Standard Oil Censors Billboards Showing HONOLULU'-'&RCCORD Shark Gulping Fish The Standard Oil Co. which is , " „ The Newspaper Hawaii Needs , working hard to build a refinery- on Sand Island in Honolulu har­ VOLUME *y- NO. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 22, 1956 bor in face of strong local oppo­ sition recently put the pressure on California outdoor advertising companies. Before the election, billboards were being put up by people and groups opposing a measure that would profit the oil companies. The Standard Oil Co. was the principal backer of Proposition 4 Hotel Stre^ races which was designed to bypass legislative process. State Attorney Brown declared that “the intent of this hill is to give the oil companies an ad­ vantage over the State.” On the billboards were the words “Stop the OIL Sharks!’’ . Out of Bounds Ban Below the words was a shark (more on page 2) Fire-Eating Col. City Unprotected from Sign Erector! Set To Visit Ire On Amusements No Law Now To Bar Any Size It’s something city authorities BY STAFF WRITER aren’t talking about at the mo­ As signs look at present, the ment, but there isn’t really a thing “Hotel St. Better Business Bureau” at present to stop an advertiser may well have started Hotel St. from putting up 100 ft. signs in and of course itself, well on the many parts of Honolulu and in road to an oblivion of padlocked virtually all rural Oahu. Since C-C Attorney Norman doors, abandoned tables and chairs Chung recently ruled that parts and dead neon lights. • of the building code pertaining to What started as a move to clear signs do not hold legal water, and a few operators of “flat games” off since the sign ordinance under Hotel St. has snowballed into consideration is not yet law—if, something near hysteria with the indeed, it ever will be—there is nothing to prohibit signs any size military, and the word has goneout except in parts of the city where that unless Hotel St. can clean it­ other types of zoning bar them. self up in jig time, the whole • If the ladies of the Outdoor Cir­ area may be put out of bounds cle find out the present state of to servicemen. Thus the action affairs, some city officials fear they SAILORS ON LEAVE get their shoes shined outside a originally aimed at the ‘.‘flat will camp at City Hall until some­ Hotel St. restaurant close to amusement centers and games" may result in putting thing is done. And if' it isn’t done hula girls that have roused the ire of a HASP colonel. dozens of entirely innocent peo­ the way the ladies want it, they ple out of work. may start some sort of vigorous Unless the colonel and the military cool off, this picture In good measure, the Ire of the campaign against someone, may be shortly out of date and sailors a sight of the military is reportedly inspired by There is practically nothing, any past on Hotel St. the experience of a HASP colonel official will tell you, he likes less THIS SIGN, like many others in who visited Hotel St. in mufti and than being the target of a vigorous Honolulu, would run the risk of came buck seething about what’ he campaign by an organized group being declared illegal under the saw and heard and tasted. That’s of aroused women. right—tasted. The colonel didn’t But the plain truth is—there's proposed sign ordinance, and these Toner Aimed at Removing Mrs. Flores, like even the food he got in Hotel nothing to stop signs 100 ft. high, signs receive the disapproval of St. restaurants and hot dog stands. or even 500 ft. high, in most parts the Outdoor Circle, But at the But more serious was the colo­ of the city. So there it is, ladies. moment, the sign would be legal 14 Other Employes, Witnesses Say nel’s failure to toe amused in the You can take it from here. even if it were 50 ft. high. Focus of the appeal of Mrs. 27, 1955, quoting TOner as saying, (more on page 6) Esther K. Flores, Maluhia Hos­ “If there’s one person Im going to pital nursing superintendent, of get rid of, it’s Mrs. Flores. That Fagan Reported About To Back Fight firing from that job shifted sharp­ b—h! She hasn’t the decency to ly Tuesday from the nurse to Ed­ (more on page 6) Wash. D^r^olumnist ward P. Toner, business adminis­ Promotion; "Talent Show" Planned trator of the hospital, as the ap­ Hints Climate May Be peal hearing went into its second By Edward Rohrbough the rumor was regarded hopefully, session before the C-C civil serv­ Toner's Exam Record Target of Red-Probers Paul Fagan Jr. was rumored since it involves the manager of ice commission. this week as a possible entry into the Civic, the only place con­ Missing from Files the field of local boxing promotion, sidered suitable for holding major Charles R. Kendall, HGEA di­ Is the Eastland committee com­ now that Boxing Enterprises, Ltd. indoor fights. But developments rector representing Mrs. Flores, in­ mittee coming to Hawaii after cli­ has become virtually inactive. along this line are still considered At Civil Service Dept. mate, or Reds? far in the future. troduced witnesses and evidence to That’s a question suggested de­ Fagan, however would not take show that Toner not only said re­ With E. P. Toner, administrator licately by Fred C. Othman, who an active part in the promotion, “TALENT SHOW” PLANNED peatedly Mrs. Flores would “have of the C-C health department, in according to the report, but would In the meantime, the nearest to go,” but that he gave the HGEA writes a Washington column for a possibility for a profesional card focus through the turn taken in number of papers. in leave that end to a partner, AI a list of the names of 14 other em­ the appeal of Mrs. Esther K. Karasick, manager of the Civic in Honolulu arose from activities the Pacific, notes Othman, “is a by the Honolulu Boxing Managers ployes who would also “have to go” Flores that she was unfairly fired subject investigated intensively by Auditorium. Informed sources said along with Mrs. Flores because, ac­ at Maluhia Hospital, the RECORD lawgivers for at least six years; that, in event the team material­ Guild to stage a “talent show.” As cording to Toner, they were trying checked into a rumor—long circu­ izes, Herbert Minn, boxing coach at now planned, tills show would to undermine him. I’d imagine it about the most in­ lated—that Toner’s records are tensively investigated subject yet.” the University of Hawaii, might be feature ■ Clem Miller, flashy wel­ missing from civil service files. asked to act as matchmaker. terweight who decisioned Dan Still, the boys .from Capitol Hill Santiago his last showing here, HGEA field workers testified The truth, it turned out; was are coming, among them a “lame In fight circles anxious to see the Toner had relented about discharg­ only part of that. From Mrs. Nesta, duck,” a senator who’s been beaten, revival of professional boxing here, (more on page 44 ing the others, but remained ada­ Gallas, civil service personnel di­ but who remains a senator until mant on Mrs. Flores. In an effort rector, the RECORD learned that his successor takes his place in to settle difficulties between the Toner has a- very large personnel January. Police Sergeants, Ex-Cops Get Heave-0 employes and Toner, Kendall history on file in the civil service “And how better,” asks Othman, brought out through questions and department. "to end a senatorial career than his own testimony, he had held a But evidence that he ever took an by a hard job of work investigating From Ginza After Brief Rhubarb meeting with the 15 employes and examination to enter service of Reds among the bougainvillea?” advised them to pay proper res­ the C-C government is highly in­ Of course the main target is the A rhubarb betwen two police The most aggrieved party, one of pect to Toner and Dr. Katsuki and complete. There is a grade re­ do their jobs. ILWU and Harry Bridges, Oth­ sergeants and two ex-policemen the ex-policemen, says he was sit­ corded, but there is no trace of man nnt.es, and he winds up this Inst Wednesday night at the Gin­ ting with a party of friends, in­ the examination on which the way; “I trust the senators can do za has provided midtowji Hono­ cluding another ek-cop, when one Dan Ainoa, HGEA deputy di­ grade is supposed to have been some good in Hawaii and if they lulu with a conversation piece for of the sergeants, off-duty and sit­ rector, and James Clark, HGEA secred, nor any sign of his exam­ garner themselves some winter tan, the past week, but the version you ting with another sergeant at a field representative, testified that ination paper. I won’t begrudge it. But the ILWU believe depends on the person you nearby table, made a comment. Toner had referred to Mrs. Flores Likewise, a number of complaints has its headquarters in San Fran­ listen to. The RECORD inter­ As nearly as the ex-policeman re­ as a "b---h” before them and reportedly filed against Toner -by calls, it was as follows: stated she would have to be dis­ cisco and nobody's ever told me viewed both sides, and even a subordinate employes because of why investigating statesmen nearly third, Roy Matsuoka, proprietor “I don’t like your looks.” charged. Clark read from a memo his attitude toward them are also he had written at the time, May always have to go all the way to of the Ginza, and offers them to Tile ex-cop says he didn’t parti- not to be found in his file. the mid-Pacific for the facts.” reader^ here. (more on page 2) PAGE 2 HONOLULU RECORD NOVEMBER 22, 1956 Police Sergeant, TRAGEDY IN HUNGARY Reasons for Firing Mrs. Flores Aired, Ex-Cops, In Beef The current bloody military action in Hungary by the Soviet army, taking place shortly after the severe and extreme criticism of Joseph Stalin’s conduct by Attacked bv Kendall as "Plot" At Ginza Commifnist leaders of the , shows that .(from page 1) words are not being followed by deeds. Preliminary skirmishing in a Toner had-,.- once put Mrsl. Fiores cularly like the looks of the po­ long-awaited battle before ithe under a job description that was liceman, either, but in the short civil service commission opened last never submitted to civil service at verbal affray that followed, he Stalin was criticized for extreme brutality and the Thursday when Dr. David Katsuki alL This act was in violation of had no desire to engage in com­ “cult of the individual.” In down-grading Stalin, the explained the charges on which civil service procedure, if not rules. bat. he fired Mrs. Esther K. Flores as Mrs. Gallas testified. Communist leaders of the Soviet Union restored Mar­ superintendent of nurses at Ma- On one occasion, . Mrs. Gallas Things quieted for a bit when shal Tito to a place of prominence in their circle. luhia Home and Charles Kendall, testified, Dr. Katsuki's department the second sergeant sent over a round of drinks. But then, sajrs the , a plague among Communists until the 20th HGEA director, countered in.,be­ offered a suggestion for the eli­ Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, half of Mrs. Flores charging that mination of 10 jobs to,effect a first ex-cop, the bellicose ser­ her removal came as the result of saving of $30^000 to ’the city’. But geant started things up again with found praise instead of condemnation. a “plot" by the hospital', adminis­ Mrs. Gallas also noted that the some more talk, and again there tration, or part of it. . saving would not amount to that was some jawing back and forth. Among the faults of T'.toism which Tito was de­ much—the only one of the 10 po­ Although Kendall did not spe­ BIG MAN STEPS IN nounced for was independent action by a Communist cifically state what part of the sitions in which any oneVw as actu­ Party of a country which did not toe the line of the administration was m^ant, his ally? employed was that of .Mrs. Flores. The other nine were either At about that point, says the Communist Party of the* Soviet KUnion. questioning strongly indicated he ex-cop, the. other ex-cop, a much was aiming at Edward P. Toner, temporary, or suggested jobs in which ho one was working at the larger man, declared himself in. Since the vindication of Marshal Tito, Communist hospital administrator. If there was going to be any fight­ Dr. Katsuki, head of the C-C time. ing, he'd do it. Mrs. Matsuoka; wife parties and people in other countries have adopted a health department, in his opening “WE’LL GET YOU OUT" of the proprietor, entered the scene new approach to their political problems and life. statement charged that Mrs. Flores about then and made as if to had roved incapable of making out Mrs. Flores testified that when hold back the bellicose cop. This contributed to demonstrations in Poland by suitable schedules for the nurses she first met Dr. Katsuki and Ton­ people demanding a greater measure of freedom. In and of functioning in the capacity “Then this guy wanted to fight er, after Katsuki had been ap­ even worse, with someone holding Poland, as in Hungary, a great mass of people called required by the title of her job, pointed to succeed Dr. Mossman, He' also cnarged that she had him,” says the ex-cop. “But he for the evacuation ’of Soviet troops stationed in their Toner said, “Well get you out wanted to fight me and not my broken confidence by talking of of here before long.” She said it countries. other matters, and that she had friend. I’m a small fellow and my was the first time she had ever friend is much bigger.” been insubordinate. met Dr. Katsuki. In Poland steps were taken to meet some of the As proof of his charges regard­ Subsequently, a note was cir­ Somehow in all this, the belli­ demands and the unrest of the people did not get out ing the schedules, Dr. Katsuki of­ culated through the hospital and cose sergeant and the smaller ex­ fered samples of schedules prepared posted on bulletin boards to the cop came to grips, and that was of hand as in Hungary. In both Poland and Hungary, by Mrs. Flores and those prepared effect that Ton,er was next in au­ the point at which Roy Matsuoka, unlike some other Eastern European countries, Com­ later, presumably by Toner to thority to Katsuki in “all non­ Ginza proprietor, entered the scene. munist leaders who had been down-graded because of whom the doctor assigned many professional” work, “up to but not “I was amazed,” says the ex­ Titoism were still influential. They were brought back of Mrs. Flores’ duties. Including bedside treatment” of cop. “He told me to get out and patients. never come back, I told him I into leadership. DIDN’T LIKE SETUP Mrs. Flores testified that she was hadn’t done anything but defend originally hired by Toner before myself. But he told me to get out, In Hungary the anti-Soviet sentiment turned anti­ Proof of Mrs. Flores’ alleged be­ Maluhia opened, and that her re­ so I left and my friends left, too.” Communist in various quarters and to quell the protest trayal of trust offered was the lationship with him had been of the people, bloody military action was employed. casual statement to others that good until Dr. Mossman took su­ EVERYBODY THROWN OUT Apparently, from news reports, the oppsition to the she “didn’t like the new setup” and pervision of the laundry away Roy Matsuoka, asked by the her questioning of persons who from Toner and put it under Mrs. RECORD about the affair, says government was quite well organized. Soviet sources were not supposed to tell things Flores, if his action semed biased, that claim that outside influence had a major part in the decided in some meetings. Kendall read statements of doc­ was a mistake. He saj's he threw uprising. Proof quoted of alleged insub­ tors at Queen’s Hosital, where Mrs. the sergeants out, too. ordination was that Mrs. Flores Flores served as nurse and admin­ One thing is certain. There was discontent which had refused to resign and take a istrator, which recommended her But the two are very good much more lowly graded job when highly. friends of his, Matsuoka says, and had been expressed for some time in the Hungarian suggested by Dr. Katsuki, and. that After some difficulty at the hos­ only that same evening earlier, press. Another thing is clear. The mass of workers she had refused to come back to pital, Mrs. Flores testified, Mayor they had aided in the trapping of took active part in the demonstrations which were work once when ordered by the Blaisdell called her, Toner and Dr. a trio of hot-check artists right routed by military action. doctor to do so. In both cases, sho KaUmkl into his office and told in tlic Ginza. had been advised by Kendall, her them he wanted them to work to­ “Tile boys helped me a lot," he Students and Intellectuals who in many countries HGEA representative, and the doc­ gether. He also warned that ho said, "and I am grateful.” tor charged her with obeying Kein- did not want the position of nurs­ As for who started the ruckus, are drawn to theoretical Marxism took active part in dall, her HGEA representative, ing superintendent abolished. Matsuoka says, he couldn’t know the demonstrations. dall rather than him. In his opening statement, Ken­ that. The two men were clinched Kendall, in his questioning of dall said, he hoped to prove the when he came up. He has known The fact cannot be dismissed that this discontent Mrs. Flores, brought out that his firing was the culmination of a all four of them and believes they and restlessness is broad and the people are determin­ advice had been in defense of her “plot” to remove her, achieved in . have respect for him. edly fighting for a larger measure of freedom. This position and her rights. its initial stages by stripping her The sergeant described as belli­ In addition, he introduced evi­ of her authority. cose, interviewed by the RECORD fact cannot be dismissed by declaring that outside in­ dence, through questions io Mrs. After two and a half hours, the by telephone, sounded anything fluence is responsible. Conditions of life for the people Flores and Mrs. Nesta Gallas, civil session was adjourned until this but that. There really hadn’t been of Hungary were bad. People in a country with a service personnel director, that week. any ruckus wprthrnentioning in the first placed he-salid, though he strong nationalist tradition resented oppression from admitted having wohds with the outside. ex-policeman. “I thought he was talking too Something is drastically wrong. Hungary’s prob­ Joei Rose Once Read RECORD Stories loud,” he said, “and I got to talk­ lem cannot be solved from the outside—not by Soviet ing to him.” arms, not by CIA (U.S. Central Intelligence Agency) The sergeant says he thinks there Over Air, Got Punched by Al Schaff wouldn’t have been anything but intrigue. Since Joe Rose, the KGU broad­ to the source, somewhat the same talk if the larger ex-cop hadn’t “said something that started every­ Hungary’s own people essentially must Solve their caster, has taken to honoring the way he handles the United Press problems and build their country. Only in this way cant RECORD with attention in recent think-pieces he now reads on his thing off.” weeks, it is interesting to recall “Inside Track” feature nowadays. He admits, too, that he and the they win dignity and a better life. the days when he once read the He managed somehow to make other sergeants were ordered out RECORD stories on hid sports them sound like his own. by Matsuoka along with the ex­ Throughout California the peo­ broadcast over another station— cop. But he says they wanted to Billboards Showing ple saw evidence of monopoly pres­ and how he got punched in the So one night he read a RECORD go anyhow. sure glaring from the billboards. kisser for doing it. story about, plans Al Schaff had ‘We didn’t want to get involved,” Some had white strips of paper for amateur " boxing here and, as he explains. Standard Oil Censors over the words "MONOPOLY” and Those were the days when Joe’s stated, Al got quite excited. He Next morning, Matsuoka says, “YOU.” These evidently were is­ great and good friend, Leo Leavitt, was still excited whpn he met Joe the calmer of ’ the two sergeants Shark Gulping Fish sued by advertising agencies that was promoting boxing in these at the Civic Auditorium a night called his wife to apologize for (from page 1) handle accounts of big oil com­ parts and warring continually with later and the first thing he did the "mess.” panies. the Territorial Boxing Commis­ was to let Joe have it good, right ready to gulp a small fish labeled sion. Leo’s enemies were Joe’s in the mush. "YOU." The shark was labeled Big ads in newspapers inserted enemies, such was their friend­ hadn’t—of telling his side of the "MONOPOLY.” by those opposing Proposition 4 ship, and the number included No one remembers what hap­ story. declared: such former figures on the local pened in the ring at the Civic that So Schaff’s story went into the The Standard Oil Co. wrote a sports scene as Bill Kim, Augie night, but everyone present re­ paper and Joe quit reading the letter to the advertising companies "Today, throughout California, Curtis, Dr. Paul Withington, Al calls it was a quick kayo for RECORD over the air. It wasn’t objecting to the word "monopoly” these butchered billboards stand Karasick and Al Schaff. Schaff out on the floor. Schaff so awfully long before he quit In poster copy submitted by op­ as shameful witnesses to Stand­ had got the idea, for which no reading anything over the air for ponents of Proposition 4. , ard Oil’s might. They prove that All of these were fairly com­ one could blame him, that Joe had that station. But that’s another —WHAT STANDARD WANTS, posed and sedate gentlemen with written the piece, himself. story.. The next day six companies re­ STANDARD GET S—U N T IL the exception of Al Schaff and Anyhow, when Joe sounds off fused to permit the words “MO­ NOW!” Al was a little excitable. Al, a SCHAFF’S SIDE PUBLISHED about the RECORD nowadays and NOPOLY” and "YOU" on the former boxer, got quite excited one Later, when Schaff met the calls everyone connected with it posters. night when Joe read a RECORD staff writer who had actually writ­ a lot of fancy names, there are West German police have seized story over his program from be­ ten the story, he had cooled down those who wonder if he’s still ach­ But six other companies—small 9,000 copies of an anti-Jewish ginning to end. He’d been reading considerably. In fact, he was quite ing from that punch Schaff hit independents—refused to be pushed pamphlet by an American writer, RECORD stories* over his program friendly when the RECORD of­ him. Maybe, they say, that’s why around by Standard and posted translated for distribution in Ger­ for some time, seldom giving credit fered him a chance Joe Rose he's got such a bad mouth. the original copy. many. EASTLAND SUBCOMMITTEE NOVEMBER 22, 1956 HONOLULU RECORD PAGE 3 Target fs Not Communists But People of the Territory of Hawaii hearing but it postponed it to the liever in the "doctrine of toe testimony on alleged spy rings in following spring. eUte.” He also singled out toe toe Federal government. She has “The SUBCOMMITTEE sought to make only present secretary’s brother, AUen Dulles, aecused many and they have de­ membership in the Communist Party its norm of subversion.” THE MIND OF A head of toe Central Intelligence nied her charges under oath. Agency. SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER This official statement comes from a subcommittee re­ WITNESS SHIELDED port of the Senate Internal Security Committee which Sen. For years the RECORD has ■ WITNESSES SUBCOMMITTEE James O. Eastland heads. The official title of the Eastland pointed out that red-baltlng at­ USES One of ■•the accused. Dr. Wil­ committee is Subcommittee to In­ tacks and witchhunting activities, liam H. Taylor of toe International vestigate the Administration of - testified before Monetary Fund, a former profes­ the Internal Security \ Act and first professed to be against Com­ sor at toe University of Hawaii, vaded Chjn^Vj The subcommittee munists, will affect more and toe subcommittee.'HDe later told a Other Internal Security Laws?: 1 let the military brass use it as a more ’people—progressives, liber­ Methodist bishop that he had lied. was cleared of Bentley's charges. Later he publicly stated that he Furthermore, an examining board If the subcommittee’s statement sounding board—largely to make a als, center elements and conserva­ found ■ there was no reasonable flank attack on the U.N. tives. had told lies under oath- against is true, recent statements by two Communists, alleged Communists„ doubt of his loyalty. persons placed in positions where President Harry Truman made the decision not to invade China General O’Daniel’s declaration and others. facts were available to them make and President Dwight D. Eisen­ proves this point. Dr. Taylor repeatedly demanded the Eastland subcommittee’s trip to be confronted with Miss Bent­ to Hawaii for hearings a waste of hower played a major role in bring­ The subcommittee haikled him ing the war to an end. Now let's see how the mind of a before the body and quizzed him ley and allowed to cross-examine time. subcommittee member works. Take vigorously on his turn-about and her. The government has always Sen. William Ezra Jenner of In­ Matusow insisted that he.had lied shielded its prize “authority” from 0' A few months ago Eugene O’DANIEL AND “UPRISING” this test. ■ Dennis, general secretary of the diana, for example, Eastland’s pre­ before when he was being paid by Communist Tarty of the USA, in This week General John W. O’­ decessor as chairman. toe government to testify in po­ litical cases. The subcommittee in­ Bentley's usefulness, too, in open an official statement to party re­ Daniel, sounding off at a com­ hearings is over, for her testimony presentatives at a convention said mittee hearing before the sub­ He is the Senator whom his sisted that Matsusow was unstable colleague, Sen. Homer Capehart re­ and declared that he was telling in toe public mind is considered that there were no Communist committee takes off for Hawaii, perjured. Party members in Hawaii. If there tried to set the tone for the ferred to when he said, “I’m the truth when he talked for it. were any, he declared, they must local hearings. The general sput­ afraid one of the ninety-six Sen­ When toe subcommittee went be tourists vacationing in these tered that in the event of global ators is nuts.” after the Southern Conference MORE ARE SPEAKING OUT Central Pacific islands. strife, he “envisages an uprising” Jenner was then calling the con­ Educational Fund, Inc., an organi­ of Commtinists. servative Republican and senior zation devoted to wiping out segre­ The Eastland committee ran; • Edward N. Sylva, who just re­ Senator from Indiana “a New Deal gation, Eastland pointed to a pro­ ragged when i sonofabitch.” fessional witness, , and signed as attorney general of the Former governor and now sena­ it went after some of its employes. Territory, declared over TV, radio told a hostile witness, "You should The newspaper was silent against tor-elect Oren E. Long quickly JENNER’S ILLUSIONS be honored to know that man.” and in the press this week that answered O’Daniel publicly, de­ toe attacks and even fired the an-, there is no Communist organiza­ claring the brass hat’s statement ployes who refused to dignify the tion in Hawaii. He cautioned If one is to take Jenner’s mouth - Eastland continued: "The at­ subcommittee by answering its was "reprehensible.” ings seriously—and Jenner is evi­ against hysteria and spoke for a Even the local Advertiser, which torney General of the questions. ■ good common sense approach to­ dently serious—he will learn from has vouched for your veracity.” hasn’t hit the suibcommitee's antl- the Senator’s statement that the ward l^bor. statehood junket as did the New NOW- the Times speaks against U.S. government is controlled by Within a few weeks the Attorney toe subcommittee’s junket to Ha­ York Times, and which is cour­ a pro-Soviet, “collectivist,” “re­ His statement, coming a couple teous to military brass hats, said General was forced to stop vouch­ waii. Locally, more and more peo­ of weeks before the Eastland sub­ editorially: volutionary eUte.” Included in ing for Crouch. He fired him—for. ple realize the purposes of the committee hearings here, gives the revolutionary eUte is Secretary . Crouch’s usefulness was Eastland subcommittee-type hear­ food for serious thought. of State John Foster Dulles, WaU over. “Leaders from every walk of Street’s conservative strategist in ings. life—the professions, religion, edu­ the State Department. The New York Times a few days cation, health, management, labor Elizabeth Bentley made head­ The Eastland subcommittee’s ago took the wrappers off the lines for the subcommittee at one —will reject the Implication of On April 19, 1955, he declared: target is the people of Hawaii. Eastland committee Junket to Ha­ such an assertion. To accept it is time, frequently with hair-raising waii by exposing its scheduled to believe that great numbers of "In 1951 I said we were being hearings here as an anti-state­ our citizens arc against our gov­ governed by a blueprint for our hood act. ernment, that they would prefer a destruction, and we were right on governmen|t that would destroy the timetable. Now the blueprint FEARS HAWAII VOTES the priceless quality of the free­ is so perfect, the whole system is dom of the individual. The in­ controlled by automation. There Earlier articles in the RECORD fluence of home and school and are only a few key switches, and by Dr. John Reinecke have dealt church in Hawaii has not been so the members of the revolutionary feeble as to produce such a trag­ elite have the switches in their with. Eastland’s anti-statehood own hands.” stand. Eastland does not want ic condition.” members of Congress from Aloha­ land where there is probably more The Eastland .subcommittee Is In a speech on Feb. 14, 1955, he racial democracy than anywhere not satisfied with one general said: z----— in the United States. He and other sounding off. It got an admiral Dixiecrats feel that Senators and who had served in the Pacific to “The collectivist machine oper­ Representatives from multi-racial write a letter, declaring that Ha­ ates, in part, in the State Depart­ Hawaii mean votes against white waii is a sensitive spot, especially ment, in part, in the White House supremacy and for civil rights. if Formosa goes to People’s China, Secretariat, in the super-cabinet the Japanese become friendly to agencies of national defense, in Eastland and his cohorts attack the Soviet Union and Communist the Foreign Operations Adminis­ the ILWU because it represents influence in the Philippines be­ tration, in the CIA. But a sub­ workers of many ancestries in the comes strong. stantial part of it operates out­ longshore, sugar, pine and general side Government. It may be found in the press, in the parties, in the trades industries. The Dixiecrat COOKING UP WAR SCARE states have Negro longshoremen colleges, in labor unions, in busi­ ness, in the United Nations. The who are struggling for decency, Tins letter from Admiral Cooke better pay and working conditions. important point is that aU the got a good play as the subcom­ parts of this political machine are These states produce sugar, cotton mittee wants to stir up a war and otner materials with low-paid, coordinated. They operate, as one, scare and to use the scare as a some from control towers we can­ racially divided labor. springboard for the hearings. not see.” An attack against the Hawaii While the people of the Islands, SAYS MOSCOW DIRECTED ILWU—a multi-racial, democratic- from various fields, have spoken rank-and-file union, represents to up against O’Daniel'S talk of "up­ "I do not know what proportipn Eastland and his group a con­ rising,” significantly the Big Five tinued battle for segregation. of these people are Communists, Mw You've HM>”ALLYouRTEtTH PULLED, employers are silent. An Employ­ but I do know for certain that ers Council spokesman said that everything they do is of benefit THE CAMOUFLAGE the hearings are government busi­ to Moscow, because it is directed ness. ■ by Mtoscow ... The camouflage for the subcom­ OOOOOOdOOCXXXXXXJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOtXXX^ mittee in attacking trade union­ This remark is noteworthy be­ “You ask who are the leaders of ists, liberal and progressive news­ cause the ILWU, which represents the collective bloc. Who Is taking Before you BUY or SELL your Automobile g papermen, scholars, lawyers and the workers on the waterfront, Acheson’s place today? others, is the term ’’internal se­ plantations and canneries—Big curity.” i Five-owned industries—is the maiii “I can guess but I have no legal CONSULT ■ g It tries to whip up a scare by target of the subcommittee. Note­ proof . . . calling in military brass hats worthy, too, is the Big Five at­ whose minds turn to war rather titude during the 1949 strike when , PhSoTnEeVs:E 9S-1A14W1 VER at Universal RMeso: to6-r3s1 45 8 "We may get the little traitors' CXXXXjOOOOOOCXXSpOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOO than peace. Once it went so far the employers refused to arbitrate by assembling legal proof. We will NEW & USED PLYMOUTH—CHRYSLER—etc. O astray from its supposed functions the issues and called arbitration, never get the big ones, except by that it called in five high-ranking “communistic.” At that time the political counterattack.” officers to testify that the United House unAmerican Activities Com­ States should have, kept on fight­ mittee was going to come to Ha- ■ In April this year, Jeriner named ing in Korea and should have in . waii during the strike to hold a Secretary of State Dulles as a Lc- ( GOOOODOOOCODOOOOOOO PAGE 4 HONOLULU RECORD NOVEMBER 2?, 1956 Total of Traffic Fagan Reported About To Back Fight Accidents Down; Sports Worlds Promotion; "Talent Show" Planned Cost Still Rises The downward trend in number (from page 1)\__ Curtis. This team promoted sev­ of traficc accidents on Oahu’s high­ eral shows a year or. so ago and’ ways as compared with last year By Wilfred Oka against Johnny Kaheakul hard- pleased Honolulu fans. It also did continued in the year’s 46th week luck. loser to Dalfus Brown by a something that made it the envy with 100 such accidents being re­ kayo after he had beaten Brown of rivals who have invested more ported as compared with 104' in decisively through the first nine time and finance. It made money. the same week last year. The total rounds and two minues. The man­ And that fact may toe an import­ number of accidents reported this Keehi Lagoon Park which is still in the blueprint stage, again agers hope 'such a main event ant part of the lure for the pres­ far- this year is 4,762, or 25 less took a shuffle temporarily when the Hawaii Aeronautics Commission might provide plenty of action and ent pair. than last year. sent the matter over to the City Planning Commission for the purpose attract a crowd if staged at “pop­ of considering rezoning, areas in lands nea,r the airport in preparation ular prices.” SCHOLASTIC BOXING, vir­ Likewise, eight fewer fatalities for what has been called the jet age, which is. not too far off. The Whatever the pair may lack in tually forgotten on Oahu outside have been suffered to date this park had been mandated by the legislature but other governmental skill and maturity, the managers the university, is reported having year, figures of the C-C traffic agencies, especially the HAG, had stepped in.to the picture with the hope, might be made up in will­ something of a revival on Maui safety commission show. zooming problems of increasing area neded for jet planes which may ingness and punching ability. where Lahainaluna High has long be put into operation in the near future. After careful analysis of been known as an institution that Number of persons injured, how­ the HAC’s land needs about 40 acres of the original 100 acres allocated “BORROW” LICENSE produces scrapping schoolboys. ever, is up 204 over the total of for the park were taken away for the jet age program. While this Now Baldwin High and Maui High 2,178 reported last year at the same is considerably less than the original plans for the park, the much This show is tentatively planned needed work for the building of the park will be able to start accord­ for either Dec. 4 or Dec. 11, and are reported conducting good box­ time, and the figure was up last ing programs, and St. Anthony week also. Last week 47 persons ing to most recent decisions by government agencies. The legislature if it materializes, will be on a takes precedence over the city and county law, and after five long percentage basis—fighters taking has been approached on the pos­ were injured in Oahu traffic ac­ sibility of raising a boxing team. cidents as compared with 34 for the years work for the much neded-park for the fifth district will begin whatever per cent of the gross is unless other governmental “clearances” should stop the work. available. The managers will be, It may well be, if all these schools same week last year. in effect, “borrowing” the license produce full teams, that the Valley MUCH HAS BEEN WRITTEN about the so-called poor showing of of the Ichinose-Yempuku combine, Isle might have the only school Cost of accidents likewise was the Dodgers in their good-will tour of Dai Nippon. We liked Manager that team having become some­ league of boxing in the Territory. up this year $152,699 over last year’s Walter Alston’s explanation which stated in part that his Brooklyn figure of $1,187,176 to date. Last what apathetic about the fight OAHU, on the other hand, has players were not up to' peak playing condition and that the Japanese game after its chief drawing card, week’s accidents were up in es­ played some good ball. Most of the Brooklyn players were of the the largest high schools and the timated cost $2,659 over the cost Stan Harrington, made several least activity, though there have opinion however that the Japanese team they played against was unimpressive appearances and the of accidents in the same week last of triple A standard when the top Tokyo players were put together into customers quit coming. been times in the past when boxing year, that figure being $26,792 for a single team. was a popular sport at St. Louis, the week. This “talent show” plan is also Farrington and McKinley. Some THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE Athletic Association slapped North regarded hopefully in local fight years ago, when the matter was The definite downward trend in Carolina State College for alleged basketball recruiting contrary to' circles, though the oldtimers say broached, purely theoretical ob number of service personnel in­ collegiate regulations and the sanity code last week. In the wake it cannot be expected to show any jections were raised—most of volved in accidents continued with of the punishment meted out to the college came concerted denials marked success unless the mana­ them emanating from practice in 30 fewer involved to date than the from "‘the prexy of the school himself and hot talk of court • action gers keep at it long enough for a some high school associations on 1,410 reported last year at this by supporters and alumni of the college to secure a court injunction following for that type of show to the Mainland. The objection that time. Last week, however, the 31 against the NCAA imposing the punishment. What really gripes build..up. The,theory of the talent high school boys might be too reported was five over the figure North Carolina officials was that the NCAA 18-member policy council show is that young, unranked but young, strangely, was not made. for the 46th week of last year. refused to spell out the charges or to permit North Carolina State .eager local boys who are willing to Much credit for the program at officials access to the files on the case. fight for what they may get, be Lahainaluna during the 30’s and Evidence of mixing alcohol and The case against North Carolina State is only the start of the given a chance. at Farrington during the 40’s must gasoline was startlingly up, 141 get-tough policy on the part of the NCAA since the basketball scandals But the percentage payoffs of go to Dr. Don Gustason, who now more drunk drivers being reported over on the East Coast and the so-called under the table payments initial ventures of this sort are practices balancing and trampoline this year to date than last year to athletes on the West Coast, which threw the conference into a often disappointing. Unless a activities in his spare time from and 274 more who had been tailspin which also almost resulted in the disbanding of the confererice. fighter has lots of ambition and his teaching at the university. drinking at the time of their ac­ Reports on Midwest schools may soon be made public which the NCAA faith in his future, he is not like­ But if Oahu high schools were to cidents. Last week 36 drunk drivers hopes will make the colleges toe the mark on the phase of college ly to be enthusiastic about train­ try reviving the sport, first on an were reported by police, or 13 more athletics which has brought sham and hypocrisy due to an un­ ing a couple of weeks for a purse intramural, then an interscholastic than for the 46th week last year, realistic attitude toward athletic aid. of $7.50 or $10. Nor is he likely to basis, it is felt in local boxing remain long upright under a se­ and 47 drivers showed evidence THERE IS TALK that the Boxing Managers Guild may get together circles there would be plenty of of drinking, six more than for the with Boxing Enterprises to put up a professional card in December at the vere pounding If the crowd around “ble coaches willing to give their same week last year. the ring is sparse and he realizes Civic. The game has been in hibernation for a spell and Christmas time and teaching ior nothing just n ancy is needed by many of the fighters. So between these two he will get little more than bus­ because they like to sec the sport fare home. factors, Boxing Enterprises is in a good spot to put all of the grow. talent on a percentage basis. We believe that if anything at all A minimum of $25 per fighter Nozaki Wins ILWU Boxing Enterprises will move on the basis of their chief accountant’s might go nt least a llttle way, some LIKE ANY OTHER TOWN recommendation. in the fight game believe, toward where professional boxing is held, alleviating this situation. Turkey Tournament THE I960 WINTER OLYMPICS will be held in Squaw Valley, Honolulu has seen some real trag­ California, with an appropriation of five million 'dollars from the state Al Karasick, reportedly, has edies involving fighters who gave gone along with encouraging the Kenneth Nozaki of Waialua won from the tidelands oil fund. We don’t know exactly the amount in what they had—on a percentage the ILWU Golf Club’s annual the tidelands oil fund, but it must be a whopping amount when five talent show type of promotion to basis. There was Eddie Reyes, for the extent of knocking $100 off turkey tournament played last Sun­ million dollars can be allocated without startling headlines. Squaw instance, who knocked Dado Mari­ day at Kahuku. He carded a 93-30 Valley Lodge, coincidentally, right near the activities, will be in a the customary $350 fee he charges no, then world flyweight champ, —63 score. for use of the Civic, and has of­ position to make the loot from thousands of participants and spectators down and generally outclassed him that will crowd the facilities of the hostel. fered a concession in the percent­ in an exhibition—and • got less Other winners were: Hoxie Na­ age. than $25 for it. And Eddie San­ kagawa, Tasuku Yui, Ben Vea, THE HONOLULU BUSINESS COLLEGE Alumni Assn, is spon­ chez who came all the way from Tommy Arakakij-Harry Yui, Bags soring the Japanese movie “Shoshun” at the Nippon Theater this week TERMS MORE LENIENT New York and got a purse of Shishido and Ben Kane. Turkeys as part of their community service project. This is an annual affair Heretofore, the price has been $18.50 after a hard fight in which and chickens were awarded the for the following institutions: St. Anthony’s Home, Kuakini Japanese $350 or 15 per cent of the gross, he was badly cut up. Sanchez various winners. Old Men’s Home, Palolo Chinese Old Men’s Home, Waimano Home whichever was bigger. But how re­ broke down and cried when he was Arata Chinen won the presi­ for Retarded Children, Susannah Wesley Home,' Korean Old Men’s port has it Karasick will ask the paid off and who could blame dent’s clock-radio trophy, played Home, and the Kida Nursing Home for Elderly People. managers only $250 with the 15 him? It turned out, too, he’d taken over 36 holes. “Soshun” (Early Spring> has a number of recommendations from per cent to begin after the gross the fight because of extreme fi­ various organizations including the Ministry of Education. The reaches $2,100. nancial hardship at home. movie’s theme revolves around the lives of a number of people who It has been the belief of pro­ come from what has been called the white collar or “salaried man” moters in the past that local fans "A HANDBOOK FOR AMERI­ group, whose dreams end ambitions are wrapped up in someday be­ will not often come out to see CANS,” the Eastland committee's coming the manager or the president of a firm. The movie doesn’t local boys fight each other, and Panama Pricks Up publication on the Communist glamorize the life of an average clerk like so many American movies undoubtedly that belief is based Party of the U.S.A.—adopted by and the appealing quality of this movie is the realistic approach into on some experiences. But if the the DPI for use in the schools and the life of the white collar worker who is beset today in Japan by managers can raise interest in Ears over Suez praised by the Star-Bulletin—con­ the high cost of living, the unemployment situation, and turbulent talent shows involving local fight­ There’s danger-of anti-U.S. riots tains a list of what the committee social forces. ers, then they’re a long way toward in Panama unless the Suez Canal brands as Communist front or­ OLYMPIC RULES for boxing must be markedly different from success in boxing promotion. A crisis is settled soon, predicts News­ ganizations. Among them is the the AAU rules according to news stories we have been reading since major obstacle to boxing promo­ week in a recent (Oct. 22) issue Methodist Federation for Social the American team was selected for the Olympics. A number of tion in the past has been the high Action. references were made regarding the rules on bobbing and weaving and cost of importing fighters from Newspapers and politicians are the illegality of such tactics in Olympic scoring so that practically playing up the “Yankee go home” Tlie Federation, according to the Mainland—even when they theme, > all of the members of the team have had to have workouts with turned out to be something less the New York Times, was founded the rules salient in their mind. Coach Don Miller has had these than tigers in action. And along with this, according in 1907. “It always has been refresher courses for the boys so that their actions in the ring will Another team reportedly get­ to a recent Christian Science Mon­ headed by a well-known Method­ be in keeping with Olympic boxing rules. It is surprising that in ting interested in boxing again is itor account (Oct. 4), there’s dan­ ist minister. Several Bishops of the the eliminations Olympic rules were not used so that prospects would that of Hugh Finley and Augie ger of a blowup against the new church have been its president.” presidential regime installed Oct. have been selected on the basis of the style most likely to succeed at the Olympics. first. Supporters of the defeated “When the handbook was first US prospects for champions in their weight divisions will be HONOLULU RECORD candidate. Dr. Victor F. Goytia, issued,” goes on the Times (5-3- harder this year than the last time around when the American team are being arrested and ‘manhan­ 56 issue), “the Federation asked to Published Every Thursday won five division championships with one of the greatest collections dled. Tile opposition radio station be heard on the issue of its listing. of fighters ever assembled under one flag. by is padlocked and the one small dai­ The request was denied." Honolulu Record Publishing ly supporting Goytia can’t get ad­ ALTHEA GIBSON who lost the big one to Shirley Fry at Wimble­ Company, Ltd. vertising, due to fear of reprisals. The Federation failed in its ef­ don has been improving as evidenced by her victory over her rival last 811 Sheridan St., Honolulu 14. TH. Goytia claims that he was beat­ forts to obtain a permanent in­ week at Sydney, Australia for the New South Wales women’s champion­ en by fraudulent counting of bal­ junction against the listing. It ap­ ship. Miss Gibson beat Miss Fry in two straight sets, the scoi;e being Entered as second-class matter May 10-8, 6-2, and then teamed up with Neale Fraser to win the mixed 10, 1949, at the Post Office at Ho­ lots, and that the newly elected pears that a congressional com­ Pres, de la Guardia is kept in of- mittee is licensed to libel with im­ doubles match against Miss Fry and Bob Howe. Miss Gibson’s nolulu, Hawaii, under the Act of sights are on Wimbledon, for this is the real big one! March 3, 1879. office by the National Guard. punity. ootyyyjocxxxxxxxyxiciooocKxxiocyyx^^ Through A Woman's lyes Honolulu record pages THE MARCH OF HOLIDAYS WALLACE FUJIYAMA* who’s biggest coastwise shippers. The been a frequent spokesrnah for steam schooners did thpir biggest By AMY CLARKE Birthdays, by all means. Even mother and dad should not be shy about celebrating the GOP in the recent primary business in the 20’s'and until 1935 Nothing reveals your age more than your and general election campaigns, when land carriers, railroads and their birthdays. Children should learn to truck fleets, lowered their rates attitude toward approaching holidays. honor others as well as receiving treats was being pushed by his friends If you gaze eagerly at the calendar and ■ for the post of attorney general, below what water carriers could. themselves. The decUne has been steady since breathe, “Gosh, it’s still a month away!” by friends, according to report, un­ you’re young, no matter what your birth Birthday customs vary from house to til the rebuff came that he is not and the Chronicle predicts steam house, all the way from elaborate parties experienced enough. The reply was schooners may soon disappear al­ certificate says. together, But if you shudder and say, “Already? with paper hats and noisemakers to just —Dan Aoki isn’t experienced- in a birthday card and a kiss, but the cake being a delegate’s executive sec­ Where has the year gone?”—you’ve passed with candles is almost universal. retary, either, but Jack Burns is OREN LONG, as. this paper has your prime. taking him to Washington to fill noted from time to time; has little Now if you are single, or married and One wise family I knew figured that that very important post. So the reputation for taking strong stands. birthday candles being as cheap as they office continues under the guard­ But no one can say he didn’t speak childless, • it doesn’t matter if you wish ianship of a hominal\Democrat, out strong and clear on the state­ the holiday season was over. You may be are, and the children’s delight in them so Richard Sharpless. Meantime some ments made by Gen. John W. missing out on a lot of fun, but your with­ great, it was silly to have them only twd or young Republicans are reported O’Daniel before the Eastland Com­ three times a year. very wroth with King Sam and drawal hurts nobody else. mittee at Washington.’ Long la­ So every ^Friday night the mother threatening to quit the GoP and beled O’Daniel’s talk of fear of a IF YOU ARE a parent, however, it’s an­ move over among the Democrats “Communist uprising” in Hawaii bought or baked a cake and at dessert time where able young AJAs are more as “absurd” and “reprehensible” other matter. Parents who are’too sophis­ the lights were put out, the candles lit, appreciated. coming from such a personage. ticated, busy, or uninterested to make a and there it was! Perhaps the thumping vote that holiday come alive are depriving their It ■ is. beautiful, small things like that POLICEMEN get into trouble elected Long at the top of the senatorial ticket on Oahu gave children of very meaningful experiences. off-duty about as much as they Why are holidays so important anyway? you remember long after your parents have do when in uniform, as a story him new confidence, even more passed on. than when he was governor. Cer­ Aside from their original purposes, which elsewhere in this issue of the REC­ • Sometimes we should stop to consider ORD indicates. Likewise, they are tainly no one could charge him sometimes become quite different with the held to be on duty 24 hours a day with being a favorite of the IL- passing of time, they have a special sig­ whether in our rush to get to work, pay when it suits the department. In WU. Or maybe like Ed Sylva, Long’s sense of honesty was outraged by nificance within the family. bills, meet schedules, get things done, we other words, they’re never really are giving our. children any tender, color­ off duty. But let one get hurt or the claptrap that’s shouted around This is the cradle of culture, where killed during the hours when he about the “Communist threat’’ in children first learn what traditions are ful memories to treasure after we are gone. isn’t in uniform and it immediately Hawaii. In any event, the former governor is to toe congratulated for (though they may not know the word). Perhaps there is no other holiday around makes a big difference in the com­ which so many individual family rituals pensation he receives. Now it is putting a general in his place. From the simple or elaborate prepara­ manifestly obvious that it’s unfair tions and customs which are repeated each can be layered as Christmas. to blame a cop for something he GEN. O'DANIEL, interestingly, year at the same time, the child receives a YOU CAN ENCOURAGE belief in Santa does or doesn’t do when it hap­ appears to have offered very few sense of the continuity, stability, and iden­ Claus or “level” with your kids—I don’t pens outside his eight-hour stint, statements that he couldn’t have tification of his family with all the other and to refuse to grant him equal read out of an IMUA request for think it makes much difference. The im­ compensation for inkuries he gets contributions. One figure, especi­ families in the community. ’ during the same period. The pol­ portant thing is to let them share in the ally, is reminiscent of IMUA shake­ That is why the child guidance experts excitement and secrecy in the air—-let them icy goes away back and it’s hard down stuff. That’s the one about advise us to put ourselves out, take a little to think of anything the depart­ know the joy of giving as well as receiving. how the “Communist forces” in trouble, to celebrate all the holidays with ment could do better calculated Hawaii spend $250,000 for propa­ It’s a lot of work—oh, mothers, how I to raise police morale and make ganda purposes alone. They’ve and for our children. recruiting easier than to make know it!—but the rewards are great. Some­ been using that figure since the And especially here in Hawaii, where how your weariness vanishes at the sight of sure this particular Inequity is cor­ 1949 strike when IMUA was there are so many ancestral patterns, it rected. Maybe the coming session founded. First they attributed it the glowing faces around you. of the legislature ought to con­ to “rei’able sources” and so far is important to keep alive the traditions of About this time of the year, let’s drop sider that one. as we know, never made any break­ your own family, faith, and country of some of our other activities if we have to, down of it at all. Yet In all those origin. years, the figure has never changed skip the window cleaning or porch scrub­ ST. CLAIR Me KELWAY Is a and one can't help wondering why THE DAYS you celebrate will vary, ac­ bing or the cupboard cleaning, but let us name readers may remember from IMUA and Gen. O’Daniel don't cording to your background, but certain never, never be too old or, too tired to make the pages of the NeW York Herald make some allowance for inflation. Tribune of some years ago, and of After all, prices of everything else days should be esteemed by everybody. a holiday for our children. the New Yorker from time to time. have gone up—why not propagan­ Real old-timers among the read­ da? sponsoring photographer-lectufer ers might remember him as a re­ Julien Bryan’s excelleiTt lecture porter on the Star-Bulletin around TELEVISION must have been a Demand for Diabetes Test Packs the end of the Roaring Twenties. little puzzling last Sunday to on Egypt and the Suez, Canal. McKelway has an article of rem­ watchers who switched about their Bryan as a photographer who gets iniscence in the Oct. 27 issue of channels. Early in the evening on to the life of the people and not Floods Drug Stores; More Airshipped New Yorker in which he tells a one station, they could hear Ed­ little of “The Best Four Years,” merely the obvious^ourist sights The demand for free Dreypack committee declares that with tests ward N. Sylva, until very recently is worth your money'even if you of his life, which include his peri­ attorney general of the Territory diabetes tests exceeded expecta­ for diabetes available, people can od in Honolulu along with a si­ and the first chairman of the ter­ don’t hear a word of his accom­ tion of the Diabetes Detection discover, if they have’ diabetes be­ milar stopover in Siam. -The old- ritorial subversives commission, panying lecture—which doubles Drive committee this year and fore they become seriously ill. It timers who remember him and say there are no “real live Com­ 5,000 additional Dreypacks were says that many discover the af­ his lively activities in these parts the value of the picture. flown in from New York the past fliction only after it has become: will enjoy it. munists” in the ILWU, though plenty of ex-Communists, and _no week. serious. active Communist organization in Bryan repeatedly stressed the The detection drive, Nov. 11 to 17, About half of the people with- got off to a quick start and heavy THE APPEAL by Mrs. Flores, the Territory. Then later in ■ the need and desire of the ordinary diabetes do not know they have it. evening, there was Joe Rose whq Egyptian for peace—though he response on Oahu resulted in the and many do not know they are fired superintendent of nurses at free Dreypacks running out at Maluhia, brings out into the open did his usual Communist-calling opened his film with dramatic seriously ill. and Implied the "Communists” are shots of a parade in honor of 70 drugstores by Thursday. A quick a fight that has been behind the about ready to take over the Ter­ order was put in for an additional The interest built up in the dia­ scenes at the hospital for several Egyptian soldiers who had fallen betes detection drive has caused ritory. Rose, of course, is no such in the border warfare with Israel. supply requested by drug stores years. Mrs. Flores was once the authority on the subject as Sylva. which informed the committee other counties to take an interest object of considerable complaint He paid his respects, as he went in it. Maui and Hawaii are ex­ by workers under her jurisdiction, Something new was added to Iris along, to the Egyptian great land­ that calls for the Dreypacks were KGU program Monday night, in­ continuing. pected to conduct their drives next but none of that has been men­ lords who squeeze the illiterate year. ' tioned by tire hospital administra­ cidentally,—a disavowal of his peasants but bank their money Dr. Teru Togasaki, chairman of views and opinions by the radio abroad and use little of it to-de­ the drive, is requesting those who tion in its initial statement of the station and’ the Advertiser. 1956 profits, predicts Fortune case. Instead, much of the material velop their own country; and also have taken the Dreypacks to mail magazine, “should total at least $43- presented thus far seems fairly to Sec. of State John Foster Dulles, them to the committee in the RICHARD KAGEYAMA, who led addressed envelopes provided with billion before taxes—a trifle over trivial and unworthy of as fine a the ticket for the board of super­ who touched off the present crisis last year’s all-time record.” doctor and public servant as Dr. by “pulling the rug” from under the Dreypacks. The test cannot be visors in the general election, may completed without urine specimen David Katsuki has been these get a chance to carry out his cam­ Nasser by his rude reversal on Latest dividend reports, by the many years. It is probably Just as the Aswan High Dam project. from individuals seeking the dia­ paign promises to abolish the gar­ betes test. The committee will in­ Commerce Dept, show that for the well for the administration that bage fee. His fellow supervisors first seven months of • this year, Mayor Blaisdell is on a llrlm to form the individuals of the re­ feel his heavy vote should be re­ ONCE BRYAN’S audience broke sults of the tests. -payments to stockholders rose 15 the mainland at present. U’ cognized with the chairmanship of per cent above the same period into applause. It was when he re­ Tire test is being conducted by a committee, and the top post of marked: “The paper in my home last year. the finance committee is indicated the Honolulu County Medical So­ HARRY EUNDEBERG, accord­ town in Pennsylvania with 8,000 ciety. since the veteran Noble Kauhane people prints more and better If the average company wanted ing to last Thursday’s S.F. chron­ is not likely to be removed from ’the Since 1048 the American Dia­ to pass on to its customers the to­ icle, has agreed to extend contracts foreign news than your big papers betes Assn, has carried on a con­ ■ chairmanship of the public works here.” tal value of a 10 per cent wage in­ of the SUP with the Oliver J. Olson committee. Wonder if Kageyama tinuous nationwide diabetes de­ crease, a two per cent to. 3.3 per Co. which sails steam schooners is one of the unnamqd witnesses tection drive. Locally, more and cen price rise would cover It. Most coastwise, until Dec. 31. Olson re­ summoned by the Eastland com­ HERE’S A HINT to island en­ more people are realizing the seri­ companies in most Industries can cently sold ,two of its five re­ mittee? terprisers: Mango juice is just ousness of the disease which ranked absorb the cost of wage increases maining steam schooners and ap­ about the national drink of Egypt. sixth in 1955 as a cause of resident out of the benefits of rising pro­ pears to be quitting by slow bits, THE LEAGUE OF WOMEN A lot of mangos go to waste in Ha­ civilian dpaths. ductivity, without raising prices though it once was one of the VOTERS deserves plaudits for waii. The Diabetes Detection Drive at all. PAGE 6 HONOLULU RECORD - NOVEMBER 22, 1956 Move To Lower Bar Against Nisei, Negroes Hotel Street in Mail Service Fails (from page 1) Hotel St. BBB, and the crackdown began. Again Williams was in the to the Communists—and through A move to include Nisei and Ne­ the lookout * for sharp operators groes and other non-Caucaslans picture, too, with quick reports of By JOHN E. REINECKE I, the IPR to strike at the Roose­ who had reportedly been clipping developments. employed by U.S. postal transport servicemen for as much as $15,000 Whether or not Sen. James'O. velt and Truman administrations, service in the National Postal But reports indicate that initial Eastland gets well enough to make which -the subcommittee represents amusement centers. Originally on Transport Assn, failed by a 72 to a week, the colonel had his at­ moves by the military plaiing four the trip to Hawaii with his sub­ as riddled with Communists. 37 vote at the organization’s con­ centers out of bounds, may have committee will make no great dif­ Sen. Watkins set his signature tention distracted by a couple of vention held in San Francisco re­ other items. worked an injustice on at least ference in the conduct of the witch­ to the report lynching the IPR, two. One had got rid of the flat and so he has continued to do with cently. • American Indians are not hunt which the committee will barred from membership. SHOCKED BY HULA GIRLS games—those at which the operat­ make here. It will go according to all the' subcommittee’s reports ors clip the servicemen fastest— Eastland’s plan. since, with their built-in verdicts. The Pacific Citizen, official For one thing, there were the and another had employed two This is clear from the start He need not have,.-done so. Two newspaper of the Japanese Ameri­ hula girls who pose in booths such operators but they had not ■which the committee has already years age when the."Reece com­ can Citizens League, reported that with servicemen for pictures. started their games yet. made in Washington, getting off mittee in the House made a screw­ there are Nisei eligible for mem­ Whether he actually entered a to a headline-catching start .with ball attack upon, thegrpat tax- bership in this organization at booth to have his picture taken is MONEY AND MUSCLE the preposterous testimony of exempt foundations,;seeking t® airports in Hawaii. not known but in.any event, the Gen. John W. O’Daniel. O Daniel’s smear them as communistic, Reps. colonel came back to talk know­ According to report, the fast ideas of the "Communistlmenace” Wayne l. Hays and Gracie Pfost Martin R. McMahon, chief of ingly of the salacious manner in operators were brought to Hono­ in Hawaii are obviously drawn from made a scathing mihority report the transportation section of the which the photography models lulu from the Mainland by a single the financiers of MUA. showing up Reece’s unfairness. postal service here, told the REC­ conducted themselves. impresario—who was conspicuous­ But Watkins has never uttered ORD that ’ postal clerks at the ly absent from the delegation that CONCLUSIONS ALREADY a word against the Internal Se­ Burning with indignation, and visited City Hall Tuesday—and airport are all AJAs but they arc not unmindful of the heat gener­ they have been placed in various STATED curity subcommittee. He has not postal transport clerks. He In a way it will be a pity if praised the truthfulness of its wit­ ated by the hula girls, the colonel »centers either by lucrative rentals, said that he is the only postal naturally got to inspecting the or by muscle-pressure. They are Eastland does not come here, for nesses. of Paul Crouch’s ilk. He transport employe here. it would be an education to see has praised the committee as be­ Hotel St. places for fire escapes reported to have offered as much and one thing and another. He as $250 a month for rental of a and hear the testy, hectoring Mis­ ing “fair,” “very objective," “not McMahon said that the matter sissippian in action. a publicity stunt in any degree.” came to the conclusion there are small booth, and on the muscle of dropping , the discriminatory a lot of fire traps where the lives side, some are reported to have But, while the hearings may be He has remained on the commit­ clause from the association’s rules tee under the chairmanship of the of servicemen are in danger every been carrying guns. nm a little different with Eastland has been a live issue at conventions minute. absent they will proceed according abusive-tongued Eastland. in the past. The clause bars from Whatever the truth of those re­ to his plan and will reach the con­ membership in the association As a result of all the colonel’s ports, it appears their day is done clusions that he has already stated, NOT AN INVESTIGATION workers not “of the Caucasian observations, C-C Prosecutor on Hotel St., and comparatively not only this year but in 1954 and When the subcommittee brings race or a native American Indian.” George St. Sure, cooperating close­ legitimate operators, who clip serv­ 1953 when he ranted against state­ in its already known verdict on ly with the military, requested the icemen for no more than the price hood for Hawaii. Indeed, seldom Hawaii, no more fairness can be Southern members of the postal health department to investigate of kewpie dolls, or sell rancid does the Internal Security sub­ expected from Sen. Watkins than transport union have opposed the complaints about unsanitary food, hamburgers, fear the fast operat­ committee hold a hearing whose from his colleagues. move to change the rule, The as­ the fire department to investigate ors may have taken Hotel St. with conclusions are not built-in in ad­ Finally, the local hearing will sociation is not gaining members fire hazards in the amusement them. • vance. be handled by Robert Morris, the because 80 per cent of the new places, and the police vice squad The military has its dander up, For proof, look at the record of same “blustery committee coun­ workers coming into the postal to look into the manner in which and the colonel has been heard the four members who are re­ sel” (as he was described then) transport service are Negroes. hula girls sell photography and to say he 'has the full support! of ported certain to come. who conducted the lynching of the one thing and another on Hotei generals and admirals. Unless IPR. The AFL-CIO has threatened St. something cools the senior brass WELKER OF IDAHO Yes, we know what to expect, and to expel the union from the parent The colonel, reportedly an offi­ down, it appears no one will be There is lame duck Herman Wel­ it’s not, in any accurate sense of organization unless it removes the cer who has done provost duty able to sell a serviceman even so ker of Idaho. Welker was Joe Mc­ the word, an investigation. color bar. over the notorious Casbah of much as one wilted lei on Hotel Carthy’s chamion when his con­ French Algiers, has very definite St. because there won’t be any demnation ’ was debated in the ideas of how the cleaning up of servicemen there. Senate. Readers of the RECORD Hotel St. should be done. He wants The Honolulu police, in this situ­ know how Welker has used the to know what kind of police records ation, have appeared extremely subcommittee for his own political Toner Aimed at Removing Mrs. Flores, the' dance-hall hostesses and photo apathetic to —those- pushingl: the ends and how he vilifies witness­ booth hula girls, have—who are crusade, but there are those who es and pries into their religious the landlords that draw rent from claim the police attitude is the beliefs. 14 Other Employes, Witnesses Say Hotel St. enterprises—what kind sanest of the lot. They put under­ of Income taxes the amusement cover men from the vice squad work. (Mrs. Flores' comment on JOHNSTON AND BUTLER (ifrbm page 1) operators pay—who sells slot ma­ out to catch the fast carnival men tills was that her office table chines and pinball games here— who owe their existence to their There is Olin D, Johnston of resign. I’ve tried every way to em­ didn't give her enough room and South Carolina, Eastland’s twin in who’s the "big man” in the local ability to spot an undercover cop barrass her.” that the lighting was better out­ amUsement world—and how come with the accuracy of a pointer everything except vulgarity. Every­ side.) thing that-Eastand has said about the amusement people drive Pack­ spotting a ririg-necked pheasant. TONER’S CHALLENGE ards and Cadillacs. The cops couldn't get close to them, Hawaii’s domination by the Com­ STRICKEN munists, Johnston has said too, • Reprimanded her for hanging Said a RECORD informant,, wip­ and neither, for that matter, could Toner declined to cross-examine gaijnents on chairs' in her own ing his brow, "When that colonel newsmen trying to get themselves and has added that Hawaiians are office. “It's unsightly,” Toner not truly American in blbod. either witness until he could con­ gets through, they’ll, probably have clipped as “evidence.” sult his own files. He attempted to wrote. churches on Hotel St.” The evidence, such as it is, all There is John M. Butler of Mary­ discredit the testimony of another come from servicemen who caught land, first elected in 1950 by what Tuesday, a delegation of ag­ HGEA field representative, Irving In other testimony, Mrs. Flores grieved Hotel. St. operators and wise too late. a senatorial committee described (Ace) Hutkins, as being - biased. testified Toner had called once to Deputy Chief of Police Leon as a “despicable ‘back-street’ type employes descended on St. Sure’s Toner charged Hutkins had called ask her if she “had permission'’ to office asking that he take the Strauss s^id, “We. have made ar- of campaign . . . conducted by him an uncomplimentary name be on a certairr-floor of the hos­ heat off—which has already re­ rests wherever we have found in­ non-Maryland outsiders”—led by and threatened him with physical pital when she was- reporting on fractions on Hotel St. We have Jdfei (McCarthy—so as to “under­ sulted in four places being put out violence at a C-C parking lot. Civil sick call for a cold. Also, Mrs. of bounds—but they got nowhere. kept watch on the situation and mine and destroy the faith and Service Chairman Albert P. Moniz Flores testified, after she had un­ we will continue to keep watch and confidence in the basic American did not allow his statement to be dergone major surgery and re­ RECORD TOLD STORY make checks. When we find people loyalty” o fhls opponent, Sen Mil­ entered. ceived flowers from workers in the breaking the law, we will arrest lard Typings. hospital laundry, she sent a thank- The whole trouble began back in them.” Among other things, Butler's Hutkins, identifying the list of you note which was subsequently December of 1955 when, as the So the police have adhered fellow senators were referring to fifteen employes who had drawn posted on the bulletin board in the RECORD exclusively reported, the strictly to a policy of arresting a faked photograph whi h pur­ Toner’s displeasure, told of a time laundry'. Subsequently, the work­ “Hotel Better Business Bureau,” anyone they found breaking the ported to show Tydings in friend-, when relations between the two ers were called in and qulzed about operators who believe the fast law and letting others strictly ly conversation with top Com­ men were more amicable. At every the flowers and a memo went out operators who stick the servicemen alone. From the point of view of munist . conversation, Hutkins said, Toner stating that no more thank-you for big money are a knock to the the vast majority of entertain­ During his six years in office, reiterated his desire to get rid notes should be posted on the whole street, saw to it that a ment people who are not fast Butler lined up with the McCar- of the superintendent of 1 nurses, bulletin board. newsman Sherman Williams of the operators—or at least not as fast thyites in the Senate. He voted “even to .promising to make' me a Star-Bulletin, was told of the fast as the carny men—that attitude against the censure of McCarthy. big man in this town if I would The commission set the next operators who had moved in and seems fair. He voted against labor. help him get Mrs. Fibres out.” session of the appeal hearing for were clipping the servicemen right But the high brass is concerned But this year, to secure reelec­ next Tuesday night at 7 p.m. at and left. more with the welfare of the serv­ tion, he made like an Eisenhower The list of names ranged through which time Kendall said he will Williams made some study of the icemen than with the entertain­ man. many categories, from, mainten­ complete his presentation of Mrs. situation, verified the reports as ment workers on Hotel St. And ance men to registered nurses. Flores' side of the case. well as anyone could, and started the military is mad. LYNCHING OF EPB to interview the operators. In a Proprietors of the Hotel St. The fourth member, Arthur V. Kendall introduced a number of scene that was the talk of Hotel places recall with trepidation what Watkins of Utah, is neithei" a Mc­ memos into evidence, mostly writ­ St. for weeks, the operators prom-, happened on Smith St. a few years Carthyite wild man nor a Dixie- ten to Mi-s. Flores by Toner in an Rock and roll, which has created isod to leave town and Williams ago when the military became in­ crat racist but a rockribbed old-, effort to show he used “picayun- such a furor among teen-agers in told them if they didn’t, they were censed and put that area out of line conservative. The country owes ish” matters to try to humiliate many countries, has left France going to get some publicity. The bounds. It has been comparatively him gratitude for his firm and her. By these memos, Kendall in­ calm. operators left, or at least ceased deserted ever since. conscientious chairing of the com­ dicated. Toner had: operations—as the RECORD re- mittee which heard the charges A "Furriner” from New York • Taken Mrs. Flores' office A French radio reporter recent­ proted at the time. against Joe McCarthy and did so ly asked Parisians about rock 'n Some weeks ago, the RECORD “The third reason (against hiq much to deflate that menace. away and installed her in a sort roll and drew some amusing blanks. again reported, the flat games confirmation to the Supreme But—Sen. Watkins has been an of makeshift office behind a show­ Court) is that Judge Harlan is case. were back in operation again, this active member of the subcommit­ A waitress thought it was a fish time in larger force than ever, and from the State of New York, and tee from the day it was set up. He • Taken away her parking stall, cooked in tomato sauce. A clerk CID men went around investigat­ that the people of this great state knew why Sen. Pat McCarran set while other- employes,. of lesser said it was sold in the store where ing and warning the proprietors possess views and philosophies it up in the first place: io' lynch’ rank retained theirs. 1 '< she worked. A policeman thought of amusement places to get them which are different from those the Institute of Pacific Relations , it was a street and being unable out or risk being put out of bounds. entertained by the rest ■ of the by "proving” it was responsible for • Reprimanded for using a to find it ohthe map declared “the Then Prosecutor ,St. Sure entered country.” (Sen. James O. East­ Chiang Kai-shek’s loss of China table outside her office for paper road must have changed its name.’’ th«> picture, perhaps called by the land, March 16,' 1955.) Traffic Violators Thank Teacher Local Stevedores NO¥E5i_BEK 22, 1956 HONOLULU RECORD PAGE 7 After 6 Weeks of Enforced Education Vote Support Monday was graduation night can took the class over the ques­ for one of the most unusual schools tions. The first was a diagram For ILA Strike in Hawaii. \ about who should yield the right- Honolulu . longshoremen voted The students weren’t ofi school of-way before a left turn, and the Wednesday morning' to carry out age, except for maybe one. One was class seemed pretty clear about any action recommended by the a half-bald, grey-haired 'heavy­ that. ILWU on the West Coast in sup­ bodied man who might have been The next asked how many feet port of the East Coast strike of a longshoreman, or a retired wrest­ before turning at an intersection the International Longshoremen's ler. Another was a grey-haired should a motorist continuously Assn. businessman with white shirt and signal. Do you know? tie. Others were laborers, farmers, Most of the class knew the dis­ West Coast -ILWU stevedores government employes. One elderly tance was 100 ft. Some had have thus far voted by nearly 9-1 Japanese man had obvious diffi­ stretched the distance to 150 ft to support thwhite supremacy forces. If longshoremen and wharf clerks want By firing Edward N. Sylva out of the post of attorney a wage raise, they would have to negotiate general last week, Gov. Samuel W. King gave another I do not know at this writing whether Chair­ with Matson and other shipping interests. sign to Hawaii that the new type of Eisenhower Repub­ man Eastland of Mississippi will be present. How­ lican hasn’t “trickled down” to Hawaii yet, and possibly ever, his physical absence would not change the In 1949 the shipping interests forced the the governor gave the Territory some gauge of his stature. character of the commit­ longshoremen to strike, by refusing to ar­ Eisenhower, it will be remembered, gave Stassen leave tee. His thinking domi­ bitrate and calling arbitration “commun­ of absence to campaign against a top member of his adminis­ nates the group and I know of nothing which istic.” They blamed the workers for the tration, Vice President Richard Nixon. Then, when the indicates any basic dis­ shipping tieup. campaign was unsuccessful, the President allowed Stassen agreement between his to return to his post as if nothing had happened. That was ideas and those of the The front elements of Hawaii’s big em­ regarded as pretty big political thinking and it did nothing committee members who ployers constantly hammer away at the to hurt the President in the eyes of the people. are scheduled to be here. control, they claim, the ILWU has on the But there was no such big thinking at lolani Palace. HENNING IS EXCEP­ island economy. They constantly scream Though he admitted Sylva had been an excellent attorney TION that this influence is “Red.” The Subcommittee on general, he could not accept Sylva’s estimate of the “Com­ internal Security is part * r ' ' No one expects the employer front ele­ munist problem” as being one of a minor nature, despite of the Senate Judiciary Committee also chaired by ments to comment truthfully on how Mat- the attorney general’s obvious position of experience and Eastland. So far as I have been able to deter­ mine, the only member of the committee with son exercises its stranglehold on the people knowledge in such matters. He could and did, however, a genuinely constructive method is Senator Tom of Hawaii. It not only has a hold on recognize Sylva’s consistently firm anti-Communist position. Hennings of Missouri who will not be present. the economy, causing such shipping inter­ Had the governor been an executive of stature, he might Hennings has led the fight against the Bricker have expressed his own disapproval of the attorney general’s Amendment, wrote the financial report which wal­ ruptions as the 1949 tieup, but it dictates loped Joe McCarthy in 1952, authored an election what it will charge people of Hawaii with­ attendance at the dinner for Jack Hall and made no move reform bill that would have stopped big campaign out the people having an effective say at all to remove a public official he says has been able funds, and headed the fight within his committee about it. and conscientious. for civil rights legislation. The Star-Bulletin, using company in­ Naturally, he has clashed with Eastland on Backing and Filling the question of civil rights. This is the committee formation, in a childish manner explained through which such legislation is channeled. The that the Matson rate hike will be reflected California recently discovered a new political acrobat chairman of the committee has the power to push in the costs of typical consumer items in in their Sen. William F. Knowland. Knowland, a self­ or retard any bill brought before committee. Since appointed expert on Asia, apparently wasn’t even aware Eastland is a vigorous white supremacist and pennies and fractions of pennies. considers any civil' rights legislation “commun­ of his somersaulting on the end of the war in Korea. Last istic,” it is obvious that he will do all within his For example, it said, the boost will add week, in a statement isstfed~~T5^ the Republican National power to block it. two-tenths of one cent to the freight cost Committee, Knowland declared: '“The whole nation knows of a No. 2 can of peas, and one and one­ that the Democrats tried vainly for 18 months to end the That was exactly what Eastland did. Rumor tenth of a cent to a shirt. had it that the Southern Democrats made a deal stalemated war in Korea. The people know that Dwight D. with the Northern Republicans to keep civil rights Matson gives out this propaganda to Eisenhower visited Korea and peace ensued under which legislation bottled up. Aiad although the Hennings the Communists gained not one foot of ground.” But on subcommittee passed favorably on numerous meas­ make the boost palatable to islanders who ures, the full committee turned thumbs down. would be forced to pay more for freight Dec. 24, 1954, Knowland had 'proclaimed: “Granting the on imported items. Communists an armistice in Korea was a mistake. I thought RACIST VIEWS, THE YARDSTICK so at the time and I have not changed my views on that. I Local apologists for Eastland are trying by By the same kind of explanation, long­ think the armistice is a farce.” the most tortured type of reasoning, to say that shoremen and wharf clerks can say that Southern California Teamster Eastland the white ■ supremacist has nothing to their wage demands would cost one hun- do with Eastland the Communist hunter. Yet any­ dreth of a cent per small can of Vienna body capable of remaining this side of a nut­ house knows that Eastland’s ideas of what con­ sausage, or a box of oatmeal they handle. FROM EASTLAND'S MOUTH stitutes a Communist and communism are deter­ We are witnessing the beginning of a great controversy mined solely by his thinking as a white suprem­ Sugar workers can say too that their —one which will last for years. The issue is: Shall the acist. Chief Justice Warren and the U.S: Supreme wage demands mean a thousandth or ten Court were labelled as “Communist minded’’ and white and the Negro retain their racial identities? The "Communist dominated” because their historic thousandth of a cent per sugar cane stalk future greatness of America depends upon racial purity harvested. decision banning jim crow schools was a blow to and the maintenance of Anglo-Saxon institutions, which Eastland’s doctrine of white supremacy. Matson and other big interests that have still flourish in full flower in the South. Who says the His racist views are the yardstick to deter­ the power to dictate prices and rates use, South will not win? mine activities of the Subcommittee on Internal when they feel the occasion is ripe, the "Mr. President, the' British Empire was entrenched in Security. He has refused to investigate such India for 10 years. It had an army stationed there. Britain major threats to internal security as the riots baiting and smearing treatment of the against* school integration incited by the White unions and give their baiting wide publi­ had invested billions of dollars in that country. Yet old Citizens Councils, revived activity of the Ku KluX city in the press and radio they control. Mahatma Gandhi, ill, in the last stages of high blood Klan, wholesale, disfranchisement of millions of pressure, dressed in a loin cloth, leading a nanny goat and potential Negro voters in the South, etc., because It doesn’t take much figuring to see who he is in sympathy with those who would block carrying a spinning wheel, with his hunger strikes and pro­ the Negro’s struggle for full equality. controls the island economy and who can fessions of piety, drove imperial Britain from India. He paralyze it. The shipping and stevedoring mobilized the sentiment of his people. Southern sentiment Calling this group the Subcommittee on In­ companies did it in 1949. They’ll do it again ternal Security is ridiculous.' It should be known is mobilized. Southern people will stand firm.” as the Eastland Committee to Promote Reaction and blame the workers. (Sen. James O. Eastland, speech of May 27, 1954) and White Supremacy.