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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, June 15, 1958, Image 10

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1958-06-15/ed-1/seq-10/

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i •• THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C.
SCWDAV. JPVE It, IMP
lAre You a "Harry Homeowner"^_L
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Chinese Reds Release
Priests After 5 Years
HONG KONG. June 14 (/P). —Two United SUtes Roman
Catholic priests walked out ol prison In Red China today after
serving full five-year terms on charges of espionage. They were
described as cheerful.
The Rev. Joseph P. McCormack. 6&, of the Maryknoll Semi
nary in Osalnlng, N. Y., and the Rev. Cyril P. Wagner. SI of
Pittsburgh and Chicago werer
the last two United States:]
priests imprisoned by the Com-; i
munists. |
A third. Bishop James Ed- I
ward Walsh of Cumberland, Md., i
has been held under various 1
forms of arrest In Shanghai but 1
has been given an exit visa. He i
has said, however, he wants to 1
work with the people and will
not leave unless forced to do
so. h
Fathers McCormack and
Wagner were met by Bishop
Walsh after their release.
To Board Ship
Bishop Walsh said by tele
phone from Shanghai that he
understood the two priests
would board the British ship
Changsha due in Shanghai
: Wednesday for a trip to Hong
;jKong and then to the United
States. The Bishop said he did
[lnot know when the Changsha
r would leave Shanghai.
“They seemed cheerful and
; looked fairly well, but a little
;! oldish.” Bishop Walsh said. He
said they were staying at the
; Peace Hotel, Shanghai’s best.
In Pittsburgh, Father Wag
i ner’s relativies said they knew
i that the Communists were
i going to release him and Father
l ; McCormack.
“It is wonderful news, but we
\ are most concerned about his
\ health," said his sister, Mrs..
Joseph Kleber. “Another priest
who saw him in China not too
i iong ago said they (the Com
| munists) were giving him in
fections to bring up his health.”
Called “Criminals’’
\1 The release of the two priests
| was announced by Peiping
jj radio. It referred to them as
l j “American criminals.’’ The
| Communists repeatedly have
\ used charges of espionage
against missionaries and other
: foreigners they want to take
l out of circulation.
Their release leaves four
l other Americans behind bars
i; in Red China on spy charges.
They are John T. Downey, an
I Army civilian employe from
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New Britain, Conn.; Richard
G. Fecteau, another Army em
ploye from Lynn, Mass., and
businessmen Hugh F. Red
mond of Yonkers, N. Y.. and
Robert E. McCann of Alta
dena, Calif. They are serving
terms ranging from 15 years
to life.
In hit telephone talk, Bishop
Walsh said he had heard
nothing about those four.
Accused as Spy
The Peiping broadcast said
Father McCormack was Im
prisoned on the charges of
collecting Chinese political and
economic information “under
the cover of being a priest."!
Father Wagner, it said, was
Jailed “for sabotaging China’s
financial ordinance.”
Father McCormack left the
United States in 1925 for the
Catholic mission at Fushun,
Manchuria. His mission was
seized by the Japanese early in
World War n and he was re
patriated to the United States
In August, 1942. He returned
to Manchuria after the war but
was forced out by the Chinese
Communist advance against
the Chinese Nationalists. He
went to China proper and in
1951 moved to Shanghai, where
he was arrested.
Father Wagner was ordained
in 1934 at Teutopolis. 111., and
went to China the next year.
Boys' Camp to Begin
10th Season Tuesday
Camp St. Florence, the St.
Vincent de Paul Camp at Abell,
St. Marys County, Md., will be
gin its 10th season Tuesday.
Nearly 100 underprivileged
boys from 10 to 14 years old
will enjoy a 10-day vacation,
the first of six camping periods
(this summer.
The Very Rev. Msgr. George
|L. Gingras, moderator of the
camp, has issued an appeal for
$20,000 to complete this year's
I program. 1
JBF K.JXL
I
h
f Bn§ Jg
RELEASED BY CHINESE REDB—The Rev. Joseph P.
McCormack (left) and the Rev. John P. Wagner
(right) the last two American Roman Catholic
pries** imprisoned In Communist China, have been
released at Shanghai.—AP Wlrephoto.
Church ill Was Doubtful
Os Victory, Notes Show
By the Associated Press
Documents held secret 18
years disclosed yesterday Sit
Winston Chuchill may not have
been nearly so cocksure of beat
ing the Nazis as he publicly let
on in 1940.
Hitherto unpublished cable:
and messages, many of them
exchanges between Mr. Church
ill—later to become Sir Win
ston Churchill—and President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, were Is
sued by the State Department
in a 1,028-page volume. Pari
of a continuing series, it covers
United States relations during
1940 with the British Common
wealth, Russia, the Near East
and Africa.
A glimpse of Mr. Churchill’s
doubts of success in the first
year of World War n was pro
vided in a cable from Joseph
Kennedy, then United States
Ambassador in London, to Pres
ident Roosevelt and the late
Cordell Hull, then Secretary
of State. The message was
dated May 15—five days after
Mr. Churchill became prime
minister. Mr. Kennedy wrote:
“I just left Churchill at 1
(o’clock). He is sending you
a message tomorrow saying he
considers with the entrance of
Italy, the chances of the allies
8 winning is slight.”
r Whatever Impression Mr.
e Churchill gave Mr. Kennedy,
* however, the ebullient Prime
1 Minister’s message to President
Roosevelt was grimly confident.
18 , In his personal history of World
n War n, Mr. Churchill quoted
‘ the message as saying:
lt “If necessary, we shall con-!
_ tinue the war alone, and we!
X are not afraid of that.”
■tl Even so. Mr. Churchill]
s allowed a note of doubt to creep
g in. He listed his arms needs.
- saying there would be enough
it available In 1941, but adding,
“if we are alive to see It.”
A measure of Britain’s hopes
. for United States help was
h shown in another cable. In this
ig one, an official British memo to
. Mr. Roosevelt, London offered
e to hand over the secret of
y British radar, then a new secret
s defense weapon, with no strings
r attached. But the British sug
e gested it would be helpful if
: the United States saw its way
1 clear to reciprocate by letting
u London have some technically
e advanced United States radio
f equipment.
U. S. to Deny
Other Nations
H-Bomb Data
By UM Auocltttd Ptui
A high Defense Department
official has Indicated the United
States does not plan to give
any other nation information
on manufacture of the powerful
hydrogen bomb.
This Indication came from
Deputy Secretary of Defense
Quarles* during closed-door
testimony before the Senate-
House Atomic Energy Commit
tee oi4 President Eisenhower’s
proposal to permit greater ex
change of nuclear weapons In
formation and materials with
allies.
In a heavily censored portion
of the transcript made public
yesterday, Mr. Quarles said
“there Is no thermonuclear
(hydrogen) design that we now
either have or contemplate that
would be of a character that
you could transfer under this
plan.”
Outgoing Chairman Strauss
of the Atomic Energy Commis
sion, testifying before the same
committee, said there probably
will never be complete dis
closure of American nuclear
know-how to any other nation.
The committee also was told
there are no plans now to give
; the North Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization weapons manufsc
' turing data. Such information,
; however, could go to an indi
vidual member of the alliance
which already has a nuclear
weapons Industry. At present,
j this means only Great Britain.
Mr. Strauss said the entire
j AEC believes “that there will
1 always be certain secrets which
i we would be unwilling to trans
, mit because our research will
, continue to go ahead and break
, new ground. Therefore, we do
not foresee a time when there
will be a complete exchange.”
! Elsewhere In the closed-door
1 testimony, taken over a four
-1 month period, the committee
1 heard that the British govern
[ ment was negotiating to buy a
nuclear submarine power plant
from Westinghouse Electric
1 Corp.
The submarine reactor deal
would depend on passage of
the nuclear exchange legisla
tfon, which has been approved
A modified form by the Joint
committee and is now before
Congress.

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