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Sidewalks Corruption 00 your Slippery And Democracy Gulch By CARL GASTON NEW YORK POST, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1960 QUESTION: The State Direc- By Max Lerner tor of Transportation suggests By Murray Kempton car tolls in the Holland and Lincoln Tunnels be increased to $1.50. What do you think? There seems be common agreement among the more Chandigarh, India. PLACE: Lower Manhattan. perceptive observers, whether they come to praise or blame him, The big news of the week-end has been the conference of the ruling Congress Party, held this year at Bangalore. Congress in GEORGE KANAKARIS, en- that Richard Nixon's style was formed in college as the champion gineer, Manhattan If New debater of Southern California. India means not a parliament but a party-the one that gained York State is But Nixon learned the arts of persuasion for hire when he freedom for the nation and power for itself, and is still less a party with grass-roots organization than a loose tent-covering trying to dis- was younger still. for the power elite and the mass-following of Nehru. courage people Earl Mazo tells us that, when he was only 14, the Vice from coming to President of the U. S. served "two stints of three weeks each as No party like the Congress exists, still in power, anywhere our city, in- barker for the wheel of chance at the 'Slippery Gulch Rodeo' in the world. The Moslem League in Pakistan has been buried creasing the in Prescott, Ariz. by Ayub Khan, while in Burma the overall Anti-Fascist League tunnel tolls to "Nixon barked for the legal front of the concession, where which inherited power from the revolution has been split into $1.50 is a won- the prizes were hams and sides of bacon, which was a 'come on' the "Clean" and "Stabile" factions of U Nu and U Ba Swe. In derful way of for a back room featuring poker and dice. Pay was based on Indonesia the Nationalist Party, which also inherited a revolution, doing it. It total concession earnings, front and back. Nixon earned $1 an is being outstripped in growth by the Communists, SO that should also dis- hour the first year, quite a windfall for a 14-year-old. The next Sukarno must govern by his personal appeal along with General courage a lot of people from do- Nasution's army. ing business with us. I can't was a depression year and his pay fell to 50 cents." Set aside all Baptist moralities about children who start in MAGAZINE PAGE FOUR The Congress Party alone, of all the parties that won their see anyone paying the increased tolls without protest. life steering for crap games. The issue is not what Nixon sold revolutions in Asia, still is strong and stable, and still governs by but the way he sold it. What is important is that he was a the methods of a parliamentary democracy. E. J. O'CONNOR, ticket ex- teenage pitchman. + + + aminer, Newark-This would * Nehru holds a monthly press conference, usually during the benefit the com- muter railroads Serious sociological research into the character of the pitch- first week of the month, in a biggish auditorium, where he mounts a teacher's platform in a classroom atmosphere. He first connecting New man is consequently necessary to any judgment of the future York with New of the republic. It is research hard to come by. The pitchman asks for the topics on which the students-I mean the newsmen It has been so diffused through our society that in pure form he -have some questions, and having jotted them down on a pad, would also re- has almost disappeared. he takes them up in succession, with interruptions for more lieve the traffic The closest specimen immediately available is Charles questions on the same topic. Unlike the American President's congestion in Kasher, who was an ornament for nearly 15 years at the conference, with its rapid-fire questions and brief answers, Nehru the city and Canadian National Exposition, which remains to the pitchman sometimes delivers a lecture on some theme. help the park- what the Palace was to vaudeville. Kasher withdrew from the In this month's conference his main theme was a defense ing situation. I of his government and his party against the charges of nepotism believe it would be an interest- struggle for a sedentary and successful life in direct mail adver- and corruption. Since Nehru was talking just before the Banga- ing experiment which might tising and as an off-Broadway producer. pay dividends in the long run. "Now the first thing to remember about the pitchman," says lore conference, his remarks had added point. Not only have Kasher, "is that it doesn't matter to him what he sells. The there been the usual crop of charges and stories about corrup JACK ROTHSTEIN, cab own- essence of the art is to sell the least for the most money. The tion, but also a protracted fight about conditions in the Punjab er-driver, The Bronx-What are less you gave and the more you got-that was the measure. state government, from whose new capital of Chandigarh I am they trying to do to the motor- The bad ones got stuck to sell things of value." writing. It had been thought that the party leaders might be forced to take some housecleaning action to meet the criticism. ist? Isn't he By such a standard, you begin to appreciate Richard Nixon's * + paying enough early promise. If he hadn't been good, even at 14, they wouldn't now as it is? I have stuck him outside. Anybody can sell a crap game; moving The leaders were presented with a troublesome concrete hope all car hams takes talent. challenge. A man of great prestige in India-C. D. Deshmukh, of owners will "Now what you got to do is to stop 500 people standing on the Universities Grants Commission-proposed a small high-level band together their feet in a noisy, upsetting fair. So, in making a pitch, you tribunal to sift corruption charges against government officials, and fight this got to make everything focus. For instance, that's why most of and force their resignation or dismissal if the evidence against suggestion. the good ones can make every disease emerge from constipation. them was incriminating. Why can't they They cure everything for everybody. I was a little embarrassed It was known that the powerful Congress Working Com- think of other ways of getting by constipation SO I used to blame everything on lack of vitamins mittee, which not only runs the party but also makes many of revenue than always taxing the the important government decisions, had voted against the tri- motorist? Let's put a stop to and minerals in the blood. But you always have to sell a cure-all. this before it gets any further. "Nixon's Checkers speech was a typical pitchman's perform- bunal idea and that it was as good as dead. Hence Nehru's little ance. You have to start by saying that if two and two makes four speech was mainly important in giving the thinking behind the RALPH HARARY, novelty what I am going to say makes sense. You start people where action of the Working Committee. shop owner, Brooklyn- As a they live, with a wife and a dog. You never let them know His reasoning was persuasive. The charges, even when they solution to the city's traffic and they're being carried along. And then, when you get them on were not simply rumors, were hard to prove under the rules of parking prob- your side, you very quietly sneak your pitch into your talk." evidence. You could of course cut across the judicial safeguards lem it may not Admiration was sneaking into Kasher's tone. and get action, as the tribunals are doing in Pakistan, but that be a bad idea. "We used to say that Franklin Roosevelt was the greatest would smell strongly of dictatorship. It certainly pitchman of them all. He even had that high sort of nasal tone If you set up a watchdog group on the theory that even would discour- you need to cut through the noise of the fairgrounds. You've ministers could not be trusted, who would watch the watchdogs? age many mo- got to reduce every problem to one simple thing. Isn't that what The whole atmosphere would become one of suspicion, and a torists fr Eisenhower did when he said, 'I'll go to Korea'?" premium would be put on the hurling of charges, in the hope using their * that some might stick. The business of government would be cars when com- Richard Nixon has said that he doesn't mind speaking to hurt, not helped, because every administrator would try to play ing to the city from New Jer- audiences, but that he could never go to a man face to face and it safe, and none would assume any risk or responsibility. sey. It would also help the try to sell him something. + commuter railroads. Many peo- This is persuasive but doesn't cut very far under the surface ple would rebel at such a price "I guess in a way we were all misfits," says Kasher. "When I for use of the tunnels. was young I could never have been a salesman and worked with of what ails the new governments of Asia, with their undeveloped individuals. I was even uncomfortable when there were only economies, their hunger for the spoils of office, and their newness IRVING RUDERMAN, cab owner-driver, The Bronx-This four or five people around at the beginning, but, when the to democratic habits. There are three prime questions each of would drive all crowd got bigger, the whole thing became impersonal and then these governments must face: How can you get things done? the motorists I became strong and powerful. Television's even better; it's even How can you get them done honestly? How can you draw the to the George more impersonal. Later on, when people began to walk away, people into helping get them done? Washington I was SO convinced myself that I used to wonder how anybody The first is the question of efficiency, the second of clean Bridge and we could walk away from these pearls of wisdom. When you are government, the third of a grass-roots democracy. The Pakistanis, would have the pitching you believe it. You don't have to be persuaded except under President Ayub Khan, are impressing observers and visitors biggest traffic when you're doing it. You don't have to believe it later. with their progress in the first, and Ayub's military elite is also tieup in our "It doesn't make much real difference, if you believe enough, setting new standards in fighting the entrenched corruption. On history. If New where you take them. I used to knock the doctors and let nature both scores Pakistan is getting under the skins of Nehru and York City do it. Remember Bernarr MacFadden; he'd outlived all the the Congress leaders. Hence Nehru's anxiety to point out that wants to lose a lot of business, this is the doctors. I'd tell them that what I was selling was not medicine; Pakistan is a dictatorship, while India remains a democracy. way to do it. I can't see any this is food. And still they'd come up afterwards and say, 'I'll But does this solve the malaise in India? Nehru is probably sense in the idea at all. It have a bottle of your medicine, Doc.' What we were practicing, right in rejecting the Catonian tribunal of Deshmukh, but does would be bad for all concerned. I suppose, was mass hypnosis." the rejection help to achieve either a more efficient or a more That was a formidable prep school of Dick Nixon's. honest administration? If not, then one may be sure that some- thing deep in the ancestral cónsciousness of India will respond The Cheerful Cherub to the ever-increasing charges that Western-model democracy is a failure in Asia. IF I could only free Surprise my mind James Aldridge, quoted in "Captain Cousteau's Underwater Didn't Choose to Serve From wanting foolish Treasury," edited by Jacques:Yves Cousteau and James Dugan, things I see (Harper, $5.95). The sea is full of debris, all of it fascinating, some of 11 From "The Anatomy of Freedom," by Judge Harold R. Medina My thoughts, exploring embarrassing. Also informative. I was lying on my stomach in (Holt, $3.50). unrestrained, the shallows one day, reading an abandoned newspaper which When I presided over the trial of the 11 Communist leaders we had a panel of some 300 odd jurors to pick from. The first Might bring more lay on the bottom. It was an article on the ancient Minoan water lasting things systems. I had to dive to read the small print. I was called thing I did was to ask those who did not wish to serve to give to me. away before I had finished the article. Next day I returned to their excuses. The result was that every single business man or RM-CANCE pick up where I had left off, but the paper was gone with the woman or person with a position of responsibility asked to be sea. I spent a little time looking for it, diving on every scrap excused. I was positively ashamed. True, it was likely to be a of paper in the area. I didn't find it: but thereafter in that long trial, but in a democracy such as ours we must all make area I could never see a sheet of newspaper below without div- some sacrifices. ing to see if it was my unfinished article. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum 32 Sidewalks Loser's Share of NewYork Boredom NEW YORK POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1960 By CARL GASTON QUESTION: Carl Sandburg By William V. Shannon dedicated a school and said it By Murray Kempton had dangerous rivals-including movies, radio and television. Washington. What do you think?. The Democrats will hold their Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner Although the Democratic liberals in the Senate lost by an HERB MERKSAMER, stu- under circumstances unfamiliar to habitual attendants at these overwhelming margin in their party caucus last week, they have dent, Huntington, L. I.-I agree. been reaping some substantial concessions. Sen. Johnson (D-Tex.), When I at- feasts. Lyndon Johnson will be the main attraction and, by George Meany's personal decision, there will be none of those old the majority leader, picked up all the glittering headlines after tended high school I found familiar faces from the labor political leagues. the caucus rejected the proposed liberal reforms but he has it hard to study quietly yielded part of what his critics demanded. Meany has told James McDevitt, director of the AFL-CIO's properly and Committee on Political Education, that, even if the spirit should There are to be many more party caucuses. The first in the found the radio move him to spend his own money, he must not go to the Demo- new series was held yesterday to discuss the aid-to-education or television cratic dinner. issue. Previously, Johnson had held only one caucus a year, to very distract- deliver his personal "State of the Union message" at the begin- ing. Now that Meany's decision not to grant the union label to the Demo- ning of the session. I'm in college crats this month-it would be hyperbole to call his action a boy- Secondly, Johnson has tacitly instituted a significant change my mother cott, but a boycott it will be called-lends support to the mount- puts me down in the cellar to in the makeup of the Democratic Policy Committee. This group ing current of Washington opinion that Meany is resigned to the study, making sure nothing dis- was the object of the liberal reform proposal which, if it had turbs me. election of Richard Nixon in 1960 and will ride with it by indors- ing no candidate. been adopted, would have expanded the policy unit from 9 to 15 HAL RAPAPORT, account- MAGAZINE PAGE FOUR members and made them elective, rather than appointed by the ant, Queens-That is a danger- * + majority leader. ous half-truth. Johnson's prominence at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner The big change has consisted of adding the three members The movies, ra- will also be owing to a mounting current of Washington opinion of the Calendar Committee to the Policy Committee. dio and televi- sion are actual- that he is not only a serious candidate for the Presidency of the * * * ly allies of edu- United States-who, after all, isn't?-but a likely one. To understand the significance of that change one has to go cation. More A major recruit to this view is Richard Nixon who is re- back to immediately after the November, 1958, elections which people know ported saying privately that he expects that he will have to de- brought the biggest Democratic majority in the Senate since more about fend America against a Johnson-Kennedy ticket, which he be- New Deal days. Sen. Clark (D-Pa.), the sparkplug of the liberal what's going on lieves will be very good for the country. I should expect Nixon to in the world to- drive, proposed to Johnson then that the new facts of life be day than ever believe that what is good for Richard Nixon is good for America, recognized and the Policy Committee revamped to reflect the this being the corporation closest to his heart. before. I think these media are increased Northern, Liberal strength. too important in our shrinking Nixon's judgment in these matters is universally accepted, Johnson brusquely rejected Clark's request. world to be dismissed this way. because everyone knows that he is an intense political scientist. When Sen. Proxmire (D-Wis.) subsequently took up the cry CONSTANTINE KOUSOU- But he also suffers from the occupational hazard of political sci- for more caucuses and a larger, democratically-elected Policy LAS, student, Queens-I agree entists, which is reading newspaper columnists too closely. He Committee, he was told by Sen. Mansfield (D-Mont.), the party to a certain ex- tent. One must information. gets it from them and then hands it back; it thus becomes inside whip and Johnson's loyal adjutant, that it would take a change consider that in the Congressional Reorganization Act of 1946 to increase the relaxation is al- The prevailing mood in Washington is that of the girl who, size of the committee. Nevertheless, Johnson began having the SO very impor- having accepted one too many propositions, begins to ask herself, three members of the Calendar Committee meet with the policy tant to the group. The function of the three members of this obscure com- "Why not?" at even the less appetizing ones. Having said, "Why mind. I have not Nixon?" the city has passed to "Why not Lyndon Johnson?" mittee is to serve as watchdogs for the party when the calendar found that soft These, of course, are questions asked out of boredom. Boredom is of pending bills is called and object, when necessary, to prevent music on the the key to the Washington mood; George Meany is bored like the other party from slipping through obnoxious bills. This is radio has the rest of us; it is hard to blame him if he refuses to face the a minor, tedious chore, traditionally assigned to freshmen helped me to Senators to help them learn the ropes. Clark served on this com- study and to absorb much more moment when he will, according to habit, vote Democratic, and mittee in 1957-58. easily what I read. However, I therefore lets informed opinion guess that he may not vote at all. The three members currently are Sens. Hart (Mich.), Engle wouldn't recommend viewing TV if a college student really (Cal.) and Bartlett (Alaska). They occasionally met with the wants to keep his mind on his Someone was saying yesterday that the problem of the Dem- Policy Committee last year but did not have a vote. work. ocrats is to find a candidate who can promise to do what the GERALD BUCHMAN, ac- Democrats have not done for the last six years and make people * * * countant, Brooklyn I can't believe it. Since Lyndon Johnson has been majority leader of the On Monday, Jan. 18, less than a week after Johnson's quite agree. Be- Senate for the last six years, he is therefore personally respon- highly-touted victory over the liberal reformers, Mansfield told cause of these sible for what everyone agrees has been a miserable Democratic the Senate that the members of the Calendar Committee did have media, most record and thus the worst possible man to make such a promise. a vote and should henceforth be considered part of the Policy people are well If you lived in a city where the insiders increasingly agree that Committee. up on current Johnson will be rewarded for these services with the Democratic "He (Johnson) has given them the same privileges a regular events and world nomination for President, you might vote for him but you cer- member on the committee has. So what we have in effect at the issues affecting tainly wouldn't send your subordinates to a Democratic dinner. present time is a 12-man committee," Mansfield said. our everyday But the insiders, as usual, are probably wrong. Johnson prob- This interesting disclosure came in a colloquy between Mans- lives. This in ably won't get the Democratic nomination and the AFL-CIO will field and Proxmire. It represented quite a change from the itself is a form indorse whoever does, listlessly and negatively, which is how official line Mansfield was expounding a year ago. of important education which they worked for Harry Truman, who was their last national win- Johnson doubtless enjoyed his press clippings about the cannot be ignored. Unfortunate- ly, radio and TV don't give ner. Most people, after all, vote by habit, politics being personal; "smashing rout" of the liberals, but without losing face or contra- dicting the fanfare he has tried to meet the liberals at least enough time to educational pro- and labor leaders are habitual Democrats, the way corporation presidents are habitual Republicans. grams which would further ben- part way. efit the people. * * Two of the three newcomers, Hart and Engle, are firm on CHARLES TESORIERO, stu- Still, it is all terribly sad. What must it be to really believe the key issue of civil rights. dent, Brooklyn-Most of the pro- in something in the United States and still be politically active, * grams on TV * + which means being a Republican and going to national dinners to are trash and The liberals have not, of course, won all they seek. The a student hear Nixon or being a Democrat and going to your party's most committee is still appointed, not eiected. And the Steering shouldn't waste sacred fiesta to hear Lyndon Johnson? Under these circum- Committee, which assigns members to legislative committees, is his time with stances it is not a political but an esthetic act to stay away. still wholly under Johnson's control. There is also the problem them. Those Presumably something is struggling to be born in American of unequal regional representation. The Policy Committee is educational politics. But the fact is that right now the inside story is simply top-heavy with Southerners and Westerners. The Atlantic Sea- programs that that everyone is at once bored himself and compelled to seek sig- board and the industrialized Midwest are badly under-represented. do appear on nificance in the actions of others who are simply bored too. TV are present- Clark has pointed out that the states north of Alabama and ed too carly in East of the Mississippi River contain 58 per cent of the national the morning for us college stu- population, have 23 of the 65 Democratic senators, and 297 of dents, who study late into the the 537 electoral votes, but they have only two of the 12 seats night. As for radio and movies, The Artist on the Policy Committee. they can be helpful culturally if you do your selecting carefully. From "Adventures of a Biographer" by Catherine Drinker Bowen * * * (Atlantic-Little, Brown, $4). The first of the new party caucuses held yesterday was The Cheerful Cherub By evil men, I do not mean those who were merely self- fairly well attended; 33, or about half the members, were present. Regretting failures in indulgent or a trifle perverse in their habits. Tchaikovsky was The question under discussion was legislative strategy on a homosexual; after my book "Beloved Friend" appeared, I think the education bill. The Senate Labor Committee has reported out the past every deviate in the state of Pennsylvania looked on me as his a bill by Sen. McNamara (D-Mich.) which would provide $500,000, Will never help me champion; they came and told me their hearts until I was al- 000 a year for two years exclusively for school construction. together surfeited. McNamara favors the more ambitious Murray-Metcalf bill anyway which would also provide funds for teacher salaries, but he But only steal my time But Tchaikovsky was first of all an artist, who did not let and thought love or terror block his work. In mortal fear of exposure, tor- believes his own bill is the only one that can be passed as long as Eisenhower is in the White House. And keep me from tured by a marriage undertaken to silence scandal, Tchaikovsky put all fear and all torment of frustration into his art. Sen. Hill (D-Ala.), the committee chairman, indorsed Mc- success today. Namara's position. RMCANN Whether or not his symphonies are to one's taste, no Clark spoke for the opposing view, which is to amend the bill orchestral music ever gave back more intimately the image of to include salaries. Johnson spoke but did not commit himself. the composer. In such a man the struggle assumed heroic No binding decision was reached and none was expected. proportions. Inexhaustible musical talent on the one hand, unremitting temptation and fear on the other, and over all the But the caucus performed the preliminary function of clarify- ing the alternatives and eliciting rank-and-file opinions. A courage to surmount-this was "plot" enough for any biographer. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum NEW YORK POST, SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1960 MAGAZINE PAGE ELEVEN The Latest Nixon Paperbacks Evergreen Review No. 12 Weekly BOOK Reviews THE REAL NIXON: An Inti- was plain fortunate. Pat has (Grove Press, $1) This mate Biography. By Bela Kor- been a tremendous help to me. issue includes Albert Camus' nitzer. Rand McNally. 353 pp. Even my critics agree that she "Reflections on the Guillo- has done a thorough job with $3.95 tine," first published by both her family and her official Evergreen Review in 1957. MURRAY KEMPTON responsibilities." Talking of Books The Story of Psychoanalysis This is a book He is talking about the wom- -Lucy Freeman and Mar- written in the style of a lackey, on he loves; and the tone would vin Small (Cardinal Origi- By MARTHA MacGREGOR "It's particularly important which I should define as un- seem cold in a U. S. Steel report nal, 50c)-Simple, nontech- "You'll find me poor copy," to give something up when American if it were not SO gen- about the Morristown plant. nical presentation of key said Clifton Fadiman. "Wife, you find you can do it, unless erally the style of American * + + figures: Mesmer, Piner, children, happy home, hobby- you absolutely need the job for campaign biographies. And yet he was a good boy Charcot, Breuer, Freud, wines. Nothing to interest bread and butter. Kornitzer seeks the riddle of and helped around the home, Jung, Adler, Rank, Jones readers." "When you have solved the and in the beginning loved his and others. Nixon in his childhood in Yorba Outside the sun shone on an problem it's a good time to stop. Linda, California, in his family family. There is even a school expansive exurbanite lawn, in- That's why I've never kept any and in his Quaker upbringing. paper he wrote about his little side on a big glass-walled study. job. I'm just an employe of that is a spontaneous act and This search seems to me largely brother who died young; it is a Dressed in baggy country whoever wants to employ me. a brief one. irrelevant for two reasons, one genuinely moving document. clothes, Fadiman, publisher, Intellectual vagabondage suits * * + editor, teacher, critic, radio and me." of Nixonry and one of America. Mr. Kornitzer does us all no The irrelevancy produced by favor by printing the full text of This thing goes on and on TV personality, talked with the * Nixonry is the family Quaker- this and then following it with according to plan: parodying humility only the successful At the moment, this. Vaga. ism, a theme which runs the most sacred notions by dare show. the entire Checkers speech. bond King's employers include through Kornitzer's chronicle. "My message to the American which Americans once lived, de- "My pattern is simple to the the Encyclopedia Britannica, Now the Society of Friends is a people: exposing this adminis- filing the combat soldier by point of banality. I do some- Holiday and the Book-of-the- free church, but it is not one tration, the corruption in it, mock-modest self-comparison, thing until I find out I either Month Club. without doctrine. the communism in it I went invoking the name of God to can or can't do it. In either His wife, the former Annalee In the last three weeks, Rich- to the South Pacific area I run for office, dragging the case I give it up. Jacoby, says a large share of ard Nixon has made two state- got a couple of letters of com- speaker's wife through a pub- his enthusiasm these days goes ments of policy. He has come mendation, but I was just there lic place. And yet the man who to educational TV "He's been out in favor of capital punish- when the bombs were falling delivered it was the boy who working with the Ford Fund ment and he has blessed Harry I believe it's five that a man could write an honest piece for the Advancement of Educa- Truman for dropping the atom like Governor Stevenson, who about his brother dead. tion" and Fadiman himself bomb on Hiroshima. inherited a fortune from his I cannot consider that his wants people to read his newest If these views reflect his early father, can run for President parents have anything to do book, "The Lifetime Reading training in Quakerism, then I I'm not a quitter. And Pat's with that man; he has out- Plan" (World, $3.75), a guide am the Pope in Rome. not a quitter. After all, her grown them and is simply an to 100 books and authors from * * * name was Patricia Ryan and American success story. Homer to Faulkner. The second irrelevancy is she was born on St. Patrick's I do not trust these Hungar- "My book is aimed to get American. Kornitzer does not Day, and you know the Irish ians. Kornitzer pretends to be people into the bookstores and never quit." a fool but his game is clear. He the libraries. I hope it will act I should say, reading it is not only anti-Nixon; he is as a spark. afresh, that this is the most anti-American. Both those at- "People start new habits at disgusting speech delivered by titudes are his privilege, but 80. You never can tell-someone a political figure in my life- his technique seems to me be- who has never opened a book time. low the belt. may try mine and say, I'll give It is disgusting because it is It is simply not fair to em- this crazy guy a chance." contrived and because it is SO ploy the style of a writer for * + * long; Jim Eastland may belch Screen Guide and use it to de- Should people read so many on the floor of the Senate but fame the republic. CLIFTON FADIMAN pages a day? "No, not unless they're systematic people. Make a regular habit of reading over A New Kind of TV Novel a long period of time. Dr. Eliot used to talk about 15 minutes a day. That's just hooey." How about Fadiman's own GOLK. By Richard Stern. Cri- to confine it within simple- -and makes of it an all-purpose reading? "It depends on what terion. 221 pp. $3.95. minded morality fables. term and a household word. I happen to be interested in. I The truth is that television A golk is an unrehearsed real- always try to put aside a couple By DAVID BOROFF life situation with the camera the whole new wave of technol- hours a day for books that I The standard novel about tele- ogy, in fact is a garish and eye trained on people caught up have no practical reason to read zany new frontier for which the in unpremeditated drama. It is vision is likely to have a preda- -not review books. tory central character riding old vocabularies are unsuitable. an henest This Is Your Life. "Once I spent some time try- Golk has an irresistible im- herd over his subordinates, some + * * ing to learn Welsh. One year I pudence in setting up situations got interested in medieval his- RICHARD NIXON of whom, at least have a linger- "Golk" is the first book to but also a true artist's sensitiv- tory." ing decency. come along to have some sense ity to human nuance, as he mis- * * seem to understand the essential It is a world of voracious ap- of these new dimensions. There chievously exposes other peo- petites, careening egos, dirty in- are no virtuous heroes, no crass At this point Kim, nine, and that Americans are parricides, ple's discomfiture. tycoons stifling creativity. In- Anne, going on seven, appeared. in a nice way of course. They fighting, and tireless tumbling (The camera is always hid- "Are you children here for a advance by so eliminating the in and out of bed. (Al Morgan's stead, there is a curiously amor- den, and at the end of each image of their parents as to "The Great Man" is perhaps the al world, dominated by the huge purpose?" said Fadiman. golk, the unlucky victim is in- "Mommy won't let me use make it unrecognizable in them- best of the lot.) electronic eye and an oddly self- formed that he is "on camera.") selves. + + And, of course, it has only an mocking Faustian itch. * the power drill," said Kim. accidental relationship to the Golk cunningly arranges After backing Mommy up, You can meet an Italian or Golk himself is a mad genius truth. What it leaves out of the whose bald head bobs to the sur- golks which show up public fig- Fadiman said he thought Kim's Englishman and tell by looking at him who his father was; this face in the swirling currents of ures for what they are. A gov- question largely rhetorical. "But picture is the sheer entrepre- is impossible with Americans of neurial magic of TV and the the new television era. He as- ernment official shoots his he may know how to use it- sumes the name Golk-his real mouth off about the electorate. they do know the darndest the Nixon type. impassioned energies of its They get ahead by obliterating name is a drab Sydney Pomeroy ("Yes, the rotten meat draws things, continually surprising to imagination. We do it violence their own background; whether the pack.") an old gentleman like myself." Yorba Linda is in California, A union leader, flattered by The reference to his age was being invited to lunch on a rhetorical, too; Fadiman will be North Carolina or Michigan, when its sons get to the big Perle: Political Party Girl yacht, leaks indiscretions. 56 on May 15. * * "Very domestic household towns, they are indistinguishable from one another. PERLE-MY STORY. By Perle Saul Bellow, in a warm en- here," he said. "The children one knows, she became Tru- Such men have mothers, of dorsement of the novel, salutes walk in and out as I work. If Mesta with Robert Cahn. man's Minister to Luxembourg. a journalist can't work under course; but their mothers are This is a warm, happy, comfort- Stern as one of the writers "who not the best of witnesses be- McGraw-Hill. 241 pp. $4.50. are not repelled by the world and these conditions he should cas- able book which makes light, cause their sons are strangers. Perle Mesta is noted for her pleasant, but not very exciting have kept an appetite for exper- trate himself." reading. M. M. ience." * * * Kornitzer spent a long time with charm, which dazzles nobodies True enough-but there is a Nixon's mother, who seems to Clifton Fadiman speaks of as well as notables. One of the be a lady of substance, but I am kind of sophisticated moral an- himself as a journalist and says afraid she is irrelevant on the nicest things people say about archy about the novel that ulti- he has been influenced by Men- the hostess with the mostest is mately subverts it. evidence of her son's letters, cken-"not appreciated now as It offers a dazzling display of which are reprinted here and in- he should be." Fadiman began that she looks after strays at variably begin: "Dear Mother pyrotechnics, but does the read- reviewing books for the Nation her parties. er care? One wonders whether (colon)" and almost cry out, while at Columbia and for The "Dictated but not read." Does the charm come the American novel can really New Yorker while an editor for + + * through in this autobiography? survive the collapse of ideology, Simon and Schuster. He now and that is what we are witness- Under such circumstances the To some extent, but the book does a book column for Holiday. ing now. word "intimate" seems especially has two disadvantages. First, "Whatever came my way I said Stern is as talented a young inappropriate in any study of TV and the press have already yes to. writer as any who have come Nixon. The problem, I'm afraid, publicized most of the events "I wanted to see what things along. The prose is marvelously is one of simple emotional of her life. Second, Perle Mesta were like. I still do. I've found is too kindhearted to write a tangy; he has an extraordinary poverty. it worthwhile to take chances. I sense of the comic curlicues in This, for example, is what really amusing book. There's everyday experience. tried short stories, was unsuc- Nixon says of his marriage: "It scarcely a mean word in the But the direction of the novel cessful, gave it up. entire 200-odd pages. can be seen in the lowering of "I tried verse, sold it to The Daughter of an Oklahoma oil the word golk. Initially, it is New Yorker, read some good Mysteries promoter and hotel man, she defined "as to look with a criti- verse by E. B. White, gave that married Pittsburgh C n cal eye." up. It's important to recognize The Schultz Money-Malcolm George Mesta, was a World But Golk, when he is cast out your limitations-don't waste Gair-GOOD War I hostess in Washington, from his creative Eden, lets time." The Man in the Cage-John where her husband served as a on that the word really means "My own limitations are quite Holbrook Vance-FAIR dollar-a-year-man, and as, every- PERLE MESTA a fool. "Golk" chills as much wide," said Fadiman, a very as it charms. modest man. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum NEW YORK POST, THURSDAY, MAY 5. 1960 51 The Trophy MURRAY KEMPTON Nicely, nicely, poor Richard Nixon was pushed and shoved- the only victim forbidden by protocol to complain-about the New York World Trade Fair in the Coliseum yesterday. He shook the extended palms of all the world-from Bulgaria to South Korea-with the firm, non-partisan grip of salesman to salesman. He took home an Indian tea kettle-his wife is a collector; a stuffed black dog from West Germany--his daugh- ter is about to be a collector; a large Benelux bowl of blue transparent glass; a volume of Israeli photographs of Biblical landscapes; a thing that looked like a lute with hangman's ropes attached from South Korea; and a cluster of flags from the European common market. He told an Indian that the new agricultural program was a "stabilizing, ahhh"; he told a Brazillan that his new capital was like Washington, D.C., and built from the ground up and the President agrees; he told the European common market that it was a great stride forward; he told Israel that it too was a great stride forward; he told the Austrians that it was a thorn in his flesh that only 5 per cent of the tourists who went to Paris went on to Vienna; he told the Sicilians that there would have been no California without the Di Giorgio farms; he didn't men- tion the Di Giorgios to the Mexicans but he told them that they were friendly and had pyramids older than Egypt's and also the shrine at Guadalupe; he told the Poles that his grandmother had a feather bed; he told the Bulgarians that theirs was one country where he and his wife had never been but that, by all evidence, it had pretty girls; he told the Aubusson tapestry industry-behind its back-that its designs were a little over his head but certainly striking; and he told the South Koreans that he had gone to school with a Korean boy and that he and Pat would never forget, etc. * ¥ % And through it all he was steamed and baked and crushed by the animal flesh of scribes from the prints and the Pharisees from the Coliseum management-"I started to hit one of those reporters, but I figured he was too important"-and tripped by television wires, and pushed into artificial flowers-"Clear out Israel; we're taking him there"-and through it all he remained pleasant, informing, and anxious to please, a single agreeable island in a sea raging with the unpleasant. He ended his journey inspecting a detailed relief map of New York and environs provided by the New York Port Authority, with light-ups of its installations and a battery of telephones which the intellectually curious might pick up to hear a recorded description of the tentacles of that octopus. The Vice President of the United States picked up the phone and nodded his head and heard the description all the way through. When it was finished he hung up. Thank heaven, there is one limitation to Richard Nixon's manners: he does not say "Thank you" to a recorded announcement. "This is the way you teach "people," he told the Port Author- ity's attendant. "They see the phone and they pick it up because they're curious and then they listen because they're interested." He tried to heist the telephone. It was anchored to its place, an example of the abiding faith his servants have in the common man. "I see," he said, "you have them all nailed down." A policeman was following him carrying his presents. The Vice President asked his bearer how long he had been on the force. Three months, the policeman answered. "That's what it is to be a recruit," said Mr. Nixon. "You have to carry the loot." He was through it all a mine of information. He has been everywhere except Bulgaria. He knows the population of the European common market; he knows the percentage of tourists who go on from Paris to Vienna; he knows that in other Asiatic nations besides India you greet a voter by putting your hands together and inclining the forehead forward; he appreciates Polish hams. He could even ask the Mexicans about a friend of his named Sierra. "We used to go to parties together. Does he still do those dances? No, I guess he doesn't. He has to be dignified, I guess." * * How dreary it is to be Richard Nixon. There must have been a little fun in Mexico-hower ceremonial and hollow-and now 2-1 the man's been promoted and is only a memory as jackanapes. m There are left just the maps and the figures on the Indian five- is year plan. What must it be like to be an American tourist and never get to see the "Folies Bergeres,' which you would have had o the taste not to like, of course, but could at least have talked n about as though you liked it as any other tourist can? There is n left only the world in the form of small talk. i. God, how Nixon must envy Khrushchev, who can drink Pepsi-Cola and spit it out in public disgust. What a terrible S curse it is to embody America as a constant apology to the world. But then there is the expense account and there are the trophies. I think of the Nixons in their golden years, the Vice e Presidential family emeritus of the United States, with Mr. Nixon saying in the long winter evenings in San Luis Obispo, "Pat, show me that thing the South Koreans gave us before the night e fell." He at the Dutch Treat Club. I bet it was S Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Dutch treat. NEW YORK POST, SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1960 MAGAZINE PAGE ELEVEN The Latest Nixon Paperbacks THE REAL NIXON: An Inti- Evergreen Review No. 12 was plain fortunate. Pat has Weekly BOOK Reviews (Grove Press, $1) This Biography By Bela Kor- been a tremendous help to me. issue includes Albert Camus' nitzer. Rand McNally 353 PP Even my critics agree that she "Reflections on the Guillo- $3.95. has done a thorough job with both her family and her official tine," first published by Evergreen Review in 1957. By MURRAY KEMPTON responsibilities." The Story of Psychoanalysis Talking of Books This is a terribly soggy book He is talking about the wom- -Lucy Freeman and Mar- in the style of a lackev on he loves; and the tone would vin Small (Cardinal Origi- By MARTHA MacGREGOR which should define as seem cold in a U. S. Steel report "It's particularly important nal, 50c)-Simple, nontech- about the Morristown plant. "You'll find me poor copy," to give something up when American it were so gen- nical presentation of key said Clifton Fadiman. "Wife, you find you can do it, unless erally the style of American * * * figures: Mesmer, Piner, children, happy home, hobby- you absolutely need the job for campaign biographies. And yet he was a good boy Charcot, Breuer, Freud, wines. Nothing to interest bread and butter. Kornitzer seeks the riddle of and helped around the home, Jung, Adler, Rank, Jones readers." "When you have solved the Nixon in his childhood in Yorba and in the beginning loved his and others. Outside the sun shone on an problem it's a good time to stop. Linda, California, in his family family. There is even a school expansive exurbanite lawn, in- That's why I've never kept any and in his Quaker upbringing. paper he wrote about his little side on a big glass-walled study. job. I'm just an employe of This search seems to me largely brother who died young; it is a that is a spontaneous act and genuinely moving document. a brief one. Dressed in baggy country whoever wants to employ me. irrelevant for two reasons, one clothes, Fadiman, publisher, Intellectual vagabondage suits of Nixonry and one of America. Mr. Kornitzer does us all no * editor, teacher, critic, radio and me." The irrelevancy produced by favor by printing the full text of This thing goes on and on TV personality, talked with the * * * Nixonry is the family Quaker- this and then following it with according to plan: parodying humility only the successful ism, a which runs the entire Checkers speech. the most sacred notions by dare show. At the moment, this Vaga- through Kornitzer's chronicle. bond King's employers include "My message to the American which Americans once lived, de- "My pattern is simple to the Now the Society of Friends is a people: exposing this adminis- filing the combat soldier by point of banality. I do some- the Encyclopedia Britannica, free church, but it is not one Holiday and the Book-of-the- tration, the corruption in it, mock-modest self-comparison, thing until I find out I either Month Club. without doctrine. the communism in it I went invoking the name of God to can or can't do it. In either In the last three weeks, Rich- His wife, the former Annalee to the South Pacific area I run for office, dragging the case I give it up. ard Nixon has made two state- speaker's wife through a pub- Jacoby, says a large share of got a couple of letters of com- ments of policy. He has come mendation, but I was just there lic place. And yet the man who his enthusiasm these days goes out in favor of capital punish- when the bombs were falling delivered it was the boy who to educational TV "He's been I believe it's five that a man could write an honest piece working with the Ford Fund ment and he has blessed Harry like Governor Stevenson, who about his brother dead. for the Advancement of Educa- Truman for dropping the atom tion" and Fadiman himself bomb on Hiroshima. inherited a fortune from his I cannot consider that his wants people to read his newest If these views reflect his early father, can run for President parents have anything to do training in Quakerism, then I book, "The Lifetime Reading I'm not a quitter. And Pat's with that man; he has out- am the Pope in Rome. Plan" (World, $3.75), a guide not a quitter. After all, her grown them and is simply an to 100 books and authors from * name was Patricia Ryan and American success story. Homer to Faulkner. The second irrelevancy is she was born on St. Patrick's I do not trust these Hungar- "My book is aimed to get American. Kornitzer does not Day, and you know the Irish ians. Kornitzer pretends to be people into the bookstores and never quit.' a fool but his game is clear. He the libraries. I hope it will act I should say, reading it is not only anti-Nixon; he is as a spark. afresh, that this is the most anti-American. Both those at- "People start new habits at disgusting speech delivered by titudes are his privilege, but 80. You never can tell-someone a political figure in my life- his technique seems to me be- who has never opened a book time. low the belt. may try mine and say, I'll give It is disgusting beçause it is It is simply not fair to em- this crazy guy a chance." contrived and because it is SO ploy the style of a writer for * + + long; Jim Eastland may belch Screen Guide and use it to de- on the floor of the Senate but fame the republic. CLIFTON FADIMAN Should people read SO many pages a day? "No, not unless they're systematic people. Make a regular habit of reading over A New Kind of TV Novel a long period of time. Dr. Eliot used to talk about 15 minutes a day. That's just hooey." within How about Fadiman's own GOLK. By Richard Stern. Cri- to confine it simple- -and makes of it an all-purpose reading? It depends what terion. 221 pp. $3.95. minded morality fables. term and a household word. I happen to be interested in. I The truth is that television- A golk is an unrehearsed real- By DAVID BOROFF the whole new wave of technol- life situation with the camera always try to put aside a couple hours a day for books that I The standard novel about tele- ogy, in fact is a garish and eye trained on people caught up have no practical reason to read vision is likely to have a preda- zany new frontier for which the in unpremeditated drama. It is -not review books. tory central character riding old vocabularies are unsuitable. an honest This Is Your Life. "Once I spent some time try- * Golk has an irresistible im- herd over his subordinates, some * + ing to learn Welsh. One year I pudence in setting up situations RICHARD NIXON of whom, at least have a linger- "Golk" is the first book to got interested in medieval his- but also a true artist's sensitiv- ing decency. come along to have some sense tory." ity to human nuance, as he mis- seem to understand the essential * + * It is a world of voracious ap- of these new dimensions. There that Americans are parricides, chievously exposes other peo- petites, careening egos, dirty in- are no virtuous heroes, no crass ple's discomfiture. At this point Kim, nine, and in a nice way of course. They fighting, and tireless tumbling tycoons stifling creativity. In- (The camera is always hid- Anne, going on seven, appeared. advance by so eliminating the in and out of bed (Al Morgan's stead, there is a curiously amor- den, and at the end of each "Are you children here for a image of their parents as to "The Great Man" is perhaps the al world, dominated by the huge golk, the unlucky victim is in- purpose?' said Fadiman. make it unrecognizable in them- best of the lot.) electronic eye and an oddly self- formed that he is "on camera.") "Mommy won't let me use selves. You can meet an Italian or And, of course, it has only an mocking Faustian itch. * * + the power drill," said Kim. Englishman and tell by looking accidental relationship to the Golk himself is a mad genius Golk cunningly arranges After backing Mommy up, truth. What it leaves out of the whose bald head bobs to the sur- golks which show up public fig- Fadiman said he thought Kim's at him who his father was; this is impossible with Americans of picture is the sheer entrepre- face in the swirling currents of ures for what they are. A gov- question largely rhetorical. "But neurial magic of TV and the the new television era. He as- ernment official shoots his he may know how to use it- the Nixon type. impassioned energies of its mouth off about the electorate. they do know the darndest sumes the name Golk-his real They get ahead by obliterating imagination. We do it violence name is a drab Sydney Pomeroy ("Yes, the rotten meat draws things, continually surprising to their own background; whether the pack.") an old gentleman like myself." Yorba Linda is in California, A union leader, flattered by The reference to his age was North Carolina or Michigan, being invited to lunch on a rhetorical, too; Fadiman will be when its sons get to the big Perle: Political Party Girl yacht, leaks indiscretions. 56 on May 15. towns, they are indistinguishable + ¥ + "Very domestic household from one another. PERLE-MY STORY. By Perle one knows, she became Tru- Saul Bellow, in a warm en- here," he said. "The children Such men have mothers, of Mesta with Robert Cahn. man's Minister to Luxembourg. dorsement of the novel, salutes walk in and out as I work. If course; but their mothers are McGraw-Hill. 241 pp. $4.50. This is a warm, happy, comfort- Stern as one of the writers "who a journalist can't work under not the best of witnesses be- able book which makes light, are not repelled by the world and these conditions he should cas- cause their sons are strangers. Perle Mesta is noted for her pleasant, but not very exciting have kept an appetite for exper- trate himself." Kornitzer spent a long time with reading. M. M. ience." * + Nixon's mother, who seems to charm, which dazzles nobodies True enough-but there is a as well as notables. One of the Clifton Fadiman speaks of be a lady of substance, but I am kind of sophisticated moral an- himself as a journalist and says afraid she is irrelevant on the nicest things people say about archy about the novel that ulti- he has been influenced by Men- evidence of her son's letters, the hostess with the mostest is mately subverts it. cken-"not appreciated now as which are reprinted here and in- variably begin: "Dear Mother that she looks after strays at It offers a dazzling display of he should be." Fadiman began pyrotechnics, but does the read- her parties. reviewing books for the Nation (colon)" and almost cry out, er care? One wonders whether while at Columbia and for The "Dictated but not read." Does the charm come the American novel can really New Yorker while an editor for * * * through in this autobiography? survive the collapse of ideology, To some extent, but the book and that is what we are witness- Simon and Schuster. He now Under such circumstances the has two disadvantages. First, ing now. does a book column for Holiday. word "intimate" seems especially TV and the press have already Stern is as talented a young "Whatever came my way I said inappropriate in any study of Nixon. The problem, I'm afraid, publicized most of the events writer as any who have come yes to. is one of simple emotional of her life. Second, Perle Mesta along. The prose is marvelously "I wanted to see what things poverty. tangy; he has an extraordinary were like. I still do. I've found is too kindhearted to write a sense of the comic curlicues in it worthwhile to take chances. I This, for example, is what really amusing book. There's Nixon says of his marriage: "It scarcely a mean word in the everyday experience. tried short stories, was unsuc- entire 200-odd pages. But the direction of the novel cessful, gave it up. can be seen in the lowering of "I tried verse, sold it to The Daughter of an Oklahoma oil Mysteries the word golk. Initially, it is New Yorker, read some good promoter and hotel man, she defined "as to look with a criti- verse by E. B. White, gave that married Pittsburgh tycoon The Schultz Money-Malcolm cal eye." up. It's important to recognize George Mesta, was a World Gair-GOOD But Golk, when he is cast out your limitations-don't waste War I hostess in Washington. The Man in the Cage-John from his creative Eden, lets time." where her husband served as a Holbrook Vance-FAIR on that the word really means "My own limitations are quite dollar-a-year-man, and as, every- PERLE MESTA a fool. "Golk" chills as much wide," sald Fadiman, a very as it charms. modest man. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Slippery Gulch rec- ests By Murray Kempton, and to The seems to be common ag eement among the more 1. perceptive whether they ome to praise or blame him, en- that Richard Nixon's style was formed in college as the champion ew debater of Southern California. is But Nixon learned the arts of persuasion for hire when he S was younger still. ple Earl Mazo tells us that, when he was only 14, the Vice to President of the U. S. served "two stints of three weeks each as in- barker for the wheel of chance at the 'Slippery Gulch Rodeo' he in Prescott, Ariz. to "Nixon barked for the legal front of the concession, where on- the prizes were hams and sides of bacon, which was a 'come on' of It for a back room featuring poker and dice. Pay was based on is- total concession earnings, front and back. Nixon earned $1 an do- hour the first year, quite a windfall for a 14-year-old. The next n't was a depression year and his pay fell to 50 cents." ed Set aside all Baptist moralities about children who start in life steering for crap games. The issue is not what Nixon sold but the way he sold it. What is important is that he was a X- ld teenage pitchman. % * % Serious sociological research into the character of the pitch- man is consequently necessary to any judgment of the future of the republic. It is research hard to come by. The pitchman has been so diffused through our society that in pure form he has almost disappeared. The closest specimen immediately available is Charles Casher, who was an ornament for nearly 15 years at the Canadian National Exposition, which remains to the pitchman what the Palace was to vaudeville. Casher withdrew from the struggle for a sedentary and successful life in direct mail adver- tising and as an off-Broadway producer. 1. "Now the first thing to remember about the pitchman," says Casher, "is that it doesn't matter to him what he sells. The essence of the art is to sell the least for the most money. The e less you gave and the more you got-that was the measure. The bad ones got stuck to sell things of value." By such a standard, you begin to appreciate Richard Nixon's early promise. If he hadn't been good, even at 14, they wouldn't have stuck him outside. Anybody can sell a crap game; moving hams takes talent. "Now what you got to do is to stop 500 people standing on their feet in a noisy, upsetting fair. So, in making a pitch, you got to make everything focus. For instance, that's why most of the good ones can make every disease emerge from constipation. They cure everything for everybody. I was a little embarrassed by constipation so I used to blame everything on lack of vitamins and minerals in the blood. But you always have to sell a cure-all. "Nixon's Checkers speech was a typical pitchman's perform- ance. You have to start by saying that if two and two makes four what I am going to say makes sense. You start people where they live, with a wife and a dog. You never let them know they're being carried along. And then, when you get them on your side, you very quietly sneak your pitch into your talk." Admiration was sneaking into Casher's tone. "We used to say that Franklin Roosevelt was the greatest pitchman of them all. He even had that high sort of nasal tone you need to cut through the noise of the fairgrounds. You've got to reduce every problem to one simple thing. Isn't that what Eisenhower did when he said, 'I'll go to Korea?'' + + + Richard Nixon has said that he doesn't mind speaking to audiences, but that he could never go to a man face to face and try to sell him something. "I guess in a way we were all misfits," says Casher. "When I was young I could never have been a salesman and work with individuals. I was even uncomfortable when there were only four or five people around at the beginning, but, when the crowd got bigger, the whole thing became impersonal and then I became strong and powerful. Television's even better; it's even more impersonal. Later on, when people began to walk away, I was so convinced myself that I used to wonder how anybody could walk away from these pearls of wisdom. When you are pitching you believe it. You don't have to be persuaded except when you're doing it. You don't have to believe it later. "It doesn't make much real difference, if you belieye enough, where you take them. I used to knock the doctors and let nature do it. Remember Bernarr MacFadden: he'd outlived all the doctors. I'd tell them that what I was selling was not medicine; this is food. And still they'd come up afterwards and say, 'I'll have a bottle of your medicine, Doc.' What we were practicing, I suppose, was mass hypnosis." That was a formidable prep school of Dick Nixon's Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum lost Don't Call Me re- By Murray Kempton Bene- When the steel strike was over, Richard Nixon went virtuously rook- into the shadows. There remained, however, one small duty to the country he had served so well and SO modestly. INA, He had to brief the prints. a And so the Secretary of Labor of the United States of America tory. sat down with the Vice President of the United States to divide up one the high governmental duty of calling the magazines and giving is them the inside story of Mr. Nixon's part in the settlement. they It is reported that Mr. Nixon immediately took on the assign- arry the ment of calling Elliott V. Bell, publisher of Business Week. The h conference proceeded to United States News and World Report. ey mble Secretary Mitchell was modest about his standing with David give Lawrence, and it was thus duly decided that Vice President Nixon for was the best man to represent the firm here. h e And so we have Richard Nixon himself to thank for the hing flowering of "Inside the Steel Settlement" this week on the cover of Business Week, in the bowels of Newsweek, ("The Facts of ook- Life by R. Nixon"), in the middle of United States News ("The too Inside Story of What Happened in Steel"). This way, no one got beat but the Nation. * Get this fellow workers, you're free. Richard Nixon has invented the greatest thing for tired journalists since the wire service. It'll be him in the White House and us in the Press Club bar. No one will have to work except the publishers, who will sit in their offices waiting for the phone to ring. Considine will have to stick around to help Hearst with his syntax, but then he's always worked harder than the rest of us anyway. There will be no more White House press conference; there iss won't even be press releases. Richard Nixon will have found that eel- national purpose that everyone was so worried about; in him the ain Voice of America will speak loud and clear: "Don't call me; I'll call you." Newsweek starts off its inside story this way: "The Vice President of the United States stood up before the ict 10 top leaders of the nation's steel industry, the Steel Companies to Coordinating Committee. His tone was quiet and friendly but firm vn as a girder. 'I just want to tell you gentlemen some of the facts ld of life,' he said. ed The assumption-or at least the hope is-that the leg man in e- this case was not the Vice President but the Secretary of Labor. y. There then comes to mind this dialogue, assuming that Malcolm n- is Muir, Sr., editor-in-chief of Newsweek, was on the desk when e Mitchell called up: S The Secretary of Labor; "First a quote and then the color, 0 O.K.?" a Muir, "O.K., but fast, huh?" a The Secretary of Labor: "O.K., O.K., Nixon said, my notes aren't very good but make it 'Gentlemen' and then-yes this is clear-'I just want to tell you gentlemen some of the facts of life.' He was very quiet about it, quiet but I'd say friendly but firm, very firm, firm as a girder." Muir: "All right, all right, go ahead." * * * There will be those, there always are, who do not consider this an entirely wholesome trend. For one thing, the inside story seems in every case to come from one of two parties, the Vice President of the United States and stringer for McGraw Hill or the Secretary of Labor and stringer for Newsweek. The other parties were less accommodating; no one for instance seems to have remembered what Roger Blough said when stringer Nixon began explaining that there were the birds and, on the other hand, there were the bees. What we have, in short, is the government's version of events. It is a wonderfully delusive prospect Richard Nixon holds out before us; from whom could one gather the real inside inside story of the Vice President of the United States better than from the Vice President of the United States? Lie down, boys, and relax in peace; Big Brother will fill you in. Rep oduce he Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum MAGAZINE PAGE FIVE NEW YORK POST, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1960 43 Brains Race MAX LERNER While most Americans are focusing on two men in the EVERYTHINGS Presidential election campaign, they are in danger of forgetting that their choice will carry with it much more than the choice of FINE! the man. It also carries the traditions and future direction of his party. VOTE Richard Nixon is obviously gunning for the "independent FOR voter" whose party ties are slight, and for the marginal Demo- NIXON crat who might be wooed away from his party. Hence he stays away from his own Republican party links, attaching himself to President Eisenhower as a person but not to the Republican party. It is a smart tactic, and may work. But it is worth saying that party government has some point USIA to it, and party attachments have meaning if they are not fol- REPORT lowed blindly. The party system in America keeps the mass of GAITHER voters from becoming merely a collection of stray unattached PRESTIGE atoms whirling about in the void. The two major parties in REPORT America are like polar magnets. Each has traditionally attracted ON STANFORD its own kind of loyalties, its own brand of leaders and members DEFENSE and interest groups. * * The other day a New York morning tabloid attacked Kennedy for "the company he keeps," singling out J. K. Galbraith and Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. for specially derisive treatment. It is a dangerous kind of argument, since it draws attention to the fact ROCKEFELLER that the Presidential candidates are not isolated men, but that each belongs to a particular party and a particular intellectual climate. When you choose one of the two men, the party climate ₦ and territory go with him. DEFENSE For the past half century, since Woodrow Wilson's eléction, the Democratic party has served as a magnet for labor and the liberals, for Negroes and Jews and Catholics and other minorities, for school teachers and university faculty, for writers and artists, for intellectuals of every category. The current attacks on Galbraith and Schlesinger remind me of the similar attacks on Franklin Roosevelt for the college professors who flocked to his standard and became parts of his "brain trust." If I were a Republican strategist I would stay HERE LIES clear of this kind of approach. To attack the intellectuals around Kennedy is to spread the word that the intellectuals are in fact drawn to him. It is to broadcast the tidings that his administra- tion might be one of brains. Surely it is too late in American history to continue with the shabby and suicidal anti-intellectualism of past Presidential campaigns. The race between the world democratic bloc and the Red-Dogging world communist bloc is as much a brains race as it is anything else. Whether America will survive or perish in the long struggle ahead will depend on how effectively it organizes its intelligence, both scientific and social. To fall behind in the mobilization of intelligence is to lose the race and lose the world. MURRAY KEMPTON Sen. Kennedy has the quality of urgency in him. He is telling whoever listens that it is later than they think. He advocates En Route With Kennedy. plauding at prop intervals; they do not screech an ambitious program of social welfare. When his opponents ask John F. Kennedy's open convertible, its floor and moan in isolation; they run after him with what he plans to use for money, he answers in effect that it fetlock deep in soggy confetti, prowled the a continual universal roar. They sound like foot- is better to have increasing expenditures which will be met and streets of Philadelphia yesterday like a vacuum ball crowds in the last quarter when the home covered by increasing national income than to have a shrinking cleaner. team, the short ender, has gone two touchdowns national income which will not meet or cover even the current He made six speeches during the day; their in front. expenditures. running time was a grand total of 42 minutes. Yesterday when Kennedy was introduced-at But there is a more important question to ask Sen. Kennedy. But he was on the streets nearly six hours, back- Temple, the crowd set up a sudden chant of Not "what are you going to use for money?" but "whom are you tracking enough so that a Kennedy cultist could "We want Jack" over and over: his voice came going to use for people?" choose his corners and see him pass at least five back, clipped and slightly impatient, "Thank you, * * times. thank you, thank you." He held his hands, too, It is too easy to forget that the wealth of nations is their But wherever he lit, his crowds were im- like a defensive captain telling the customers to human material and that the motive power of nations is their mense; his main open air rally at Reyburn Park keep quiet so the line can hear the signals. organized brainpower. The Presidency, as Jefferson said in one downtown drew the sort of throng which is cus- He taunts the few hecklers he gets in a tone of his letters even before he attained it, is a "splendid misery." tomarily overestimated at 50,000; some of its of command in extraordinary contrast with Rich- If it gets isolated from the talented and resourceful people, as members had stood more than an hour; he gave ard Nixon's tone of grievance. Yesterday, outside Eisenhower's Presidency got isolated; it can become an intolerable them a six-minute speech. a Negro housing project, some brave conscripts and ineffectual misery. He went through safe precincts and doubtful held up a "For Peace and Prosperity, Vote for This is what gives meaning to the recent full-page ad listing ones; he had one mile's progress through an Nixon and Lodge" sign. Kennedy announced that the lawyers, writers, artists, historians, and social scientists who area so monolithically Democratic that its chil- he had a thing to tell these friends of Mr. have repaired to the standard raised by Kennedy. Among the dren, when they go out on trick-or-treat night, Nixon's. most meaningful is a list of specialists in foreign policy and write "Kennedy" in soap on the store windows. Pointing that lean brown finger, he said, "Mr. world politics. These are the men who have spent their lives * ** * Nixon calls a $1.25 minimum wage extreme and studying politics among nations, political and psychological war- His speeches were as short, simple and brutal they wave a sign about prosperity." fare, the aid race, the undeveloped countries, and the communist as a blackjack. The Kennedys play the game He went on to say that the Republican Party societies themselves. Their suffrage should carry the weight that like the pros; ahead in the last quarter and the is against civil rights (which is, of course, why attachès to their knowledge. other team gets the ball, they red-dog the passer. Jim Eastland votes Republican). America needs not only a new program of domestic and Yesterday, standing in the rain outside Tem- * * foreign policies. It needs men with enough talent and dedication ple University, Jack Kennedy even dared red- This is harsh and extreme and oversimple to carry them out. The brains race will not wait. I am convinced dog President Eisenhower, the coach and a sacred stuff, but it is the tone of the winning side in that Kennedy, himself something of an impllectual, will gather subject until now. most elections. around him the most brilliant group of brain trusters since "I'm going to make Mr. Nixon an offer," he It is in fact the language winners habitually Franklin Roosevelt. said. "Let President Eisenhower come with him speak, and a political barometer as indicative as to the fifth debate." the eggs that were thrown at Nixon. Make no mistake, he went on; Eisenhower I remember in 1956 seeing one poor Steven- isn't on the ballot this year. son leaflet bearer beaten to the ground by Re- Play Now, Pay Later "It's Nixon versus Kennedy and I look to the publicans outside Independence Hall when Nixon From "The Crisis We Face: Automation and the Cold War," future with some degree of hope." was visiting there. Coming home, a man on the by George Steele and Paul Kircher (McGraw-Hill, $4.95). He has nervous feet and nervous hands: he bus I had not seen before and have not seen The Russians are not so well off as we are, and they know seems to pant a little. The nerves have nothing since-the Devil, I suppose-said that his experi- it. Their slogans promise them that they will live better if they to do with confidence; he is the most confident ence had been that the side that plays rough is work harder, and their standard of living gradually has been political candidate I have ever seen. They have the side that wins. "Show me a candidate hit granted slow increase. They are urged that it is noble to make something to do with personal, almost boyish with an egg," he said, "and I'll show you a loser." sacrifices SO that their country can be independent and powerful. superstition; you do not, on peril of the wrath You can look it up; it's true. A man was saying In contrast, what are we told? That the good things of of God, relax when you're ahead yesterday that, after all, the professional foot- life are already here, that a credit card will get you anything + * ball team that draws the most penalties wins the you want before you are old enough to vote. Pay later. There is now something different in his most games. Something to do with keeping your We probably shall. Every other major civilization has. crowds. They do not stand and look at him ap- mind on the business. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum COPY December 3, 1957 Personal Dear Murray: This is just a note to say that I have just had the opportunity of reading your column of November 15 concerning the actions of the President's Committee on Government Contracts, I think you would probably agree that this column particular cases, and the purpose of my writing you is to let you know that I have been assured by Mr. Jacob Seidenberg that his Committee would be more than willing to provide you X - President's Committee on Govt. Contracts Kempton, Murray - folder contained something less than the complete facts about these with the complete facts about these cases or any other matters with which they are concerned in the future. The next time you are in town I would be most happy to discuss this further with you. With best regards, Sincerely, Charles K. McWhorter Legislative Assistant to the Vice President CMcW/amk Mr. Murray Kempton New York Post New York, New York Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum November19, 1957 Memorandum To:RN From: KAND Your old friend Murray Kempton is back in action!!! check Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum NYPost 1957 Modesty By Murray Kempton There is a mounting conviction among informed observers that Richard Nixon is currently more popular with Negro voters than any other politician. I cannot quarrel with their findings, since I can't think of any politicians who deserve the faith and trust of Negro voters any more than Richard Nixon, or of anything worse to say about poli- ticians than that. Nixon is chairman of the President's Committee on Govern- ment Contracts, the body set up by Harry Truman and continued by Dwight D. Eisenhower to supervise enforcement of that clause in defense contracts which bans discrimination against Negroes. The Vice President is generally represented as feeling that this is a position at once too important and too sensitive to be used for his own political profit, and is loath therefore to talk about it publicly. He only breaks that rule at campaign meetings largely populated by Negroes; on such occasions, he lowers his head and stammers modestly that nothing is nearer his heart or more con- sumptive of his energies than the work of the President's Commit- tee on Defense Contracts. On April 20, 1955, Herbert Hill of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People swore out a complaint to Nixon against Esso Standard of Baton Rouge, Union Carbide and Carbon of Texas City, Cities Service of Lake Charles, La., and other South- ern refineries and the unions which represent them for flagrant, persistent and indubitable discrimination against Negroes. The heart of the complaint was that these companies hired Negroes only as sweepers and janitors, let them work in higher grades only on sweepers' pay, and barred them by custom and union contract from advancement to skilled categories. The bill of particulars assembled for the President's Commit- tee by the NAACP was beyond argument. The system described both in the paper of the union contracts and the affidavits of the aggrieved Negro employes needs investigation about as much as a washroom sign saying "White Only"; it is just that open. Over the next two years, the NAACP received no word about its complaint beyond a bare acknowledgement from Nixon's execu- tive director. In the interim, Hill labored in other vineyards; with the assistance of the CIO Oil Workers, the NAACP won valuable improvements in two plants; thanks to the efforts of these private bodies, as an instance, 40 Negroes have been promoted to the skilled trades pool at Magnolia Petroleum in Houston. This is no small thing; but in general the situation in the Southern refineries remainReproducad at the Richard Nixon, Rresidential. Library and Museum Last June, the NAACP wrote Nixon as chairman of the Presi- dent's Committee on Government Contracts asking for some report on the status of its 25-month-old complaint. On July 8, this reply came back-signed, not by Nixon, but by Jacob Seidenberg, his committee's executive director: "In order to assure full compliance with your request of June 5, 1957, the Defense Department has been requested to review the current hiring and employment practices of [here are listed the corporations named in the complaint], and report their findings to the committee. "The Department of Defense has given the Committee's re- quest the highest possible priority. You, of course, will be further advised as soon as we have received the Department's report con- cerning this matter. Cordially yours, etc." We have to assume that Seidenberg is writing the English language. The inevitable conclusion from reading that letter with that assumption is: (1) The committee did not even transmit the April, 1957, complaint to the Defense Dept. and (2) The committee has now transmitted to the Defense Dept. only the NAACP's letter of inquiry, which was merely a summary, and the NAACP's S original complaint lies embalmed, unread in its files. And, what is more, the NAACP has not heard a word from the President's Committee in the five months since the Defense Dept. was sent in passionate pursuit of this matter. And the oil company case does not sleep alone in Richard e Nixon's files. In July, 1956, the NAACP filed a complaint of dis- 1 crimination against seven aircraft manufacturers, including Boeing e d in Wichita and Lockheed in Marietta, Ga. The bill of particulars spelled out a situation just as flagrant as in the oil refiineries. After 15 months of silence from Nixon's committee, J. H. Cal- 1- houn, president of the NAACP's Atlanta branch, wrote to find out what progress could be reported from Lockheed in Marietta, Ga. Calhoun got this answer from Seidenberg: S "You will recall that on April 24, 1957, we wrote to advise you that the case had been referred back to the contracting agency for further action. We have been following the matter closely, and S present indications are that we shall receive a report from the agency by the middle of November. "Please be assured that this complaint is under active con- sideration, etc." It is a dreadful mistake for a civil servant to depart from the form letter composed for such occasions. Seidenberg's mistake in so departing proclaims itself in the sentence: "We have been following the matter closely." For, in point of fact, NAACP's Hill and the International Assn. of Machinists have together taken various steps at Lockheed which have improved the situation measurably if not spectacularly. Ma- rietta is one place where there has been progress. That is no thanks to Nixon and Seidenberg, but I hardly think them exempt from the habit public officials have of grabbing credit for other people's achievements. The only possible reason for Seidenberg's modesty about the improvement at Lockheed is that he doesn't know about it. The reason for Richard Nixon's modesty about his role as chairman of the President's Committee on Government Contracts is that, on the record, he could hardly be anything else. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum THE PRESIDENT'S COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS WASHINGTON 25, D.C. November 21, 1957 MEMORANDUM To: Charles McWhorter Legislative Assistant to the Vice President From: Jacob Seidenberg Executive Director In accordance with your request concerning Murray Kempton's article in the New York Post, I am enclosing for your information a chronological report of our activities in the Boeing Aircraft and the Lockheed case at Marietta, Georgia. All that I can say is that whatever progress has been made in these cases has been done as a re- sult of the pressure the Committee has brought to bear on these cases rather than what Mr. Herbert Hill has done. Admittedly we have not released any- thing about these cases because they have not been disposed of and our Committee does not make any statement about its complaint cases. It is the over- all Committee policy not to make any statement or release about complaint cases even when they are satisfactorily resolved. Encls. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum CHRONOLOGY OF COMMITTEE ACTION REGARDING THE OIL CASES April 20, 1955 -- The Committee received from the NAACP complaints alleging violations of the nondiscrimination clause by the Esso Standard Oil Company, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Cities Service Refining Corporation, Lake Charles, Louisiana; Lion Oil Company, El Dorado, Arkansas; and Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Company, Texas City, Texas. May 6, 1955 -- Vice President Nixon appointed a special subcommit- tee headed by Mr. John Minor Wisdom to consider the comppaints. Messrs. William P. Rogers, Thomas Pike and James Nabrit were designated to serve with Mr. Wisdom. Subsequently, Secretary Mit- chell was designated to serve as Consultant. January 21, 1955 -- The special subcommittee agreed that the complaints against the companies should be explored informally and that Mr. Wisdom should institute negotiations with representatives of the oil companies. July 22, 1955 -- Mr. Wisdom advised the Executive Director by tele- phone that he had had two conferences with repre- sentatives of the Esso Standard Oil Company in Baton Rouge and conferences with representatives of Cities Service Refining Corporation. Mr. Wisdom further stated that these industry representatives said they were in sym- pathy with the philosophy of the Committee and approved of its methods of approach and that they would prefer to have the cases settled on a broad basis rather than dealing with specific allegations of the complaints. September 1, 1955 -- Mr. Wisdom reported that substantial progress was being made with all of the companies cited in the complaint with the exception of the Lion Oil Company. In this connection it should be noted that at this time the Lion Oil Company had recently merged with the Monsanto Chemical Company. September 9, 1955 -- Mr. H. J. Voorhies of the Esso Standard Oil Company, Oil Baton Rouge, Louisiana, met with the Sub-Committee on Review in order to advise them of his plans for the implementation of nondiscriminatory employment at the Baton Rouge plant. January 16, 1956 -- Mr. H. J. Voorhies advised Mr. Wisdom by letter -- (1) That the company had placed 25 Negro employees into mechanical-helper jobs, and (2) That 296 Negro employees had applied for consideration for transfer to mechanical-helper openings and that 55 of them made satisfactory scores. Thirty-two were considered the best qualified and were offered transfers to the mechanical-helper classifica- tion. Five elected to decline the transfers and two were subsequently re- turned to their former jobs. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 2 - Memorandum to Dr. Seidenberg November 18, 1957 June 1956 -- The Executive Director attempted to get Mr. M. X. Shannahan, of the Department of Defense, to inves- tigate the complaints but negotiations for his services were never com- pleted. July 3, 1957 -- The Executive Director and Dr. Houchins discussed with Mr. Bannerman the problem of processing the complaints against the oil companies. Mr. Bannerman agreed to accept the complaints for investigation and the full complaints were forwarded to the Defense Department on July 8, 1957. July 29, 1957 -- Captain C. L. Gilbert, the person assigned to the complaints by the Department of Defense, met with the Executive Director and Dr. Houchins for a full discussion of the com- plaints and the action to be pursued during the investigation. August 2, 1957 -- Detailed instructions for the conduct of the inves- tigations were was sent Captain C. L. Gilbert. October 25, 1957 -- The Committee received the investigative reports of the complaints involving Cities Service Refining Corporation, Esso Standard Oil Company, and the Lion Oil Company. November 8, 1957 -- The Committee received the investigative report in= volving the Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Company, Texas City, Texas. The complaints are now being analyzed. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum November 21, 1957 MEMORANDUM TO: Jacob Seidenberg Executive Director FROM: Joseph R. Houchins Director of Compliance SUBJECT: Chronology of Committee Action Regarding Lockheed Air- craft Corporation, Marietta, Georgia (File No. 298) July 23, 1956 - The Committee received a complaint from the Atlanta Branch of the NAACP alleging discrimination against Negroes in regard to hiring, upgrading, training, and other incidence of employment. (Similar complaints were filed by the Washington Bureau NAACP and the Gate City Young Republican Club on August 3, 1956, and September 6, 1956, respectively). July 23, 1957 - The complaint was transmitted to the Department of Defense for investigation. October 21, 1956 - The Committee received a report of investigation from the Department of Defense. The report indi- cated that a reinvestigation would be conducted at the corporation during the first quarter of the Fiscal Year 1958. November 19, 1956 - The case was presented to the Sub-Committee on Review, which recommended that the Department of Defense -- 1. Make every possible effort to bring the cor- poration into compliance with the provisions of the standard nondis- crimination clause. 2. Supply, on a quarterly basis, reports showing -- a. Number of Negroes hired during the re- porting period by occupations and departments. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 2 - Memorandum to Dr. Seidenberg November 21, 1957 b. Number of Negro upgrades and promotions during the reporting period by occupations and departments. c. Number of Negro women hired during the reporting period by occupations and departments. 3. Request the corporation to issue to the Atlanta United States Employment Office and all company hiring and supervisory personnel a statement of nondiscriminatory employment policy. December 20, 1956 - The Committee received from Herbert Hill, Labor Secretary of the NAACP a "Summary Report Re Status of Negro Workers at Lockheed Aircraft Corporation Plant, Marietta, Georgia", which was transmitted to the Department of Defense as supple- mental information to the complaint. June 28, 1957 - A new complaint of discrimination was filed by Mr. Bryant R. Britt, an employee of the company. The com- plaint alleged that the company violated the provisions of the clause -- 1. By restricting the employment of Negroes to certain specified areas. Allegedly, approximately 90 percent of all Negro em- ployees are in two departments. m 2. By requiring Negro workers to use a separate cafe- teria and segregated rest room dispensary and drinking facilities. July 19, 1957 - A report of investigation conducted by the Department of Defense was received by the Committee. A follow-up re- port was not requested because of the receipt of the complaint mentioned under the date of June 28, 1957 which had to be submitted to the Sub- Committee on Review. July 22, 1957 - The Sub-Committee on Review considered the matter of whether the Committee had jurisdiction over the complaint which alleged in part that the corporation violated the clause by requir- ing Negroes to use a separate cafeteria and other segregated facilities. Following a review of the complaint the Sub-Committee recommended that the Department of Defense designate a top ranking civilian procurement officer or military officer to meet with Mr. C. S. Gross, the corpora- tion's President for the purpose of getting him to take action which would result in the desegregation of facilities and the elimination of other discriminatory employment practices at the Marietta plant. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 3 - Memorandum to Dr. Seidenberg November 21, 1957 July 26, 1957 - The Executive Director met with representatives of the Defense Department to discuss the actions to be taken by the agency relative to the Sub-Committee on Review's recommendations. The contracting agency, after considerable discussion, agreed to comply with the Committee's request. August 8, 1957 - Dr. Seidenberg discussed with Mr. Max Golden, Deputy for Procurement to the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force, the Lockheed, Marietta, Georgia plant situation. He informed Mr. Golden of the Sub-Committee on Review's feeling with regard to the com- plaints and its recommended action. Mr. Golden's cooperation was soli- cited in obtaining a top official to present the Air Force's position to Lockheed's top management. October 31, 1957 - Mr. Boris Shishkin informed the Committee that the International Association of Machinists have orga- nized the Lockheed plant and have integrated their "Jim Crow" local. November 14, 1957 - A report of investigation of the complaint filed by Mr. B. R. Britt (see June 28, 1957, above) was re- ceived from the Department of Defense. November 20, 1957 - The investigative report of the complaint filed by Mr. Britt against the corporation was presented to the Committee. Following a review and discussion of the case the Com- mittee requested the Department of Defense -- 1. To designate an appropriate official, at the rank of Assistant Secretary or higher, to urge the corporation's Presi- dent to initiate such action as will result in the desegregation of the Marietta plant. 2. To instruct the corporation's President -- a. That segregated facilities in or apper- taining to departments or areas where Government work is performed violate the provisions of the clause. b. That contracts being performed at the Marietta plant will not be renewed unless manage- ment initiates such action as will result in the desegregation of the plant facilities and work area. 3. To submit to the Committee within 60 days a re- port on the action taken by the company. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum THE PRESIDENT'S COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS WASHINGTON 25, D.C. November 21, 1957 MEMORANDUM TO: Dr. Jacob Seidenberg Executive Director FROM: Joseph R. Houchins Director of Compliance SUBJECT: Chronology of Committee Action Regarding Boeing Aircraft Corporation, Withita, Kansas (File 269 - 282) May 17, 1957 -- The Committee received from the NAACP complaints alleging that the corporation had discriminated against Negroes in regard to initial hiring, pre-induction train- ing, transfer, promotion, and other aspects of employment. The cases were referred to the Department of Defense for investigation. October 9, 1957 -- The first investigative reports of the cases were received by the Committee. These reports were not complete, therefore, supplementary information is being requested. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum THE PRESIDENT'S COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS WASHINGTON 25, D.C. November 21, 1957 MEMORANDUM To: Charles McWhorter Legislative Assistant to the Vice President From: Jacob Seidenberg Executive Director In accordance with your request concerning Murray Kempton's article in the New York Post, I am enclosing for your information a chronological report of our activities in the Boeing Aircraft and the Lockheed case at Marietta, Georgia. All that I can say is that whatever progress has been made in these cases has been done as a re- sult of the pressure the Committee has brought to bear on these cases rather than what Mr. Herbert Hill has done. Admittedly we have not released any- thing about these cases because they have not been disposed of and our Committee does not make any statement about its complaint cases. It is the over- all Committee policy not to make any statement or release about complaint cases even when they are satisfactorily resolved. Encls. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum OFFICE OF THE vice president WASHINGTON 7/29/57 MEMORANDUM TO: RN FROM: CKMc 0KM W I spent 50 minutes talking with Murray Kempton of the New York Post this morning. He was paying a "courtesy call" and covered a wide area of topics, mostly related to the civil rights controversy. He volunteer some kind words about you personally in connection with civil rights and also about the Republican Party. It will represent some sort of millenium if we were ever to get Kempton to print something which was favorable to you, which wasn't qualified and full of reservations, but this sort of softening up process should help him understand the integrity and high purposeof your motivation in this area. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Dear Mr. Vice President: There is a question DATE I'd like to ask you this afternoon; since it's long-winded, I thought I8d just send it over early so it wouldn't consume too much time in the asking. It goes to our efforts to define the difference between the Eisenhower Republicans and Harry Truman in dealing with the Communist menace: (1) You said yesterday that, in voting for Greek-Turkish aid in 1947, Congressman Javits had passed the fundamental test of understanding the Communist menace. In the same session, Javits also voted against an appropriation for the work of the House Un-American Activities Committee. D If he had been in the majority then, there would have been no Hiss case. Did he pass or flunk the test then ? (2) You have said several times over the last few days that the President would never underestimate the Communist menace here and abroad. On Junex2x 21 1955, at Geneva, the president was quoted by Elie Abel in the New York Times as "stating his belief that the Soviet leaders were as earnestly desirous of peace as their Western counterparts." Margaret Higgins reported in the Tribune that the president said that he had personally talked to every nue member of the Russian and was confident that every one of them wanted peace." Daxyauxthinkxthxt Do you feel that in this case the president was underestimating or overestimating the correctly good faith of a government, which as yourself say has broken every promise it ever ever made. Thanks, Murray Kempton Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum