SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SUDA, OVMBR , 9 HE IHGNDiYPG HE Sen. McCarthy Meets f By LEE MARKS TOMORROW, the United States Senate convenes in special ses- sion to act on recommendations submitted by the Select Commit- tee To Study Censure Charges. Senate Resolution 301, to censure Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (R.- Wis.), was submitted by Senator Ralph E. Flanders (R.-Vt.) on July 30 climaxing a stormy career in which the junior senator from Wisconsin made newspaper head- lines with charges, counter charg- es, exposes and sensationalized hearings. Serving on the committee with Senator Arthur Watkins, (R-Utah), chairman, were John C. Stennis (D-Miss.), Frank Carlson (R-Kan.), Francis Case (R-S.Dak.), Sam J. Ervin, Jr. (D-N. Car.) and Vice- Chairman Edwin C. Johnson (D.- Col.). They were authorized by the Senate to investigate and hold hearings on more than 30 charg- es of various forms of misconduct submitted by Senator Flanders, Senator Wayne Morse (Ind.- Ore.) and Senator William Full- bright (D.-Ark.). To a certain extent, the Watkins Committee was appointed by Sen- ator Richard Nixon for the anony- mity of its members. Although ex- perienced in judicial proceedings, none of the six Senators were na- tionally prominent or on record as being rabidly opposed to or in sym- pathy with McCarthy. Aug. 24, after preliminary hear- ings, Senator McCarthy was in- formed that the charges had been reduced to 13, divided into five categories. As noted in the official commit- tee report these categories and their subdivisions were: 1) Incidents of contempt of the Senate or a Senatorial Commit- tee. Repeated refusals to appear before Senate committees, fail- ing to supply information to the Senate Sub-Committee on privi- leges and elections, denouncing the Sub-Committee, showing gen- eral contempt for the Senate and calling Senator Robert Hendrick- son (R-N.J.) a "living miracle without brains or guts," were included in this charge. 2) Incidents of encouragement of is Peers United States employes to violate the law and their oaths of office. 3) Incidents involving receipt or use of confidential or classified document or other information from executive files. 4) Incidents involving abuses of colleagues in the Senate. 5) Incident relating to Ralph W. Zwicker, United States Army Gen- eral. Final conclusions of the com- mittee as submitted to the sec- ond session of the 83rd Congress called for a censure of Senator McCarthy. Senator Watkins and his col- leagues found Senator McCarthy "contemptuous, contumacious and denunciatory without reason or jus- tification" in his actions toward Senator Hendrickson and his sub- committee. They found his conduct "uncon- donable and improper," And for his actions toward Gen- eral Zwicker, the committee rec- ommended censure claiming that McCarthy was "reprehensible." At the outset of their hearings, the Watkins Committee said, "This sub-committee has but one object JOSEPH WELCH AND RAY JENKINS .this is the army, tomorrow the Senate and that is to reach an impartial Carthy on four, condoning his ac- and proper conclusion based upon tions towards Senator Flanders facts." only because Senator Flanders had At the conclusion, they recom- precipitated Senator McCarthy's mended censure on two of the five statements with inflamatory re- charges and severely criticized Mc- marks of his own. wo Beautiful Reasons Why "Little Evenings" Are Gay: Our Felt Skirt And Jumper Go Gala Arriving at the smartest late day get-togethers this season ... our wool-rayon blended felt night-timers have new fashion and social significance. Left: Sleek jumper with a flaring skirt, a multitude of buttons and sophisticated air. Red, black or camel. Sizes 10 to 16. 19.95. / Right: BSutton-front circle skirt with its own belt and an affinity for teaming beautifully with evening blouses and sweaters. block, blue or camel colour. Sizes 1 to 16. 14.95 PA V K