DAVID LAWRENCE Dilemma in the Lattimore Case Study Seen on Whether Prosecution Os Perjury in Future Will Be Feasible Bo far as the public is concerned, the case of Owen Lattimore. Far Eastern expert who was indicted by two Fed eral grand juries on perjury charges, ended when the De partment of Justice the other* day asked a Federal Judge to dismiss the Indictments. This doesn't mean that, however, guilt or innocence .has been established. For, due to the* legal battle, waged by the de fendant against the wording of the charges themselves, the case was never tried on its merits. . The controversy inside Washington, especially among lawyers, moreover, hasn’t end ed. The case will certainly be studied by one of the congres sional investigating commit tees to determine whether in view of the 4-to-4 decision of the U. S. Circuit Court of Ap peal anyone hereafter can be successfully prosecuted on per jury charges even when they involve the alleged deliber ate dissemination of propa ganda beneficial to an enemy country. If the Federal judges ap pointed by Messrs. Roosevelt and Truman, who now have re versed the entire trend of ju dicial interpretation of the scope of perjury charges, are to remain in command, it could happen that even in wartime no such prosecutions as were effected in the 1940 s against the promoters of nazism could ever be successful again. For the truth is that present day “liberals” who have in veighed against the nature of the indictments in the Latti more • case were in the fore front of the agitation to jail the Nazi followers in America on almost precisely the same ground a little more than a decade ago. But when alleged promoters of'Communist causes now are indicted, the cry is that they would, if prosecuted, be punished for their beliefs and hence cannot be brought to trial on a perjury charge. For the fundamental issue in the Lattimore case was wheth er the Far Eastern specialist lied when he denied that he was a “promoter of Commu nist interests” and “follower of the Communist line.” The THOMAS L STOKES Eisenhower Acts Like Candidate An Accumulation of Recent Acts, Rather Than Words, Points to Second-Term Try It is in acts, rather than words, that we may find the clues to President Eisenhow er’s 1956 intentions. As far as his words go, he has been adept at the tactics of confusion, and obviously by design and right merrily. In fact, it has become a sort of joking game with him as to whether he will run again next year. He delights evi dently in seeming contradic tions to which he gives cur rency, such as on his recent New England trip. What he said one day was interpreted ’ as meaning for sure that he would run again: but then, the next day. he seemed to be try ing to give just the opposite impression. Whatever he says is, of course, news and a one-day story and subject of guessing contests though none of it thus fai adds up to enlight enment But recent acts, when added up. give us a picture of a man who appears to be taking hold, with a sense of excitement, of his combined job as President and party leader, as if he rel ished it, and with a concern for practical political consid erations in the conduct of his office as if thinking in terms of the next election. There is no question that he got a big lift out of the warm welcome on his New England foray and that this, in turn, inspired in him a zest for meeting with people and talk ing to them, which is the first requirement for a candidate for political office. Nor does it seem without political significance that, promptly on his return from that experience, he set him self up more boldly than hitherto as President and party leader by demanding more action from the Demo cratic leadership in Congress which thought it was doing very nicely for the President of an opposition party. In truth. Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon Johnson was just saying something to that effect when the President broke in to interrupt—and to challenge. The President's intervention gave him an opportunity to identify himself with a po litical philosophy that he once labeled as “moderate progres sive” or “progressive mod erate." For most of what he now calls “my program” was adapted, with some modera- Danish Royal Ballet On First U. S. Visit NEW YORK. July 5 (/P).—The Danish Royal Ballet troupe, the second oldest ballet in the world, arrived ir New York by air yes terday for its first American appearance. The troupe, consisting of six women and four men dancers, will make its American debut tomorrow at Ted Shawn's dance festival at the Jacob's Pillow Theater, near Lee, Mas*. It will remain in the United States until July Si. grand jury charged him with lying and one indictment said he “wilfully and knowingly” promoted such causes. The issue was not whether any body could promote the Com ’ munist cause in America on the public platform or in the press under the protection of the right of free speech and a free press. It was whether Mr. Lattimore lied whep he denied carrying out that sort of a course in his writings and speeches. The Senate Internal Secu rity subcommittee in Septem ber, 1952, unanimously—that is. all Democrats and Repub licans—made s report sub mitting to the Department of Justice five instances of al lege* perjury charges and characterized Mr. Lattimore as a “conscious, articulate instru ment of the Soviet conspiracy in the United States.” But the Department of Jus tice, after being blocked br the United States Court of Appeals as to the wording of the in dictments, finally gave up last week the effort to prosecute. Hence, so far as the Senate Internal Security subcommit tee 4S concerned, it may find itself compelled to make an exhaustive review of the whole subject. For theoretically, at least, it could mean that here after a witness might mislead the committee and knowingly carry on a campaign of propa ganda for an enemy country and yet not be subject to any curb whatsoever by the laws of the land. Plainly, new legisla tion may be needed and that’s what the Senate Internal Se curity subcommittee has a duty to study, and to make such inquiries as are neces sary in pursuit of that legis lative objective. Recently there has been a hue and cry that internal security could readily be left to the FBI and the Federal courts and that there was no need for congressional inves tigations. The latest develop ments, however, show the De partment of Justice as throw ing up its hands in helpless ness when confronted with a case of a man whose writings it charged had coincided or paralleled the Communist tions, from New Deal-Fair Deal programs left around by Messrs. Roosevelt and Tru man. Glibly the President talks of public housing, health edu cation, minimum wage in creases as if he Invented these issues. He has. indeed, taken them over, leaving Democrats gaping and somewhat fussed. But the leaders must try to get them through, or else they will be charged with failing the people. This is not so easy in the House, where Speaker Sam Rayburn finds resistance from many Republicans as well as some Southern Demo crats to some of the Presi dent's “my program.” One of Mr. Eisenhower's re peated pledges in his first campaign for the presidency was to "preserve the social gains,” as he put it. His em phasis again on those issues —and so possessively—could almost be read as an an nouncement that he is run ning again. For those issues are still vote-getters and the best paraphernalia for a can didate on the stump Perhaps the best clue of all that the President will run again, at least in the view of some shrewd politicians of both parties, was his back down on the controversial Dixon-Yates contract that has so provoked so many voters in Tennessee as well as other parts of the South. The President carried Tennessee in the 1952 elections, though by less than 3.000 votes. One of the brightest spots for him in the 1952 result was his sweep into the South that added three other Southern States besides Tennessee to his landslide elsewhere. One of his political aspira tions is for a two-party South, and he would like to get credit for establishing that. He would, if he as a candidate in 1956 could hold Tennessee and carry other Southern States again. Though breaks in the solid South have occurred sporadically—in 1928 and 1948 in this century—they have never carried through two suc cessive national elections, and so were in the accidental cat tical politics which contrib advertisement! READER’S DIREST $53,000 CONTEST Nothing to writo or buyl How wefll do you know human na ture? Here’s a chance to find out— and you may win SIO,OOO cash fimt prize or one of 12,164 other prizes! The official entry blank is FREE at your newsstand.. Just read its brief descriptions ot the articles in July Reader’s Digest. Then list, in order, the 6 articles you think most readers of the magazine will like best. Or, if you wish, read the com plete articles in July Reader’s Di gest, now on sale. You'll also find an entry blank in all newsstand copies—but you need not buy the magazine to enter. Entries must be postmarked by midnight, July 26. Hurry—get a free entry blank i at your newsstand TODAY! fc ' causes. He denied being a promoter ot Communist causes. One may conclude that ir up holding the District court, the Court of Appeals reasoned that the court’s action can be in terpreted to mean that the question of a false oath in a future ease of this kind is an issue that cannot be submitted to a jury because the subject matter itself now is ruled to be insusceptible of proof. This is a far-reaching ap plication of a radical concept and overturns what has been an established principle of Anglo-American common law since the 16th century. The decision to drop the Lattimore case was not ar rived at by the Department of Justice without considerable discussion among its lawyers. The case could have been taken on appeal to the Su preme Court of the United States. But to the top officials of the department it looked as if the whole thing might come to a head during the 1956 political campaign. So the Eisenhower administra tion, rather than risk the in jection into partisan politics of the controversy—which, by the way, was begun in the courts by the Truman admin istration with the first' in dictments against Mr. Latti more—decided to abandon it and pursue perhaps in some other case the issue of the scope of perjury indictments. This, however, leaves sev eral unresolved questions up to Congress and its security committees: Is new legisla tion needed to curb propa gandists who, it may be al leged, willfully and knowingly promote Communist interests inside the United States? Are propagandists for Communist causes in America to have a free hand hereafter in the {‘cold war”? Is there to be a reversal of the “clear and present danger” doctrine of the late Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, famous liberal? For it was he who declared that the right of free speech does not include the right to cry “fire” in a crowded theater. The safety of the Republic used to be paramount even with judges of “liberal" persuasion at least they didn't refuse to listen to the evidence of an alleged infraction. (Rtproductlan Right* Reserved.) uted to the belief he is look ing toward a 1956 candidacy, egory. In the congressional elec tions fast year, Dixon-Yates was found to be effective as an issue for the Democrats beyond the South; though more so in the South naturally where the TVA, into which the Dixon- Yates deal would have injected a private power wedge, is such a cherished landmark. Demo crats claimed good effects for them from the issue not only in the Pacific Northwest, which has great public power proj ects of its own in Grand Cou lee and Bonneville, but also with voters in the Middle West. Politically this deal was get ting too hot to handle, though the President had stood firm until last week. Here he ex hibited an interest for prac- FORTY WINKS AWAY BY NATIONAL fly NATIONAL to RICHMOND WILMINGTON, N.Cn CHARLESTON, S.C -rent a car there • Pressurized, air-conditioned cabin, 44 seats arranged two-abreast • Built-in steps to speed you on your way after landing • Self-store luggage racks if you want to save baggage claiming time • Delicious complimentary meals served in flight fra*.. je>~ ■ . CALL NATIONAL FOR RESERVATIONS ANYWHERE J NATIONAL AIRLINE OF THE STARS . / iiHff WMM use national air FREIGHT W LOUIE —Br Hony Honan POTOMAC FEVER fLCTCHCK KNIBCL Moscow treats the American chess team to a 19-course dinner. You. can’t win. If the Reds aren't spoiling your appetite, they’re giving you indigestion. * * * • Now about that garden hose that's sinking into the ground in California. The big mystery is why anybody who could pull a hose underground would forget to pull California in after it. * * * * Secretary of Commerce Weeks says 1955 will be a record year for business. The standard of living is so high that a fellow can climb on top of it—and see everybody he owes. * * * * Republicans say President Eisenhower can’t be whipped. He’s the Davy Crockett of politics. * * * * An Australian claims he ate 480 oysters in an hour. Don’t believe it. Anybody who would eat that many oysters at one time couldn't count that high. * * * * The Commerce Department says the average wife has been married 13 years. As for the average husband, there’s no such thing. They’re all mediocre. ** * • Surveys show the Germans are drinking less beer. Watch out, men. The last time that country sobered up, it took six years to stop the fight. Austria Shows Coolness Toward Setting Up Army VIENNA, July 5 (JP). Aus trians are showing little enthu siasm for setting up an army under this country’s restored independence. Government leaders are trying to popularize the idea of univer sal military training. The ques tion of the length of military service is still to be decided. The conservative People Party de mands a 12-month term, while the Socialite consider four to six months sufficient. The coalition parties likely wtll agree on universal military training and the building up of a mobile force of 25,000 to 30,000 men. A compromise probably will be reached on a nine-month term of service. The uniform of light gray is to be worn open at the neck, with a grayish shirt and tie. The trouser legs are to be tucked into American-type light boots. Both political parties have an- nounced that satisfactory ar rangement will be found for re cruits refusing military service I on religious and other grounds. Austria is to be neutral under : its treaty of independence. . Chancellor Julius Raab says the army “will not be invincible, but ! should be strong enough to force even a major enemy to think twice before attacking.” There’s More Interest at Union Trust! B : I■ j [! jp m PERCENTAL BrLSaEhbR WF We mean the 2Y 2 per cent interest l|| Union Trust now pays on savings s§§ SpNNDw accounts from SIOO to SIO,OOO BRH| the bank’s officers). Your money earns this 2% per cent* ' at a bank where every financial service is at your command. What’s more, after the account is opened you may make all subsequent ‘ deposits at your nearest mail box in the handy Bank-by-Mail envelopes we are glad to supply. Open your account soon at Union Trust and put your savings to work for you at 2Vi per cent. j *Computed April 30 end October 31 on minimum balance for period. mmSßgm Union Trust Company ) OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BSEm!jollity 15th & H Streets, N. W. 14th & G Streets, N. W. « Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation "The Symbol of Friendly Banking" CONSTANTINS BROWN No Real Reason to Hope for Peace Smiles From the Kremlin Have Not Changed Ruthless Bolshevik Hearts There la much talk among our peace planners that there must be a good reason when the Kremlin sends its top men traipsing all over the world with instructions to smile, shake hands, drink toasts and open a small crack in the Iron Curtain for American newspapermen. The planners seem to believe an impending major economic crisis is behind the new atti tude of the Soviet hierarchy. This theory is shared by many Americans who by necessity judge the totalitarian peoples by their own standards. We just change administrations when things go badly And the American electorate knows that administrations do not want to lose elections. The initiated who have in tensively studied old Russian and present Soviet affairs are inclined to disagree with this optimistic thesis. They believe that Russia’s present feints are the work of skilled Soviet diplomacy intended to isolate America from her European allies on whose association Washington predicates the conduct of its foreign policies. The initiated believe that the main /purpose of Messrs. Bulganin. Molotov and Co. in putting velvet mittens over their iron hands is to seek a Soviet-type solution for West ern Europe. And once they have achieved this at Geneva and the other conferences which may succeed that gath ering at the summjt they would want to force this coun try to abandon its stand on Far East defenses. They ex pect their deceptive smiles will stir in Americans that will for “peace at any price” which has existed in Western Europe for at least four years. The skeptics in Washington maintain, that bad economic situations do not affect the present Bolshevik tyranny any more than during the hun dreds of years of Czarist re gime. They say the present Communist lords disregard the rights of man and the well being of the masses as much as or more than the autocratic Czars did. The masses in Russia have been inured to privations un der the empire or under the Bolsheviks. There has been mass starvation and frequent hunger under the emperors as well as under the dictators. Millions have died of starva THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. C. tctimt. row a. lfc tion because of bad crops, faulty transportation and ad ministrative corruption and inefficiency under both sys tems of totalitarian govern ment. Only free men or men once accustomed to freedom rebel when the cup overflows. The 1949 Russian food crisis pro duced no revolution—only local uprisings which were suppressed by the MVD forces with the customary Russian ruthlessness. What our policy makers overlook is the fact that throughout Russian history there has been no revolution wherein the whole people rose against the rulers. There have been occasional uprisings in small sections: there have been numerous plots against the Czars by young men in the in telligentsia. But unlike the British. American and French, the Russian people have never risen in mass against their op pressors regardless of what hardships they have suffered. Possibly this is because they lacked unity of race and lan guage. The 1917 revolution, wit nessed by this reporter, was brought about by a handful of men at a time when the Czarist Norblad Hits Use Os Foreign Butter Representative Norblad, Re- [ publican, of Oregon, said yester day the Army and Navy are using Danish and Australian butter. He urged that it be stopped and surplus American i butter be used instead. Mr. Norblad said that since ; :he reported last month that j I Danish butter was being sold in | Army commissaries in Okinawa, : servicemen had written telling him the same was happening in Japan. He said servicemen also had reported seeing Australian I butter in Army and Navy com missaries and aboard Navy ships 1 in the Far East. ' 1 The Congressman's protest was made in a.letter to Wilber M. Brucker. who has been nom inated by President Eisenhower to become Secretary of the Army this month. He referred to his original protest on the Okinawa 1 sales to Secretary of the Army Stevens last month. A-13 armies were punch-drunk from the many defeats they had suffered from the Germans. A similar situation might have come about in 1942 had Amer ica not rushed vast supplies to bolster the Boviet morale and fighting power and had the Western allies remained as impassive militarily toward- Germany as they were in 1917. Since the end of the war the skilled men in the Kremlin have won one diplomatic vic tory after another against the once great powers of the West. These victories Ivave frequently been served in lieu of food and consumers’ goods to the Rus sian people through unrelent ing propaganda which did not exist in the past. The slogan ot guns (in the present case, planes and bombs) instead of butter is as appealing today to the Russians as it was to the Germans under Nazi domina tion. Economic difficulties, even hunger through major crop failure, say the skeptics in Washington, ar- not likely to affect the men in the Krem lin whether they be Lenin. Stalin or the Czars of the past. What influences the Russian bear, say these students of Russian affairs, is the desire to deceive the West into a feeling of security and thus make the final "kill” easier and less risky. Baptist Union Hears Belmont College Head MASSANETTA SPRINGS. Va„ j July 5 UP). —The president of Bel mont Baptist College in Nash i ville, Tenn., called on church men here last night to pour themselves "out selflessly for Christ and other people." Dr. R. Kelly White spoke be fore some 900 delegates attend ing the 45th annual Virginia Baptist Training Union assem bly here. WHEEL ALIfiNMENT SPECIAL >4-«i ECCENTRIC TYPE Alm wheel* balanced, knee-action rabuilt, part* and sarvice. ffitik l BRAKE STEERING & ELECTRICAL SERVICE 1BO» M St. N.W. ST. 3-2066 611 MS. At*. S.W. ME. 6-623* ■ t 6th and lnd*p*ndeiira At*.