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can achieve tremendous results. We have seen it happen time and time again. And we are seeing it happen right here in Minneapolis.

To all the citizens of Minneapolis, as well as to the individuals and organizations from which the leadership has come, I extend the congratulations and good wishes of Look magazine. I understand that you have already received congratulations from many other quarters-including a message from the President of the United States-but I can assure you that none is more sincere than ours.

We say at Look "Success is a journey, not a destination." The All America City Award is not an end, but a beginning. Just keep on traveling.

Mayor Naftalin and Mr. Martens, it is with great pleasure that the National Municipal League and Look magazine present to you as the elected representatives of all the citizens of Minneapolis this recognition of their outstanding achievement through citizen action the All America City Award.

Tribute to Clarence Cannon on 85th Birthday

SPEECH

OF

HON. WRIGHT PATMAN

OF TEXAS

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Friday, April 10, 1964

The House in Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union had under consideration the bill (H.R. 10723) making appropriations for the legislative branch for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1965, and for other purposes.

Mr. PATMAN. Mr. Chairman, we in the House, who know him so intimately and admire him so much, have a thousand reasons for eulogizing CLARENCE CANNON, of Missouri, on having achieved his 85th year. The massive weight of his services for his State and his country, in the great decisions made in this Chamber and by its committees, is a matter of record and has not gone unnoticed, both nationally and internationally. Yet the degree of his fame hardly matches the monumental importance of his contribution for the good of our country and the free world.

The point, however, I am most eager to emphasize in the career of Representative CLARENCE CANNON, of the Ninth District of Missouri, is that the mere accumulation of years is no measuring device for determining an individual's capacity for major service. Far from being a handicap, the seniority that CLARENCE CANNON has attained is the very arch stone of his influence among us, because he is the living proof, demonstrated daily and hourly in this House and its deliberations, of just how relative age can be. By common acceptance and by what is sometimes called the conventional wisdom, CLARENCE CANNON, at 85, ought to be ripe for retirement. It may be, indeed, that CLARENCE CANNON is the exception, perhaps the remarkable and singular exception; but, exception or not, it would be foolhardy and wasteful to the point of legislative tragedy, for the people of his District, the Members of this Mouse, or for Representative CANNON

himself, to be persuaded that he should leave this deliberative body and go into retirement.

I have been in this Chamber long enough, indeed the whole of a political lifetime, to recognize at once among my colleagues the symptoms of failing powers and diminishing vigor. Thousands of legislators have come more or less intimately into my observation over the run of the years, whole generations of them. And so, however great my personal admiration, respect, and affection for CLARENCE CANNON may be, I would not offer this very special emphasis on the strength and effectiveness of his counsel with the committees on which he serves today, did not the fact make so powerful an impression.

For here, to put it bluntly, is seniority without senility.

It is, incidentally, a phenomenon I have witnessed again and again in this House in the course of the years.

What might very likely be a handicap with other legislators of advanced years is an asset with Representative CANNON, for every month and every year of his experience adds to the depth and soundness, the force and analysis of his judg

norance, prejudice, and illiteracy is being waged by the libraries, librarians, and all of those dedicated to this great cause. Poverty is associated with a lack of learning and low income.

Mr. Speaker, I am glad the United States is paying homage this week to all of those throughout the Nation who make our library program one of the very best in the world. These devoted men and women at the local level are making a great contribution to our national culture. Our country is moving forward to its destiny as a nation of enlightenment, education, and understanding, largely because our libraries are leading in the campaign for learning and knowledge.

I salute our libraries and their devoted personnel during this National Library Week and wish for them every continued success. I am particularly proud, Mr. Speaker, of the superb achievements and devotion to duty and success of the men and women in my own State of South Carolina who have been associated in improving this great work.

ments. Mr. Chairman, I have been in Lowell Thomas, Jr.'s, Story of Alaska

this Chamber some 36 years, and I testify as I would under oath, that it is my most thoughtful conviction that the most useful years of CLARENCE Cannon'sS service to his State and to his country in this Chamber occurred after he reached his 70th birthday. And yet the record of his life before that is one to excite the wonder and the applause of the most ambitious leaders of our time.

The wisdom that CLARENCE CANNON has demonstrated through the years and the restraint-especially in fiduciary matters-has been bulwarked by experience as it grew with the years. Had it been otherwise, his influence with the Members of this Chamber and with the committees on which his leadership and direction was so outstanding, would have declined as his gifts declined. Instead he never ceased to grow, to broaden, to understand more and more fully, the endless complexity of the problems that came under his ken and under his decision. Today, as, humbly, I evaluate his meaning to the Congress, to the country, and to the world, I am positive, beyond all question of a doubt, that CLARENCE CANNON stands at the very apex of his talents and his great force as a legislator and a leader of legislators. Mr. Chairman, I sincerely believe that in this man from Missouri the Nation has, for years to come, one of its greatest human assets.

National Library Week

EXTENSION OF REMARKS

OF

HON. W. J. BRYAN DORN

OF SOUTH CAROLINA

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, April 6, 1964

Mr. DORN. Mr. Speaker, a successful and determined offensive against ig

Terror

EXTENSION OF REMARKS

OF

HON. THOMAS M. PELLY

OF WASHINGTON

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, April 6, 1964

Mr. PELLY. Mr. Speaker, the New York Herald Tribune of Sunday, April 5, carried a most graphic description of the holocaust which raised such havoc in our neighboring State to the north, Alaska. Since this article was written by a professional, Lowell Thomas, Jr., who happens to live in Alaska and who happened to be in Alaska at the time of the tragedy, I think its contents should have as wide distribution as possible.

One of the great contributions to the immediate information that Alaska was undergoing an earthquake, Mr. Speaker, came from many thousands of "ham" radio operators, based in Alaska and in other places all over the world. Normal communications broke down almost immediately after the quake struck and I am informed the "ham" operators stayed on duty endlessly.

The vigor and courage of our neighbors to the north is being perfectly exemplified in the current disaster. I have heard of no one packing what may be left of his belongings and returning to the less hazardous surroundings of the mainland proper. I do know, however, that Lowell Thomas, Jr., and his courageous wife, Mary Taylor Pryor Thomas, daughter of Sam Pryor, vice president of Pan American Airways, are staying on in Alaska, although their home in Anchorage was a total wreck. I am also informed that it is quite possible that Mr. Thomas will become a Republican candidate for the Alaska State Legislature.

The New York Herald Tribune article by Mr. Thomas follows:

THE WEEK THAT SEEMED LIKE A YEARLOWELL THOMAS JR.'S STORY OF ALASKA TERROR

(By Lowell Thomas, Jr.) ANCHORAGE, ALASKA.—Just over a week ago the great earthquake struck Alaska. But it is a week that seems like a year. I am sitting in the shattered remains of our oncebeautiful, split-level home on Chilligan Drive which commanded one of Anchorage's most spectacular views, sweeping 180 degrees from Mount Spur, a still-active volcano on the left to the Chugach Mountains on the right, with mighty Mount McKinley right in the middle.

Our home was just back of the bluff that dropped in a series of steps to Cook Inlet, a few hundred feet below. That was before the earthquake. Now the twisted, broken remnants of our home are scattered along the base of the new bluff line in half a dozen pieces and just barely above high tide.

I am sitting on what is left of the stairs to the bedroom which somehow held together, although it is tipped up at a sharp angle. My study, directly below, was crushed into the sand. Where the front door and the hall were is a jumble of broken boards, masonry, and pipes. Thirty yards away is the squashed living room and kitchen. Farther along are the tilted remains of the garage.

Another pile of debris marks the family room, and farthest away is the greenhouse with only a few broken panes. It is intactone of the oddities of this disaster. Farther off are the ruins of neighbors' homes beyond twisted trees.

of our street, but he didn't know where they had found shelter. He, too, had lost his house but saved his family.

A new day was dawning by the time I located Tay and the children. They were still in a mild state of shock and Tay's feet were painfully frostbitten. They had run from the house lightly dressed and in their stocking feet. How fortunate they didn't pause for their boots.

I was so happy that my family had escaped that Tay's report of our house being demolished didn't matter. One can find a new home, but, of course, there is no way to replace a family of loved ones. However, our dog and two cats were still missing, so I lost no time in going back to our street.

It was now about 7 o'clock in the morning and civil defense men were guarding the edge of the new cliff. Far down in the devastated area was the wreckage of our place. They warned me about the still collapsing cliff and instability down below, but I told them my dog was still down there. Over I went, slithering and crawling through sand, clay, snow, and ice. Bud Schultz' German shepherd appeared, barring my way-the loyal watchdog. I had to hit him several times with a rope to keep from being bitten and to get on to my place.

As I picked my way along, I called for Boaz, our 9-year-old German shepherd. No answer. Getting closer I heard low mournful howling. Old Boaz was pouring his heart out as though the world had ended. When he heard me calling he began to bark exWell, it took a rope swing finally

to hoist Boaz up the cliff.

citedly. This looks like a World War II battleground, with one exception. The ground has been broken up into a crazy Jumble of huge blocks.

HOURS OF TERROR

As I sit here I can still feel the terror my wife, Tay, and our two children experienced a week ago. It is a miracle they escaped. I wasn't here, having flown to Fairbanks that afternoon to give a speech at a Republican district convention. Chances are that had I been home, one or all of us would have been killed, because at the first trembling I probably would have tried to reassure Tay by telling her it was just another mild shake, such as we felt before.

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Had she not immediately rushed out the door with the children, the collapsing house would have claimed them. As it was, they barely cleared door before a terrific shock flung them to the ground and the house began to pull apart.

Then the snow-covered ground began to heave and break up. Everything started to fall toward the inlet. Trees snapped, huge blocks of frozen earth tumbled down, deep cracks opened, then closed again. How Tay, Anne, 8, and David, 6, kept from being crushed or swallowed up can only be credited to the grace of God. Others were not so fortunate. It is a terrible story, but it is Tay's story. My part in this devastating earthquake, so far, has been to pick up the pieces of our home, which also doubled as my office, and to resettle the family. In Fairbanks it was several hours before word of disaster began to trickle in. All normal communications with Anchorage had been knocked out.

I was fortunate to hitch a ride that night on an emergency civil defense flight, landing at Elmendorf Air Force Base after midnight. While waiting for transportation into Anchorage, I learned for the first time that my part of town had slipped into the inlet. No one knew the fate of those living there and I feared the worst.

The next 3 hours that night were the grimmest I can remember, not knowing whether Tay, Anne, and David were alive. It was one of our neighbors, Bud Schultz, manager of Chugach Electric, who told me the good news that I still had a family. This was at civil defense headquarters. Bud had actually seen them climbing the bluff to the remains

Back down I went, this time taking a close look at the wreckage. I couldn't believe the total destruction I saw and still can't a week later. All that day I gathered possessions that were strewn over the ground, aware that my neighbors were doing the same. we spoke to each other it was to express our sorrow at the loss of two children in the house right next to mine. They had been seen falling into a crevasse which closed over them.

HEROIC EFFORTS

When

That evening Eskimo Scouts of the Alaska National Guard came quietly through the spruces along the new bluff, taking guard positions throughout the devastated area. They were unsmiling, and quiet, which is unusual for these wonderful, happy people. by what they saw. Obviously they were saddened and awed Their purpose was to guard against looting and I was very glad to see them. One of the scouts said he came from Gambell on St. Lawrence Island, in Bering Strait near Russia, and he recognized me from a film I had made a few years ago.

Another important find that first day was the children's kitten, Sylvester. He was hiding under David's bed, a terrified kitty. The other cat didn't turn up until the next day, buried but unscathed beneath blankets and clothing in what had been the laundry. That cat used up about five of her nine lives surviving that.

During the days since the quake, truly heroic efforts have been made by the people of Anchorage to care for the hundreds of homeless families and to salvage as much property as possible. In our case, the Spenard Rotary Club organized rescue squads of 10 men each to help the owners of lost homes retrieve clothing and possessions. Bulldozers cut trails into the devastated area, all manned with voluntary help. All available cranes and hoists were brought in. Collapsed roofs were lifted so we could get at what was left inside.

Another miracle, for us, was the recovery of our ranch wagon, partially crushed by the garage roof and suspended by its bumpers over a pit where the floor had dropped away.

I was certain the car would never run

again, although it looked in pretty good shape. The question was how to get it out and up over the cliff. A bulldozer operator, in true Alaskan fashion, said he'd like to give it a try. So, with a cable he pulled off the garage roof, then bulldozed a hole into the back of the garage, and hauled out the car, towing it up a trail that he had already made. A few hours later, Tay drove it away, never minding the bashed top, dented chrome and missing rear window.

The Air Force donated four-wheel-drive trucks to haul possessions retrieved by rescue crews. The Army sent soldiers from nearby Fort Richardson to help policemen patrol the devastated area and prevent the unwary from entering hazardous sections.

Everywhere the spirit of Alaskans was, "Let's pick up the pieces and start building anew." There has been little or no despair shown by a youthful people who are used to making new starts. There has been much thankfulness that the loss of life was not far greater.

DETERMINED PEOPLE

As for our future here in Alaska, we have more than enough spirit and energy to get on with it. Our determination to conquer and develop this last great American frontier is stronger than ever. We all feel that nothing can stop us now, provided our sister States will lend a financial hand in restoring our shattered cities and homes. A quick estimate of our losses from this disaster totals between $500 and $750 million. That ly, this is a case for Federal assistance. kind of money does not exist up here. Clear

Although I have been picking up the pieces of my demolished home and office all week, there are still valuables buried in the sand. But it is time now to call a halt and to look ahead. As I scribble these impressions of the week that seems a year, Tay and the children already are moving into a new house in an undamaged section of Anchorage.

For the children, school will probably reopen next week. For me, much work lies ahead in helping friends and neighbors rebuild Anchorage and then continue the development of "Alaska, America's Brightest Star," the title of a film I made a few years ago for the Alaska State Chamber of Commerce and the Alaska Banker's Association.

It was great to be an Alaskan before the quake of '64, but it is even greater to be an Alaskan now.

UAW Promotes Retraining

EXTENSION OF REMARKS

OF

HON. THOMAS B. CURTIS

OF MISSOURI

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, April 15, 1964

Mr. CURTIS. Mr. Speaker, the United Auto Workers Union is to be congratulated for taking the lead in promoting retraining courses for their members who are prospective victims of technological unemployment. The union-sponsored training program is an outstanding example of union-State-Federal cooperation under the Manpower Development and Training Act.

Under unanimous consent I place an article from Business Week of April 11, discussing this program in the RECORD at this point:

LEARNING NEW JOBS BEFORE OLD ONES FADE United Auto Workers, in cooperation with State and Federal agencies, is retraining

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The UAW program could serve as a textbook example of union-Federal-State cooperation. The Michigan Employment Security Commission (MESC) certified the existence of labor shortages in mechanical drafting, graphic illustrating and clay modeling. This enabled UAW to receive $16,231 under the Federal Manpower Development and Training Act, to teach these skills, it remodeled an old union hall into classrooms at its own expense.

The U.S. Labor Department's Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training keeps a paternal eye on the program. MESC picks students from among both union and nonunion applicants.

Students attend 3-hour classes 2 nights a week for 40 weeks. There are 25 in each class-men and women, Negro and white, and ages range from 18 to 50-odd years. All took aptitude tests before being admitted in January. They must maintain passing grades to stay in class. A handful who found the going too rough have been replaced by others.

Those who remain make eager pupils. Instructor Don Kramer gets to his 6:30 clay modeling class a half hour early-but finds students ahead of him every time. "By 6 o'clock some fellows are already at work," he says.

Most students are intent on bettering themselves, worried about the possibility that their new skill will be wiped out by automation, Kramer says. He's happy to assure them that clay modeling is not a job for machines. It takes initiative, imagination, and creativity and has a "no limit" future in industry, he believes.

Kramer is a clay modeler at Chrysler engineering.

The Center's staff consists of an administrator and seven instructors, all UAW mem

bers who work at regular jobs during the day, Each is a specialist in his subject, and most have teaching experience. They are paid from Manpower Development and Training Act funds at a rate a bit above their normal hourly pay.

MOVING UP

Three kinds of workers are eligible for the program: those already unemployed, especially if technological change is the reason,

those whose jobs are threatened by technology, and those capable of learning skills that have manpower shortages. Like other retraining programs under Manpower Development and Training Act, it aims to supply workers for occupations that have shortages; to reduce unemployment; and to provide more job opportunities for unskilled and semiskilled workers, who may be able to move into jobs vacated by retrainees who move up.

There are plans for a second cycle of classes-perhaps in the same specialties, perhaps in others, depending on the labor market.

COAL STRIKES EBBING BUT LOCALS SIMMER A strike by dissident coal miners in six States appeared to be breaking up early this week-but dissatisfaction was still running high against a new contract and United Mine Workers President W. A. "Tony" Boyle.

UMW recently negotiated soft coal contracts calling for a $2 a day in wage increases over 2 years plus more vacation pay and seniority and other job-security gains (BW, Mar. 28, 1964, p. 121). A number of large locals protested that the union should not have compromised tougher security demands in return for more pay. At their peak, wildcat walkouts involved more than 10,000 miners.

The national leadership moved in quickly to defend the terms as "a splendid contract," with new and important job props. However, the explanations appeared less important than coal market considerations in bringing the wildcats to an end in many coalfields; locals feared jobs would be lost if strikes con

tinued.

Within the UMW, the contract revolt has this added significance: Boyle faces his first election to the presidency this fall, and the dissident moves reflect possible opposition gathering against him.

CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY

The Public Printer, under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing, may print for sale, at a price sufficient to reimburse the expenses of such printing, the current Congressional Directory. No sale shall be made on credit (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 150, p. 1939).

RECORD OFFICE AT THE CAPITOL

An office for the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, with Mr. Raymond F. Noyes in charge, is located in room H-112, House wing, where orders will be received for subscriptions to the RECORD at $1.50 per month or for single copies at 1 cent for eight pages (minimum charge of 3 cents). Also, orders from Members of Congress to purchase reprints from the RECORD Should be processed through this office.

LAWS RELATIVE TO THE PRINTING OF DOCUMENTS

Either House may order the printing of a document not already provided for by law, but only when the same shall be accompanied by an estimate from the Public Printer as to the probable cost thereof. Any executive department, bureau, board or independent office of the Government submitting reports or documents in response to inquiries from Congress shall submit therewith an estimate of the probable cost of printing the usual number. Nothing in this section relating to estimates shall apply to reports or documents not exceeding 50 pages (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 140, p. 1938).

Resolutions for printing extra copies, when presented to either House, shall be referred Administration of the House of Representaimmediately to the Committee on House

tives or the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate, who, in making their report, shall give the probable cost of the proposed printing upon the estimate of the Public Printer, and no extra copies shall be printed before such committee has reported (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 133, p. 1937).

GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS FOR SALE

Additional copies of Government publications are offered for sale to the public by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D.C., at cost thereof as determined by the Public Printer plus 50 percent: Provided, That a discount of not to exceed 25 percent may be allowed to authorized bookdealers and quantity purchasers, but such printing shall not interfere with the prompt execution of work for the Government. The Superintendent of Documents shall prescribe the terms and conditions under which he may authorize the resale of Government publications by bookdealers, and he may designate any Government officer his agent for the sale of Government publications under such regulations as shall be agreed upon by the Superintendent of Documents and the head of the respective department or establishment of the Government (U.S. Code, title 44, sec. 72a, Supp. 2).

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STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences

Messrs. Anderson (chairman), Russell, Magnuson, Symington, Stennis, Young of Ohio, Dodd, Cannon, Holland, Edmondson, Mrs. Smith, Messrs. Case, Hickenlooper, Curtis, and Keating.

Committee on Agriculture and Forestry Messrs. Ellender (chairman), Johnston, Holland, Eastland, Talmadge, Jordan of North Carolina, McCarthy, Mrs. Neuberger, Messrs. McGovern, Edmondson, Walters, Aiken, Young of North Dakota, Hickenlooper, Cooper, Boggs, and Mechem.

Committee on Appropriations

Messrs. Hayden (chairman), Russell, Ellender, Hill, McClellan, Robertson, Magnuson, Holland, Stennis, Pastore, Monroney, Bible, Byrd of West Virginia, McGee, Humphrey, Mansfield, Bartlett, Proxmire, Saltonstall, Young of North Dakota, Mundt, Mrs. Smith, Messrs. Kuchel, Hruska, Allott, Cotton, and Case.

Committee on Armed Services

Messrs. Russell (chairman), Stennis, Byrd of Virginia, Symington, Jackson, Ervin, Thurmond, Engle, Cannon, Byrd of West Virginia, Young of Ohio, Inouye, Saltonstall, Mrs. Smith, Messrs. Beall, Goldwater, and Case.

Committee on Banking and Currency Messrs. Robertson (chairman), Sparkman, Douglas, Clark, Proxmire, Williams of New Jersey, Muskie, Long of Missouri, Mrs. Neuberger, Messrs. McIntyre, Bennett, Tower, Javits, Simpson, and Dominick.

Committee on Commerce Messrs. Magnuson (chairman), Pastore, Monroney, Thurmond, Lausche, Yarborough, Engle, Bartlett, Hartke, McGee, Hart, Cannon, Cotton, Morton, Scott, Prouty, and Beall.

Committee on the District of Columbia Messrs. Bible (chairman), Morse, Hartke, McIntyre, Beall, Prouty, and Dominick.

Committee on Finance

Messrs. Byrd of Virginia (chairman), Long of Louisiana, Smathers, Anderson, Douglas, Gore, Talmadge, McCarthy, Hartke, Fulbright, Ribicoff, Williams of Delaware, Carlson, Bennett, Curtis, Morton, and Dirksen.

Committee on Foreign Relations Messrs. Fulbright (chairman), Sparkman, Humphrey, Mansfield, Morse, Long of Louisiana, Gore, Lausche, Church, Symington, Dodd, Smathers, Hickenlooper, Aiken, Carlson, Williams of Delaware, and Mundt.

Committee on Government Operations Messrs. McClellan (chairman), Jackson, Ervin, Humphrey, Gruening, Muskie, Pell, McIntyre, Ribicoff, Brewster, Mundt, Curtis, Javits, Miller, and Pearson.

Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs

Messrs. Jackson (chairman), Anderson, Bible, Church, Gruening, Moss, Burdick, Hayden, McGovern, Nelson, Walters, Kuchel, Allott, Jordan of Idaho, Simpson, Mechem, and Dominick.

Committee on the Judiciary

Messrs. Eastland (chairman), Johnston, McClellan, Ervin, Dodd, Hart, Long of Missouri, Kennedy, Bayh, Burdick, Dirksen, Hruska, Keating, Fong, and Scott.

Committee on Labor and Public Welfare

Messrs. Hill (chairman), McNamara, Morse, Yarborough, Clark, Randolph, Williams of New Jersey, Pell, Kennedy, Metcalf, Goldwater, Javits, Prouty, Tower, and Jordan of Idaho.

Committee on Post Office and Civil Service Messrs. Johnston (chairman), Monroney, Yarborough, Randolph, McGee, Brewster, Carlson, Fong, and Boggs.

Committee on Public Works

Messrs. McNamara (chairman), Randolph, Young of Ohio, Muskie, Gruening, Moss, Metcalf, Jordan of North Carolina, Brewster, Inouye, Bayh, Nelson, Cooper, Fong, Boggs, Miller, and Pearson.

Committee on Rules and Administration

Messrs. Jordan of North Carolina (chairman), Hayden, Cannon, Pell, Clark, Byrd of West Virginia, Curtis, Cooper, and Scott.

UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT Mr. Chief Justice Warren, of California, Hotel Sheraton-Park, Washington, D.C.

Mr. Justice Black, of Alabama, 619 S. Lee St., Alexandria, Va.

Mr. Justice Douglas, of Washington, 4852 Hutchins Pl.

Mr. Justice Clark, of Texas, 2101 Connecticut Ave.

Mr. Justice Harlan, of New York, 1677 31st St. Mr. Justice Brennan, of New Jersey, 3037 Dumbarton Ave.

Mr. Justice Stewart, of Ohio, 5136 Palisade Lane.

Mr. Justice White, of Colorado, 2209 Hampshire Rd., McLean, Va.

Mr. Justice Goldberg, of Illinois, 2811 Albemarle St.

OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT Clerk-John F. Davis, 4704 River Rd. Deputy Clerk-Edmund P. Cullinan, 4823 Reservoir Rd.

Reporter-Walter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Rd. Marshal-T. Perry Lippitt, 6004 Corbin Rd.

Librarian-Helen Newman, 126 3d St. SE.

UNITED STATES JUDICIAL CIRCUITS JUSTICES ASSIGNED TERRITORY EMBRACED District of Columbia judicial circuit: Mr. Chief Justice Warren. District of Columbia. First judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Goldberg. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island.

Second judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Harlan. Connecticut, New York, Vermont.

Third judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Brennan. Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virgin Islands.

Fourth judicial circuit: Mr. Chief Justice Warren. Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia.

Fifth judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Black. Alabama, Canal Zone, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas. Sixth judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Stewart. Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee.

Seventh judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Clark. Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin.

Eighth judicial circuit: Mr. Justice White. Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota.

Ninth judicial circuit: Mr. Justice Douglas. Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington; Guam, Hawaii.

Tenth judicial circuit: Mr. Justice White. Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Utah, Wyoming.

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