the Quaker City throbbed with fanat ical crowds as Genet was welcomed to the nation's capital. At a banquet ($4 a plate) the impetuous diplomat thrilled the diners by singing a French fighting song. Throughout the city wild toasts were drunk t o the guillot ine, and showers of fiery poems descended upon the youthful minister. As one cont emporary later exclaimed:
Can it ever be forgotten, what a racket was ma.de with the citizen Genet? The most ent husiastic homage was too cold to welcome h is arrival; and his being the first minister
CXV--1722-Part 20
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS of the infant republic ... was dwelt upon, as a most endearing circumstance. What hugging and tugging! What addressing and caressing I What mountebanking and chanting! with liberty-caps, and the other wretched trumpery of sans culotte foolery! 3
The uproar over Genet
Shortly before arriving in Philadelphia, Genet learned of Washington's Neutrality Proclamation. He was profoundly shocked, though not completely disillusioned. His roaring reception had convinced him that the American public overwhelmingly favored intervention against England on the side of France, and he did not believe that the proclamation correctly represented the popular will. Many pro-French editors agreed with him.
The continued acclaim of the masses only strengthened Genet in his conviction that President Washington was not faithfully interpreting the public will. Crowds of Francophiles damned the President for his coolness toward the French alliance, and accused him of seeking a crown and of trying to pass himself of! as an honest man. Genet admitted that one of these published attacks was the work of his own private secretary. Maddened Francophiles even went so far as to print woodcuts of George Washington being guillotined. In later years John Adams, Vice-President in 1793, reminisced to Thomas Jefferson:
"You certainly never felt the terrorism excited by Genet, in 1793, when ten thousand people in the streets of Philadelphia, day after day, threatened to drag Washington out of his house, and effect a revolution in the government, or compel it to declare war in favor of the French revolution and against England.<l
Adams went on to report the belief held in some quarters that nothing but the terrible epidemic of yellow fever, which broke out in Philadelphia at this time, "could have saved the United States from a fatal revolution of government."
In the midst of all this uproar, Washington remained cool and unperturbed, determined not to be swayed from sound policy by the clamor of a rabble aroused by foreign agents. The British poet of later years, Rudyard Kipling, is believed to have been moved to write his inspirational poem, "If," by the General's levelheadedness in this crisis.
THE UNDOING OF GENET
The fiery Frenchman continued to be the storm center of American politics from the time of his arrival in Philadelphia until his d~parture. He fitted out fourteen privateers, which swarmed from American ports and brought back, under the very nose of the national government, over eighty prizes, some of them taken within American waters.
These ventures appear to have been fiagran t violations of American neUJtrality, but offenders were promptly freed by pro-French juries. Public opinion was stronger than law. The British m1uister lodged strongly worded protests against this unneutral activity, and Secretary Jefferson made the appropriate representations to Genet. The latter indignantly accused the American Secretary of State of hunting up legalistic excuses "in the dusty tomes of Vattel and Grotius." "I thank God," the French emissary exulted, "I have forgot what these hired jurisprudists have written."
Th e protests of Genet became m ore shrill and his oonducrt more arrogant. Jefferson obtained from him what appeared to be a promise that a British vessel, Little Sarah, which the French had recently captured,
a A. Graydon, Memoirs of a Life Chiefly Passed i n Pennsylvania (Harrisburg, 1811) , p. 3 3 5.
' c. F. Adams, ed., Works of John Adams (Boston, 1856), X, 47.
27331 would not be sent to sea as a privateer. Yet a few hours later she slipped down the Delaware River to begin a career of destruction. Washington and Jefferson were both furious. Such defiance of the government was even turning pro-French enthusiasts against the French minister. Jefferson, who perceived that Genet was proving to be a Jonah, wrote to Madison in alarm, "he will sink the Republican interest if they do not abandon him."
Genet finally overreached himself. In a moment of fuming anger he threatened to appeal over the head of the cold and unresponsive government to the sovereign masses. President Washington, oppressed by the heat of fetid, disease-ridden Philadelphia, exploded:
Is the minister of the French Republic to set the acts of this government at defiance with impunity? And then threaten the executive with an appeal to the people? What must the world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United States in submitting to it? 6
Excited throngs of Francophiles might vilify Washington, but when the issue was squarely drawn between him and a foreign diplomat, sanity returned with a rush. The Federalists gleefully spread broadcast the news of Genet's indiscretion, and their most caustic spokesman, William Cobbett, branded the Jeffersonian Republicans as "bastard offspring of Genet, spawned in hell, to which they will presently return." Everywhere French sympathizers were hushed and shamed, except for a few who attempted to condone Genet's offenses.
Washington's Cabinet met and unanimously agreed to demand the recall of Genet. A new faction had come into power in France, and they were eager to cut of! the diplomatic career as well as the head of the ill-starred envoy. But Washington, wisely declining to make a martyr of a fallen idol, refused to send the Frenchman home to an almost certain death. The discredited Genet-Hamilton called him "a burned-out comet"ultimately retired to New York, where hand in hand with the daughter of Governor Clinton, he faced the altar instead of the guillotine.
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL TO THE NATION
A weary Washington was now prepared to bow out. He had planned to retire at the end of his first term, in 1793, but friends persuaded him that the critical state of foreign affairs demanded a continuance of his strong hand at the helm. Now, with the Jay and Pinckney Treaties negotiated, he felt that he could conscientiously lay down his burdens. He therefore prepared his famed Farewell Address with extreme care, and instead of presenting it as a public speech, gave it to one of his favorite newspapers as a special "scoop," on September 17, 1796.
Washington wrote his Farewell Ad.dress in collaboration with several of his intimate advisers, notably Hamilton, who contributed the incisive style. His immediate object was to announce that he would not be a candidate for a third term. But to this declaration he saw fit to add some sage advice, particularly regarding involvement in the broils and intrigues of Europe.
The memory of recent and current French intrigues was painfully fresh. Both Vergennes and Genet, it will be recalled, had attempted to use the United States as a pawn in French schemes. The suooessor of Genet, Joseph Fauchet, had sought by every means at his command to block the ratification of Jay's Treaty. His successor, Pierre Adet, through subsidies to the press and through Jeffersonian Republican societies, had aroused the people against the pact and had
5 w. c. Ford, ed., Writings of George Washington (New York, 1891), XII 302.
27332 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE September 29, 1969
labored with the House of Representatives to defeat the necessary appropriation. Failing in this, he had attempted to bring about the defeat of Washington for re-election in 1796, and the elevaition of the pro-French Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency-a scheme that was blocked by Washington's withdrawal. Following Washington's Farewell Address, Adet continued to labor unsuccessfully, through a public appeal and otherwise, for the defeat of the presumably pro-British John Adams, the Federalist candidate, and the election of the presumably pro-French Thomas Jefferson, the Republican candidate.
With such outrageous foreign intermeddling specifically in mind, Washingt on issued an earnest warning in his Farewell Address to the American people. He especially deplored the growth of a violent partisan spirit
that inflamed the people with fierce likes or dislikes for foreign countries.
Nothing is more essential than that permanent, inveterate antipathies against particular nations and passionate attachments for others should be excluded, and that in place of them just and amicable feelings toward all should be cultivated. The nation which indulges toward another an habitual hatred or an habitual fondness is in some degree a slave. . . . Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence (I conjure you to believe me, felJow-citizens) the jealousy of a free people ought to be constantly awake .... 6 [Italics inserted]
Washington then turned to formal entanglements. With the disputes caused by the "forever" French alliance clearly in mind, he solemnly asserted: "It is our true policy
to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world .... [But] we may safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emergencies." [Italics inserted] 1 Washington, in other words, was giving specific advice to a youthful and disunited nation in the year 1796-advice that had been dictated by recent and bitter experience. He was thinking of the existing permanent alliance with France, and probably had no intention of charting a specific course which the United St ates would have to follow for all time. He did not say-as he was later made to say-"No alliances, with any nation, at any time, for any purpose." The policy of noninvolvement---not isolation-that he recommended was not so much aloofness from the affairs of Europe as the exclusion of European agents and intrigue from the affairs of the United St ates.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES-Monday, September 29, 1969 The House met at 12 o'clock noon. The Chaplain, Rev. Edward G. Latch,
D.D., offered the following prayer:
-The Lord bless thee and keep thee.Numbers 6: 24.
We come to the altar of prayer, our Father with grateful hearts as we rememb~r the loving care with which Thou didst watch over our fathers as they founded and built our country. Time and again they found shelter under the shadow of Thy protecting love. Thou didst make of them bearers of Thy truth, champions of Thy law, and supporters of Thy kingdom. Give to us, their children, the courage and the strength to be true to our sacred trust.
In days of distress and in times of trouble fortify our spirits with a deep faith in Thee who never slumbers nor sleeps. Keep alive within us the gre~t memories of the past, the good experiences of the present, and the grand visions of the future. May we always labor for that spiritual harvest when all Thy children shall be gathered under the banner of truth and love, and stand united in a common brotherhood.
In Thy holy name we pray. Amen.
THE JOURNAL
The Journal of the proceedings of Thursday, September 25, 1969, was read and approved.
MESSAGE FROM THE SENATE
A message from the Senate by Mr. Arrington, one of its clerks, announced that the Senate agrees to the amendments of the House to a bill of the Senate of the following title:
s. 574. An act to authorize the Secretary of the interior to engage in feasibility investigations of certain water resource developments.
The message also announced that the Senate had passed with amendment in which the concurrence of the House is requested, a bill of the House of the following title:
H.R. 474. An act to establish a Commission on Government Procurement.
The message also announced that the Senate had passed bills of the following
titles, in which the concurrence of the House is requested:
S. 406. An act to amend the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 to permit the rotation of certain property whenever its remaining storage or shelf life is too short to justify its retention, and for other purposes;
S. 740. An act to establish the Cabinet Committee on Opportunities for SpanishSpeak.ing People, and for other purposes; and
S. 2210. An act to amend the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 so as to permit donations of surplus property to public museums.
EMERGING NATIONS MUST ALSO SHARE IN NEW IMF RESERVES
(Mr. HANNA asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. HANNA. Mr. Speaker, today starts a week in which this great Capital will play host to the representatives of the many nations of the world who are members of the International Monetary Fund. As one of the principal matters on the agenda, they will be formalizing what has already come to be a generally accepted proposition that the International Monetary Fund will include in the future the creation of the reserves of members in special drawing rights which will multiply the effectiveness of the gold supply of the world, and undergird the trade of the world.
Mr. Speaker, I think this is a very singular accomplishment, but there is something that is missing. In the arrangements that have been agreed upon the nations who will be benefited most are the 10 strongest and richest nations of the world.
Where I think we have an opportunity here is in the suggestion that was made by the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. REuss) in saying that the rich nations should make available through some mechanism in the World Bank such as IDA or through the soft windows of the regional banks, some of the new reserves that they will be creating for the smaller nations; the emerging nations of the world.
e J . D . Richardson, ed., Messages and Papers of the Presidents (Washington, 1896), I, 221, 222.
It seems to me, Mr. Speaker, that just as we have found in America that the trickle-down theory did not operate to improve the economic strength of our Nation, it is equally true that a trickledown theory between nations is not going to work. We should put together some of the solid benefits from the almost 70 percent of new reserves that we are going to get for practically nothing out of this new system, and make it operative for the underdeveloped nations where the great new market potential of the world really lies.
Mr. Speaker, I would hope to see that some of this kind of dialog is included in the IMF meetings which will be going on in this city this week.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
HONOR, RECORDS, AND LIVES OF SIX GREEN BERETS BEING SACRIFICED
(Mr. W AGGONNER asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend h~ remarks.)
Mr. WAGGONNER. Mr. Speaker, in a cruel, compassionless demonstrat ion of self-serving, the Army, the CIA, and unknown other agencies and individuals in the Government are preparing to sacrifice the honor, the exemplary records. and perhaps even the lives of six members of the Green Berets for the allegea slaying of a Vietnamese triple spy. If this trial proceeds, it will be the most outlandish misca rriage of j ustice perpetrated deliberately by Gover nment agencies and individuals ever to come to public attention.
The victim in this t r avesty is not the Vietnamese triple agent, but six American servicemen who have proudly worn the uniform of the military and faithfully served the ftag of the U n ited States. T he other principal victim will be the United States itself , if our G overnment is paraded before the world a s a murderer of civilians.
There are those a t home and a broad, in Government a n d out, who will go to any length to embar rass this country in any conn ection wit h the war in Vietnam.
1 Ibi d. , I, 223.