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The News du lieu suivant : Paterson, New Jersey • 23

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The Newsi
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Paterson, New Jersey
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23
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'f March 2. 1972 States Cover Is Blown BUCKLEY On The Right WM. BUCKLEY JSC' BY ART BUCHWALD- TULLY Capital Faro Andrew tully A German Spy Once Saved Her By JACK O'BRIAN- WASHINGTON One of the best-kept secrets, of the Nixon Administration was -blown during the President's trip to China last week. The American people discovered that NEW YORK Critic Marya Mannes now reveals she was a-World War II For our side. Her cover was as New Yorker mag reporter in Spain and Portugal.

She reversed some of the usual Bonded-tension: a German spy once saved her, Danish secretary Birgitte van Deurs be-' conies a "Royal" British princess via marriage to Prince Richard of Gloucester. The Duchess of Windsor's been wed to her there is a highly confidential organization advising the President on foreign af- -fairs which is called the State Department. The head of this secret apparat is a lawyer named William Rogers, an old friend of President Nixra. i This is how the exist- undercover agency was President Nixon went to BUtHWALD ence of this vealed. When O'BRIAN the agency he represents may believe they were reporting news, but in effect they are only giving aid and comfort to th enemy." "Does the revelation of a State Department mean that' Henry Kissinger is not running the entire foreign policy of the United States?" "It means no such thing.

All policies on foreign affairs are still made by the 'be-, partment of Kissinger', or, as we call it' here, the DOK. The State Department, and I'm not confirming there is one, mind you, is sort of a backup organization which provides the Presidentwith information he might miss from his usual sources." 1 "If this is true, why all the mystery about the organization? Why hasn't the country heard about the State Department before? And why has the identity of Wil-. liam Rogers, as head of it, been kept a '-'t-'-i STYryy' I 1 "The -President believes that there are certain agencies that can operate x-if they arenot publicized. If people knew what Mr. Rogers did, he would not have the freedom of movement that he has now.

He can go anywhere in the world without being recognized. The President can assign him missions that would be for someone as well known as Henry Kissinger to take. The State De partment, because, of its has. been able to perform a great service to the nation." "Do you believe the gamble of taking Mr. 'Rogers to Peking was worth all the trouble that the State Department is now in?" "That's Monday morning quarterhack-Jng.

From the beginning we were aware that it was a calculated risk to allow Mr. Rogers to be seen in such close proximity to the President. But at the time the decision was made, we had no idea that the would meet Mao Tse-tung, and Rogers wouldn't." "Will the State Department be now that its role is out in the open?" "That decision is up to Dr. Kissinger," China, he was seen in the company of a sandy-haired man who rarely left the President's side. Most reporters on the trip assumed he was a Secret Service man and paid no attention to Mm.

Rut then the President went to visit Chairman Mao Tse-tung, and the newspapermen discovered that the sandy-haired man did not accompany Mr. Nixon. This knocked out the theory that the mysterious person was a Secret Service agent." When questioned about what the person was doing on the trip, Ron Ziegler, re- A luctantly admitted that: the man's was William Rogers and he held title of secretary of state, and be had something to do with foreign affairs, though Ziegler refused to go into it" any further, i- ij 1 Meanwhile, back in Washington, reporters were trying to find out more, about the State Department and where it fitted into the diplomatic picture. The White House seemed very disturbed about the leak, and J. Edgar Hoover has been ordered to find out who blew Mr.

Rogers' cover. A White House spokesman told me, "It does no good lor the security of the nation to talk about the role of the State Department in foreign affairs. The people who revealed the existence of Mr. Rogers and ex-king 35 years and still hasn't been officially dubbed Next week is "Return Borrowed Books Week;" anyone know the author of the quatrain: The characters who borrow, books come from all races and -I wish some kind Burbankian guy would cross my books with homing rr. Suzanne and Sidney Blackmer (Sidney's been ill) proved he's fit again at L'Aiglon.

Said both will appear of the Cat," to be filmed in Charlotte, N.C., in April. Copa hadliner Bobby Darin lugs a tape recorder to all interviews to make certain no one misquotes him A regular Chou En-lai, eh? Crime 7 costing the nation's business almost $16 billion a year, but the Commerce Dep't says businessmen are too apathetic about spending what.it takes to erase it. Karen Morrow, who belts out a song like Merman, was signed for Selling of the President" and didn't get one song to Now they may write one in. Especially after the three Philty reviews. AU bad.

Aft.r Dark mag gives its "Ruby" award to Dorothy one of the major "Follies" 'excitements after all those coootsy-' poo early Hit Paraded too-cute If Jessica Walters wins an Oscar for "Play Misty for Me" she'll certainly indulge a pregnant pause on the way to the podium: As Mrs. Ross Bowman she's expecting a baby in May. VV Caesars Palace topped Yugoslavia's bid for the Bobby Fischer-Russki chess championship ($175,000 to the Yugo i The players decided Caesars Palace has too many distractions, Of course it has. forth, he sighs. Brando (25 films) and Liz Taylor (40) think they are celluloid veterans but Jack Warner's "1776" jmovie is Jack's Jerl Farrellj is a Yonkers housewife, r-dedicated mother of two, and has balanced the bit thus: to massage ego and tonsils, Jeri sings eight weeks a year with the band.at Roseland.

There now. Ethel Merman's excitement "at the Pen Pencil was about her immediate future: Mar. 1, a concert at Philharmonic Hall, then in June she's off td Disrieyworid and the Caribbean with grandkids, Mike, 11, and Barbara, 8. Laugh-in Arte Johnson's German frau Gisela becomes a U.S. eitizen Mar.

24 Henry Mancini's rock-oriented son Chris, who heads his own group, "Fly," just zipped up a big record "Hair" pit band leader Margaret Harris has TV-taped a CBS-TV special conducting the prestigious Chicago Symphony Howard Hughes has to do something startling now to steal the headlines back from Henry Kissinger. Don't think he doesn't like them either! Jazz king Lionel Hampton's already booked for the re-elected-Nixon Inauguration Ball, he tells us. Somerset Maugham's secretary-companion for decades, Alan -Searle, has turned down a real fortune to write a book about- his. late boss. The Old Party's confessed homosexuality is the vulgar key to the big offers but Searle won't do it.

Maugham left him far mpre than enough money not to. Revlon's European Pres. Paul Hughes and, his Patsy are divorcing. Sad. Nice people.

Eva Gabor's serious, even if Sinatra isn't. Sports Illustrated gifted writer Dan Jenkins has a first novel, that has. the galley-proofers prophesying certain best-seUerdom. jWillieFreischauer's book "David Frost" really takes that carbonated English iiri- port apart. Diahann won't like it! Only makeup artist in "Who's is Dick Smith, who Mafia-aged Bj-ando for "The Godpappy." Duke, Ellington hasn't much more room for honors but collects three more Downbeat Mag's top composer, arranger, and big-band categories.

Greek money-shipper Stavros Niarchos bought the Chateau de la Croe from the Duke of Windsor 15 years ago and never stayed in it one night. But his brideJTjna looked i over and now ttey'UJwlKlhat Antibes This is Publicity the news Juliet Prowse- is being signed to play the Mt. Airy Lodge also includes the leer that' she's. a baby out of That's taking candor from a baby, no? One of the "Superstar" leads was told by the management to cut out the public -boozing and cussing. Tennessee Wil- liams is writing again but not a play.

Says his project is "either a novel or a rambling memoir." Not, he says, an' autobi- ography. The deal for Faberge; Cary Grant's firm, to buy Compoz and Zizanie isn't quite closed yet. Handshakes, but they aren't worth the paper written on, of course. South African-Italian Sergio Franchi's becoming's U.S. citizen.

Our gain. WASHINGTON How can one find words to comment on the. decision of California Judge Richard E. Arna-son's decision to free Angela Davis -on $105,000 bail? Surely it would be iust eVinrf tit klae. phemous to nj 'i 3 ward Coke's' LJ i- tully tion that "Reason is the life of the law; nay, the common law it- self is nothing else but reason." In reconsidering the case against Miss Davis involving the murder of four persons in a courtroom shootout in San Rafael in August 1970, Judge Arhason suggested instead that Dickens' Mr.

Bum- ble was right when he said "If the law supposes that, the law Is a ass, a idiot." The judge said that the state law prohibiting bail in capital cases had been invalidated by the recent State Supreme Court decision abolishing the death penalty in California. But the victims, including a judge, are still dead by human band. Calling murder by some other name than a capital crime requiring the death penalty will not bring those victims back to life, Lazaruslike. 'i IN FACT, the term "capital case" refers only to the punishment for the crime of murder, not to the murder itself; it is used only in states i that prescribe "capital pun ishment," meaning death. Even in states which prohibit capital punishment, defendants often if not customarily are denied bail at the court's discretion because a person accused of murder has nothing to lose if he jumps his bOnd.

I am not saying Angela Davis will jump her bail, which, incidentally, required that she post only $2,500 in cash and the rest in a surety bond. But the record shows that after a warrant was issued for her arrest on a charge of buying the guns that were smuggled Into the courtroom she was a fugitive for several months, and apparent ly had no intention oi sur Indeed, a judge has another option he may use at his dis-' cretion. He can decide that a defendant is a danger to the community and thus should be detained pending conclusion of his trial. Suspects with nothing worse than burglary or rape are sub- Iect to such detention. Miss )avis is charged with the worst crime, murder, under the provisions, of California law that hold an accomplice ui vww New Humane System Being Planned By VICTOR RIESEL Paterson News imJ One is that lack -of morals may be just as re- sponsime tor-poverty as poverty for lack of morals.

There are statistics to sup port at least the partial truth of this view. Thus, throughout the 19th and well into the the most cui. vated and most moral segment of the American community was the most woefully underpaid. They were 'the ministers and the educators. Their children experienced Spartan childhoods as far as this world's goods go.

Yet, they, and their children furnish 60 per cent of the pfo-- lessional life ot tne country. Asked why, one national edu cator "because they were given all the ad- -vantages of American culture without any of the disadvantages of its wealth." Women are much freer of men than they were 50 years ago, and though most worn-' en don't" realize it, men are freer of women. The only ones Who aren't free are 'the children they fell in between; the freedom of the parents they heed. WITHOUT REGARD to creed, color or state of family finance, every child is dependent on the love and i PEKING In what one devoutly hopes will' be the last toast ever offered by a Presi dent, of the. United States to Chairman Mao and Premier Richard Nixon said, giddily, "This was the week that changed For ence he was not traf- BUCKLEY fiplrin irt Viv.

perbole. It was surely such a week, aqd it, was evident from the strain on. the face Henry Kissinger when he presented himself for ques-. tions -after the communique "was issued, thai he also so understood it. Those who know Mr.

Kissinger and his work are entitled to surmise that the whole China adventure settles now in his mini as night- mare. -A, Here is what the Chinese gave up: 1) They consented to traffic with representatives of the government of the United States even though the United States still recognizes "the -government of Taiwan. 2) They perrcrmed routine rhe- torical exercises on the, theme of world peace, and national sovereignty, thereby disap pointing a few Berkely sopho- mores and African purists who believed that Maoism would never equivocate on the primacy of its internatien- al revolutionary When the New York Times' reporter asked Mr. has the United States accomplished that wasn't accomplished by Ping-Pong, Mr. JCissinger, nettled, rattled off, Chinese obeisances to the good international life.

He might as well have cited the Soviet Union's guarantees as described in its constitution. HERE IS what the United States gave up: 1) With all the world poised to consider one -point above all, namely the commitment to Taiwan, we juibcgiitjr ui. uic vutvu okaiw issued v- a communique in ed and re-asserted their ab- solute right to conquer Taiwan, while we uttered not one word on the subject of our defense treaty, not one word on the applicability of our prin-' ciples of self-government and independence to the people of Taiwan. staggering capitulation, for all that Kissinger sought to distract from 4t by citing President Nixon's world report which reaffirms our, de- fense treaty with is the salient datum in the week that changed the world. AlF of Asia will understand that whatever the Mandarin niceties of the President's world report, at the crunch he didn't dare risk a social breach in Peking and its implications, merely to reassure the people and the government of Tai? wan notwithstanding that on announcinff last summer that he would come to China, Nixon guaranteed that he wonH nnt iMnardizA'the best' interests of our 'friends." SINCE UTTERING those words, Mr." Nixon has seen the expulsion of Taiwan from the United Nations, and, how.

the expulsion of Taiwan from the Presidential catalog of nations in Asia whose independence he is prepared to affirm while in China, 2) We have lost irre- trievably any sense of moral mission in the world. Mr. Nixon's appetite, for a summit conference in Peking transformed the affair from a meeting of diplomatic technicians concerned to examine and illuminate areas of common interest, into 'a pageant of moral togetherness at which Mr. Nixon managed to give the impression that he was consorting with Marian Anderson, Billy Graham and Albert Schweitzer. Once he deci(ied t0 Come here himseif lit waa wryl npvHflWfl' mat iiiio onuuiu unyyvitt- Gr anted, if it had been Theodore Roosevelt, the distinc- might have been preserved.

But it is important to remember about Mr. Nixon that he is so much the moral enthusiast that he alchemizes the requirements of diplomacy info the coin of ethics. That is why he toasted the bloodiest incumbent chief of state in the world in accents most owner of the mule team liable for Seymour's being dumped? 5 in t. 1 The Stage Deli's No. 1 pastrami-mes-, senger is called "Johnny" for short.

Long, he'S really Chanabhong Changkrajang, a -Bangkok U. featherweight champ in his. native Thailand. Now. he's working his way through, kasha.

That's a wheat gecm with a college education. "Two by Two" was a terrible musical but Tricia O'Neill (got unanimously great reviews) was the one marvelous item in it. The talent scouts mustn't've been able to separate her. gold from the dross Hasn't worked since. Power of TV: N.Y.

police surgeon Arthur Michele's surname properly is pronounced "Mishelli," but after TV. appearances (Mike Douglas, etc.) for his book "Orthotherapy," so many calls came pronouncing, his name" the same Mike mispronounced it (Mishell) that Doc's decided not to fight it. Mishell it is hence Busing Is the Answer equally guilty with the per- ana tenaiuiy nut we noon-nn ornersons who nhvsicallv einal gorillas hkh profes sdid the murdering. -'r sional and high profit-making working ina jute mill, a mat-It is hard not to quarrel ultra-left-wing causists would tress rehabilitation cage or li- WASHINGTON Of course there' is a Marxist-Leninist neo-revolutionary network in side Amerl- ca's 'prisons especially the local and state pen s. I've inter viewed and cor responded with wardens across the land who a Ve faced RIESEL i 1 1 A.

"correctional institutions." I've read prisoners' diaries and truly brilliant rebel liter ature expertly written in class struggle language. 7 There is physical as well as Ideological rot inside the nation's prisons and a cultural counteroffensive' has been launched by city, state and Federal penologists who are erudite, umane, empatnetic nave you Deiieve. love oi money is tne root of all evil, availability of mo.ney can uproot the primordial evil inside our prisons which the Eldridge Cleaver- Black Panther network skillfully exploits even to' the of goading their own "brothers" info futile and lethal propaganda-making rebellions. From: the construction industry' itself there is word that the "prison con- struction market" will have $11 billion available. 7 ALL THIS money will not go, over the decade or more, for stone walls and iron bars.

Many of these may be. as archaic as a non-sexual movie. There is a year-old Office of Facilities Development in the Federal Bureau of Prisons. It plans prisons which, wont be massive human "ware- houses" but smaller wsti- tutions for 200 to 500 persons. It thinks in terms of separat-- ing touch criminals from those awaiting trial wnose guilt nas not yet been proven.

This office is responding to the public and official concern with the increasing crime rate and the demand for a long searching look at the nation's criminal -justice This office is developing new concepts not only in creation of institutions which will not co-mingle the murderer" with the not-yet- convict- of a four -sited West Coast Ynnt.h rnmnlev: Thpv will ha "campus" styled. They are planned for Seattle. San Fran- cisco, Los Angeles and San Diego. Estimated cost now is 1 $16 million; FIRST TO come up for bids will be a $12 million New York City Metropolitan Correctional Center a pre-sentencing detention and court service fa- -cility. There will be complete facilities for mental and physical diagnosis, counseling and other humane care because the building will hold persons 1 awaiting trial or This will be the first of the Metropolitan Center concepts -soon to be a network After New York comes Chicago with a 25-story building at $10 million Three such Metropolitan correctional centers are set for San Diego, i San Francisco and Philadel-' phia.

Plans of the Federal Bureau Of Prisons call for a women's dormitory facility at Terminal Island, a Northeast Youth Complex, ho final loca--tion yet, and a Behavioral Research 'Center at Butner, N.C., a campus-type designed for research into humanizing correctional treatment. There is money $230 million in Federal research and con- struction funds this year. There is heart. There need for planning and research. True, it is a race against the skilled inner-core revolutionist." But it be Judge "After all the cacti were painfully removed from his derriere Seymour sued the-operator of the mule team for his tender backside.

"That mule to me complained beymour court, "was the most stead- fast animal I ever came? across. It had absolutely no, get up and go." a mule is as stubborn as a was the' an- swer, "it's to be expected and not my fault. In fact, if any-v body was at fault, it was Seymour himself. He was in the saddle and he had control of the animal. Getting the mule to go was his problem and not mine.

IF YOU WERE THE would you hold the by Brickman IT INSIDE PRISON ed, but in rehabilitation treatments which include campuslike "prisons," modern sky-' scraper -psychiatric and training centers, penal hospitals and humane treatment. This office, headed by an imaginative architects is de- veloping "pre architectural programs" which will be. turned over to other "out side' architects. The thrust, which is as much counterthrust to those revolutionists who want to whip up the 430,000 men and women who make an average, year's i population throughout the U.S., calls for, more regionalized community-oriented institutions which will blend Into their locations, and for more attention within the prisons to the individual inmate's needs for privacy. There will be useful job-get-.

ting skills developed through the sort of reform on which Jimmy Hoffa believes he has a monopoly of advocacy. The old system of inmates cense plate, production will be eased over the years. Thus juveniles and younger offenders won't mash their souls as well as their fingers. Physically scores of millions of dollars now being supplied on a 75 to 25 basis to the local and state penal authorities by the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA) will create a new prison of tomorrow. For example, soon up for bids will be the construction 8e yjhe THE OF THE FLIPPED ACCOUNTANT By JACK STRAUSSi LL.B.

SEYMOUR WAS an ad ven- he discarded hfs glasses and his accounting practice long enough to take a tour through the Grand Canyon via mule team. Unhappily, I1 however? the mule assigned to him proved extremely backward about going forward. Instead of seeing the canyon, there-' poor Seymour nearly ended up in it. While trying to make his long-eared com-' anion "gid-y-yap," the stub-orn critter began to buck and rear and dumped him out of his saddle. Only a cactus plant, on which he landed, backside up, stopped his downward trek.

PAT with the position of tne prose- cutor, Deputy State Atty; Gen. Albert Harris Jr. "I think what he (the judge) is doing is against the law," said Harris. In the hearing in chambers, he pointed out jthat it is still not xnown whether the State Supreme Court would rehear the case in which it voted, 6 to 1, that the death penalty constituted "cruel and unusual" punishment in contravention of the State Constitution, i A Harris argued quite properly that the bail question should be postponed until that question was answered. But he did not appeal the judgets ruling because he said he wanted to concentrate on pre paring for the long-deiayea rial.

POSSIBLY, HARRIS also i. I i. 1 J. trial as much as possible. If ZT hJ.

HrAflmir. Nothinff anybody can do from now on will, end the screeching of Miss 'Davis' supporters that she is tried because she is a black and an avowed Communist. Everything her supporters and defense have said publicly indicates that "political persecution" will be "prominent in their arguments. -In any event, the law has 'surrendered to a segment of Eublic opinion. Coke probably i swiveling in his but not the 18th play- wright, Charles Macklin.

In "Love- a la Mode," Macklin observed that "The law is a sort of hocus-pocus science." love Not WASHINGTON ---Iirisan ovinm nt Npwtnhian ohvsics SL that action is jequaL.to reac-. tion. with equal force and in the opposite direc-' tion. This' law, in general, a bp 1 i to politics, with the exception that the reaction very often exceeds the action in. force.

CUNEO I' of us would reserve for Flor-ence Nightingale. 3) Mr. Nixon has almost certainly adjusted American politics such a way as to compel almost the whole of the Democratic party, to the position that we need to dump Taiwan. Previously, that had been an aberration of Senator George McGovern. A few days ago, in the spirit, of Peking, Senator Fulbright took it up.

Now, in the communique mid-wifed by Richard Nixon, the Chinese list the independence of Taiwan as the principal ob- stacle to the "normalization" of relations between China and the U.S. (as if our normal relations with the Soviet Union 'had done anything for the peace and freedom of the "world)." And- Richard Nixon, by his heroic actions of the past week, clearly puts 'normalization as the highest ob- jective. The analytical deduc- -tion will necessarily occur to Democratic presidential candidates, and the arguments -will have been made for them by Richard Nixon. All of this might take a few years to transact, in America. But in Asia, they.

will have received the signal. They Will have got' it by the ime these words are printed. Mr. Kissinger spoke about the Peking summit "in terms of the direction to which it seeks to point" and of "the basic objective" of setting "in motion a tram of events and an evolution in the policy of our two' countries." That was" brilliantly accomplished. By ERNEST CUNEO- The -country's reaction.

the busing of school chiiaren tenas to illustrate the point. As f. a -whole, the vast majority of the "Ameri can people are against busing, and are' now aroused, about it. For this basic reason, willy-nilly, busing is dead. In simplest terms, this means that, if those elected to olfice don't kill it, the vast majority will elect officials' who will, period, BUSING WAS ill-conceived, ill-contrived and ill-effected from the first.

By this time, it is perfectly clear that it does not achieve the goals it heralded, and in fact, is often6 counter-nroductlve of them It was also apparent, and long before busing was instituted, that, children who' did not do well in school were more affected by the homes or lack of homes from which they came, than the schools to which they went. For all of the bleeding-hearts "and handwriting, only 50 years ago, the American people were for worse off educationally than the poorest areas today. In 1920, only 75,000 boys and 25,000 girls werefi.graduated from college. Today, the college population is nearly eight million and will be doubled by 1980: 527,000 of the undergraduates are 'black Americans. Sixty per cent of all black American males between 25 and 29 have a high school diploma.

In 1920, a high school diploma was not unusual, but it was far from general. This represents the greatest advance of general education In recorded no other nation or civilization then or now even roughly compares with it. It was accomplished without busing. Americans were much poorer then and poorest of all during the -Depression. Out of that nightmare was born the conviction that poverty was the cause of all moral ills.

Since then, the wealth of the country has increased .10 times and so has the crime rst6. SOME SERIOUS thinking must be done about this, which means that-some previous accepted axioms must be the small society interest of its parents. Money is no substitute, and absence money. is little excuse, As Emerson said, the only gift possible is of oneself; a ma-terial thing may be a symbol of such gift, but it can never be a substitute for it. Hundreds -of studies, by--4- dedicated and honest people, all come up with the same answer: for a there's' not only no place like home, but nothing which can take its place.

As the experiences of the families of clergy and the educators prove, a gram- i mar school is, at best, only an extension of the -primary education in the home. As for packing millions of American kids in buses, literally, it's the end' of the line in parental attempt to shift upon the public school' system their own inalienable responsibility, "By their fruits shall he know them" saith the Lordv and He sure as hell didn't have Boards of Education mind when He fixed that re This is how tne Judge ruled; Yes! The judge held that any-, one who offers transportation to the public is a "common "carrier" and has a duty to use the utmost care and diligence for their safe carriage. In this case, the judge 'pointed out, the fact that Seymour exercised some con-' iMTrieRJuiT -trol Jover the mule did not-re lieve the operator of the mule team of his duty. As a "common carrier," he was required to exercise the highest degree of care in selecting an appropriate and safe mule for Seymour which, apparently, '-he failed to do. (Based upon a 1 1962 California District Court Decision) A.

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